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Happy Earth Day 2022!

April 22, 2022 by Lazy Man 2 Comments

Earth DayI hope everyone is having a good Earth Day today. It snuck* up on me. As I mentioned in my last article, I’ve been busy boarding dogs while people travel during their April school vacations.

Let’s kick things off with…

Solar Power Update: Seven Years Later

We just completed our seventh year with solar panels and they’ve been great. The only “hassle” was one of the 20+ inverters that failed earlier this year. We were generating 5% less energy for a month while our local company sourced the part and installed it free of charge. I wish all my problems could be solved as easily as typing a few emails like that.

We paid $16,000 for the solar panels back then. Normally they would have twice that – $32,000. There were some energy programs and tax credits, which cut the price in half. Let’s see how it’s paid off so far.

In the 7 years, our panels have generated 64.9MWh of electricity. Don’t worry if you don’t know your energy conversions, I don’t either. That’s 64900 kWh of power. I went to our electric bill to see what the cost of a kWh is and it’s 24.05 cents in Rhode Island. We have expensive energy here. That’s one of the great surprises about solar power – it’s very cost-effective even in states that you wouldn’t think are sunny. If our energy was cheaper it would take longer to make back our investment.

At today’s cost of electricity (24.05 cents), the 64,900 kWh of energy would have cost us $15,610. That’s very close to breaking even. It’s not entirely fair, because the cost of electricity wasn’t always $0.2504 kWh. For example, when I reviewed our solar energy after four years the cost of a kWh was around 21 cents. In addition, we had to pay for the panels in 2015 dollars. Everyone is thinking about inflation nowadays and 2022 dollars just aren’t the same.

It’s not worth going through and adding up the cost of electricity each year and getting an inflation calculator together. I think it’s safe to say that we’d hit “fake” break-even next year, with “fake” meaning that it wouldn’t account for these factors. We’d theoretically hit real break-even in 2024 – after 9 years of ownership. It looks like we’ll save around $1,750 a year after that. That’s roughly 7,200 kWh produced each year at $0.2405. Of course, energy will continue to go up in price and maybe our efficiency will go down (though it’s guaranteed to be 95% for 25 years or something similar).

Long story short, our solar panel purchase was a great money move and great for the environment.

Moving on from the solar update, there are a couple more things I wanted to cover today:

Encourage Kid Entrepreneurship this Earth Day

Over on Kid Wealth, I wrote about how to inspire a kid entrepreneur this Earth Day. I worked out a business plan where he could make and sell can tab bracelets for a small profit. Recycling and entrepreneurship are a winning combination.

I’ve been working on a new Kid Wealth home page. It’s not perfect, but I think it looks great on desktop browsers. There are a couple of things that I know are broken. For example, I link to content that isn’t published yet. So for now, let’s keep that a secret between us.

Previous Earth Day Articles

Here’s a look back at my Earth Day Articles from the years gone by:

  • Climate Change is like Personal Finance

    Whether it is personal finance or fighting climate change, the little things add up to become big things over time.

  • All At Once

    COVID shut down hit one month when I published this one. The Jack Johnson lyrics written in 2008 about the environment described how many were feeling about COVID.

  • Solar Panels: One Year Later

    My one-year review of solar panels.

  • Solar Panels Completed

    My post after finishing the installation of the solar panels.

  • Four Lazy Ways to Save the Environment

    This is an old article from 2009. I was recommending CFLs – those corkscrew bulbs. We still have and use some, but the technology with LEDs is better and more cost-effective now.

If you’ve finished all that reading… or even if you haven’t, I hope you take some time to get outside and enjoy Earth day today.

* Some people don’t believe that snuck is a word, but I’m sticking to it. Wordle says it is a word. Then again, I’ve gotten away with “gwine” and “comby” too, so…

Filed Under: environment Tagged With: earth day

Climate Change is like Personal Finance

April 22, 2021 by Lazy Man 2 Comments

Earth DayHappy Earth Day!

