It feels like the perfect time to act. The government is throwing money at people to beef up insulation, replace gas-burning appliances and install electric vehicle chargers.
But you can’t do any of that. You rent your place, and it’s hard enough to get your landlord to react when something breaks.
The Star Tribune went on Reddit to ask whether anyone had ever persuaded their landlord to make climate-related improvements. One St. Paulite responded, “I think my last landlord before buying my own home would have laughed in my face. They barely did anything to fix the leaky roof.”
So what’s a renter to do?
Experts in energy efficiency, electrification and landlord-tenant rights said there are plenty of ways for renters to shrink their carbon footprint. And those actions could add up, considering how many of you there are — about half of the population in Minneapolis and St. Paul are renters.
“Typically, we focus on behavioral things with renters, so focusing what they do have control over,” said Carmen Carruthers, outreach director for the Citizens Utility Board of Minnesota, or CUB.
From a landlord’s perspective, it can be hard to justify raising the rent to cover the cost of an improvement like better insulation, Carruthers said.
But more than half the energy use in a typical Minnesota home comes from heating and cooling, and small actions can pay off. In winter, use draft blockers under doors or on windowsills and cover energy-leaking windows with plastic. In the summer, run fans before air conditioners.