Energy Audit Tips
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Check the insulation levels in your attic,
exterior and basement walls, ceilings, floors, and crawl spaces.
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Check for holes or cracks around your walls,
ceilings, windows, doors, light and plumbing fixtures, switches, and
electrical outlets that can leak air into or out of your home.
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Check for open fireplace dampers.
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Make sure your appliances and heating and cooling
systems are properly maintained. Check your owner's manuals for the
recommended maintenance.
- Study your family's
lighting needs and use patterns, paying special attention to
high-use areas such as the living room, kitchen, and outside
lighting. Look for ways to use lighting controls
-- like occupancy
sensors, dimmers, or timers -- to reduce lighting energy use, and
replace standard (also called incandescent) light bulbs and fixtures
with compact or standard fluorescent lamps.
Evaluation Checklist for Home Energy Use
Formulating Your Plan
After you have
identified where your home is losing energy, assign priorities by asking
yourself a few important questions:
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How much money do you spend on energy?
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Where are your greatest energy losses?
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How long will it take for an investment in energy
efficiency to pay for itself in energy cost savings?
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Do the energy saving measures provide additional
benefits that are important to you (for example, increased comfort
from installing double-paned, efficient windows)?
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How long do you plan to own your current home?
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Can you do the job yourself or will you need to
hire a contractor?
- What is your budget and how
much time do you have to spend on maintenance and repair?
Once
you assign priorities to your energy needs, you can form a whole house
efficiency plan. Your plan will provide you with a strategy for making
smart purchases and home improvements that maximize energy efficiency
and save the most money. Another option is to get the advice of a
professional. Many utilities conduct energy audits for free or for a
small charge. For a fee, a professional contractor will analyze how well
your home's energy systems work together and compare the analysis to
your utility bills. He or she will use a variety of equipment such as
blower doors, infrared cameras, and surface thermometers to find leaks
and drafts. After gathering information about your home, the contractor
or auditor will give you a list of recommendations for cost-effective
energy improvements and enhanced comfort and safety. A good contractor
will also calculate the return on your investment in high-efficiency
equipment compared with standard equipment.
Heat
Loss from a House
A picture is worth...in this case, lost heating dollars. This thermal
photograph shows heat leaking from a house during those expensive winter
heating months. The white, yellow, and red colors show heat escaping.
The red represents the area of the greatest heat loss.

Tips for Finding a Contractor
- Ask neighbors and friends
for recommendations
- Look in the Yellow Pages
- Focus on local companies
- Look for licensed, insured
contractors
- Get three bids with details
in writing
- Ask about previous
experience
- Check references
- Check with the Better
Business Bureau
Excerpted from U.S. Department
of Energy, "Energy Saver$: Tips on Saving Energy & Money at Home,"
(Washington: National Renewable Energy Laboratory, 2006).
For more energy-saving
tips, see
Energy-Saving Tips.
Published and distributed
in furtherance of Acts of Congress of May 8 and June 30, 1914, by the
University of Maine Cooperative Extension, the Land Grant University of
the state of Maine and the U.S. Department of Agriculture cooperating.
Cooperative Extension and other agencies of the U.S.D.A. provide equal
opportunities in programs and employment.
Call 800-287-0274 or TDD
800-287-8957 (in Maine), or 207-581-3188, for information on
publications and program offerings from University of Maine Cooperative
Extension, or visit
www.umext.maine.edu. 2008
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