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A report released by the Energy Saving Trust shows each home will spend £200 a
year on electricity to power IT.
By 2020, personal computers along with other
communication and entertainment technologies will account for 45 per cent of all
electricity used in the home according to a report from the Energy Saving Trust.
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Do
our gadgets use more energy than they used to, or do we just have more of
them as technology becomes cheaper? |
The report also suggests that we will need as
many as 14 average sized power stations to produce the energy needed to keep
home IT powered.
The report points to modern entertainment appliances and electronics for causing
the hike in
energy costs and use. In 2005, the third most popular activity carried
out by people in the UK, aside from sleeping and working, was watching
TV/videos/DVDs and listening to music - activities all requiring a growing
number of gadgets.
In 1985, only 0.6 per cent of homes owned a mobile phone. In 2004, that number
rose to 96 per cent. In 1982 just three per cent of the population owned a
computer, compared to 60 per cent in 2004. Current figures also show that the
average family home also owns two to three televisions, one to two DVD players,
two music systems, one to two MP3 players, three cordless phones and a digital
camera, among other things.
Single person households are also contributing to the rise electronics use. By
2016, in the UK, 70 per cent of the total rise in households will be due to
single person households.
However, the report also shows that modern appliances are using more power than
conventional ones.
For example, plasma TVs use three times more energy than their conventional
counterparts. Digital radios use seven times as much power as traditional
analogue ones.
Even PCs in idle mode uses large amounts of energy. PCs lacking a manual 'off'
switch are a concern because they can sit idle for longs periods of time doing
nothing and still consuming energy to enable restart from a keyboard press or
other peripheral. The reports suggest buying laptops which consume, on average,
70 per cent less power than PCs.
"Think about how you are using appliances and turn equipment off when not needed
as well as rein in the impulse to hoard equipment that has already been
replaced," said Philip Sellwood, chief executive of the Energy Saving Trust.
"The average user could save £37 a year by avoiding standby use alone and some
of the 2020 energy burden projections could be curbed."
Sources: http://www.itpro.co.uk
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