
The study was conducted in order to investigate how efficient the average home television setup is and how it can be improved. Some of their numbers are staggering:
In 2010, set-top boxes in the United States consumed approximately 27 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity, which is equivalent to the annual output of nine average (500 MW) coal-fired power plants.
That’s insane. Also consider that a recent model HD-DVR consumes more power than an Energy Star-certified 42-inch LCD screen and consumes more than half the power of your new household refrigerator. Seriously, think about scale in that comparison.
Fortunately, the NRDC notes that industry players are already working together to find more energy-efficient solutions that won’t adversely harm the environment while saving consumers billions of dollars. Good. Soon you won’t have to feel so bad about recording the next season of Game of Thrones. [NRDC via USA Today, Image via Shutterstock]



















Mr Mack
Thursday, June 16, 2011 at 8:30 AMAnd to think customers whinge about the cost of established brands…
Grant
Wednesday, June 29, 2011 at 4:28 PMGiven that Gizmodo is an Australian website, does that “our” in the headline mean Australia? I have seen a lot of US media stories lately re this, but are US set-top boxes different to ours?