Sunday, November 7, 2010

We, the moderate people

The center determines who governs; that is the only national mandate; Dems and GOP - ignore at your peril.



The relatively narrow band of independent voters put Pres. Obama into office and took the House from the Democrats. They (OK, we) don't want one party in the White House and leading Congress (see Jonathan Rauch column in the NYT) . Neither party has a monopoly on hubris. Speakers Gingrich and Pelosi made the same mistake - winning the middle is not a national mandate for the positions that won a primary or district. If either party wants to get and keep the radical moderates of the middle they will need to govern, not just occupy government.

Monday, November 1, 2010

What I learned from my smart meter – so far

DISCLOSURE - I work for and buy my power from Reliant Energy.

Local electric distribution utility Centerpoint installed my smart meter sometime in July or August, I think. I don’t know the exact date because I must have missed the notice or doorhanger telling me when it would be installed. I knew something was up because the digital clock on my microwave was flashing ‘12:00’ one afternoon. That weekend I noticed the new meter and figured it out - they have to cut the power briefly to swap the meters. I admit I was a little excited, but, then, I’ve been tracking how much power I use every month since we moved to Texas in 2001.

So I wrote down all the pertinent information – the ESI ID and meter number – an headed to smartmetertexas.com, the web site sponsored by a consortium of electric transmission and distribution service providers (TDSPs) doing business in the state of Texas that lets you see how much electricity you use - in 15-minute chunks. Unfortunately (at least for me) it takes time – like 4-6 weeks – for the data from the meter to start showing up on the website.

So, several weeks later I registered, and could see a 24-hour chart showing how much electricity my house used every 15 minutes. Unfortunately there is no easy way to compare one day to the next, or one week to the next, and it doesn’t have anything about cost. But it does give me an idea of when we use the most power, even if it is delayed about 48 hours.

Once the data started showing up there, I was able to sign up for Reliant’s Weekly Summary Email. This free service for Reliant customers with smart meters has three things that I really like.

First, it estimates my monthly bill based on how much power I’ve already used. I’ve got average billing, so the amount I pay each month doesn’t change much, but knowing that month-end amount early on let’s me decide if I want to change something – like raising the AC a couple of degrees – to cut my use and save some cash.

Second, it gives me a graph that shows three different bits of information – the high and low temperature for each day; how much electricity I used and when during each day compared to the same day the week before; and our daily electricity cost.

Third, each weekly email has a tip on how to lower my bill – dropping the temp on the hot water heater, keeping my AC filters clean, etc.

I’ve gotten four of these emails so far – what have I learned?

1. I use almost twice as much electricity on a weekend day as on the other days of the week.
2. The outside temperature makes a difference.
3. Doing the laundry costs $3 - $5 in electricity.

Number one is easy to understand and makes sense. I’ve got programmable thermostats set to raise the AC temperature on weekdays when no one is home. It probably has the same setting on the weekend, but since there is usually someone in the house we use the over-ride to keep it cooler.

Number two makes sense as well – when it’s hotter outside your AC has to work harder to keep the same temperature.

The third took a little longer to figure out. I noticed that every Tuesday we used about $3 - $5 more in power and there was a morning and an afternoon spike. After a few weeks I got it – laundry day. My wife usually does the family laundry on Tuesday. She starts in the morning, does errands around mid-day, and finishes in the afternoon. One note – I do offer to help with the washing, but I’ve been judged incompetent in that area.

What have I learned? A few things:

o For what it does for us, power is pretty cheap. My average cost with the temperature in the upper-80s was $8-$9 each day. Even though that adds up to a lot for a year, it isn’t much for comfort and security at home.

o Change the temperature. Running the AC can make up as much as 50-60% of summertime electricity bills in Houston. Keeping the system well-maintained (change those filters) and cutting back on the amount of time the system runs will have a bigger impact that just about anything else. I tweaked the schedule on the programmable thermostat - we’ll see if that makes a difference.

o Time-of-use might make sense. Looking at that Tuesday laundry spike, I thought that shifting laundry to off-peak times – usually after 8 or 9 at night and all weekend long – might make sense. Reliant’s off-peak TOU price is about 14% lower than the peak price, so I could theoretically save fifty to seventy cents each laundry day.

