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Welcome to Eco Ave – greenest street in Scotland



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Published Date: 23 July 2008
SIX months ago, Chris McGuire would have thought nothing of having a bath instead of a shower and filling the kettle up to the top.
But now a few simple lifestyle changes, such as measuring out small quantities of water for a cup of tea and swapping baths for showers, have led her family to cut their use of gas and electricity by 47 per cent.

The McGuires live in Colinton Main
s Green, Edinburgh – a street that is leading the way across Scotland in slashing use of energy and cutting damaging carbon dioxide emissions.

Since launching a competition across the UK six months ago to cut energy use against seven other streets, the Edinburgh entrant has reduced its use of electricity and gas by almost 20 per cent.

British Gas, which is behind the Green Streets contest, says if every household in the UK followed suit, then it could save £4.6 billion.

In January, British Gas handed £30,000 to the residents of the street, which was spent on energy saving measures in homes, from cavity wall insulation, to push lawnmowers.

They also received a dedicated energy efficiency expert, Fiona Legge, to give advice on the most effective steps to change their lifestyles.

Ms Legge said the households taking part had been surprised by the difference small changes in habit can make.

“When they see the difference even just simple things like turning off lights can make, they are amazed,” she said.

“We gave them monitors so they can see how much energy they save if they don’t fill up the kettle and it has a real impact when they see it in kilowatts or monetary value.

“It’s about not wasting. It’s about using energy properly rather than wasting it.”

Matthew Lockwood, a senior research fellow in the climate team at the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), which carried out a study into the progress of the contest, said that it was a change in behaviour, as well as measures such as insulation, that has made a big difference.

“In quite a lot of cases where they haven’t had major measures put in, we still see large energy savings,” he said. “Many of them are clearly highly motivated to change their behaviour. You have to really want to do it and to sustain it, but once you have made the adjustments, it is quite easy to carry on.”

Steps taken involve turning off lights, not leaving appliances on standby, taking fewer baths, not filling the kettle to the top, switching off the oven early and using the remaining heat to complete cooking, and washing hair early in the evening so it can dry naturally without a dryer.

Mr Lockwood said turning it into a competition gave the households the push they needed to change their habits.

“I didn’t expect the competition element to be so important for people, but the feedback we have had suggests that it makes it fun. It keeps it in their mind and helps the motivation.”

Domestic energy use is responsible for about a quarter of all the country’s carbon dioxide emissions.

Mr Lockwood said this means it is crucial to reduce home energy use in order to meet Scottish Government targets to cut carbon emissions by 80 per cent by 2050.

He said even though governments are making pledges for all new homes to be zero-carbon, the vast majority of existing houses will still be producing large amounts of .

The IPPR is recommending the government take up three measures learned from the contest. Firstly, bring in neighbourhood energy advisers. One for every 20 streets would cost £500 million a year, compared with potential savings of £4.6 billion a year if all households cut energy use by 20 per cent.

Secondly, start incentives and finance packages to help pay for energy saving measures, such as reducing council tax for households that fit energy efficiency devices.

Finally, raise cash for prizes to inspire change – such as a £50,000 national prize. The households from streets in London, Manchester, Birmingham, Southampton, Leeds, Plymouth, Cardiff and Edinburgh are competing for a £50,000 top prize, to be spent on making a community building more energy efficient. Leeds is currently in the lead.

How we can all make a difference

THE Scotsman has its own campaign to encourage the nation to go green.

Let’s Go Green Together, launched with the Scottish Government six months ago, encourages people to sign up to a more environmentally-friendly lifestyle.

It centres around pledges people can make to help reduce their carbon emissions.

Anyone wanting to take part can sign up online at www.scotsman.com/gogreen or www.infoscotland.com/ourfuture.

The pledges cover simple measures such as recycling household waste, turning the tap off when brushing your teeth, switching to energy-saving light bulbs, leaving the car at home at least once a week, using rechargeable batteries instead of disposable ones, reusing carrier bags, paying back the environmental impact of any flights you take and not flying when there’s a suitable alternative.

Annie Fair

ANNIE Fair is so keen to save energy she has cut back on using her oven and now even bakes cakes in the microwave.

