Showing posts with label alternative energy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alternative energy. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Passive Houses the Alternative Energy Wave of the Future?


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Are passive houses the alternative energy wave of the future? In these houses there are no drafts, no cold tile floors, no snuggling under blankets until the furnace kicks in. There is, in fact, no furnace.
Even on the coldest nights in central Germany, Mr. Kaufmann’s new “passive house” and others of this design get all the heat and hot water they need from the amount of energy that would be needed to run a hair dryer.
The most interesting part of this revolution is that passive houses only cost about 5 to 7 percent more than conventional houses.

No Furnaces but Heat Aplenty in ‘Passive Houses’

By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL

DARMSTADT, Germany — From the outside, there is nothing unusual about the stylish new gray and orange row houses in the Kranichstein District, with wreaths on the doors and Christmas lights twinkling through a freezing drizzle. But these houses are part of a revolution in building design: There are no drafts, no cold tile floors, no snuggling under blankets until the furnace kicks in. There is, in fact, no furnace.

In Berthold Kaufmann’s home, there is, to be fair, one radiator for emergency backup in the living room — but it is not in use. Even on the coldest nights in central Germany, Mr. Kaufmann’s new “passive house” and others of this design get all the heat and hot water they need from the amount of energy that would be needed to run a hair dryer.

“You don’t think about temperature — the house just adjusts,” said Mr. Kaufmann, watching his 2-year-old daughter, dressed in a T-shirt, tuck into her sausage in the spacious living room, whose glass doors open to a patio. His new home uses about one-twentieth the heating energy of his parents’ home of roughly the same size, he said.

Architects in many countries, in attempts to meet new energy efficiency standards like the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design standard in the United States, are designing homes with better insulation and high-efficiency appliances, as well as tapping into alternative sources of power, like solar panels and wind turbines.

The concept of the passive house, pioneered in this city of 140,000 outside Frankfurt, approaches the challenge from a different angle. Using ultrathick insulation and complex doors and windows, the architect engineers a home encased in an airtight shell, so that barely any heat escapes and barely any cold seeps in. That means a passive house can be warmed not only by the sun, but also by the heat from appliances and even from occupants’ bodies.

And in Germany, passive houses cost only about 5 to 7 percent more to build than conventional houses.

Decades ago, attempts at creating sealed solar-heated homes failed, because of stagnant air and mold. But new passive houses use an ingenious central ventilation system. The warm air going out passes side by side with clean, cold air coming in, exchanging heat with 90 percent efficiency.

“The myth before was that to be warm you had to have heating. Our goal is to create a warm house without energy demand,” said Wolfgang Hasper, an engineer at the Passivhaus Institut in Darmstadt. “This is not about wearing thick pullovers, turning the thermostat down and putting up with drafts. It’s about being comfortable with less energy input, and we do this by recycling heating.”

There are now an estimated 15,000 passive houses around the world, the vast majority built in the past few years in German-speaking countries or Scandinavia.

The first passive home was built here in 1991 by Wolfgang Feist, a local physicist, but diffusion of the idea was slowed by language. The courses and literature were mostly in German, and even now the components are mass-produced only in this part of the world.

The industry is thriving in Germany, however — for example, schools in Frankfurt are built with the technique.

Moreover, its popularity is spreading. The European Commission is promoting passive-house building, and the European Parliament has proposed that new buildings meet passive-house standards by 2011.

The United States Army, long a presence in this part of Germany, is considering passive-house barracks.

“Awareness is skyrocketing; it’s hard for us to keep up with requests,” Mr. Hasper said.

Nabih Tahan, a California architect who worked in Austria for 11 years, is completing one of the first passive houses in the United States for his family in Berkeley. He heads a group of 70 Bay Area architects and engineers working to encourage wider acceptance of the standards. “This is a recipe for energy that makes sense to people,” Mr. Tahan said. “Why not reuse this heat you get for free?”

Ironically, however, when California inspectors were examining the Berkeley home to determine whether it met “green” building codes (it did), he could not get credit for the heat exchanger, a device that is still uncommon in the United States. “When you think about passive-house standards, you start looking at buildings in a different way,” he said.