What do I want to learn? A few more things:

o What does each appliance cost? A friend tells me that his pool pump costs him about $1000 (that is a thousand) each year. If I can measure that and cut it by just 10%, that would be worth it. If I know what each energy purchase decision (that’s what we do when we turn on something) costs, I’ll be able to make more rational and effective choices.

o What’s my ‘baseload?’ It would be cool to know how much power my house uses when we’re not doing anything – like at 3 in the morning. Maybe not all that useful, but still interesting.

o What are the trade-offs? If I know my clothes washer costs $1.00 of power per load (just guessing here) and I can buy one that claims to be more efficient, I can better make the decision if it is worth the expense of the new machine.

For those I’ll have to wait for the next device – a home energy monitor, hopefully coming soon.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

At Home: A Short History of Private Life

Bill Bryson tells the story of life by describing his hallway

Bryson’s new book is a masterful balance of scale. He uses the layout and history of his small house – a former parsonage – in England as the framework for a story about why we live the way we do. Whether writing about the gifted amateurs who created some of the most enduring habitation-building techniques or the quaint sociology that allowed village parsons to live well – until they couldn’t – follows the tradition of Bryson’s best quirky, observation-based writing.

The Wave – In Pursuit of the Rogues, Freaks and Giants of the Ocean

Surfers and scientists chase giant waves - great read - no, really

Susan Casey’s subtitle could be about the mysterious giant waves that have wreaked havoc on unsuspecting ships and over-confident surfers, or about those surfers and the equally-obsessed scientists who actively seek out the unpredictable monster swells. I don’t know and I don’t care. This is a compelling narrative that mixes history, science, global surf-culture and manic behavior into an adrenalin-rush of a book.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Note to Pres - the EV jobs are in the network

To really reap the benefit of electric vehicles, we need infrastructure, not just battery manufacturing.

It's great that Pres Obama is highlighting the benefits of getting more electric vehicles on American roads, but to reap the real sustained benefits - lower imports of oil for transportation and reduced carbon emissions - and create significant numbers of jobs, we need to build the infrastructure. Broad adoption of mass-produced EVs and plug-in hybrids will depend on two things - the vehicles have to be accepted as 'real' mass market cars, and someone will have to build the ecosystem - home and network charging, and a cellphone-like value package, so that owing and operating an EV is easy and at least comparable in cost to a gasoline power vehicle.

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Curve update 2010

Return to Prosperity, Arthur Laffer - Entertaining take on cap-and-trade, cash-for-clunkers by Regan-era economics guru

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Summer help in the TX heat

Reliant Energy assistance for seniors and others in need http://tinyurl.com/2awjung

Simple, cheap energy savings

Reliant Energy customer home energy audit covered by Jeff Ehling Houston ABC 13 http://tinyurl.com/23zjm4x

Sunday, February 21, 2010

The Billionaire's Vinegar

GQ writer on wine, Jefferson, 1990's style conspicuous consumption, self-reinvention and the perils of obsession - great read

Benjamin Wallace brings together history, fraud, people with more money than sense and some really colorful characters and looks into the briefly fascinating world of really old wine enthusiasts. Detailing what looks - in hindsight - almost farcical - heated bidding for bottles of uncertain provenance as trophies, Wallace blends Jefferson's bring French wine to the young America

Molly Ivins - A Rebel Life

very readable bio of TX journalist - great overview of political/culturtal changes in Texas and Houston

There is no doubt that authors Minutaglio and Smith - who make their personal ties to Ivins clear - venerate their subject - the warts and all treatment is credible, but the warts are really interesting. The narrative - near-debutante becomes back-room political reporter becomes national reporter becomes commentator - is compelling for the hard work that Ivins put in before she reached prominence and influence. Political commentary backed by solid reporting and experience. I'm not sure if today's media market could produce another like her.