Your Energy Needs
Understanding Sustainability & Your Energy Needs |
| To appreciate the impact that our energy usage has had on earth, particularly over the last 100 years, it is important to understand where energy comes from and how it affects climate change. | |
Millions of years ago land-plants and sea algae absorbed energy from sunlight. This ‘energy’ was then consumed by fish and animals. When the plants and animals died they were buried in mud and, over time, became fossilised. Under intense pressure and heat, from deep in the earth, plants became coal and animals formed crude oil and natural gas, which was trapped in tiny pores of sandstone rock. These are fossil fuels.
By burning these fossil fuels we release the energy they contain, which allows us to generate steam in a power station boiler which, in turn, drives a generator to produce electricity. We also use these fossil fuels when we heat our homes and drive our cars.
GO THAT STEP FURTHER AND THINK “RENEWABLE
ENERGY”
| Most of the energy we use today is generated by fossil fuels. These are finite resources and, therefore, not sustainable. So, not only are they bad for the environment, they will also eventually run out. The sustainable alternative is renewable energy which will never be exhausted. The main sources of renewable energy are the sun (solar energy), the wind, moving water (hydropower, wave and tidal energy), heat below the surface of the earth (geothermal energy) and biomass (wood, waste, energy crops). Ireland is rich in all of these and their use will reduce harmful greenhouse emissions as well as presenting opportunities to reduce our reliance on imported fuels. | |
| | Several renewable energy technologies are now commercially viable and capable of supplying clean, economical heat and power in your home. When building or renovating your home consider installing solar panels on your roof, to save on your heating bills, or use passive solar design to maximise energy from the sun. Or simply consider room layout and window location/size to gain maximum benefit from the sun's free heat and light. Solar energy is clean, environmentally friendly, inexhaustible and free. Alternatively there are a variety of heat pumps that convert the heat of water, air or the earth to warm your home. |
HOW DOES RENEWABLE ENERGY CONTRIBUTE TO SUSTAINABILITY?
![]() | This is an important question and gets to the heart of the objectives of sustainable energy. The answer is straightforward: most renewable energy sources are directly influenced by the sun, which provides us with an infinite, sustainable resource through the cycles of nature. This could be the sun stimulating growth in plants, causing thermal currents and creating the wind, or causing precipitation resulting in river currents. As long as there is light from the sun we can generate renewable energy, encouraging us to reduce our demand and consumption of fossil fuels, thereby reducing the likely impacts of climate change. |
Sustainability is a wise approach to take to the way we live. And using energy in a more sustainable way is a part of this approach. We can save money, reduce imports, protect the environment, and move society forward in a positive manner enabling future generations to avail of the vital resources we now take for granted. If we adopt the sustainable approach now, we win as individuals and we win as a society.
Everyone can decide how they want to live.
Shaping society together starts by shaping our individual behaviour.
![]() | Turn your heating down. Reducing your thermostat by 10 Celsius will cut your heating bill |
| | Buy A rated kitchen appliances. They cost less to run and over time they will give you considerable savings on your electricity bill. |
| | Insulate your attic. Attic insulation will keep the heat in your home for longer and it will pay for itself in 2-3 years. |
| | At night, pull the curtains to stop heat being lost through the windows. Take care not to drape curtains over radiators as this will funnel heat straight out of the windows |
| | Turn your TV off rather than leave it on standby. Equipment on standby uses up to 20% of the energy it would use when fully on. |
![]() | Use energy efficient light bulbs instead of traditional bulbs. They use 1/5th of the energy and last up to 10 times as long. |
| | Fit a lagging jacket. Lagging your hot water cylinder will keep the water hotter for longer and pay for itself in just 2-3 months. |
| | Heat the amount of water you really need and if you're using an electric kettle, make sure you cover the elements. More modern kettles have no visible element so you use less water, you could also try to fill a cup and use it as a guide to fill the kettle, so that you boil the right amount of water |
Contact Us for further information or to arrange an appointment
Email; info@wilsondea.co.uk
Telephone/Fax 01723 583747 Mobile 07815738049
Wilson Energy Assessors, 18 Westway, Eastfield, Scarborough, North Yorkshire, YO11 3ED