It’s amazing to me how long we’ve been talking about the importance of the environment and things rarely seem to change. Last month, I wanted to show my kids an example of great physical comedy, so I found a clip of Fire Marshall Bill (Jim Carrey) from In Living Color. He comments on the kids’ “Save the Planet” artwork. It’s hard to believe this was roughly 30 years ago:



A little more recently, I’ve been writing about Earth Day since 2009. Before that, I was writing about the environment in one-off articles, usually in a push to get people to adopt Compact Fluorescent Light (CFL) bulbs because LEDs were new and too expensive. That’s still twelve years ago.

Last year I tricked you by using the song lyrics of Jack Johnson’s environmental anthem of All At Once to make it seem like I was writing about COVID-19. A few years before that I wrote about our four years of solar panels.

We’re up to 6 years of solar panels now. We’ve generated 56.2-megawatt hours. According to our Enphase panel we’ve produced the equivalent of 1016 trees saved.

Since this is a personal finance blog, let’s get to the financials, shall we? The cost of a kWh of energy in Rhode Island is 21.73 cents. Thus the 56,200 kWh we’ve generated would cost us $12,212.26. (This makes the assuredly false assumption that the price was a consistent 21.73 cents over the last 6 years. With that caveat in mind, let’s continue the analysis anyway.) We spent $16,000 on the solar panels. As I predicted when we got them, they’d pay for themselves in about 8 years… after that, we’ll enjoy savings. It is likely that the cost of energy will just continue to go up. It seems like we save around $2000 a year in electricity costs.

Now that I’ve covered just about every environmental topic except for the title, let’s get to my main Earth Day thought for 2021:

Climate Change is like Personal Finance

There are a couple of overarching principles in personal finance. One school of thought is that if you do a few of the really big things well, you’ll be fine. Examples of these include getting a high-paying job, not spending too much on house/transportation, and investing early.

Another school of thought is that if you can reduce a lot of the small, often repeated costs, you’ll be fine. Some examples of these include brewing coffee at home vs. the coffee shop and bringing your lunch to work.

Many personal finance bloggers will say that it is one or the other, but I’m a big fan of both. It’s possible to not buy a McMansion and avoid Starbucks. I had no problem bringing my lunch to work in my 10-year old car. Yes, you can walk and chew gum at the same time.

What does this have to do with climate change and the environment?

If you do a lot of the little things to help the environment they add up. This is the famous “reduce, reuse, recycle”:



(You had to have known that I was going to sneak Jack Johnson into this article, right?)

What about the other side, doing a few of the really big things? Unfortunately, many of those things are controlled by governments and big corporations. As individuals we have a vote, at the ballot box or with our wallets, to put leaders in power to create policies that will make big differences. In my town, there was a long, long fight to ban plastic bags at the grocery store, because the plastic bag lobby (who knew this existed?) inserted itself into the town’s politics.

In the end, the winning formula for personal finance or the environment is to do the little things AND the big things. Don’t get discouraged if it seems like the progress is going too slowly. Every little bit helps, neither is all or nothing.

Filed Under: environment Tagged With: climate change, earth day

All At Once

April 22, 2020 by Lazy Man 5 Comments

All at once,
The world can overwhelm me
There’s almost nothin’ that you could tell me
That could ease my mind

Today, I’m going to exercise some poetic licence – in a couple of very different ways. In a literal sense, I’ll be quoting a famous person’s poem. In a less obvious “poetic” sense, I’ll be straying from the topic of personal finance.

That quote above invoked some feelings, right? What about this next verse?

Which way will you run
When it’s always all around you
And the feelin’ lost and found you again
A feelin’ that we have no control

Did that strengthen those thoughts? I know I’ve been feeling all this since the middle of March.

What if I told you that this poem isn’t about what you think it is?

What if I told you that this was written more than a decade ago?

(What if I told you that I’m going to stop asking these rhetorical questions?)

There’s gonna be the new hell
Some say
It’s still too early to tell
Some say
It really ain’t no myth at all

I don’t know if this is a “new hell”, but sometimes it can feel like that, right?

Recently our government has said that this situation was “too early to tell” and it was a myth/hoax.

I wanna take the preconceived
Out from underneath your feet
We could shake it off
Instead we’ll plant some seeds
We’ll watch em’ as they grow
And with each new beat
From your heart the roots grow deeper
The branches will they reach for what
Nobody really knows
But underneath it all
There’s this heart all alone

Did I take the preconceived out from underneath your feet?

