Page added on October 12, 2013

Which energy source has had the biggest impact on meeting America’s energy needs over the past forty years? It’s not coal. It’s not oil. Not wind or nuclear. Believe it or not, it’s even bigger than all of those combined. Our greatest energy resource is energy efficiency—wasting less, and making the most out of the energy we already have.
According to NRDC’s groundbreaking, comprehensive analysis of key indicators, America’s energy position, in terms of security and reliability, has never been stronger. That’s reassuring, and perhaps surprising, in a time when bad energy news (turmoil in the Middle East, fracking, oil spills) seems to dominate the headlines. For nearly 40 years, our economic growth has been rapidly outpacing our energy consumption. Our businesses and industries are producing and selling more stuff, and using less energy to do so. We used less energy last year than we did in 1999—despite running an economy that’s 25 percent bigger.
How have we accomplished this growth without an accompanying boom in energy demand, and a drastic uptick in carbon pollution?
In a word, efficiency.
Our home appliances and electronics have been meeting increasingly tough federal efficiency standards. Thanks to standards like these (which NRDC has been helping push through for decades), electricity consumption from 2000 onward has been growing slower than the population. Remarkable, when you consider not only how many more people are using electricity, but how many more gadgets we have at home now that we did at the turn of the century, how many more chargers are plugged into every wall socket.
Refrigerators are bigger and fancier than ever, yet they use about one-quarter the energy they did 40 years ago, while the cost of owning and operating a fridge has fallen about 70 percent.
We’re using less oil now we did in 1973, when the economy was one-third its present size. We’re going farther than ever on each gallon of gas, thanks to federal fuel efficiency standards. The latest set of standards are expected to cut oil use 2.1 million barrels by 2025. That’s more oil than we import from any OPEC country.
Thanks to efficiency, we’re already on track to meet President Obama’s target of a 17 percent reduction in carbon pollution by 2020. That’s progress, but scientists agree we need to do more in order to stabilize the climate. We can get there if we really put efficiency to work—and studies show we have plenty of opportunity to do so.
President Obama made efficiency a cornerstone of his climate plan because he knows it works. The next big opportunity for energy efficiency is our homes and buildings, which are responsible for about one-third of U.S. global warming emissions. Tightening building energy codes and upgrading our homes and buildings with better insulation, energy-efficient equipment and appliances will reduce energy waste, save money for owners and tenants, and bring down carbon pollution. A new model building energy code, jointly proposed by NRDC and several leading homebuilders, could cut home energy use up to 20 percent, and, by 2030, reduce as much carbon pollution as 158 power plants produce in a year.
Federal and state governments can move things along faster by continuing to update efficiency standards for vehicles, buildings and appliances. But ironically, most utilities are penalized when they help their customers become more efficient, because electricity rates are set with a target revenue in mind. If customers use less electricity, utilities’ revenues fall short. Regulators can fix this disincentive by allowing for small yearly rate adjustments to correct for changes in sales, ensuring that utilities and customers who do the right thing aren’t penalized. Half the states have measures like this in place for some utilities, but progress has been slow. And only two publicly owned utilities, in Los Angeles and Glendale, have made the change.
When we get more efficient, good things happen. Our existing efficiency efforts are already saving Americans hundreds of billions of dollars a year, creating hundreds of thousands of jobs, and reducing carbon pollution, all while costing far less than developing new sources of energy.
In contrast, continuing to burn coal and oil in our power plants and gas tanks costs us more than $100 billion each year in premature death and illness, hospital bills, work days lost, and other health costs. That figure doesn’t include the billions of dollars in damage from extreme weather, which is fueled by carbon pollution (and cost taxpayers nearly $100 billion in 2012), the national security costs of our oil addiction, and the harm done to ecosystems from power plant and vehicle pollution.
When it comes to energy, it makes sense to focus on what works. Energy efficiency should be our priority, not another checkbox on the list. It’s the cleanest, most cost-effective, most productive energy resource we have, and we need to use more of it.
6 Comments on "US Energy More Secure and Reliable, Thanks to Efficiency"
LT on Sat, 12th Oct 2013 2:54 pm
The article’s title is funny.
Energy supply and appliance’s efficiency are two different things, and not really related.
Equipment/appliance ‘s efficiency often encourage people to consume more energy than save it. For example, let say if there are two houses of the same size. One house uses only one 100-watt incandescent light bulb, while the other uses ten 13-watt compact fluorescent light bulbs. which house consumes more energy?
DC on Sat, 12th Oct 2013 5:54 pm
RoFL! NRDC works for US corporations. This piece of puffery brought to you courtesy of the status-quo. Read it again, and all you will see is cheer-leading for more consumption and waste.
SteveK on Sat, 12th Oct 2013 6:29 pm
“We’re using less oil now we did in 1973, when the economy was one-third its present size. We’re going farther than ever on each gallon of gas, thanks to federal fuel efficiency standards. The latest set of standards are expected to cut oil use 2.1 million barrels by 2025. That’s more oil than we import from any OPEC country.”
Obfuscation! We import the vast majority of oil from Canada! We’re also producing a lot less:
http://petroleuminsights.blogspot.com/2011/04/us-crude-oil-production-1970-1980-1990.html
Economic growth? We’ve exported our oil-consuming manufacturing, depend more on nuclear and natural gas for electricity generation, and have grown our GDP on government spending (debt) and financial derivatives. That’s progress!!
rockman on Sat, 12th Oct 2013 7:29 pm
“We’re using less oil now we did in 1973”. An easy Web search to show this is a lie. And that’s not taking into account the amount of other liquid hydrocarbons being consumed. And since article is focused on energy it’s also far to point out that total energy consumption has increased 25% since 1973.
http://wilcoxen.maxwell.insightworks.com/pages/804.html?id=804&att=
J-Gav on Sat, 12th Oct 2013 11:10 pm
Oh well then, let’s all bow down low to ‘efficiency’ and observe a minute of silence in its honor.
BillT on Sun, 13th Oct 2013 4:02 am
NET energy? No mention as usual. How much did it take to make those new bulbs? Safely recycle them? LED is better, but they are also more high tech and need more materials from all over the world than a normal light bulb. Both will be gone when oil goes. Maybe we will be back to candles?