Customers asked to conserve natural gas

Atmos Energy, which serves part of Wyandotte County, is asking customers to conserve natural gas at this time.

A message on the company’s website states, “Due to extreme temperatures and high natural gas demand, we urge customers to conserve natural gas at this time.”


Atmos offered these tips:

Turning down the thermostat a degree or two is one way to conserve natural gas. Atmos suggested lowering the temperature to 68 degrees when home, and 58 degrees when away from home.


Another method is to lower the water heater temperature to 120 degrees.


Let the sunlight in your home in the day, then close the drapes and blinds at night to keep the heat in.

Keep the fireplace damper closed unless a fire is burning.


Make sure air registers and vents are not blocked by furniture or equipment for proper air flow.


Kansas Gas Service Company, which also serves Wyandotte County, stated, “As frigid weather settles over Kansas, energy conservation is key to preventing widespread outage.”

Kansas Gas Service offered several tips:

Keep warm, not hot.


When possible wear additional layers of clothing.


Consider turning down your thermostat and check your programmable settings.


Seal leaks around doors and windows.


Apply weather-stripping or caulk to seal gaps and cracks around windows and doors to stop air leaks and prevent energy loss. If that is not an option, you can also cover windows with towels, sheets or plastic to help keep the warm air in your house. Seal air leaks in your unfinished basement, particularly along rim joists and sill plates. Add an airtight door to your fireplace to keep heated air from escaping through the chimney.


Reduce the temperature on your water heater.


Set the temperature on your water heater to 120 degrees Fahrenheit or put it on the “warm” setting. If your home will be vacant for two days or more, set the dial to the pilot position for even more savings.


Close blinds and curtains.


This helps keep warm air inside, especially if the sun is not shining. When the sun is shining, open drapes on the south-side windows to take advantage of free heat from the sun.


Change or clean filters.


A clean filter on your furnace can lower your energy consumption by 5% to 15%. Dirty filters cost more to use and overwork the equipment.


Hold off on doing chores.


Doing laundry and washing dishes can both use natural gas to heat the water and your dryer. If you can, wait until the extreme cold weather passes to complete these activities. If you cannot wait, use the cold setting where possible.


Install foam gaskets on switches and outlets.


Electrical switches and outlets can account for up to 10% of your home’s energy loss.


Change rotation of ceiling fans.


Hot air rises, so reverse your ceiling fans to a clockwise rotation to push that warmth back downward.


Additionally, remember these safety tips during cold weather:


Never use your stove or oven for home heating.


Make sure nothing obstructs a furnace’s air intake and that vents and flues are intact and unblocked to avoid the potential of carbon monoxide poisoning.
When removing ice and snow in the vicinity of meters, vents or flues, do so carefully so as not to cause damage.


Leave cabinet doors open, especially those on exterior walls, to reduce the risk of frozen pipes.