Spooky season is upon us, and it’s a great time to find and reduce the phantom load in your home to save energy and money all year long.
Phantom load — or standby power — comes from electronics that draw power even when they aren’t in use. A typical American home has 40 products constantly drawing power, including DVRs, personal computers, video game consoles and DVD players. Together, these amount to about 6% of residential electricity use. In fact, the National Resources Defense Council estimates that phantom load accounts for $19 billion a year in energy costs in the U.S — about $200 each year for the average American home.
Idaho Power encourages customers to reduce phantom load with the following tips:
- Enable power-save features on computers, TVs and videogame consoles.
- Unplug electronic devices that don’t require reprogramming or aren’t frequently used.
- Buy ENERGY STAR® products, which have lower standby use.
- Borrow a Kill A Watt™ meter from your local library to measure the standby use of devices in your home.
- Use a power strip and make it easy to turn off multiple items at once — or better yet, a smart power strip — to control groups of electronics like computer or video equipment.
For more energy-saving tips, visit idahopower.com/save.
Alexis Freeman
Marketing Specialist
afreeman@idahopower.com
208-388-2291