Posts Tagged 'energy efficient'

Vampire Proof™ Charger Pre-Order Coming Soon!

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Vampire energy loss occurs when an electronic device, like a cell phone charger, continues to draw and waste energy when left plugged in, which adds wasted watts to your electric bill! The US Department of Energy has noted that vampire energy loss is responsible for up to 15% of a home’s annual energy costs.

Vampire Proof  Chargers are here to put a stake in vampire energy loss once and for all! Coming soon Vampire Labs will be offering an exclusive pre-order for our revolutionary vampire energy eliminating mobile phone chargers. Our patent-pending technology eliminates vampire energy loss at its core – reducing your home’s wasted energy, saving money, and ultimately saving our planet.

Visit www.vampirelabs.com to learn more about our exclusive pre-order, which guarantess you will be among the first people in the world to own a piece of tomorrow’s energy-efficient, ground-breaking technologies.

Happy Earth Day, Earth

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Today marks the 40th official year of recognizing the Earth for being, well, the Earth. Check out the certified Earth Day website and see what you can do to help celebrate our cosmically singular yet ubiquitous home.

Unfortunately for our planet, April 22nd will come and go like so many other honorary holidays or birthdays where a calendar day recognizes or memorializes something that is forgotten the next day. If everyone on the planet observed 4/22/2010 with 100% earth-friendly practices, it would not change the Earth’s plight. This is not to say that Earth Day is not important or that it having its own day of recognition is not valuable. It is; it is.

The message just comes with a caveat – Earth Day should be everyday and practiced by everyone in a rational manner. Human behavior is not hard to change for a single day once a year. Most people are incentivized by a mix of peer pressure and conscious that comes with an official Earth Day to think green (but just for today). Instead of going overboard on green-this and eco-that all packed into 24 hours, why not incorporate more sustainable (and attainable) practices in one’s everyday life?

Aside from spurring more people to think about how their everyday actions represent themselves as stewards of a world, hopefully this Earth Day will add fuel to the new climate bill being introduced on April 26th in the U.S. Congress. Because while everyday individual choices do, can, and will make a collective difference, changing our laws in order to move to a more sustainable, more energy-efficient and less oil-dependent world is worth all the carbon free activities one can cram into a late day in April.

Abusus non tollit non nocet – Happy Earth Day, Earth.

Energy Efficiency Week in the U.S. Congress

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

Congress ChamberU.S. Congressional hearings are set this week for proposed energy efficiency legislation and programs, like Home Star and Building Star, which primarily focus on residential home and commercial energy efficiency and rebating those who outfit their homes or commercial locations accordingly. Check out the New York Times online Green Wire post for detailed information on these and other exciting energy efficiency legislation slated to be reviewed this week in Congress.

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Click on picture to view downloadable U.S. DOE Energy Posters

2010 continues to be the year of energy efficiency, and the positive attention it is receiving from venture capital markets, consumers, the European Union and U.S. Governmental bodies are market drivers that contend it’s here to stay.

Why not have products and facilities that waste energy use that energy more efficiently? It saves energy resources, which in turn saves money, reduces unnecessary climate warming environmental waste, and can ultimately lower the cost of energy altogether. Our future depends on conserving energy in a practical manner and that future is now.

“Unlocking Energy Efficiency in the U.S. Ecomony”

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Read the Executive Summary:

http://www.mckinsey.com/clientservice/electricpowernaturalgas/downloads/US_energy_efficiency_exc_summary.pdf

Read the Full Report by McKinsey & Co:

http://www.mckinsey.com/clientservice/electricpowernaturalgas/downloads/US_energy_efficiency_full_report.pdf

U.S. Gov Pushes Energy Efficiency Reform on the heels of Overwhelming Climate Change Impact in the U.S.

Monday, July 27th, 2009

If the effects of climate change in far reaching parts of the world does not spur action, then climate-change-report2maybe its effects on the United States will. It has, at least, struck a nerve within the U.S. government with the recent ACES bill, Energy Efficiency Standards for Appliances, and other energy efficiency measures. The United States Global Change Research Program released Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States, a report that outlines specific detrimental effects to different regions of the U.S. and how important it is to change our environmental course now.

Key findings of the report include:

  1. Global warming is unequivocal and primarily human-induced.”
  2. Climate changes are underway in the U.S. and are projected to grow.”
  3. Widespread climate-related impacts are occurring now and are expected to increase.”
  4. Climate change will stress water resources.”
  5. Crop and livestock production will be increasingly challenged.”
  6. Coastal areas are at increasing risk from sea-level rise and storm surge.”
  7. Threats to human health will increase.”
  8. Climate change will interact with many social and environmental stresses.”
  9. Thresholds will be crossed, leading to large changes in climate and eco-systems.”
  10. Future climate change and its impacts depend on choices made today.”

Check out how climate change will impact your region in the U.S.:

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Alaska | Islands | Coasts | Northwest | Southwest | Great Plains | Midwest | Northeast | Southeast

The comprehensive report also looks at Climate Change by Sector: 

 

 

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Water Resources         Energy Supply & Use           Transportation                 Agriculture

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Ecosystems                        Human Health                         Society

 It is no wonder why the U.S. government and Global governing bodies are pushing so hard for energy efficiency measure in order to curb impending climate change. We urge you to take a look at your region and sector and read the report. Our world is changing, and all of our actions will determine if that change will be for better or for worse. 

