Ten tips for greening your own home that will save you money and help prevent climate change:
1. Insulate in the attic because hot air rises and you could be losing as much as 15% of the home’s heat
through the roof, costing you £110 and the environment one tonne of CO2 per
year. Current recommendations are for 270mm of insulation. B&Q has a recycled plastic loft
insulation product made from 90% recycled plastic bottles. Each rolls covers
1.48m2, and is priced £11.98. Grants are available for
loft and cavity wall insulation.
2. To stop heat escaping through your windows, draw the curtains at night, or install a primary or secondary
glazing system, such as EcoGlaze by Access Plastics UK Ltd. The product comes as different sized easy to fit acrylic sheets that are
attached to the interior of a window frame with a magnetic strip. Prices start from £40 per
m2.
3. Install energy efficient lights bulbs which last far longer than normal bulbs. They cost a bit more
than ordinary ones but you’ll find plenty of places giving them away free, perhaps your
energy supplier. From September 2009 you’ll only be able to buy low energy light bulbs. Osram has a
several ranges of bulbs. (Pictured are ‘Parathom’ bulbs, priced at
£5.99 each). Available from Osram or at most stockists such as B&Q.
4. Fit air-flow taps and showerheads. For example, the ecocamel showerhead reduces the flow rate of water per minute from 12
litres with a conventional showerhead to 6.7 litres. Over a year, a family of four will save 30,000 litres of water and knock
around £140 off their annual energy bill, or up to £250 if they have a water meter. Priced at £24.95.
5. If you have an older style toilet (fitted pre-1991) you could be wasting three litres with every flush
compared to a modern low flush toilet which uses six litres per flush. Adding a displacement device, such as
Hippo the Water Saver, will reduce the amount of water used per flush, saving as much as 40% annually. The price
is just £1.95 from BigGreenSmile.com.
6. An alternative to buying a new boiler is to ‘Tag on a tadpole’. This innovative
‘green gizmo’ improves the efficiency of heating systems by minimising the dissolved air that
makes water slower to heat up. Savings can amount to several hundred pounds and up to a tonne
reduction in CO2 emissions annually. (The average home accounts for six tonnes of
CO2 per year.) Easy to fit by a capable plumber or heating engineer, Tadpole is
priced at £195.
7. If you need a new boiler choose a condensing boiler which will save about 1.7 tonnes of CO2 and £200 a year, according to the Energy Saving Trust. You can have a gas, electric, biomass or oil-fired condensing boiler. Prices start from around £400 for a combi condensing boiler, rising to £1,500 and higher dependent on the capacity required.
8. Reuse and salvage rather than buy new. Not only will you doing your bit for the environment by re-using items that have already been made (which cuts down on embodied energy CO2 emissions), but you can create a unique look by combining classic fittings and fixtures with contemporary ones - and save yourself money in to the bargain. SalvoWEB has lots of useful information.
9. Go ones step further and consider rainwater harvesting or grey water recycling (from baths and showers for reuse in your toilet). Rainwater harvesters can be a simple as fitting a downspout from your roof into a recycled plastic water butt (priced from £29.98 at B&Q), or a more sophisticated model such as those sold by BigGreenSmile.com.
10. The holy grail for many greens is to produce their own electricity from renewable sources - such as the sun, wind, water, biomass (burning of timber either logs or pellets) or ground source heat. You’ll need solar panels or tubes to produce hot water and photovoltaic (PV) panels to convert sunlight to electricity. You can even export it to the mains and earn income. The Energy Saving Trust has a directory of reputable manufacturers and suppliers who have signed up to its scheme.
And if you are looking for professional help, visit The Green Register. The Green Register is an independent, self-funded organisation which promotes sustainable building practices. Its register of members - including architects, tradesmen and manufacturers - is freely available on the website.