Vampire Power. Just a Little Scary.

2 comments

After you’ve finished putting out your ghosts and goblins this Halloween, why not turn your attention to the vampires in your house?

Go touch your cell phone charger.  Is it warm?  Vampire power, sucking away wattage and pocket change, every hour.

Also called standby power, it’s the energy your appliances and gadgets use when you think they are powered down.

What’s using vampire power in my house and why?

In fact, this bad boy uses more power a year reminding me I’m late for something than it does reheating mac n cheese.¹

Some studies have found standby power responsible for 5, 7, 8 or even 10 percent of our power usage.  That’s not insignificant!  The Discovery Channel just tried to tell me the average household loses $200 a year to vampire power, $60 to the TV alone (but I think that’s crazy talk).  This number goes down as we replace our appliances with newer models but then goes back up as we buy more and more chargeable gadgets.

And labeling of standby power usage is in its infancy.  You are more likely to know if your breakfast cereal contains GMOs than if your new flat screen has low or high standby-power loss.

What can you do about it?  You can buy better appliances, ones that follow the One-Watt Initiative, losing a watt or less when in standby mode.  You can buy fancy power strips, ones that slave to a master gadget, meaning, for example, the cable box only turns on when the TV turns on.  Another strip allows you turn off the TV but keep the wireless router hot.  And one even uses a motion sensor!  Wow.

Or you can do what we do:  unplug stuff when it’s convenient.  We turn off our surge protector when we’re not charging things.  I don’t need to keep the rechargeable toothbrush in the charger and the charger doesn’t need to be plugged in.  And neither does the printer.  And of course you can always go extreme and reduce your family room electronics.

Admittedly, we’re not talking a lot of waste.  So while I’m not exactly driving a stake through the energy suckers in my house, I do hope that this little article helps to shed some…sunlight, if you will, on vampire power.

¹ http://www.economist.com/node/5571582

October 30, 2014

About Me

About Me

I’ve been passionate about combatting blind consumerism since 2008 and joined the Zero Waste movement by starting this blog in 2013, soon after my second child was born. I think it might have been trying to unwrap a toy or someone’s attempt to sell me a butt-wipe warmer that put me over the edge… read more

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2 Comments

  1. IronMike

    So hard to remember to do, and then so annoying when you're sitting comfy on the couch and plug in your laptop to realize last night you'd switched off the power-strip way over there 3m from where you're sitting!

    Reply
  2. zerowastemommy

    3 meters!? Look at you… 🙂

    And since buying a used iPhone, I find that I'm using the power strip most nights, so 'when it's convenient' has become less often.

    Reply

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