Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

BC Hydro Says Smartphone, Tablet, 'Obsession' Behind Shift In Electricity Use

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Sep, 2018 06:29 PM
    VANCOUVER — A report from BC Hydro says British Columbians are addicted to personal electronics, prompting a dramatic shift in electricity consumption across the province.
     
     
    The report from the Crown-owned utility says B.C.'s obsession with devices including smartphones, laptops and tablets has hiked electricity use for small electronics by 150 per cent in less than 30 years.
     
     
    The survey of 400 B.C. residents shows 20 per cent of those under 34 would give up a days' pay rather than be without their phone, while many more admit they may be fonder of their smartphone than their spouse.
     
     
    One quarter agree they would rather skip contact with their partner for a day than give up their smartphone over the same period, while that number rises to one-third for those aged 55 to 64.
     
     
    Twenty per cent of respondents admit to sleeping with their phone, 50 per cent check it the moment they wake up and two-thirds would forego their morning coffee for 48 hours rather than start the day without their device.
     
     
    Smartphone owners are especially faithful, with the survey revealing they use their devices for nearly five hours every day. Hydro president Chris O'Riley says the desire to be connected is driving B.C.'s shift in power usage.
     
     
    "While none of these devices use a lot a power individually, taken together, household electricity use from these devices has increased from seven per cent to 17 per cent since the early 1990s," O'Riley says in a news release.
     
     
    Each small device only uses about 15 to 20 watts when plugged in, but several in use simultaneously — along with the peripheral devices often used with them — all add up, says the Hydro release.
     
     
    It points to a dramatic jump in the number of wireless routers used with new "smart" televisions, along with set-top boxes for high-definition TV.
     
     
    Hydro recommends the use of available power management technology now built into most new smartphones, tablets, laptops and game consoles, or the use of so-called smart strips or advanced power bars that shut down devices when they are not in use.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Families Finding Small Living Creates Closeness, Creative Kids

    Canadian Families Finding Small Living Creates Closeness, Creative Kids
    Adrian Crook hadn't always intended on raising his five kids in a three-bedroom condo in downtown Vancouver.

    Canadian Families Finding Small Living Creates Closeness, Creative Kids

    Landslide Lake Offers Breath-Taking Views On Vancouver Island Hike

    Landslide Lake Offers Breath-Taking Views On Vancouver Island Hike
    Cradled below towering mountains at the centre of Vancouver Island is a lake whose name tells the landscape's history. Landslide Lake caught the face of one the Island's tallest mountains when a magnitude-7.3 earthquake shook it loose in 1946.

    Landslide Lake Offers Breath-Taking Views On Vancouver Island Hike

    New Home, Vehicles Damaged In Targeted Port Coquitlam Shooting

    New Home, Vehicles Damaged In Targeted Port Coquitlam Shooting
    Coquitlam RCMP is making progress in the investigation into a shooting at 8:30 p.m. last night (February 18, 2018) at a Port Coquitlam home.

    New Home, Vehicles Damaged In Targeted Port Coquitlam Shooting

    Harjit Sajjan Asks Justin Trudeau To Meet Punjab CM Who Accused Canada Of Sikh Separatist Sympathies

    Harjit Sajjan Asks Justin Trudeau To Meet Punjab CM Who Accused Canada Of Sikh Separatist Sympathies
    At the request of Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan — who was snubbed by Singh when Sajjan visited India last April — Canada's high commissioner was dispatched to set up a meeting with Singh, Trudeau and Sajjan later this week.

    Harjit Sajjan Asks Justin Trudeau To Meet Punjab CM Who Accused Canada Of Sikh Separatist Sympathies

    PICS: Justin Trudeau Visits India's Famed Taj Mahal With Family In Tow

    PICS: Justin Trudeau Visits India's Famed Taj Mahal With Family In Tow
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau began the first full day of his week-long trip to India by taking a tour of the famed Taj Mahal, followed by a visit to an elephant rescue sanctuary north of Agra.

    PICS: Justin Trudeau Visits India's Famed Taj Mahal With Family In Tow

    SEE PICS: Justin Trudeau's Son Hadrien Trudeau Arrives To Steal The Show On Indian Social Media

    SEE PICS: Justin Trudeau's Son Hadrien Trudeau Arrives To Steal The Show On Indian Social Media
    Hadrien Did His Best To Steal The Show, Making Off Down The Red Carpet With The Flowers Handed To His Father By An Indian Official, Leaving The Rest Of His Family To Manage The Receiving Line.

    SEE PICS: Justin Trudeau's Son Hadrien Trudeau Arrives To Steal The Show On Indian Social Media