Leaving computers on overnight = $2.8 billion a year

Thu Mar 26, 2009 12:13PM EDT

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Admittedly I don't think much about it at all. I leave my laptop running overnight because I know it'll take five minutes or more to get things going in the morning -- not just booting up, but launching the various apps I start the day with, downloading my overnight email, filtering out the spam, and otherwise "getting settled."

But all the power wasted while computers are sitting idle overnight adds up, and one study has finally tried to measure it. The tally: An estimated $2.8 billion wasted on excess energy costs each year in the U.S. alone.

On a CO2 basis, that's 20 million tons of carbon dioxide, about the amount produced by 4 million cars on the road.

The full report is available for download here (scroll down to "PC Energy Report US 2009").

But big numbers like that become almost meaningless in an era of trillion-dollar bailouts, so to put the wasted energy in perspective, the study provides the data in terms you can better understand: If you run a company with 1,000 PCs left on overnight, you can save about $28,000 a year if they are turned off after hours. That's not chump change.

Of course, it's also a fact that your PC will function better if you restart it regularly, and nightly shutdowns can help you avoid having to suddenly reboot in the middle of the day when you'd otherwise be productive. So even though this little laptop, by my math, eats up only about a quarter's worth of power overnight, maybe it's a smart idea -- and ultimately a time-saver, too -- to shut it down after hours after all.

Via USA Today

Comments on Leaving computers on overnight = $2.8 billion a year

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  • 1 Posted by hlawlink on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:19PM EDT Report Abuse

    I always shut down my laptop. In one minute, my computer is booted with foobar2000 and firefox3 ready for my use. And this is on a PC (running windows 7).

  • 3 Posted by phil.seymour on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:09PM EDT Report Abuse

    I think leaving them on goes back to UNIVAC, and keeping the vacuum tubes warm.

  • 4 Posted by alexgannis on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:50PM EDT Report Abuse

    You don't want to restart your computer and files so you just leave your computer on is just really being lazy and foolish sorry chris but you really set yourself up on this one.

  • 5 Posted by larmo33 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:56PM EDT Report Abuse

    I don't have a laptop. I have a PC Lan. I go back and forth between my two PCs during the day. My gaming machine and monitor are totally shut off when not in use. The computer that I use to go on line, and do the daily tasks like printing. Is put into "hibernate" when not in use, and I shut down the monitor. Using hibernate lets me get back to work pretty quickly. I also create "restore points" a couple of times a week, and restart the computer after. Several apps create restore points after they have scanned the system for various problems. System Restore has saved me on several occasions.

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