How about we continue using something more convenient like a standalone dryer and focus our energy usage reduction on the largest target -- which is manufacturing by a whopping 76% of the total electricity consumption in the United States (https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/use-of-energy/industry.p...) as well as transportation. Nothing else comes close.Quirky Japanese technology is not the solution.
rgmerk|1 year ago
Of the transportation sector, about 25% is "cars and motorcycles" and 32% is light trucks; however, a lot of that light truck usage includes pickup trucks for private use. [2]
I can't prove it without more Googling but when you put the two of those together energy use of the direct control of consumers likely exceeds that in the industrial sector.
So while this is small beer, switching out your gas heating and hot water for electric heat pumps, insulating your house better, and switching to EVs are a big deal in terms of reducing greenhouse gas emissions, not to mention the almost forgotten but huge benefits of reducing local and especially indoor air pollution.
[1] https://css.umich.edu/publications/factsheets/energy/us-ener... [2] https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/use-of-energy/transporta...
badpun|1 year ago
kibwen|1 year ago
According to that link, manufacturing represents 76% of industrial energy consumption, not total energy consumption.
throwaway4aday|1 year ago
rgmerk|1 year ago
There's no way in the world you're putting a nuclear plant on site.
habitue|1 year ago
But as an individual who wants to do something, and in principle has an incentive to reduce their energy bill, reducing consumption is the main thing under their control.
unknown|1 year ago
[deleted]
KennyBlanken|1 year ago
I exclusively dry my clothes on a ~$30 folding clothes frame that will take a full washer load. If I'm in a rush, I point a fan at it.
In the winter, the humidity is welcome and the fan alone dries the clothing really quick. In the summer, I set it up outside. If there's a good breeze, my laundry is dry in no time. If I set it up indoors, the central AC takes care of the humidity.
My electric bill is tiny and my clothes last forever because they're not getting beat to shit for half an hour every week...
DANmode|1 year ago
Hopefully not wooden - otherwise, I can smell this comment.
badpun|1 year ago
They still are though, in the spin dry part of the wash cycle? Or do you not use it?
__MatrixMan__|1 year ago
cactusplant7374|1 year ago