Buildings that are certified hermetically sealed may sound suffocating. (To meet the standard, a building must pass a “blow test” showing that it loses minimal air under pressure.) In fact, passive houses have plenty of windows — though far more face south than north — and all can be opened.

Inside, a passive home does have a slightly different gestalt from conventional houses, just as an electric car drives differently from its gas-using cousin. There is a kind of spaceship-like uniformity of air and temperature. The air from outside all goes through HEPA filters before entering the rooms. The cement floor of the basement isn’t cold. The walls and the air are basically the same temperature.

Look closer and there are technical differences: When the windows are swung open, you see their layers of glass and gas, as well as the elaborate seals around the edges. A small, grated duct near the ceiling in the living room brings in clean air. In the basement there is no furnace, but instead what looks like a giant Styrofoam cooler, containing the heat exchanger.

Passive houses need no human tinkering, but most architects put in a switch with three settings, which can be turned down for vacations, or up to circulate air for a party (though you can also just open the windows). “We’ve found it’s very important to people that they feel they can influence the system,” Mr. Hasper said.

The houses may be too radical for those who treasure an experience like drinking hot chocolate in a cold kitchen. But not for others. “I grew up in a great old house that was always 10 degrees too cold, so I knew I wanted to make something different,” said Georg W. Zielke, who built his first passive house here, for his family, in 2003 and now designs no other kinds of buildings.

In Germany the added construction costs of passive houses are modest and, because of their growing popularity and an ever larger array of attractive off-the-shelf components, are shrinking.

But the sophisticated windows and heat-exchange ventilation systems needed to make passive houses work properly are not readily available in the United States. So the construction of passive houses in the United States, at least initially, is likely to entail a higher price differential.

Moreover, the kinds of home construction popular in the United States are more difficult to adapt to the standard: residential buildings tend not to have built-in ventilation systems of any kind, and sliding windows are hard to seal.

Dr. Feist’s original passive house — a boxy white building with four apartments — looks like the science project that it was intended to be. But new passive houses come in many shapes and styles. The Passivhaus Institut, which he founded a decade ago, continues to conduct research, teaches architects, and tests homes to make sure they meet standards. It now has affiliates in Britain and the United States.

Still, there are challenges to broader adoption even in Europe.

Because a successful passive house requires the interplay of the building, the sun and the climate, architects need to be careful about site selection. Passive-house heating might not work in a shady valley in Switzerland, or on an urban street with no south-facing wall. Researchers are looking into whether the concept will work in warmer climates — where a heat exchanger could be used in reverse, to keep cool air in and warm air out.

And those who want passive-house mansions may be disappointed. Compact shapes are simpler to seal, while sprawling homes are difficult to insulate and heat.

Most passive houses allow about 500 square feet per person, a comfortable though not expansive living space. Mr. Hasper said people who wanted thousands of square feet per person should look for another design.

“Anyone who feels they need that much space to live,” he said, “well, that’s a different discussion.”

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Taos Solar Music Festival Promotes Renewable Energy with the Power of Music


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The festival’s Solar Stage will be powered by photovoltaic panels while the main stage uses the wind energy from Kit Carson Electric
Proclaimed the Solar Capital of the World, Taos, New Mexico has been committed to going green for a long time, and this summer thousands of people from around the world will gather their umbrellas, sunscreen, family and friends, and make a musical pilgrimage to this high desert town for the 10th Annual Taos Solar Music Festival. Renowned for its brave and eclectic montage of musical acts, a solar and wind powered stage and educational Solar Village, the 2008 festival is scheduled for June 27-29th.
http://www.solarmusicfest.com.
They’re walking the walk and living green.
The festival’s Solar Stage will be powered by photovoltaic panels while the main stage uses the wind energy from Kit Carson Electric

First zero-carbon city to rise out of the desert


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One of the world's largest oil producers has begun construction on the first zero-carbon city, powered entirely by renewable energy.
Officials from Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates, touted plans for a $22 billion development known as the Masdar Initiative at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), in Cambridge, US, in on 5 May.
"This is going to create huge business and research opportunities to get beyond where we are today," says Khaled Awad, of the government-owned Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company.
Solar power, in the form of photovoltaic panels, concentrated solar collectors, and solar thermal tubes will provide 82% of the city's energy needs.
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Monday, May 5, 2008

