Electricity-leaking office equipment.Several years ago, scientists at Lawrence Berkeley (Calif.) National Laboratory launched an energy conservation campaign against electronic goods that continue to draw power when switched off (SN: 10/25/97, p. 266). A typical home squanders 50 watts to this leakiness Leak´i`ness n. 1. The quality of being leaky. Noun 1. leakiness - the condition of permitting leaks or leakage; "the leakiness of the roof"; "the heart valve's leakiness"; "the leakiness of the boat made it . The lab has now gone on to calculate electrical consumption by office computers, copiers, and related equipment that have ostensibly os·ten·si·ble adj. Represented or appearing as such; ostensive: His ostensible purpose was charity, but his real goal was popularity. been turned off. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the new estimates, such equipment wastes 71 terawatt hours per year nationally--or nearly 2 percent of the country's electrical production. Roughly 75 percent of this waste occurs in commercial offices, another 12 percent in home offices, and the rest in industrial settings. Desktop computers and monitors are the biggest offenders, report Jonathan G. Koomey and his colleagues in a quarterly newsletter published by the lab. On a national basis annually, they say, each of these components wastes 14.3 TWh. Copiers lose another 7.6 TWh, laser printers more than 6 TWh. Fax machines and inkjet printers A printer that propels droplets of ink directly onto the medium. Today, almost all inkjet printers produce color. Low-end inkjets use three ink colors (cyan, magenta and yellow), but produce a composite black that is often muddy. each leak an additional 3 TWh. Simply pulling the plug on office equipment overnight could save up to 7 TWh per year, the LBNL LBNL Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley, CA) LBNL Last But Not Least scientists calculate. Furthermore, replacing all office machines with units that snooze--power down when not in active use but still turned on--would save a whopping 17 TWh per year. --J.R. |
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