 

The Answer to Oxfam and the Global Energy Crisis is Reducing Vampire Energy Loss

Friday, July 10th, 2009

plug-electricity4The previous post, Oxfam asks, “What Happened to the Seasons?”,explored the latest climate change report, which captivatingly addresses the personal stories of those suffering. Its overwhelming question of ‘Why?’ arguably has many possible answers; however, a person doesn’t leave the water running when not using it and ask ‘why was the water bill so high?’ or ‘why is there no water left?’. 

While there is a lot of talk surrounding discovering new energy sources, or expanding others – like solar or wind, the first step must be how do we more efficiently use the resources already in place? Likewise, when a new type of energy is discovered, or an existing one is expanded, and that energy is turned into electricity – we still need efficient systems and energy efficient electronic and semiconductor products no matter where the original source of energy comes from.

Take cell phone and mobile device chargers for example, often called ‘wall warts’ – think the little black box that’s plugged into outlets to charge a cell phone. The DOE has noted that wall warts consume about 5% of the electricity used by the average U.S home. This 5% amounts to around 52 Billion kilowatt hours, or the energy produced by 26 average-size power plants! To break it down – the aggregate average U.S. household energy spend for mobile device chargers is $537 Million per month, or almost $6.5 Billion per year, just for mobile device and cell phone chargers! Since most mobile device chargers waste around 80% of the energy they draw, the average total residential dollar amount thrown away on unused, wasted energy is an average $429.6 Million per month, or $5 Billion per year JUST FOR CHARGERS! Think about that, $5 Billion a year on average is wasted due to vampire energy loss that occurs in mobile device chargers in residential homes. Crazy, right? 

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Of course, chargers are not only used in homes. They are everywhere in our lives, especially at work. The average U.S. commercial operation spends $537 Million per month due to chargers. That is $6.44 Billion annually. As mentioned above, wall warts waste 80% of the energy they pull from the grid; thus, the money thrown away on wasted energy by U.S. commercial operations is $429.67 Million on average per month, or $5.156 Billion annually! 

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On top of the residential and commercial energy waste, U.S. industrial operations have an aggregate average monthly energy appetite for mobile device chargers of $237.8 million, or $3.28 Billion per year. The money that is wasted on mobile device chargers’ vampire energy loss is $219 Million per month on average, or $2.628 Billion per year.

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Together, all 3 sectors have a total energy waste of a whopping $1.1 Billion per month on average, or $13.7 Billion per year!!!

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It is important to note that most industry experts agree that 5% is a relatively low estimate for commercial and industrial operations, but it is important to Vampire Labs that numbers are not inflated for impact.

It is also necessary to understand that mobile device chargers, or wall warts, are only the tip of the vampire energy loss iceberg. Many other vampire electronics and vampire mechanical devices are present in households and commercial and industrial operations that are not accounted for in the before mentioned data. Those figures only speak to mobile device chargers.

According to John Donovan, an energy efficiency expert and the Editor-in-Chief of Low-Power Design, “Increasing the energy efficiency of chargers by 50% would have a huge impact on energy consumption and greenhouse gas reduction.” Vampire Labs aims to eliminate the energy waste altogether, and his next statement especially fuels our fire, “The U.S. electronics industry needs to make a coordinated attack on power consumption, starting with the design of ultra-low power systems” and that “the green future depends on emerging technologies and energy efficient, low power designs.”

To be an Eco Charger, or Not to be an Eco Charger: that is the Question

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

On April 1st, 2009, at the Smart Energy Wireless 2009 trade-show in Las Vegas, Nevada, the CTIA-The Wireless Association overwhelmingly adopted the Universal Charger Solution (UCS).

Ironically, on a day infamous for practical jokes – at a convention named Smart Energy – held on behalf of an industry notorious for its negative environmental impact – in a city not recognized for energy conservation, this measure was accepted for 2012 compliance.

As discussed in an earlier post, the UCS is a surprisingly commendable, eco-charger-2254albeit shortsighted, first draft from the mobile wireless industry. It lacks comprehension as it fails to fully address vampire energy loss that occurs in mobile devices. We strongly suggest a revision that forms necessary standards for truly energy efficient Eco chargers.

Research suggests that UCS chargers will only reduce vampire energy by 50%, instead of aiming to eliminate vampire energy consumption altogether. Why not take up front action and manufacture universal chargers with exisisting technology that eliminates wasteful energy loss?

The UCS does bring the right discussion to the table. It’s most Eco-notable quality is the call for a standard micro-USB user interface between a mobile device and its charger. This universal standard will reduce the vast amount of chargers that go into landfills every year, reduce energy that is required to manufacture them, and reduce carbon emissions during shipping.

However, most environmental rewards and positive PR of the UCS are ancillary among the biggest trophy – reduced costs for mobile device manufacturers. The UCS will reduce design, manufacturing, packaging and shipping costs of chargers for mobile device manufacturers.

If an industry’s goal is to provide profitable tech-savvy products and be environmentally revolutionary, then consumers must demand that their electronics actually be energy efficient, instead of only being labeled as such. After all – a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.