The winter is ending, and soon spring flowers will shoot from the ground to reclaim the barren wasteland that has become our yards. The last thing you want to think about is your heating system, but this is the perfect time to consider going green.
I have never been a diehard conservationist. I let people with money to spare spend their time thinking of ways to save the world, while I just do my best to keep the bills paid and raise my family. But that doesn’t mean I can’t give a little insight to alternatives for heating your home that may actually save a little bit of the planet and some money over time.
Natural Heat: The sun’s rays are powerful and are skiing down on us throughout the day. It heats the planet, so why not let it heat your home, as well? Install skylights to let the sun rays filter into your home. Large windows on the side of the home where the sun hits regularly can go a long way to cutting heating costs.
Solar Panels: One of the most expensive ways to heat your home is electrically. The constant production of electricity from power plants depletes our environment of precious resources such as coal or creates hazardous radioactive waste from power plants. Installing solar panels on your home helps you create your own electricity, so you can heat your home for free. If you are lucky, you can even sell a little electricity back to the power company. You won’t make much, but every little bit helps to ease the burden on the environment.
Geothermal: Geothermal is a way to heat and cool your home using the temperatures of the Earth. Unlike standard forced-air heating systems that blow heated air into a home at intervals, a geothermal system expels a steady stream of lukewarm air to keep the house a constant temperature throughout the seasons. Pipes are laid underground below the frost line where the temperatures are constant regardless of the cold of winter or the heat of summer. Water is circulated through the pipes so it reaches a set temperature and then is sent back to the home where ambient heat or coolness is used to raise or lower the temperature of the air. The cost of a geothermal heating system is about twice that of a standard heating and cooling system, but the cost savings over time will more than make up for the cost.
I think that if we have it in out power to make a change that is better for the environment, then we should do it. I may not single-handedly save the brown otter from the ravages of the logging industry, but I can put my recycling out on the curb on time and help other people with the means to think of ways they can help the environment.
Image Source: flickr.com/photos/dominiqs/137546658
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