I did not do anything extra in 2004. We have not owned a car for 30 years, and managed to raise 3 children in a suburb without owning a car, something lots of people say is impossible. (Now they are adult, do not complain about hte experience, and only one owns a car)
For space heating and hot water we use a heat pump, which is a very efficient way of using electricy for heating. No change since last year.
Unlike our neighbors, we do not have any outdoor lightning in the garden, and are very careful to turn out lights.
We have no dryer for clothes (in winter we hang them in the basement, in summer outdoors or occasionally indoors when it is rainy).
Unfortunately, I made four airplane trips in 2004 - much more than usual.
Two new things - I built a solar stove but due to the cloudy weather and high latitude, 59th parallell, it did not really cook anything - heated water for dish washing though. In winter I have started to put water bottles outside to freeze and then put them into the fridge - really paradoxical to use lots of energy to cool things while simultanousely using energy to heat the kitchen where the fridge is standing.
I guess I also had a few more vegetarian dinners from home-grown veggies.
Due to the air travel, I am sure I have used a lot more energy and particularly more oil products this year than last year. But perhaps it is better anyway to get PO sooner than later - the sooner it happens the fewer of the world's people have adapted to an oil-burning daily lifestyle, as in car culture, which makes the transition easier. And fewer people will have build their lives around servicing the tourist industry. If the whole world could agree to power down and use just a little oil every year it would be different. Then it would better to postpone PO
