Knowledge is power, literally. A colleague brought in a nifty little device today called a Kill A Watt—it measures how much power an appliance or computer is using. Right now, my Dell laptop is sucking 20 Watts of electricity per hour, or .11 Kilowatts for the last six hours (compared to our server, which draws that much in one hour).
I learned that if I right-click my desktop and click Properties>Screen Saver>Monitor Power and select “Turn off Monitor After 5 minutes” my power draw drops to 11 Watts (when I’m idle, which is hardly ever!). We also found that our Braun 12-cup coffee maker draws 60 Watts per hour when the burner’s on, but spikes to 850 Watts while brewing a pot (the equivalent of 120 Wh). That’s a pittance compared to the four-burner Bun-o-Matic coffee maker which gulps 1200 Watts to brew a pot and 100 Watts per burner to warm, or about 2.2 Kilowatts per day.
This tool has been enlightening (one can be had online for about $20)—it’s fun to get real time data of our carbon footprint and be able to make informed choices about where to change behavior.
We continue to report about this 30-member (and growing) group exploring innovative strategies to reuse vacant land (3,300 parcels) in Cleveland. They recently produced a final report and recommendations on how vacant land can derive benefit for low-income and underemployed residents, increase community self-reliance for food and energy production and link natural and built systems.
Wind power in Cleveland is “no longer a matter of whether, but when?” said Case President Barbara Snyder at the opening of yesterday’s ‘Building an Advanced Energy Future for Offshore Wind’ conference.
Amalie Lipstreu
For the past year, NPI and the Kent State Urban Design Center (UDC) have led what GreenCityBlueLake Institute Director David Beach describes as “some of the most exciting land-use planning I’ve seen in the last thirty years.”
Cleveland
“As growers, we feel alone,” Jocelyn Kirkwood of Gather ‘Round Farm shared with a large, sympathetic gathering interested in urban agriculture at AJ Rocco’s last week. 