Sustainability Home Audit Training for Community Care Workers
This project was funded by the Department of Sustainability and Environment
Notes to presenter • • •
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Please refer to the guide for additional information. Some information will need updating, such as grants available, which change fairly regularly. Some information needs to be added, such as litres per person per day and waste per person in your area. Refer to the notes, which offer advise on where to source this information. We also suggest that if the audit form is going to be used to arrange further assistance for specific items e.g. maintenance staff to install retrofits, or showerheads to be arranged through the water retailers, that you add a slide about this just before the energy solutions slide. Due to copyright limitations many of the great photos that could be used to illustrate points cannot be included in this presentation. However, you might have access to suitable photos and we encourage you to include these into your presentations. A photo that illustrates a point is better than lots of words. Where we lack a suitable photo we have simply added a few words to illustrate the point, or to be a place holder for your photo or diagram. You will also note that we have tried to keep each slide to a separate topic. Bullet point lists such as this slide are boring and contain far to much information for a presentation. If you develop a slide like this one then the temptation is to read it word for word and the audience will have done that in the time you have said your first sentence and will know what your going to say for the rest of it Participants want to hear what you have to say not read lots off stuff off a slide. A handout is a better way to give detailed information. The information booklet and audit sheet form the handouts for this presentation. Delete this slide before giving your presentation! Good luck and have fun. If your having fun, then the participants are more likely too as well.
why home audits identifying possible solutions
background information
energy issues
92%
Greenhouse Gases Photo: NASA
Photo:Â Longhorndave
rising energy prices
efficient use does not mean going without
water issues Photo: Spiralz
166 litres per person per day
Waste
m r a t e e t r i a a ls w energy
products waste
Photo: Samuel Mann
192kg of waste per person per year
methane gas
buried landfill Stops land being used for other purposes contaminates soil leaching into groundwater underground water
Smart consumption
Home Audits
save clients $ maintain comfort protect environment
education
options
Individual differences
action
The information booklet
Home Audit Worksheet Date: ________ Client Name: _______________________Client Phone No: _____________ Client Address: ________________________________________________________ Community Care Worker Name: ____________________ Phone No: ______________ This worksheet is for community care workers, to use in the homes of their clients. It helps carers identify where and how energy and water are used and waste is produced in different parts of the home. The Audit outlines simple actions and home improvements to help clients live more comfortably, reduce energy and water use, save money on bills, and help the natural environment. Explanations of the recommendations in this document can be found in the Home Audit Information Booklet for Community Care Workers. The numbered sections correspond in the two documents for ease of reference. Each section covers a different part of the home where resources are used, e.g. In the Kitchen or Heating and Cooling. The majority of the suggested solutions or actions are no‐cost or low‐cost for the client. Larger possible retrofits or new appliances are in some cases listed in the Audit, for discussion when you think appropriate. There are also a number of selected home retrofits which are entirely free for the client, and which you can order for them on the Retrofit Job Order Form.
4
4.1
How Water Question
Suggested Solution or Action
Is the hot water system set at a higher temperature than it needs to
4.1.1 Set the hot water service to 60°C if it’s a storage hot water service (a large tank), or to 50°C or less if it is an instantaneous system (a small box on the wall).
be? Yes Ö No – no action required
Note: use thermometer to measure water temp at tap – should be no higher than 55°C.
practise in your own home
after you complete a client’s home audit you…
1. Discuss with client 2. Send copy for data input 3. Copy form for clients file 4. Send copy to client’s family 5. Provide copy to client 6. Refer client to assistance coordinator
What are the top two areas of energy use in the home?
What are the top two areas of water use in the home?
Home energy use Refrigerator 4%
Cooking 3%
Lighting 3%
Appliances 10%
Water heating 21%
Heating + Cooling 59%
Home water use Kitchen
Bathroom and toilet
Garden
Laundry
Sustainability Solutions
1. GreenPower
2. Heating and cooling
2. Heating and cooling
o 19‐21 C in winter
o 24‐27 C in summer
2. Heating and cooling
What’s the best form of heating?
2. Heating and cooling
www.energyrating.gov.au 2. Heating and cooling
What’s the best form of cooling?
2. Heating and cooling
Insulation
3. Insulation, draughts and windows
3. Insulation, draughts and windows
3. Insulation, draughts and windows
Stopping exhaust fan draughts
3. Insulation, draughts and windows
air near window gets cooled and falls warm air rises cold outside window cool air
worst 3. Insulation, draughts and windows
no pelmet allows air to slip behind curtain
air near window gets cooled and falls
warm air rises cold outside curtain window
cool air
better
pelmet
3. Insulation, draughts and windows
pelmet stops air slipping behind curtain warm air rises
cold outside
curtain window
best 3. Insulation, draughts and windows
3. Insulation, draughts and windows
3. Insulation, draughts and windows
4. Hot water
Photo: eelke dekker
4. Hot water
4. Hot water
Greenhouse gas emissions from hot water systems
Electric storage 3.4 tonnes Solar (electric boosted) 1.4 tonnes Heat pump storage 0.9 tonnes Efficient gas storage 0.9 tonnes Efficient gas instantaneous 0.7 tonnes Solar (gas boosted) 0.2 tonnes
4. Hot water
4. Hot water
5. Bathroom and toilet
5. Bathroom and toilet
5. Bathroom and toilet
5. Bathroom and toilet
5. Bathroom and toilet
Image: pjt56
6. In the laundry
6. In the laundry
6. In the laundry
7. In the kitchen
7. In the kitchen
7. In the kitchen
Photo: Alan Cleaver
Photo: Nicole‐Koehler
7. In the kitchen
7. In the kitchen
7. In the kitchen
7. In the kitchen
8. Standby energy and lights
8. Standby energy and lights
Purchase and running costs for 8000 hours of use Compact fluorescent
$18
Downlight
$60
Incandescent
$88
per light! 8. Standby energy and lights
Source: Sustainability Victoria
9. Waste
Junk mail sticker
9. Waste
9. Waste
9. Waste
9. Waste
9. Waste
10. House cleaning
Appendix A: Grants and rebates
Any questions?