City of Tecumseh, OK
Home MenuWeatherizing for the Heating Season
Apply These Tips and Tricks to Cut Costs and Boost Comfort!
As the warm season winds down, it pays to be proactive about preparing your home to weather the elements during the colder months ahead.
Homeowners can benefit from weatherizing, or protecting their homes and buildings from sun, water, and wind to save on energy costs and maximize comfort.
Weatherization involves making relatively easy, low-cost modifications to a structure and its systems to reduce energy use and improve overall efficiency.
Often the low-hanging fruit of strategic energy planning, weatherizing homes and buildings offers a big bang for the buck, and the savings can be substantial during the often-harsh colder months.
This infrared image shows how more heat is lost through the windows and corners of building envelopes, which are places that winter weatherization efforts should focus on.
Source: Cold Climate Housing Research Center
Why Weatherize?
Weatherizing your home is key to lowering your energy use and costs.
Roughly 10%–20% of the annual average cost of energy in the United States is wasted due to drafts, air leaks around openings, inadequate or no insulation, and outdated heating and cooling systems.
Considering that heating-related costs make up nearly half, roughly 45%, of average household energy expenses, it is especially important during the winter to ensure your home is properly maintained and sealed to keep the warm air in and the cold air out. Taking small steps to improve your home energy performance can make a big dent in your energy bills, ultimately putting more money in your pocket.
Ensuring proper ventilation while weatherizing your home is essential to the health and safety of the people living there.
Maintaining proper ventilation and not over sealing your home is essential for one's health and safety—especially during the winter months. When your doors and windows are closed to protect you and your family from ice, snow, and chill, ventilation is key to keeping moisture out and reducing the risk of mold. This is especially important for communities in wetter climates.
Along with mold, gases from stoves and fireplaces, volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from household products, and asbestos fibers from building materials can accumulate in a poorly ventilated home, placing the health of its occupants at risk. Proper ventilation is essential to keeping you and your family safe from gas leaks, asbestos, carbon monoxide leaks, and VOC emissions—all of which can be dangerous or evenly deadly.
Information provided by the Department of Energy