I ave ith his infrared cam- era in one hand and a smoke stick in the other, Adam Duke, 24, of Bloomfield Hills is like an energy-saving super-sleuth. The president and co-founder of Go Green Energy Consulting in Southfield moves from room to room searching high and low — around baseboards and window ledges, in the wells of re- cessed lighting and along ceilings — for air leaks and other inefficiencies that can wastefully boost a homeowner's energy bills. His company, with nine full-time employees, makes house calls all over Southeastern Michigan performing home energy audits and recommending and installing upgrades like door and window frame sealing, weather stripping, door sweeps and spray foam insulation. By making these simple changes, he says most homeowners can save more than 20 percent on their energy bills. "We take a look at the whole house as a system," he says. "Most people are definite- ly paying more than they need to." Jonathon Koenigsberg of West Bloom- field says he was one of them. He had Go Green assess and make improvements to his 2,900-square-foot house in West Bloomfield, which was built in the early 1970s. While Koenigsberg did not offer specifics, he's certain his Consumers En- ergy bills have gone down. "They sealed a bunch of different areas and put in some insulation here and there," Koenigsberg said. "This is the first winter since the work was done, but I believe it really did make a difference Another customer, listed as "Tony D. of Lathrup Village," posted this comment on the company's website. Southfield- based energy consultants make house calls to help lower utility bills. By Robin Schwartz I I 12 March 2012 I • RED MED ree "I have received our first electric bill since your company's work on our home," it says. "Our electric bill was $220. At the same time last year it ranged from $340- $380." FROM THE GROUND UP Duke built the home energy evaluation and upgrade company from the ground up with his longtime friend, Jacob Smith, 23, of West Bloomfield. Both have busi- ness degrees: Duke from Michigan State University; Smith from the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business, where he focused on marketing and social entrepreneurship. Duke also took courses in alternative energy engineering technol- ogy at Lansing Com- munity College and is a certified home energy specialist through the Build- ing Performance Institute. A family tragedy actually got the ball rolling on the green business. In 2006, on his first day of col- lege, Duke's family's house in Waterford burned down in an electrical fire. At Adam Duke the time, an MSU professor introduced Duke to energy con- servation, and he decided to incorporate those principles in the construction and rebuilding process. "I helped my family build a green house," Duke says. "By implementing efficient technologies, I knew I could save them a substantial amount of money on their energy bills. The project was extremely successful." He says he started Go Green Energy Consulting to do the same thing for other families, and Duke is right at home when it comes to entrepreneurial endeavors. At age 18, when he was senior class president at Birmingham Groves High School (and his school's homecoming king), he started an out-of-state dance business teaching dance classes to middle school students at the Alfred and Adele Davis Academy, a Re- form Jewish day school in Dunwoody, Ga., near Atlanta. For six weeks, he'd fly back and forth between Detroit and Atlanta to run the business. He says his passion shift- ed from dance to working with the environment and helping boost Michigan's economy. "I've worked on a wide range of jobs from solar panel installation, electri- cal supply distribution and even public policy to help write our state's Renew- able Energy Policy," Duke says. "Nearly all can drasti- cally reduce their energy use through basic energy efficiency upgrades. This also helps the environ- ment by reducing consum- er reliance on polluting fossil fuels." HIGH-TECH TESTS Go Green Energy Consulting has a host of high-tech equipment (some of which looks like it belongs at a hazardous mate- rial cleanup site), which it uses to evaluate homes. One test, called the "blower door test," involves sealing off an exterior door www.redthreadmagazine.com •