Companies share energy efficiency secrets
One of the energy efficient features installed during 2012 at the Marriott La Jolla in La Jolla, Calif., was a programmable thermostat for each room. When a guest leaves the room, a magnetic door sensor tells the thermostat to reduce heating or cooling and when the guest comes back, it returns temperatures to the selected degree.(Photo: Courtesy of HEI Resorts , Hotels)Story HighlightsHotels use in-room devices to alter a room's temperature when guests leaveCompanies boost insulation and use more efficient lighting, appliancesSome tie employee performance reviews and pay increases to energy savingsWhen hotel guests leave their room during the day, a magnetic door sensor tells the thermostat to reduce the heating or cooling. When they come back, it has the temperature return to their selected degree.The programmable thermostat is one of several energy-efficiency features installed last year at the Marriott La Jolla in La Jolla, Calif. The hotel also uses motion sensors on stairwells and vending machines to keep lighting dim when not in use. In 2012, the Marriott La Jolla in La Jolla, Calif., installed energy-efficient features including vending machines with motion sensors that keep the lighting dim until a hotel guest wants to buy something.(Photo: Courtesy of HEI Hotels , Resorts)"We save $5 million per year" on utility bills company-wide with such retrofits, says Bob Holesko, vice president of facilities at HEI Hotel & Resorts, which owns the La Jolla property and 40 others in 16 states. He says basic steps such as programmable thermostats pay for themselves, by lowering energy use, within three years. His company is one of three dozen -- including Best Buy, General Electric, Macy's and Staples -- that have pledged not only to cut energy use 20% by 2020 but also to share their secrets for success as part of a new federal…
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