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Seventeen Ways To Cut Your Fuel Bills

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Is It Right To Reclaim Bank Charges?

Published in Money Saving Tips on 19 September 2006

Winter approacheth and, therefore, so do higher energy bills. Here are seventeen ways to keep your costs down.

The office manager in one of my previous jobs was a tree-hugging nutter, God bless her. If there was anything she could do to protect the environment or help the poor, she would.

She often said that if you switch off your monitor during your lunch break, you'll save about £45-worth of electricity over the year. Now I don't know how accurate that statistic is, but I still considered it prudent to switch off my screen and not just because she could turn from a charmer to a battle axe when riled. For virtually no effort, I'll save a few pounds and do a little something for the environment. You'd have to be as cold as a stone to do otherwise!

As winter approaches, I think more about this and other little money-saving tips that we tend to dismiss. Looking back over my bills for the past twelve months, I pay a third more for electricity in winter than in summer and an extraordinary three-and-a-half times as much for gas!

Therefore, if there's ever a good time to start taking some of these ideas on board, it's right now before the cold sets in. Here are a few tips that I've collected from all over the Internet:

  • The old thermostat trick. Turn it down a degree or two. You probably won't notice the difference, but you could always wear a jumper if you have to. You could turn it down even more at night and when you're out of the house.

  • Lower the temperature of your hot water too.

  • Defrost your freezer regularly.

  • Insulation is an obvious one, but it can be expensive. Your attic roof, water tank and hot water pipes are good places to start. If you have an old house with not much outside wall insulation, you can reflect heat back in from radiators by putting radiator foil behind them. Failing that, kitchen foil with the shiny side facing the radiator will do.

  • Another expensive option is double glazing. A cheaper alternative is to draw your curtains! If you buy heavier curtains they'll provide better insulation.

  • Get your boiler serviced once a year. You'll want to do this before the winter rush for Corgi-registered plumbers.

  • Boil water in a kettle first before using a gas stove. Put a lid on the saucepan and use just enough water for your cup of tea or to boil your peas or whatever.

  • Switch off your electrical appliances when you're not using them; don't just leave them on standby.

  • Turn off radiators in unoccupied rooms.

  • Close the fireplace flue when it's not in use.

  • Allow at least three centimetres of space on each side of the fridge to increase circulation and reduce electricity consumption.

  • Keep your fridge in a cool place so it doesn't have to work so hard.

  • Buy energy-efficient light bulbs.

  • Turn lights off!

  • Generate your own electricity! See the Energy Saving Trust for more.

  • And, of course, switch off your monitor - or even your computer - when you stop for lunch!

These may seem trivial, but if your household picks just five that it can cope with the savings should add up nicely. With winter approaching and npower announcing yet another rise on 1st October, you should look also look for better deals with other utility providers (that's the seventeenth tip in case you were counting!).

It takes at least 28 days to switch, as your new supplier has to give sufficient notice to your previous one. So now is a great time to compare gas and electricity prices and switch to a cheaper deal before the cold winter weather arrives.

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Comments

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AdrianStannard 21 Jul 2008, 6:44pm

"Boil water in a kettle first before using a gas stove" WRONG! This is one of the misconceptions about energy by people with no basic scientific training. It takes the same amount of energy to boil 1 kg of water, regardless of whether that energy is from your gas stove or electric kettle. It might come to the boil quicker in your kettle, thats because your kettle is drawing a lot more power: the energy consumed is the product of power x time [indeed this is what is meant by the energy unit of kWhr on your bills]. You will always use the same amount of energy to heat 1kg of water to 100 degrees C, it is then obvious that doing it in less time will require more power.

Some bills will show you the price of gas in the equivalent kWh of energy - then you can make a direct comparison - despite the price hikes, gas is still much cheaper per kWh than electric, (with Ebico, gas is currently 2.86p/kWh, electricity is 12.23p/kWh) so if you have one, boil your water with your gas stove, and NOT electric kettle!

ian3marshall 21 Jul 2008, 8:17pm

The best way to save energy is to start with knowing exactly how much you are using.
I became aware of this in 2002 and changed suppliers from BGas/ NPower to atlantic dual fuel online, this gave us a 25% approx saving.

Then I began to monitor our usage and established we were using 22000Kwh of gas and 6000Kwh of electricity per year. We live in a 4 bedroomed house, 2 of us, and had 2 freezers and 3 fridges, built up from various times of peak need to store loads of wine and loads of food for famly parties etc so we cut down to one freezer, one fridge and 1 wine cooler.The others being stored in the garage and switched off but still providing useful storage space.

As the prices increased we became more aware of usage and by then I was monitoring the usage on a weekly basis instead of monthly and by early 2007 we had cut the usage to 16500Kwh of gas and 4000 Kwh of electricity per year, some 30% less, this done by switching lights off, also appliances switched off at the wall every night, lower temp on the thermostats ( my wife turns them up and I turn them down so she wears a fleece in the house sometimes) haven't gone to those funny light bulbs yet nor have we fully insulated the loft ( it has maybe 4 inches of stuff there) but we had cavity walls done in the 80's and double glazing in 2003.
At the end of last year we moved to Southern Electric's 2008 price fix ( prices fixed till Dec 2008) and made a saving on price by having no increase this year as yet.

About 3 months ago I invested £45 in a wireless energy monitoring device ( trade name is Owl) which is connected to the output from the elctricity meter and tells you exactly to 2 decimal places what your instantaneous usage of power is ie when everything is off we use 0.25 Kwh per hour, switch the electric kettle on and it shoots up to 3.25 per hour, normal lights and tv on says about 1.25 units, it also reads out greenhouse gas in kg/ hour if you want that mode on and you can programme in the Kwh price per unit and it will tell you the instataneous cost you are using, I don't use this facilty.

This is the type of meter we should all have fitted eventually when whoever is going to do it gets round to it but I wouldn't hold my breath.It is a useful product and a talking point to visitors, however you have to accept one is just a sad old bxxxxx for having one.

Another useful saving comes from monitoring the mistakes of the energy suppliers who make constant mistakes in the bills and seem to be ok to pay me a credit of £20 each time this happens and I usually get about £60 average per year so it does have a reasonable payback back but you have to watch them closely.

Finally now I know what usage I can achieve I shall keep in control and if it ever drifts ( it would left to my wife) I shall manage it back to the norm level.

Whatever turns you on but I am happy making good savings and doing my bit to save the planet.
Cheers
Ian

204panadil 11 Oct 2008, 1:32am

If you still have some hot water left in your gas kettle or saucepan when you have made your cup of tea, put it in a Thermos flask and use it to start off the next round of hot water. Use the residual heat in the kettle by rinsing it round with water from the cold tap and put that in the Thermos as well. By Newton's law of cooling this will reduce the loss of heat from the water in the Thermos. Then put a bit more cold water in the kettle and stand it on the gas ring you have just been using. This wll help bring up water from the temp. of the cold supply to room temperature. It may seem fiddly, but done every day for a year it will reduce gas consumption noticeably. I also toast my bread under the gas grill instead of using the electric toaster, using the same reasoning as applies to heating water - my gas is a quarter the price per KwH of electricity.

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