The retired 60-year-old has discovered she can steam vegetables, fish and bake potatoes in the microwave – and save the energy it takes to heat her fan-assisted oven.

“I have a meal ready in about five minutes,” she said.

“I even use it for baking cakes. I would never have thought of using a microwave for that, but it takes about six minutes in total.”

When her grandchildren visit, she times them in the shower, saves up her laundry until she has a full load to put in the washing machine, and takes care to switch off the lights when not in a room.

She said: “It’s so easy to get into the habit of just switching them off.”

At the start of the contest, Mrs Fair was given a new boiler by British Gas, as well as cavity wall insulation.

She said: “The difference in terms of the cavity wall insulation is amazing. The house is never cold.”

Before taking part in the competition, the grandmother of three said she had no idea how to save energy at home, but taking part in the competition has been an eye-opener.

“It’s so easy to get into the habit. When I put the kettle on I put a small drop into it now.

“I’m conscious about leaving my TV on. Before, if I was going for a walk I would leave it on. Now I would never think of doing that.”

The McGuires

CHRIS McGuire and her husband Derek have cut their use of electricity and gas almost in half since the start of the competition, making them one of the most successful families taking part.

Simple steps like turning off lights, and using the microwave instead of the oven, have seen their

total energy consumption cut by 47 per cent since January. This is one of the highest savings of any of the 64 households taking part.

Baths have been swapped for showers, and when they realised how much energy an oven uses they almost completely stopped using it.

Instead they use the microwave, or eat cold dishes.

They even stopped having toast for breakfast eating muesli instead, and drank water instead of boiling the kettle for tea and coffee.

Mrs McGuire, a teacher, said: “We just got used to it and it saved time in the morning, and was healthier as well.”

The 44-year-old admits that to begin with they became obsessed, using a meter to measure their energy use and hunting the house for appliances left on.

“We went to extremes and now we have stabilised,” she said. “We went through phases when we first started taking meter readings every day and writing them on the calendar.”

They use the washing machine at 30 degrees, but have found they have to put some of their young child’s messy clothes through the cycle twice.

Julie Lamb and Mike Smith

JULIE Lamb and her husband have been so enthusiastic about cutting their energy use that even their two young children have got involved.

As well as switching off lights, the family has made sure computers and other gadgets are not left on standby and draft excluders have been put along doors.

Ms Lamb, 39, said: “We have just been a bit more careful. Even the kids are getting in with that by making sure their bedroom lights are off.”

She said small steps have actually been the most challenging. “These are the biggest changes and probably the hardest because you realise how much you have been leaving the lights on.”

She said cutting down on baths was a difficult step for her. “I had to make a big sacrifice and have more showers,” she said.

Ms Lamb has been impressed by the response of her children, aged nine and six.

“My son, who likes computer games, remembers to switch the screen off,” she said.

“Hopefully this sort of thing will instil good practice in them, so when they grow up they will be more aware.”

She said they had always been keen to help the environment.

“It’s not as if we hadn’t ever thought about it, but we didn’t always know how to go about it, or how much it was going to cost. This has given us the push that we needed.”



The full article contains 1611 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

,

23/07/2008 00:21:05
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
2

Fifi la Bonbon,

23/07/2008 00:47:10
Will they supply the residents with smugmometers as well?
3

Boy Wonder,

23/07/2008 07:35:39
If they want to see real change, start with the poorest levels in our society who can't afford the increases in gas and electricity!
4

Louis Catorze,

23/07/2008 07:37:15
These people had to be told that not filling the kettle to the top, turning off lights and taking showers saves energy?

HOw do people so stoopid manage to survive in the real world?
5

techpunk,

23/07/2008 07:58:43
straight out of "brass eye".

:)
6

,

23/07/2008 08:14:55
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
7

bluehead,

edinburgh 23/07/2008 08:16:48
I thought people were already green!by that I mean green at the gills,through all the lecturing the people seem to suffer these days,if it is not one thing it is another.
britain seems to be lead along by the nose,there's always someone telling us what we should or should not be doing.
It is bad enough putting up with this abominable labour government, without advice from other nutcases,
try taking a long walk of a short pier to see if that may dull their enthusiasm.
what a diseased country this has become!!!!!
8

Slioch,

Scottish Highlands 23/07/2008 09:11:28
“It’s about not wasting. It’s about using energy properly rather than wasting it.”

