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YOU!: Fix the US Energy Crisis |
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| Jan26-12, 12:31 PM | #783 |
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YOU!: Fix the US Energy Crisis |
| Jan26-12, 01:35 PM | #784 |
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Sometimes, it would be nice to have the place a little bit warmer in the winter without stoking the stove, but adding studs and insulation to the outer walls would destroy the appearance of the place. As it is, I have to be careful not to stoke the stove when the outside temperature is freezing or higher, because it gets really hot in here. Extra insulation would require us to buy a much smaller wood-stove to avoid getting roasted out. I enjoy splitting, stacking and seasoning hardwood that has only sequestered carbon for maybe 40 years instead of burning #2 heating oil (~$3.60/gallon right now). I could cut the wood off our 10 acres, but I prefer to buy the wood from my niece's husband, who runs a bulk-firewood operation in the spring/summer. That saves me a lot of work and risk. My footing is not so great after I had a stroke, so running a screaming chainsaw on steep side-hills (about the only terrain on our property) is not an attractive option. |
| Jan26-12, 01:43 PM | #785 |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_recovery_ventilation Sealed up homes still need to turn the air over, and I expect you'll get a more even room temp as a benefit. Not sure how much duct work you'd need to add. |
| Jan26-12, 02:21 PM | #786 |
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The only duct-work we have is connected to the oil furnace, and this place is so small that ducting would be overkill. We burn less than 5 cords of seasoned hardwood/year, so our heating energy costs are negligible. As summers have gotten hotter and hotter, we need more air-conditioning, but hopefully the new windows will cut back that cost, too.
My youngest uncle is a (semi-retired) HVAC guy, and he's pretty darned sharp. When he saw these last two problematic windows, he said "Replace them, and they'll pay for themselves in a few years." I know he's right, and shouldn't have waited this long to swap them out, but there always seemed to be other priorities cropping up. Still, replacing drafty old windows pays more than keeping money in savings accounts. |
| Feb2-12, 04:26 PM | #787 |
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It's official now. We have passed the Peak Oil and there is not evident solution:
http://www.wired.com/autopia/2012/01...tudy-peak-oil/ |
| Feb2-12, 04:32 PM | #788 |
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| Feb8-12, 06:51 PM | #789 |
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Lift ALL restrictions on oil and gas production / refining nationwide.
CEASE all exports of energy. To include crude and refined product as well as gas. Possible exception for batteries. Eliminate trading of ALL futures contracts of energy. Defund the EPA and scatter those responsible for the outrageous damage they have done!. Cease all "alternative energy" dreams and subsidies, including tax breaks. All research to be privately funded. I wish them well but see no need to fund their pipe dreams. Kill all building of hybrid cars which in fact ADD to pollution. Suspend the clean air act until such time as all job killing, cost increasing provisons are removed. Eliminate all efficiency standards for things like vehicles, light bulbs, home heating etc. Remove alcohol contamination from gasoline and bio contamination from diesel fuel. Give a tax break for construction of new coal fired generating plants and advanced nuclear plants. To aid construction, eliminate income taxes for those working on the projects. IMMEDIATELY resume nuclear fuel reprocessing for the valuable material otherwise wasted and to reduce the volume of high level waste to be stored. Build such new electrical transmission lines as necessary. Grant maximum of 14 days for all NIMBY actions and hearings. No more roadblocks to sighting of transmission lines, coal and nuclear plants, refineries and nuclear waste disposal sites to name only a few. Am I serious?? You better believe I am!! Our "energy crisis" has been created by politics. Our current economic funk can also be traced to the treasonous acts of the EPA, DOE and congress to mention only a few of the crimminals involved. |
| Feb8-12, 07:06 PM | #790 |
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An important question is why we have a looming energy crisis at all. Perhaps we should find an answer to a lifestyle crisis that is clearly driving an energy crisis. Just a thought. |
| Feb8-12, 07:29 PM | #791 |
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I've thought about this a lot. There was never an energy crisis 200 year ago because people lived different lifestyles and the technology which consumes large amounts of energy hadn't been created yet. Solving the energy crisis is rather simple, just revert back to the lifestyles of Ben Franklin and its problem solved. This would obviously never happen but I think it is a very practical solution. This of course raises another question; is it really worth doing? Man kinds time on earth is finite no matter which way you look at it. Is it better for humanity to exist as long as possible, or to achieve as much as possible. Without the consumption of energy and pollution of the planet we would never go to Mars, there would be no LHC, and we would have to give up on our search for a theory of everything. I think there's a practical solution somewhere there in the middle but there's no telling if we'll ever find it. |
| Feb8-12, 07:54 PM | #792 |
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There were energy crises hundreds of years ago. People denuded the forests of Europe for fuel and building materials, and were well on the way to doing so in the Americas until Coal came along. In the early 19th century it was said that a man had to travel 50 miles from Boston center to find a tree fell-able for firewood.
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| Feb9-12, 03:15 AM | #793 |
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Inevitably we will have to convert to a clean, sustainable and high energy system. Clean because we don't want to cause any more ecological damage (for practical and aesthetic reasons), sustainable because if not we just delay the problem and high energy because we have to maintain our current level of infrastructure as well as coping with the developing world electrifying. On the subject of growing levels and ease of renewable power according to this new scientist article the cost of solar panels have quartered in the last four years. This doesn't surprise me as in the UK there's been something of a gold rush for home solar power, a few years ago the only solar panels I saw on buildings were corporate show-offs or university institutions. Now there are solar panelled roofs everywhere, there are probably a few dozen in my small town alone. It doesn't sound like much (and it's not) but the cost is now low enough for the above average wealth family and if they keep coming down soon it will be affordable for the majority of people. Obviously there are problems with solar power like not producing power at night or on a cloudy day but it is a great supplement and an intensive for people to nail the storage problem. |
| Feb9-12, 12:47 PM | #794 |
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Part of that solar expansion in the UK must be due to the UK's large solar feed-in tariff. The cost of PV panels have dropped by ~half in the developed world over the past four years, but not the installed cost and not the cost per kWh (though they too are falling), especially not in the higher latitudes. London's year round average daily insolation is ~2.7 kWh/M^2, compared to ~7-8 kWh/M^2 in Phoenix. Furthermore London gathers most of that energy during its long summer days, and in the winter collection falls off to nothing, up to 40X less than in the summer, unlike Phoenix. I agree the solution is storage as Ryan says, but currently long term storage is much more cost effective with solar thermal-hot water than PV.
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| Feb13-12, 08:18 PM | #795 |
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| Feb13-12, 08:24 PM | #796 |
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| Feb14-12, 01:18 PM | #797 |
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http://www.google.com/publicdata/exp...=1234587600000 I'd also like to see fossil fuel energy use per capita in developed countries, which must be falling even faster. |
| Feb28-12, 07:56 AM | #798 |
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| Feb28-12, 11:21 AM | #799 |
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All that is needed to decrease population growth to near nothing is to establish these things. |
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