This “poem” is not really a poem. These are song lyrics.

The song is “All at Once” and it was written by Jack Johnson in 2008.

It’s about climate change, not COVID-19 (coronavirus).

Today is Earth Day. It’s the best day of the year to write about our solar panels. They are still a great value – one of the best decisions I’ve ever made.

A few years ago, I wrote about how Jack Johnson is the champion of environment. He created the All at Once foundation to help with environmental causes.

This may not be the time to focus on the environment. The strange thing is that it’s okay. Physical distancing and closing of businesses is helping the environment more than almost anything we’ve done in the past. For example, Los Angeles has some of the cleanest air of any major city.

We’re learning that we can make a big difference – even if it’s by accident. It certainly isn’t the path that we would have picked if we had a choice. However, the results are stunning. We’re finally making progress for the first time in decades.

It’s very difficult to find silver linings during this time. For one day, or even a few minutes, let’s focus on this one.

Filed Under: environment Tagged With: earth day, Jack Johnson

Happy Belated Earth Day

April 25, 2010 by Lazy Man 4 Comments

Having a name like “Lazy Man” means that I lose a lot of potential media attention. Many of the bigger websites will think twice before linking to a website feature me. I’ve often thought that I should re-brand myself. However, every now and again, the Lazy Man name works to my advantage. One such time spanned the last few days. While I was deeply engaged in a combination of family issues and the NFL draft – two of my highest priorities – I missed the opportunity or an Earth Day post. On the bright side, I think there’s great value in reminding people about Earth Day after the actual day has passed. It’s not like there is only one day to think about the environmentally responsible.

On some Earth Days, the topics to write about come easy to me. This time it didn’t come easy. I came close to mentioning the little things we do to help the environment such as recycle about 75% of trash (the other 25% is simply extremely difficult or impossible to recycle in my area). However, I decided it was best to leave it to the experts and give you a couple of sites and articles to read:

  • While I try to be a good human, I’m not The Good Human… so humbly ask that you read The Good Human – Seriously, it’s worth reading every day… and twice on Sundays.
  • One of the better articles I read this week was a great analysis about shutting off a computer to conserve power

If you didn’t like any of those articles, I remind you to check out previous articles I’ve written:

  • Importing Food to Kill Mother Earth
  • Save Money and the Environment
  • Four Lazy Ways to Save the Environment
  • Hewlett-Packard Hates the Environment and Your Wallet
  • Save Money and the Environment at the Same Time?

Filed Under: environment Tagged With: earth day

Four Lazy Ways to Save the Environment

January 26, 2011 by Lazy Man 6 Comments

It’s Earth Day and I’d be remiss if I didn’t take a minute to recognize that. While I typically focus on financial topics here, there are other important issues I care about. The environment is one such issue. All the money in the world is worthless if there’s no world left. I know that’s a bit of an extremist view. I honestly don’t know the state of the environment throughout the world, but my common sense says that we need to start acting now. With that in mind, here are some tips that will help the environment… be careful a couple of them might even save you money.

  • Re-Use – Re-usable cups for your morning coffee reduces trash. Substituting bottled water for water from a Brita in a re-usable bottle saves the environment and money. I like Thinksport Sports Bottles for both hot and cold beverages. Bringing re-usable shopping bags is another great way to re-use. I’m only touching the tip of the iceberg of ways to re-use – I got more ideas from watching Enviromom on Nightline and following up on the Enviromom website.
  • Corkscrew Bulbs – Those wacky looking bulbs, known CFLs (Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs) are great ways to save energy (and money). There are similar products that can also do this, like photoluminescent exit signs ““ perfect for making sure your office obeys building regulations and helps the environment.
  • Eat a Low Carbon Diet – No, not low carb, but low carbon. The idea is to eat locally, grown foods. If you logically think about it, importing food requires some kind of fuel. The further you import the food, the more fuel you’ll need. See Eat Low Carbon for more ideas.
  • Recycle – As Lazy as I am, I can usually sort our where I put my garbage with little effort. I realize that for some people, recycling is more difficult, but for others it’s easy.

This is space where I annually pitch The Good Human. David is a great writer who not only writes about sustainable living… he lives it everyday.

Filed Under: environment Tagged With: bottled water, brita, earth day, environment

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