Poll: Americans know how to save energy, but balk

WASHINGTON (AP) — When it comes to sav­ing energy, peo­ple in the United States know that dri­ving a fuel-efficient car accom­plishes more than turn­ing off the lights at home.

But that doesn’t mean they’ll do it.

A new poll shows that while most of those ques­tioned under­stand effec­tive ways to save energy, they have a hard time adopt­ing them.

Six in 10 sur­veyed say dri­ving a more fuel-efficient car would save a large amount of energy, but only 1 in 4 says that’s easy to do, accord­ing to the poll by the AP-NORC Cen­ter for Pub­lic Affairs Research. Peo­ple also are skep­ti­cal of car­pool­ing or installing bet­ter home insu­la­tion, rat­ing them as effec­tive but impractical.

On the other end of spec­trum, 8 in 10 say they eas­ily can turn off the lights when they leave a room, and 6 in 10 have no prob­lem turn­ing up the ther­mo­stat in sum­mer or down in win­ter, although fewer than half think those easy steps save large amounts of energy.

Even those who sup­port con­ser­va­tion don’t always prac­tice it.

Cindy Shriner, a retired teacher from Lafayette, Ind., buys energy-efficient light bulbs and her 2009 Sub­aru Impreza gets nearly 30 miles per gal­lon on the highway.

Still, she keeps her house at about 73 degrees year-round, despite gov­ern­ment rec­om­men­da­tions to turn ther­mostats to 68 degrees in win­ter and 78 degrees in summer.

I’m ter­ri­ble,” Shriner, 60, said in an inter­view. “In all hon­esty we have extreme weather in all sea­sons” in Indi­ana, she said, and her ther­mo­stat set­tings keep her comfortable.

Her par­ents recently qual­i­fied for a grant under the eco­nomic stim­u­lus law that paid for a new fur­nace and insu­la­tion, Shriner said. She said such pro­grams are impor­tant to improve energy conservation.

The pub­lic looks to large insti­tu­tions for lead­er­ship in sav­ing energy, believ­ing that indi­vid­u­als alone can’t make much of a dif­fer­ence. Nearly two-thirds look to the energy indus­try to show the way toward energy con­ser­va­tion, and nearly 6 in 10 say the gov­ern­ment should play a lead­ing role. Democ­rats, col­lege grad­u­ates and peo­ple under 50 are the most likely to hold indus­try is respon­si­ble for increas­ing energy savings.

The poll, paid for by a grant to the AP-NORC Cen­ter from the Joyce Foun­da­tion, shows that just 4 in 10 ques­tioned think their own actions can sig­nif­i­cantly affect the country’s energy prob­lems. Some 15 per­cent say indi­vid­ual actions make “a very large dif­fer­ence,” while 7 per­cent say indi­vid­ual action makes no dif­fer­ence at all.

On some energy top­ics, peo­ple are in the dark.

Only 1 in 3 reports know­ing a lot or a great deal about the government’s Energy Star prod­uct labels, which are meant to help con­sumers choose energy-efficient appli­ances and other prod­ucts. Even fewer, 25 per­cent, report detailed knowl­edge about fuel-efficiency stan­dards for cars. Not even 20 per­cent know a lot or a great deal about rebates for energy-saving prod­ucts, home ren­o­va­tion tax cred­its or home energy audits.

About 6 in 10 peo­ple cite lack of knowl­edge about energy-saving prod­ucts as a major rea­son they don’t do more to conserve.

Jen­nifer Celestino, 29, of Buf­falo, N.Y., said she might do more if she knew how much energy she was using com­pared with her neighbors.

If you had infor­ma­tion that says, ‘Hey, your house­hold uses more than the typ­i­cal house in your ZIP code,’ that would get my atten­tion,” said Celestino, a work­force ana­lyst at an insur­ance company.

Lack­ing hard data, nearly half of those ques­tioned say they use some­what or a lot less energy than oth­ers in their com­mu­nity, while only 9 per­cent think their con­sump­tion is above average.

Over­all energy use by peo­ple in the United States is four times the world aver­age, accord­ing to the Energy Infor­ma­tion Admin­is­tra­tion, but Amer­i­cans use less energy per per­son than peo­ple in coun­tries such as Canada, Nor­way and Ice­land. Aver­age energy use by Amer­i­cans declined by about 9 per­cent from 2005 to 2009, largely because of increased effi­ciency of appli­ances and machin­ery, and the eco­nomic down­turn, the EIA said.

Dori Spauld­ing, a stay-at-home mom from Niceville, Fla., wor­ries about high energy bills, par­tic­u­larly in the sum­mer, but says her home­town “is a hot place and we have small kids.” Her home win­dows are not as effi­cient as they should be, Spauld­ing said, but they aren’t bro­ken and “I don’t have 10 grand to replace the windows.”

Spauld­ing, 33, said she and her hus­band, an Air Force pilot, have con­sid­ered buy­ing a hybrid or elec­tric car. But for now they drive a mini­van and sta­tion wagon. She said she needs the room for her two chil­dren and the triathlon club she leads, but acknowl­edged that the vehi­cles fit her lifestyle.

I think that Amer­i­cans want what we want, and we want it now,” she said.

The sur­vey was con­ducted from March 29 to April 25. It involved land­line and cell­phone inter­views with 1,008 adults nation­wide and has a mar­gin of error of plus or minus 3.1 per­cent­age points.

—-

Asso­ci­ated Press Deputy Direc­tor of Polling Jen­nifer Agi­esta and News Sur­vey Spe­cial­ist Den­nis Junius con­tributed to this report.

Online:

AP-NORC poll: http://www.apnorc.org

Energy Infor­ma­tion Admin­is­tra­tion: http://www.eia.gov

Fol­low Matthew Daly’s energy envi­ron­ment cov­er­age on : (at)MatthewDalyWDC

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Arti­cle Source: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_ENERGY_POLL_BEHAVIOR?SITE=NMALJ&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT