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Animal fats, cooking oil, and motor oil are
recyclable.
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Did you know that
cooking oil and grease poured down drains can build up in pipes
causing backups at home, into streets and the storm drain system. Proper
disposal of your cooking oil and other greases and fats will help
prevent a sewage backup in your home. Overflows can pose health and
environmental hazards, polluting the local water supply.
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9 out of 10 people would recycle more if it
were made easier
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If you reduce the temperature setting of your water heater from 140
degrees to 120 degrees F, you could save over 18 percent of the energy
used at the higher setting. Even reducing the setting 10 degrees will
save more than 6 percent in water-heating energy.
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You’ll be surprised to know that one of the
biggest problems for the city’s sewer system is common grease, oil, and
fats from cooking.
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Air-conditioning energy use can be reduced 40 percent or more by shading
windows and walls. Position trees and shrubs to keep the sunshine off
the building and nearby ground.
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A
single quart of motor oil, if disposed of improperly, can contaminate up
to 2,000,000 gallons of fresh water.
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A
dripping faucet can waste up to 20 gallons of water a day.
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A
leaking toilet can waste up to 200 gallons of water a day.
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Oil and grease, primarily generated from restaurants and other
institutional food service establishments, are major contributors to
sewer line blockages and overflows.
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Disposing of restaurant grease into storm drains or down manhole covers
is illegal under the Texas Litter Abatement Act
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If every gas-heated home were properly caulked and weather stripped,
we'd save enough natural gas each year to heat about 4 million homes.
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Every year, each American throws out about 1,200 pounds of organic
garbage that can be recycled.
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The human body gives off heat, about 390 Btu's an hour for a man, 330
for a woman. Dressing wisely can help you maintain natural heat in the
winter. Wear closely woven fabrics. They add at least a half degree in
warmth.
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Used cooking grease can be recycled as animal feed additives, in soap
production, oils, cosmetic and skin care products, and in composting.
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If every household in the United States lowered its average heating
temperature 6 degrees over a 24-hour period, we would save the
equivalent of more than 570,000 barrels of oil per day.
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If every household in the United States raised air-conditioning
temperatures 6 degrees, we'd save the equivalent of 190,000 barrels of
oil every day.
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Approximately 80 percent of the energy consumed by a dishwasher is used
to heat water; a typical dishwasher uses 14 gallons of hot water per
load.
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The amount of solar radiation that reaches the earth's surface in
approximately 3 days equals roughly the total energy content of all
known supplies of fossil fuels.
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Fluorescent lights convert electricity to visible light up to 5 times
more efficiently than incandescent lights and last up to 20 times
longer.
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The incandescent light is the most common lighting source in U.S.
homes. It also wastes the most energy. Ninety percent of the energy
consumed by an incandescent light is given off as heat rather than
visible light.
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Between 1978 and 1991, there was a 4-5 percent loss of ozone in the
stratosphere over the United States, which represents a significant loss
of ozone. A thinned-out ozone layer could lead to more skin cancers and
cataracts; scientists are also investigating possible harm to
agriculture. Destruction of stratospheric ozone is attributed to CFCs
and related chemicals. CFCs are widely used as refrigerants in such
appliances as refrigerators, freezers, air conditioners, and heat
pumps.
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A
transit bus with as few as seven passengers uses less fuel per passenger
mile than a typical car with only a driver in it.
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A
transit bus with full rush hour load of 44 passengers uses much less
fuel than 11 cars with 4 passengers each.
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A
fully loaded rail car is 15 times more energy efficient than the average
automobile.
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Increasing mass transit ridership by 10 percent in the five largest
metropolitan areas would save 135 million gallons of gasoline a year,
while also reducing emissions of air pollutants.
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Boosting the occupancy of automobiles in rush hour from one to two
persons would save 40 million gallons of gasoline a day (or over 15
percent of U.S. gasoline consumption), while reducing the number of
vehicles on the road.
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One gallon of used motor oil when recycled yields the same amount of
refined lubricating oil--2.5 quarts-- as 42 gallons of crude oil.
Recycle your used motor oil!!!
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The United States uses 400 billion gallons of water per day.
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If every American home installed low-flow faucet aerators, 250 million
gallons of water would be saved every day.
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New energy-efficient motors are about 5 points higher in efficiency and
operate about 10 degrees C cooler than repaired standard design motors.
In a study of over 100 motors, they also operated just under their full
load rated current, compared to repaired standard motors which exceeded
full load rated amps by about four percent.
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Trains are among the most energy-efficient mode of transport. In the
United States, trucks use more than eight times as much energy to
transport freight between cities as trains.
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Trains are among the most energy-efficient mode of transportation.
Based on a measure of the amount of energy required to move one
passenger one kilometer in the United States, an intercity train uses
948 kilojoules. A commercial airplane, on the other hand, uses three
times this amount of energy, and an automobile with a single occupant
uses six times this amount of energy.
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Electronic ballast manufacturers suggest that new energy-efficient
electronic ballast and T-8 lamp systems offer energy savings of up to 41
percent over conventional electromagnetic ballast and lamp systems, with
no loss of light or performance.
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Replacing an incandescent bulb with a compact fluorescent will save the
energy equivalent of 46 gallons of oil as well as one-half ton of carbon
dioxide emissions over the lifetime of the bulb.
