4 research outputs found

    Comparing consumer perceptions of appliances' electricity use to appliances' actual direct-metered consumption

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    Many strategies for reducing residential energy consumption—including product labelling programs, subsidies for the purchase of efficient devices, behavioral programs that encourage efficient energy use, and others—rely on building owners and end users to make informed investment and operational decisions. These strategies may be ineffective if consumers are unaware of how much electricity is used by different devices in their homes and buildings. This study therefore compares consumers' perceptions of their appliances' electricity use to these appliances' actual direct-metered electricity consumption. Using an online survey, 118 homeowners from Austin, Texas were asked to estimate the energy consumption of six household devices which were monitored in the participants' homes. Homeowners were randomly assigned to assess their appliance-specific electricity use in terms of energy units (kWh/month) or energy cost units ($/month) for an average summer month. Consistent with previous studies, participants overestimated the energy consumed by their low energy consuming devices and slightly underestimated that of their most energy-consuming device. Results also showed that responses of the experimental groups estimating their consumption in energy units and energy cost units were similar, the accuracy of the two groups' perceptions was similar, and levels of confidence in the two groups were similar. These results suggest that targeted information campaigns focused on air conditioning energy consumption and device power reduction opportunities could improve consumer decision-making to save energy and reduce demand

    Procter & Gamble’s Profit Sharing Plan: A Classroom Exercise in Ethics

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    This class exercise involves a min-case that discusses the Procter & Gamble Profit Sharing Plan, and raises the issue of whether the plan, which results in a very high percentage of employees\u27 retirement benefits being in P&G stock, is consistent with the company\u27s high standard of ethics. The case uses a chronological approach to lead the reader through a series of events which alternately caused fear and joy among Procter & Gamble stakeholders

    Terrestrial Origin for Abundant Riverine Nanoscale Ice-Nucleating Particles

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    Ice-nucleating particles (INPs) associated with fresh waters are a neglected, but integral component of the water cycle. Abundant INPs were identified from surface waters of both the Maumee River and Lake Erie with ice nucleus spectra spanning a temperature range from −3 to −15 °C. The majority of river INPs were submicron in size and attributed to biogenic macromolecules, inferred from the denaturation of ice-nucleation activity by heat. In a watershed dominated by row-crop agriculture, higher concentrations of INPs were found in river samples compared to lake samples. Further, ice-nucleating temperatures differed between river and lake samples, which indicated different populations of INPs. Seasonal analysis of INPs that were active at warmer temperatures (≄−10 °C; INP–10) showed their concentration to correlate with river discharge, suggesting a watershed origin of these INPs. A terrestrial origin for INPs in the Maumee River was further supported by a correspondence between the ice-nucleation signatures of river INPs and INPs derived from the soil fungus Mortierella alpina. Aerosols derived from turbulence features in the river carry INP–10, although their potential influence on regional weather is unclear. INP–10 contained within aerosols generated from a weir spanning the river, ranged in concentration from 1 to 11 INP m–3, which represented a fold-change of 3.2 over average INP–10 concentrations sampled from aerosols at control locations
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