From the comments in #1 to #7 above, it seems the most apt comment would be that, 'Its about being smart instead of stupid.'

But then I forgot, to save any energy requires you to be an eco-fascist and live in a cave.
9

eyeswide,

pixieland 23/07/2008 09:34:31
The horse's mouth:-

Testimony of Roy W. Spencer before the
Senate Environment and Public Works Committee on 22 July 2008

"I have a PhD in Meteorology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and have been involved in global warming research for close to twenty years. I have numerous peer reviewed scientific articles dealing with the measurement and interpretation of climate variability and climate change. I am also the U.S. Science Team Leader for the AMSR-E instrument flying on NASA’s Aqua satellite.

Despite decades of persistent uncertainty over how sensitive the climate system is to increasing concentrations of carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels, we now have new satellite evidence which strongly suggests that the climate system is much less sensitive than is claimed by the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

If true, an insensitive climate system would mean that we have little to worry about in the way of manmade global warming and associated climate change. And, as we will see, it would also mean that the warming we have experienced in the last 100 years is mostly natural. Of course, if climate change is mostly natural then it is largely out of our control, and is likely to end — if it has not ended already, since satellite-measured global temperatures have not warmed for at least seven years now."

10

Down with everything,

23/07/2008 10:01:15
#9

We all know or suspect this to be the case, at least those of us who do not swallow every morsel of popular opinion and the modern panic press.

Watch now as the learned fellow is labelled a crackpot by the press, or once-great scientist.

With regard to the story, the energy companies should follow the government's lead and increase dramatically the cost of our energy bills to offset against the terror that is climate change (note change of terminology since it isn't getting any warmer - more difficult to sell!!). This will encourage us to use less and save the planet.

Oh wait a minute............

11

Slioch,

Scottish Highlands 23/07/2008 10:01:56
9 eyeswide

[I see you are multi-posting. So I will have to multi-reply.]

"Roy [Spencer] does have a handful of peer-reviewed publications, some of which have quite decent and interesting results in them. However, the thing you have to understand is that what he gets through peer-review is far less threatening to the mainstream picture of anthropogenic global warming than you'd think from the spin he puts on it in press releases, presentations and the blogosphere."

"Roy has been pretty busy dishing out the confusion recently. ... his mass market book on climate change, entitled Climate Confusion, [was] published last month" raypierre, RealClimate.
see http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2008/05/how-to-cook-a-graph-in-three-easy-lessons/langswitch_lang/po#more-567

Gosh. Someone with a book to sell making controversial comments to the Senate about climate change. Now, I wonder why he should do that?

Let's wait to see if what he say has any validity. It appears that his claims about climate sensitivity have not been subjected to peer review.
12

Down with everything,

23/07/2008 10:03:55

They already have!!!!!!
13

MikeF,

the real world 23/07/2008 10:05:24
#9: What's the point here?
The IPCC is made up of a collection of scientists, politicians and others with oil based interests. If your man cannae get support for his view from them, what's it worth?
14

Down with everything,

23/07/2008 10:09:33

Fear = control = taxation/income generation

Keep us in our place, keep us afraid, keep us under ever stricter control.

You have nothing to fear as long as you are a good citizen and do nothing wrong.

but step out of line and you will be squished like the bug you are.

It's all getting a bit too 1984.
15

eyeswide,

23/07/2008 10:13:44
oops - wrong story. #11 Slioch So I will have to multi-rebuff (-;

I would point out that lying before The Senate is an imprisonable offense. Unlike lying to a movie going audience. Or lying on a blog. Or lying on TV. Or lying on the hustings.
16

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 23/07/2008 12:51:31
In the summer using the microwave is smart because the oven just heats up the whole house if you don't have air conditioning but in winter use the oven and turn down the heat because the ambient heat from the oven will heat up your kitchen and other parts of your house or apartment.

