Editorial: The Fast-Changing World of Saving Energy

January 01, 2015
January/February 2015
A version of this article appears in the January/February 2015 issue of Home Energy Magazine.
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In reviewing the content of this issue, I was struck by how rapidly the energy-saving business is changing. In this issue, we cover the come-from-nowhere explosion in LEDs. Another article about energy-efficient homes in Germany describes the rapid shift to near zero energy homes. That article also reminds us why it is getting risky to ignore activities on what used to be the utility side of the meter. German utilities have recently changed electricity tariffs and have suddenly made it more attractive for homes with PV to consume all electricity generated on-site, rather than feed it into the grid. Enter the battery and other forms of energy storage.

Alan Meier (Yasushi Kato)

Even the technologies to solve age-old problems are changing. Buildings still have cracks and leaks, but fixing them is time consuming, expensive, and not always successful. An article on aeroseal duct sealing hits all three of those targets. We need to learn to air seal more buildings faster if we want to do the job economically. And yes, the world still needs weather strip, so Home Energy is pleased to publish a product view of the venerable V-strip.

Home Energy’s readership is changing, too. Our older readers are retiring and being replaced by younger specialists who turn to the web for all kinds of information. That’s why we’re rebalancing our magazine and web content, pushing more of the smaller articles onto the web. That shift allows us to publish longer articles in the paper magazine, where you can read them in comfort. We’ll also publish more-timely articles on the web—articles that might become stale if we waited two months to publish them in our next issue. We will, of course, tell readers of each format what we are offering in the other format.

UntitledThe sealant is delivered to the inside of the ductwork via long flexible tubing attached to a temporary access point. (Aeroseal LLC)

UntitledAs more people make the switch to energy-efficient lighting, it makes a big impact on our total energy use and carbon emissions.

What further changes can we expect for 2015 and beyond? Will there be any more explosive changes like the one we saw with LEDs? Here’s what I predict. First, I expect we will see many more networked products communicating with each other and with the Internet. The first of these networks will consist of only a few products, where the presence of a network makes possible a new feature or a new service. Second, we will see less distinction between electricity providers and consumers. The utility meter once marked a clear boundary, where electricity flowed in only one direction, from the utility to the customer. In a few places already, the meter behaves more like a broker in a marketplace, deciding in which direction the energy will flow. And third, we will be worrying a lot more about water. Average residential water and sewage bills have already overtaken natural-gas bills, and I can’t imagine that costs will plateau soon.

One thing won’t change. You will read about all of these topics in Home Energy—regardless of the format—and see how all of these changes play out.

Alan Meier is senior executive editor of Home Energy.

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