We all hate spending money on utilities. I highlight companies and other initiatives working to save renters money on energy — by providing portable, cheaper tools, new financing tools to afford expensive retrofits, or new sources of green energy cheaper than your utility. As renters, we should be aware and support these efforts.
According to a survey by Freddie Mac, more renters are worried about rising utility bills (70%) than rising rents (63%).
These concerns aren’t unfounded. Utility costs (electricity, gas, water, and sewer), from one analysis of public real estate records, add 25% to homeowners’ costs and up to 27% to renters’ costs. These costs hit low-income renters the hardest, eating up 21% of their entire incomes. The biggest utility culprit is energy — electric and gas take up 49% of total utility costs, followed by internet and cell phones (29%) then water (7%). Of electric and gas costs, 58% of it is due to heating and cooling. It’s clear, then, that more energy-efficient and energy-producing units mean more money and financial empowerment for renters.
Most solutions are impractical or too expensive for renters and landlords
Renters are 30% — 40% less likely than homeowners to be energy efficient. Solar panels or insulation retrofits are (1) too annoying or impossible to move to your next apartment or (2) too expensive with large up-front costs. Landlords — who own the building — otherwise do not care about saving you money since you pay for your own utilities. This gap between renters’ and landlords’ interests is called the “split incentives problem.” So you — the renter — use what’s there: Drafty windows and earth-killing appliances your landlord hasn’t updated since the 1980s.
The split incentives problem leaves a lot of money on the table. Insulation retrofits of the floor, wall, and ceilings, the Salford Energy House study found, saved 63% off heating costs, resulting in $500 of savings a year. The most cost-effective retrofits, such as $5000 fabric insulation and double-glazed windows, the University of Nottingham found, have payback periods of 3 to 6 years. Similar studies found that controlling the temperature in each room throughout the day — and shutting off air flow in empty rooms using smart vents, like Ecovent or Flair— can result in energy savings from 25% to 40% for a cost of $490 per room. Closing your shades at night, for instance, can save up to 17% of your heating costs. If the thought of closing all those blinds everyday overwhelms you, Luftron’s smart shades open and close at optimal times at $350 per window.
Unfortunately, these cost-saving solutions are too expensive or impractical for most renters, especially if they can’t take those improvements with them to their next apartment. Fortunately, startups and other initiatives are starting to address these problems.
Meet the startups fighting energy waste
Strategy #1: Affordable and portable tools for renters
To address the fact that some tools are too cumbersome or impossible to move to your next apartment, a swath of portable energy-saving or energy-producing tools have come onto the market.
Sense Home Energy Monitor tells you where you’re wasting the most energy
Energy auditors come to your home and find sources of drafts and energy loss using data like the above.
One author aspires to put his apartment “off the grid” using window sill and balcony panels.
Strategy #2: New financing to overcome up-front costs
To address the fact that some tools or retrofits too expensive to purchase, a swath of new financing opportunities have come onto the market to make $10k-$20k solar panels or insulation retrofits affordable for renters. Importantly, while landlords have to provide consent, these tools don’t require the same renter — who will, on average, move out in 1–2 years — to pay back the obligation. Landlords have to disclose this obligation to new tenants, but this should not be a barrier as tenants generally face unchanging utility costs.
Sealed’s visual illustration of on-bill financing, where third parties pay for costs up front (the “solar loan payment”) and beneficiaries pay back the loan helped by electric bill savings
People and other smaller investors — not banks or big investors — lend you capital to finance your project.
Grid Alternative supervisor and trainee at work
Strategy #3: New sources to buy energy beyond your local utility
This strategy minimizes both aspects of the split-incentives problem. Tenure isn’t an issue. Renters can buy cheaper, renewable energy sources regardless of where they live. Upfront costs aren’t an issue. Third parties build and maintain these farms. Lastly, landlord consent isn’t an issue. Local solar farms sidestep any need to install solar on your roof; a requirement that blocked up to 92% of US residents from using solar energy.
Illustration of Brooklyn’s Microgrid Project
Ideally, we’d live in a society where policies would incentivize developers, landlords, or renters to build or retrofit green. See, for instance, Germany’s recent bill to help renter access solar on their apartments. But until then, to save money on your utility bill, it’s going to take some work. These products can be good investments in the long-term, paying itself off and saving you money over the decades.
If you’ve used any of these products or services, I’d love to hear your experiences.
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