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- <text id=90TT0265>
- <title>
- Jan. 29, 1990: Money Angles
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 29, 1990 Who Is The NRA?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 62
- MONEY ANGLES
- Throw a Few More Kernels on the Fire
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Andrew Tobias
- </p>
- <p> The bad news (just to get it out of the way) is that the
- energy crisis seems to be resurgent. One sign: energy-related
- stock prices have been rising in greedy anticipation. Shares in
- Offshore Logistics, which leases helicopters to offshore
- drillers, rose from $2 a share to $12 last year. A less oblique
- sign is that the U.S. is back to importing fully 46% of its oil,
- or 7.9 million bbl. a day, the largest percentage in ten years.
- Domestic production of crude oil recorded its biggest decline
- ever last year, falling to a 26-year low.
- </p>
- <p> The good news is that there are things you can do about it.
- I don't know how much time you spend glued to the Weather
- Channel, but here's what I learned watching it one night: it
- makes sense to run ceiling fans in the winter! Just turn the
- blades so they push the air down. Instead of cold feet and warm
- ceilings, a gently rotating fan will even things out so you
- don't have to turn the heat up so high. (In summer switch the
- direction of the blades and increase the speed. The wind chill
- will make it feel like 72 degrees, even though the thermostat's
- set at 78 degrees.) A ceiling fan, says the weather lady, takes
- no more energy than a 100-watt light bulb.
- </p>
- <p> If you have no ceiling fan, then how about a Dove-Tech
- corn-burning stove? It's too early to tell for certain how well
- this really works--only 4,000 have been sold so far--but it
- sure seems to solve a lot of problems: the energy crisis (we're
- the Saudi Arabia of corn), the pollution crisis (the kernels
- burn far cleaner than wood, coal or oil), the farm crisis
- (Dove-Tech will even burn moldy surplus), the trade deficit
- (American corn, not imported oil), the deforestation crisis
- (chop corn, not trees), the safety crisis (corn isn't
- dangerous, and you can put this stove flush against a wall--or even sit on it--because the housing doesn't get hot) and
- the chimney crisis (Dove-Tech doesn't need one; you can vent it
- the same as you would a dryer, or hook it in to your existing
- ductwork).
- </p>
- <p> True, the current models may be a little ugly, and they're
- not cheap--about $1,800--but the long-term savings over oil
- or electric heat can be dramatic. And what you don't burn, you
- can pop (just kidding). Dan and Barbara Burbank, who are using
- one to heat their eleven-room New Hampshire home, say it costs
- about $5 a day, and they're thrilled. Last winter they burned
- seven cords of wood, at $130 a cord, and over a thousand gallons
- of oil. So far this year, just $400 worth of corn. (For more
- information: Dove Energy Systems, Box 399, Fletcher, N.C.
- 28732.)
- </p>
- <p> But c'mon. Corn stoves? Just to be sure this is a good idea,
- I called Amory Lovins, who quit Harvard after his sophomore year
- ("I was paying Harvard, so I felt Harvard should let me study
- what I wanted") and has since written twelve books, garnered
- five honorary degrees and become a world leader in energy
- conservation and research. Not that I was going to let any of
- that damp my enthusiasm for corn stoves.
- </p>
- <p> It turns out that burning corn is O.K., but that growing it,
- at least the way it's grown now, is not. Lovins says the erosion
- modern farming causes eats two bushels of topsoil for every
- bushel of corn produced. Agricultural strip mining. So in his
- view, corn stoves may make the best sense only in regions where
- there's lots of corn (especially if it's rotting in silos) but
- few trees.
- </p>
- <p> Lovins' approach to the energy and pollution crises is
- "negawatts." Don't curtail your comfort, just obtain it more
- efficiently. You can "produce" fuel simply by arranging to need
- less of it. His own toasty, superinsulated 4,000-sq.-ft.
- Colorado home and office complex is heated entirely by the sun's
- rays, even when it's ten below, by the warmth of the lights and
- appliances, and by the body heat of the human occupants and one
- "50-watt beastoid"--his dog (which can be revved up to the
- equivalent of 100 watts when excited). His specially made,
- thick-walled 16-cu.-ft. refrigerator runs on less than 10% of
- the electricity required by conventional models. Its
- Freon-charged heat pipe employs the cold outside to cool the
- unit in winter. If everyone used such refrigerators, he
- calculates, the U.S. could do without $50 billion worth of power
- plants, along with all the fuel they consume and pollution they
- spew forth. And that's just on refrigerators! (For a $2
- Visitors' Guide to the house: Rocky Mountain Institute,
- Snowmass, Colo. 81654.) All told, Lovins calculates that if the
- U.S. were as efficient as its competitors in Europe and Japan,
- it would save $200 billion a year. Some of that savings could be
- yours.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, with the stock market on Dristan (even Offshore
- Logistics has fallen back a bit), your best investment these
- days may be attic insulation, window caulking, door sweeps on
- the bottoms of your doors (to cut drafts), low-energy bulbs,
- more efficient appliances, faucet aerators and more frugal
- shower heads (to cut hot-water consumption)--a corn stove, of
- course--and a snug-fitting pet door for your own beastoid. If
- you invest $2,500 in such things and lower your utility bills
- $50 a month as a result, you earn a $600 (or 24%) annual
- tax-free return on your money. Not too shabby. Of course, if
- you move, you stop "earning" that 24%. But the planet doesn't.
- And, though it may be hard to quantify, a house that can be
- shown to have low heating and electric costs is likely to sell
- at a premium over one that does not.
- </p>
- <p>[For pamphlets on The Most Energy-Efficient Appliances and on
- Saving Energy and Money with Home Appliances, send $3 each to
- the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy, Suite 535,
- 1001 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036.]
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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