Showers are more sanitary than sitting in a tepid bath and use much less water. I haven't had a bath in years - but PLENTY of showers.

The latter comment had to be clarified to quell those who would say that I stink. I am as pure as the driven slush.
17

Dave from Barra ©,

Western Isles 23/07/2008 13:12:00
Tim

re: microwave usage. Is that your Canadian summer or our Scottish summer?

And I'm sure you are fragrant my good man.
18

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 23/07/2008 13:24:38
Dave from Barra

Our Canadian summers can go up to +45 Celsius with humidex factored in and our winters here in Ottawa can go down to -42 Celsius with windchill factored in.

We are a tough lot here - but not QUITE as tough as you Scots!
19

Dave from Barra ©,

Western Isles 23/07/2008 13:39:23
Tim

Most of you ARE Scots! And just as tough!

Sadly, we are not quite getting the 45 degree summer heat here....send some over will ya?!
20

A Clamper,

Edinburgh 23/07/2008 14:26:20
9# Pixieland, indeed.
Some of the rest of you, obviously have so much money that you don't mind throwing it away to the Gas and Electricity companies.
21

Geomac 1,

Scotland 23/07/2008 16:02:23
Is it just me or do we get one of these preaching articles every day from Ms Haworth? This is even more nonsense - did no-one tell these folks that a home's energy consumption goes down in the summer - the programme started in the winter and people seem to be claiming credit for reducing energy - yawn!!!
22

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 23/07/2008 16:56:12
I do most of this "green" stuff anyway but not from a sense of guilt that I am somehow overwarming the planet (I think the sun already does a great job), but from the viewpoint of efficient use of scarce resources and it costs less, so leaving more money to run my 4x4. Which incidentally has been getting an average of 42mpg before the eco-bams start leaping up and down - more than some small cars.

There is a cure for higher gas bills - just shut the bl**dy stuff off when you don't really need it and heat one two rooms you do use a lot with an oil-filled radiator. In this way my power account is now in credit for once. On principle I am about to switch from gas to air heat exhange central heating as the power companies now regard us, courtesy of the GW/CC myth as cash cows like never before.
23

John99,

UK 23/07/2008 17:31:42
I like to read about all the things we can do to go green and also see it being done as well via videos. I came across a site called GreenEnergyTV.com and saw some great videos and they have a category for Europe.

Here is a link to a great video of Scotland: http://greenenergytv.com/Watch.aspx?1659880053

J
24

Saoghal Beag,

23/07/2008 20:33:17
22 Mr Angry, you are shwitching to an air source heat pump. good i do hope you have got a good grasp on the options out there. they are great at maintaining a constant heat which if you have a home with significant thermal mass, ie a stone built house, it may well be the best option. Set your thermostat at a low and constant temp to start with. ours never rises about 2 through winter in a house built in the 1600s. the constant temps work weel with the house and the heating costs are minimal comapred to what the utlities think it should cost.
25

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 23/07/2008 22:01:14
24 Saoghal Beag

Thanks for that encouraging comment - my house is a traditional build 30's one with stone facing and an internal skin of brick. It needs cavity wall insulation which I'm about to do. It already has the loft insulation done. As I understand it insulation with this (as with any) heating system is pretty vital. I've had a look at a couple of options so far, with the main problem trying to get them on site to do a quote! Unbelievable. Here I stand with money in hand and they won't tell me how they're going to take it. I will just persist. It will be worth investigating thoroughly from the viewpoint of the relative newness of the technology although it's just a reverse fridge, basically, but not many have it installed yet. It's also encouraging to hear that your costs are much less than traditional methods. The constant heat seems to be a useful feature and although I'm not sure what "2" means (presumably the control setting for fan and pump). The low cost aspect seems apparent from what case studies I have found, but it is good to have some independent verification.

Thanks again.

26

Robbierunciman,

Romney Marsh 23/07/2008 22:18:41
perhaps there can be "ECOS SE" now, with MEPs taking steps to reduce their carbon footprints?

27

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 23/07/2008 22:25:46
19 Dave from Barra

Consider it done.

Will arrive at 6:43 a.m. your time on Friday - but don't quote me on that.

 

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