Engineering wonder world's longest sea-crossing bridge (China)


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clipped from blogs.usatoday.com
The world's longest sea-crossing bridge opened in China just a few days ago, an engineering wonder designed to cut in half the travel time between Shanghai and the key port of Ningbo — from four hours to about two. But as with many/most traffic projects, planners just couldn't factor in the variables of one confounding element: humans.
Bridge050508
Since the Hangzhou Bay Bridge opened Friday, traffic has doubled.
"I just wanted to drive a bit slowly and enjoy the sea breeze. Is that wrong?" one driver complained, according to Zhejiang Online
The 36km-long Hangzhou Bay Bridge is a six-lane highway bridge and the longest ocean-crossing bridge in the world.
The 36km-long Hangzhou Bay Bridge is a six-lane highway bridge and the longest ocean-crossing bridge in the world.
The service island at the middle of the Hangzhou Bay Bridge serves as a sightseeing location for drivers and can also support rescue services.
The service island at the middle of the Hangzhou Bay Bridge serves as a sightseeing location for drivers and can also support rescue services.
An artist's impression of the finished cable-stayed bridge.
"Designed for 100 years of service life, the bridge has speed limits of 100km/h for the main spans and 120km/h for land approaches."
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$60 Million for Advanced Concentrating Solar Power Technologies


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clipped from www.energy.gov
U.S. Under Secretary of Energy Clarence “Bud” Albright today announced the issuance of the Solar Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) for up to $60 million in funding over five years (Fiscal Years 2008-2012), which includes $10 million in FY 2008 appropriations and $10 million in the FY 2009 Budget request, to support the development of low-cost Concentrating Solar Power (CSP) technology.

“Harnessing the natural and abundant power of the sun and more cost-effectively converting it into energy is an important component of our comprehensive strategy to commercialize and deploy advanced clean, alternative technologies that will allow us to become less reliant on foreign oil,” Albright said.  “The Administration’s investment in solar technology will not only bolster innovation, but will help meet the President’s goal of making solar power cost-competitive with conventional sources of electricity over the next seven years.”

U.S. Department of Energy Partners with City to Help Rebuild With 100 Percent Renewable Energy


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clipped from www.energy.gov
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today highlighted its renewable energy and energy efficient building design assistance - valued at up to $1.25 million - in rebuilding the City of Greensburg, Kansas, one of the first cities in the country to power its homes and businesses through continuous renewable energy.  Following the tornado that hit Greensburg last year, DOE dedicated a team of experts to advise Greensburg in construction of an advanced wind energy system and the use of efficient building technologies and designs.
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Eat, Shop, Live Green in New York


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For those looking for a helpful green guide without the guilt, Greenopia has come up with a new handbook that is printed on recycled paper (chlorine-free), produced by a printer that is virtually volatile-organic-compound-free, researched by combustion-engine-free people who took public transportation or bicycles, and produced in a carbon-offsetty way such that any wayward CO2 output is covered by a donation to Carbonfund.org
greenopia
Looking for kennel-free doggie day-care
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Oil conservation: getting over the hump


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Trade in your SUV — the answer to high oil prices is here!

Farmers in the Indian state of Rajasthan are rediscovering the humble camel.

As the cost of running gas-guzzling tractors soars, even-toed ungulates are making a comeback, raising hopes that a fall in the population of the desert state’s signature animal can be reversed.

Market prices for these “ships of the desert”, which crashed with the growing affordability of motorised transport, are rising again as oil prices soar.

A sturdy male with a life expectancy of 60-80 years now fetches up to Rs40,000 ($973), compared to Rs5,000-Rs10,000 three years ago, according to Hanuwant Singh of the Lokhit Pashu-Palak Sansthan, a non-profit welfare organisation for livestock keepers. Entry-level tractors cost around $4,000.

Unfortunately, I don’t think there’s camel parking in the Prospect Street garage.

