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Behavioral Economics And Your Energy Bill

This, as described by Felix Salmon, sounds like a pretty wise and noble undertaking from Google:

The behavioral sociology* of measuring energy usage is simple: the more you know about how much energy you’re using, the less you use. Just getting the information cuts most people’s energy usage by somewhere between 5% and 15%, while people with high electricity bills (like me) find it much easier to isolate exactly what is causing those bills and can then work out how best to reduce them through upgrading appliances or replacing incandescent bulbs with CFLs or any number of other routes to energy efficiency. ...

Enter Google, which has now announced plans to release free PowerMeter software which will map any individual’s energy use on their phone, home computer, or iGoogle homepage. The little gizmo which plugs in to your fusebox is going to be very cheap, and with any luck will somehow be available for free to anybody who might have difficulty paying for it. (This is part of Google’s philanthropic google.org arm, after all.)

Google’s Dan Reicher mentioned the PowerMeter on a panel at the New Yorker Summit today... His colleagues have already installed it — one of them discovered he was paying for all the washers and dryers in his building.

*I guess the line between behavioral economics and behavioral sociology can get a little murky. I tend to think of this discussion as behavioral economics. But, then, my training is in economics, so I would. In fairness, sociologists claimed a lot of this territory long before economists did...

--Noam Scheiber