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To: PartyTime who wrote (99888)6/5/2007 5:31:32 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 173976
 
Small, unexciting steps can make big climate leap

By Gerard WynnWed May 2, 1:14 PM ET

Simple steps to save energy such as changing light bulbs or not quite filling up
the kettle can also save carbon emissions, a U.N. report will say this week.

The numbers are big: some $122 billion will be saved and nearly a billion metric
tons of carbon dioxide emissions avoided globally by 2020 just by screwing in more
efficient light bulbs.

The trouble is getting business and individuals motivated by measures like energy
efficiency.

"It's not that exciting," said Tom Delay, chief executive of the Carbon
Trust, a public and private-funded company meant to drive a low carbon shift in
British industry.

"It falls uncomfortably between routine maintenance budget and capital investment.
It doesn't justify going to the company board and making a big pitch."

But improving efficiency can cut almost any business's energy use and carbon
output by a fifth, Delay said.

And such measures could cut by a third carbon emissions from buildings by 2020,
at a profit, the U.N. draft report says.

Products are working on their image, according to the "Carbon Counter,"
a carbon-saving guide published by Collins.

"Low-energy fluorescent bulbs used to be ugly and chunky and take hours to
heat up with a sort of sickly bluish light. Luckily they are now smaller and swankier
than the energy-wasteful alternative," it says.

And a "ban the incandescent light bulb" campaign is mounting. Started
by Australia in February, EU leaders have also demanded to phase out inefficient
bulbs by the end of the decade.

"There are big steps we can all make in energy efficiency and waste management.
We can be very positive -- rather than talk about the penalizing side of climate
change," said Miles Templeman, director general of Britain's Institute
of Directors.

INVISIBLE

Maybe one image problem for energy efficiency is that savings are invisible, suggests
Nick Robins, head of Henderson Global Investors 300 million pounds ($598.3 million)
Sustainable & Responsible Investment (SRI) funds.

Henderson has 48 million pounds invested in energy efficiency companies.

The International Energy Agency, energy adviser to 26 rich nations, says efficiency
measures could cut carbon dioxide emissions by 5 gigatonnes, or 5,000 billion metric
tons, by 2030.

This would not only pay for itself but knock some $8 trillion off consumers'
electricity bills, and save $3 trillion in power plants that would no longer have
to be built, it says.

Some businesses are wising up to demand for efficiency kit. Microsoft introduced
in its latest version of Windows a "sleep state" facility which uses "absolute
minimal" energy.

"Thirty percent of PCs are left on overnight, 20 percent over the weekend.
We're more capable now to allow a machine to shut down," said Paul Stoddart,
Microsoft's UK Windows marketing manager.