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By Warren Swil
Have you recently awoken in the dead of night to find a greenish blue
haze swirling around your home, even though you turned off all the
lights before going to bed?
It's not the ghost of Aunt Betsy returning to haunt you. Most likely
it is the rapidly increasing plethora of tiny light-emitting diodes
featured on modern electronic appliances, many of which indicate that
a machine is in "standby" mode. In fact, it's probably been
years since you really turned "off" your desktop computer
or, for that matter, your television.
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Most modern electronics come equipped with either standby or
"sleep" functions. First made widely available on computers
and TVs, this state of limbo was created to avoid time-consuming waits
when machines start up. We've all spent dozens of hours cumulatively
waiting after we push the start button as our computers read and load
all the programming code necessary to get ready. In the era of vacuum
tubes, it took televisions several minutes before the picture became
visible.
In standby, a machine is not really turned off. It goes into a state
of reduced activity that requires only minimal power consumption. The
downside is that even at vastly reduced power levels, millions of
machines running all day, every day adds up to huge amounts of wasted
energy. With oil prices at record highs and the climate under threat
from excessive consumption of fossil fuels, this is neither smart nor
desirable.
It's not the tiny lights themselves that are at fault -- they're a
marvelous, energy-saving invention. Rather, it's what they indicate: a
seemingly unstoppable proliferation of devices that siphon power even
while not in use.
A new-model Braun razor features not one but three LEDs as part
of its self-cleaning system. Two lights are green, one blue.
"Keep it plugged in," the instructions say.
It's the same for office equipment. Count the little lights on your
desk at home. A new DSL modem has six green LEDs, five of which are
always on when the machine is plugged in. A copier/fax/printer (which
must always be on to receive faxes day or night) has two green ones.
The computer monitor may have a blue one. There's a green LED on every
computer speaker, a red one on the radio dial. And that's not counting
the green clocks on the microwave and coffee maker.
Not surprisingly, some people are becoming concerned by this trend.
In June 2005, British Environment Minister Elliot Morley reported
that electrical equipment in sleep mode used enough energy per year to
emit about 800,000 tons of carbon.
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That's just for the 60 million or so Britons; multiply by five for
the United States. The U.S. Department of Energy has estimated that
by 2010, the portion of each utility customer's bill consumed by
appliances in standby mode will reach 20%.
Do an inventory in your home and you will be shocked.
"They're the little red-eyed monsters that silently suck up
energy, leaching electricity via vampire fangs gripping power
sockets," wrote Steve Dow in the Sydney Morning Herald last
month. Dow had a consultant check his home, where just a TV, DVD
player, stereo, computer, modem, wireless router and microwave were
left in standby mode. He was astonished by the result:
"Bypassing standby or sleep mode and switching appliances off
at the power point, where practical, would cut our power use by
10%."
A 10% reduction in California's 254 annual megawatt hours would save
roughly as much energy as is consumed by South Dakota, Vermont,
Alaska and Rhode Island combined, according to the Department of
Energy.
In January 2006, California mandated maximum levels of standby power
consumption for some -- not all -- household electronics. But the
big step will come when consumers become convinced that it's worth
trading convenience for conservation.
So next time you awaken in the middle of the night, check around to
see if you are bathed in an eerie, greenish-blue hue. And remember,
those innocent-looking, sometimes blinking little monsters are
sucking the money out of your wallet as you sleep.
Sweet dreams.
Warren Swil is a journalism instructor at Pasadena City College.
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