Thinkcage

Hi. I'm Jason Zimdars a web designer in Oklahoma City, OK and this is my website.

How many bloggers does it take to screw in a lightbulb?

I am bit late to this party, but I wanted to climb on board anyway because I feel very strongly about this.

[Note: this is part of a webwide series of blog posts about compact fluorescent lightbulbs. January is the darkest month of the year in the Northern Hemisphere (December might be a bit darker, but with all the candles, trees and dropping balls, we work hard to light it up). To fight off the darkness, bloggers everywhere are invited to create a post with their own riff on why CF bulbs are cheaper, better politically, harder to market or just plain cute. Your choice. If you trackback here, I'll post your link in a future post and/or you can add your link to this lens, which donates all royalties to Ecotrust].

From Seth Godin’s Blog

This is something I’ve felt pretty strongly about for some time now. I’ve always been a turn the lights off when you leave a room kind of guy so naturally any energy savings is appealing to me. Why? Is it to save on my utility bills? Sure – who wouldn’t want that? But I really think it is more than that. Every bit of energy you conserve cascades, it adds to the big picture. Sure your bills might be a little less. But on a grander scale every little bit of energy that you save is less energy that has to be produced be it via a coal plant or oil refinery. That helps the environment. So when people are still buying large SUV’s because they can “afford” the price of gas, they’re missing the point. There is more to conservation than just your bottom line.

But the thing is, switching away from incandescent lighting may make a bigger impact than you might expect. How big? Well, according to Energystar.gov:

“If every American home replaced just one light bulb with an ENERGY STAR [compact fluorescent bulb], we would save enough energy to light more than 2.5 million homes for a year and prevent greenhouse gasses equivalent to the emissions of nearly 800,000 cars.”

Frankly, that’s a pretty modest goal. Australia has plans to completely ban incandescent bulbs altogether by 2009. How about that for government really acting on something?

So please comment here. Send your trackbacks. Sign the lens linked above. But most of all, replace those outdated bulbs with newer, more energy-efficient compact fluorescent models.

One Response to “How many bloggers does it take to screw in a lightbulb?”

  1. Daimon Says:

    I live in Australia and am very excited that the government has actually decided to do something positive for the environment. It may have something to do with the drought we have been suffering for many years now. It’s making everyone very aware how fargile our environment really is.
    About a month ago, in co-operation with Channel 10 broadcasting a special show on climate change, neco.com.au was charged with the task of swapping every single light bulb in every home in Tamworth. (Tamworth was the first town in Australia to have electric street lighting). That’s 40,000 homes, with 10 – 20 light bulbs in each. And what’s really impressive, is they did it for free! Go Neco and Channel 10!