California study shows shade trees reduce summertime electricity use

January 5, 2009

A recent study shows that shade trees on the west and south sides of a house in California can reduce a homeowner's summertime electric bill by about $25.00 a year. The study, conducted last year on 460 single-family homes in Sacramento, is the first large-scale study to use utility billing data to show that trees can reduce energy consumption.

"Everyone knows that shade trees cool a house. No one is going to get a Nobel Prize for that conclusion," says the study co-author, Geoffrey Donovan. "But this study gets at the details: Where should a tree be placed to get the most benefits? And how exactly do shade trees impact our carbon footprint?"

Donovan, a research forester with the Forest Service's Pacific Northwest (PNW) Research Station, is a co-author of the report with economist David Butry of the National Institutes of Standards and Technology. The report, "The Value of Shade: Estimating the Effect of Urban Trees on Summertime Electricity Use," has been submitted for publication to the journal Energy and Buildings.

The researchers chose to do their study on homes in Sacramento because of the city's hot summers and the fact that most people use air conditioners. The Sacramento Municipal Utility District operates an active tree planting program and residents are eligible for up to 10 free trees annually through a program delivered in partnership with the Sacramento Tree Foundation.

Some of the study's key findings are:

• Placement of a tree is the key to energy savings. Shade trees do affect summertime electricity use, but the amount of the savings depends on the location of the tree.
• Trees planted within 40 feet of the south side or within 60 feet of the west side of the house will generate about the same amount of energy savings. This is because of the way shadows fall at different times of the day.
• Tree cover on the east side of a house has no effect on electricity use.
• A tree planted on the west side of a house can reduce net carbon emissions from summertime electricity use by 30 percent over a 100-year period.

In 2007, the Sacramento Municipal Utility District gave its customers about 16,000 free trees (at a cost of $85.00 a tree). The district will recoup this investment in 26 years provided trees are planted on the west side of a house.

"Because homeowners experience virtually none of the carbon benefits of tree planting," says Donovan, "a subsidy to encourage tree planting seems warranted. Indeed, many of the benefits of urban trees have been shown to spill over to others in the community."

Source: USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station

3.1 /5 (7 votes)  

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Keter
Jan 05, 2009

Rank: 3.7 / 5 (3)
Oh, I do not have a "DUH!" big enough for this story. But... forget about the subsidy to encourage tree planting. How about this: *penalize* with hefty fines the developers who go in and plow down every existing tree before they consider a lot to be "buildable"? Mature trees give benefits NOW, baby trees won't give any benefits for 20 years, and there's the as-yet-unstudied benefits of leaving the mini-ecosystems around existing trees intact.

Short answer: stop cutting down trees in the name of "improving" a lot. My new neighbor - an architect! - scalped his lot, which was full of lovely nature native plants and wildlife and provided wonderful privacy between our homes, and I hate him for it. I think he's beginning to realize - as he looks out over a wasteland of bark mulch - that he's made a mistake, but surprise, it's too late...you can't uncut a tree. Come 100 degree temperatures next summer, he'll be baking on his steel deck and wondering why his cooling bills are so high.

I have a silent message for him: I'm putting a new compost heap where he has a convenient view (and whiff) of it from the huge expanse of concrete and steel he put in for entertaining.
GrayMouser
Jan 05, 2009

Rank: 3 / 5 (4)
They also increase you fire hazzard.
Mauricio
Jan 05, 2009

Rank: 2.8 / 5 (4)
Only in a self-destructive society we have to justify the "utility" of nature. What about the air purifying capacity of trees? what about their function to maintain the rest of the ecosystem?
Velanarris
Jan 05, 2009

Rank: 3 / 5 (4)
Only in a self-destructive society we have to justify the "utility" of nature. What about the air purifying capacity of trees? what about their function to maintain the rest of the ecosystem?
That's what a lawn and garden are for.
aufever
Jan 06, 2009

Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
This is a No Brainer, I put a Grape arbor on the South Side of a House 35 years ago to cool the Bedrooms down to a manageable level in the San Joaquin Valley.
Rank 3.1 /5 (7 votes)
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