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A
new model refrigerator uses about a third the energy to operate as a
similarly sized refrigerator from the early 1970s. If you replace a
1973 18-cubic foot refrigerator with an energy-efficient 1996 model of
the same size, each year you would save over 1,000 kWh of electricity
and reduce emissions of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, by over a ton
and emissions of sulfur dioxide, the leading cause of acid rain, by over
20 pounds.
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Horizontal-axis clothes washers use a third less water than conventional
vertical-axis clothes washers. This not only saves you water, but also
the energy to heat some of that water when you use hot water.
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For every kilowatt-hour of electricity you save, you also avoid pumping
over two pounds of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. This helps the
environment because carbon dioxide is the number one contributor to
global warming.
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For every mile-per-hour over 55 mph, the average car or truck loses
almost two percent in gas mileage.
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If the energy used to power office equipment were cut in half using
available technologies, the resultant reduction in carbon dioxide
emissions would be equivalent to removing 6,750,000 automobiles from
U.S. streets.
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The average U.S. home uses the energy equivalent of 1,253 gallons of oil
every year.
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Americans receive enough junk mail in one day that could heat 250,000
homes.
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If 100,000 people stopped their junk mail, we could save about 150,000
trees every year. If a million people stopped their junk mail, we could
save about 1.5 million trees.
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It is estimated that 50 percent to 80 percent of the tires rolling on
U.S. roads are underinflated. Driving with tires that are underinflated
increases "rolling resistance," wasting up to 5% percent of a car's
fuel. We could save up to 2 billion gallons of gasoline annually simply
by properly inflating our tires.
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If all the cars in the United States were equipped with the most
efficient tires possible, the fuel savings would equal 400,000 barrels
of oil per day.
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If 10,000 families with four members each installed inexpensive low-flow
aerators on their kitchen and bathroom sink faucets, they'd reduce water
consumption by more than 33 million gallons a year.
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The American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy estimates that if
each of us increased the energy efficiency of our major appliances by 10
to 30 percent, we'd reduce the demand for electricity by the equivalent
of 25 large power plants.
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In 1994, for the first time in its history, the United States imported
more than 50 percent of its petroleum, a level of dependence that
aggravates the trade deficit and leaves the American economy vulnerable
to oil price shocks.
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Residents of Los Angeles drive 142 million miles every day--roughly the
same distance between Earth and Mars.
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According to the Natural Resources Defense Council, leaky automobile air
conditioners are the single largest source of CFC emissions to the
atmosphere in the United States.
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Cars emit 20 pounds of carbon dioxide for every gallon of gas consumed.
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According to one expert, if America refined the billion gallons of motor
oil they use every year, we would save 1.3 million barrels of oil every
day, which represents half the daily output of the Alaska Pipeline.
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According to the American Paper Institute, the average American consumes
about 120 pounds of newsprint each year -- the equivalent of one tree.
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If everyone in the United States recycled one-tenth of their newspapers,
we would save about 25 million trees every year.
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More than 500,000 trees are used to supply Americans with their Sunday
newspapers every week.
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Manufacturing glass from recycled cullet uses up to 32 percent less
energy than producing glass from raw materials.
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The energy saved from recycling one glass bottle will light a 100-watt
bulb for four hours.
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Producing glass from recycled glass cullet rather than from raw
materials reduces related air pollution by 20 percent and water
pollution by 50 percent.
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Disposable (throwaway) bottles consume three times as much energy as
reusable, returnable bottles.
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Each ton of glass produced from raw materials generates about 385 pounds
of mining waste; using 50 percent recycled glass reduces this waste by
almost 80 percent.
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Recycling and reusing the material in tin cans reduces related energy
use by 74 percent; air pollution by 85 percent; solid waste by 95
percent; and water pollution by 76 percent.
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According to the Aluminum Association, Americans recycled 62.7 billion
aluminum cans in 1995.
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Producing aluminum from recycled aluminum consumes 90 percent less
energy than producing it from raw materials and generates 95 percent
less air pollution.
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Waterbeds can be the largest consumer of electricity in the home,
exceeding even the refrigerator and water heater. If you heat your
water bed, practice simple energy conservation measures to reduce its
energy consumption.
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Globally, each year we pump 20 billion tons of carbon dioxide into the
atmosphere--which comes to four tons for every man, woman, and child.
Of this amount, the United States is responsible for one quarter, or
five billion tons per year.
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It is estimated that as a result of the appliance efficiency standards
that went into effect at the beginning of 1990, Americans saved more
than 30 billion kWh of electricity in 1995.
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Between 1973 and 1986 the U.S. economy grew by 36 percent with no
increase in energy use. If Americans had not become more energy
efficient, annual energy bills would have been $150 billion higher.
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Boosting the fuel efficiency of cars in the United States by a mere 1.5
miles-per-gallon would save more oil than is estimated to lie under the
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
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Adding low-emissivity (low-E) coatings to all windows in the United
States would save the equivalent of 500,000 barrels of oil per
day--one-third the amount of oil we import from the Persian Gulf.
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Approximately 90 percent of the energy consumed by a clothes washer is
for heating water.
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Every year in the United States we throw away 1.741 billion incandescent
bulbs - enough to fill two large stadiums