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  <created>1754314533</created>
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  <title><![CDATA[Will People Conserve Energy During Emergency Heat Waves?]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p>This June, New York City’s government and utility urged households to conserve electricity during an extreme heat wave with temperatures reaching 100 degrees F. People were asked to set air conditioners to 76 degrees, to avoid using more than one air conditioning unit, and to delay using electricity-hungry appliances during peak cooling hours.</p><p>The big concern is that when every air conditioning unit is running at full blast, electricity demand can exceed total generating capacity and force the utility to implement rolling blackouts.&nbsp;These rolling blackouts avoid a total system failure but leave people without access to cooling and other electronics as temperatures reach dangerous levels.</p><p>As temperatures peak in the United States during the coming weeks, utilities and city governments may follow suit with similar requests for voluntary conservation.&nbsp;Voluntary requests for conservation in the United States are part of the standard energy emergency playbook and go back at least to President Carter’s request for Americans to reduce heating temperatures during the 1977 energy crisis.</p><p>So, do voluntary conservation requests work to save energy and prevent blackouts?</p><p><a href="https://epicenter.energy.gatech.edu/2025/08/01/will-people-conserve-energy-during-emergency-heat-waves/">Read Full Story on the EPIcenter Newspage</a></p>]]></body>
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      <value>2025-08-01T00:00:00-04:00</value>
      <timezone><![CDATA[America/New_York]]></timezone>
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  <field_summary_sentence>
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      <value><![CDATA[Dylan Brewer, EPIcenter's Faculty Affiliate discusses if voluntary conservation requests work to save energy and prevent blackouts.]]></value>
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    <item>
      <value><![CDATA[<p>This June, New York City’s government and utility urged households to conserve electricity during an extreme heat wave with temperatures reaching 100 degrees F. People were asked to set air conditioners to 76 degrees, to avoid using more than one air conditioning unit, and to delay using electricity-hungry appliances during peak cooling hours.</p><p>The big concern is that when every air conditioning unit is running at full blast, electricity demand can exceed total generating capacity and force the utility to implement rolling blackouts.&nbsp;These rolling blackouts avoid a total system failure but leave people without access to cooling and other electronics as temperatures reach dangerous levels.</p><p>As temperatures peak in the United States during the coming weeks, utilities and city governments may follow suit with similar requests for voluntary conservation.&nbsp;Voluntary requests for conservation in the United States are part of the standard energy emergency playbook and go back at least to President Carter’s request for Americans to reduce heating temperatures during the 1977 energy crisis.</p><p>So, do voluntary conservation requests work to save energy and prevent blackouts?</p>]]></value>
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      <email><![CDATA[priya.devarajan@research.gatech.edu]]></email>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p>Written by: Dylan Brewer, Faculty Affiliate, <a href="https://epicenter.energy.gatech.edu/">EPIcenter</a> &amp; Assistant Professor, School of Economics, Georgia Tech</p>]]></value>
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  <!--  TO DO: correct to not conflate categories and news room topics  -->
  <!--  Disquisition: it's funny how I write these TODOs and then never
         revisit them. It's as though the act of writing the thing down frees me
         from the responsibility to actually solve the problem. But what can I
         say? There are more problems than there's time to solve.  -->
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        <![CDATA[Energy]]>
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        <tid>144</tid>
        <value><![CDATA[Energy]]></value>
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        <tid>135</tid>
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      <url>https://epicenter.energy.gatech.edu/2025/08/01/will-people-conserve-energy-during-emergency-heat-waves/</url>
      <title></title>
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