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Green Ink: Pollution and Bad Hair


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clipped from blogs.wsj.com
Auto makers and dealers are going to the states to stop lawmakers from following California’s move to regulate greenhouse-gas emissions, writes the WSJ
As automakers gear up to introduce plug-in hybrid cars in 2010, they are worried that rising electricity prices may deter consumers
The Boston Globe reports on states’ efforts to reduce green-house gas emissions
The United Nations Climate Panel is optimistic that a climate change deal can be reached by 2009
The Nature article on “global cooling” has been widely misreported
Earth2Tech has a roundup of information-technology entrepreneurs entering the cleantech market looking for the next “Google of cleantech
men living in polluted areas are more likely to go bald, according to a new study from the University of London
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Saturday, May 3, 2008

Ancient Volcano Erupts after 10,000 Years


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clipped from news.aol.com
The Chaiten volcano spewed light ash on a nearly deserted village Saturday, two days after its first eruption in thousands of years
Just six miles away, the volcano belched fat smoke plumes that at times rose as high as 12 miles into the air, the government's Emergency Bureau said.
Winds carried the ash to other towns in the region and across the Andes mountains to Argentina, where two airlines suspended flights due to poor visibility.
The Chaiten volcano has "probably been dormant for about 9,000 or 10,000 years but that's not unusual," said Charles Stern, a professor of volcanology at the University of Colorado who specializes in Andes volcanoes.
"This could be the end of our town,"
"We have worked an entire life here and now all we could do was to put a few things in a bag and depart, leaving everything behind."
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America's Greenest Colleges


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clipped from www.forbes.com
Long a hotbed of environmental activism, America's campuses are blooming green. Schools are committing to reducing their carbon dioxide emissions, they're funneling endowment money into renewable-energy investment funds, and students--the engine behind much of this growth--are pushing for more.
pic
In Pictures: America's Greenest Colleges
clipped from www.forbes.com
Read the full story

Brian Wingfield

ALT

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Shell Game: Oil Giant Pulls out of U.K. Wind Farm


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clipped from blogs.wsj.com
We’ve mentioned before the belief that high oil prices will inevitably spur more alternative energy.
Royal Dutch Shell said it is pulling out of the “London Array,” which—if it ever gets built—will be one of the world’s largest wind farms.
Shell’s departure leaves the other two partners, Germany’s E.On and Denmark’s DONG, holding the bag on an increasingly expensive and complex project
The Times of London called the departure a “huge blow” to Britain’s ambitious plans to harness offshore wind to meet growing energy needs. The Guardian is harsher:
Even though it isn’t clear if or when U.S. federal clean-energy subsidies will be renewed, European utilities are champing at the bit to enter the U.S. wind market.
texas_art_200_20080501133600.jpg

Answers About Alternative Energy in New York City


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Following is a first set of answers from Carol E. Murphy, who is taking questions from City Room readers about alternative energy choices for consumers, what New York City is doing to decrease its reliance on fossil fuels and how city dwellers can decrease their “carbon footprint.” Readers are invited to submit additional questions using the comment form below.

Is New York doing enough to promote solar? Incentives,
research, tax breaks?

New York is playing catch up with the rest of the nation when it comes to investment in and policies promoting solar energy. Gov. David A. Paterson’s Renewable Energy Task Force calls for a comprehensive program for solar photovoltaic and solar thermal (heating water for domestic use and space heating) with a goal of 100 megawatts of installed solar PV systems and 1,100 solar thermal systems across New York by 2011.

New York State Energy Research and Development Authority.
, Audubon
bell
Ask About Alternative Energy

DOE Seeks to Invest up to $60 Million for Advanced Concentrating Solar Power Technologies


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clipped from www.energy.gov
U.S. Under Secretary of Energy Clarence “Bud” Albright today announced the issuance of the Solar Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) for up to $60 million in funding over five years
Increasing the use of solar energy is an important component of the Administration’s efforts to diversify our nation’s energy sources in an effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and enhance our energy security.
The FOA makes funding available for projects from industry and academia that develop advanced thermal storage concepts and heat transfer fluids to further increase the efficiency of concentrating solar power plants
Read more information on the President’s Solar America and Advanced Energy Initiatives and the Department of Energy’s commercialization efforts on the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy's website.
Financial Opportunities page or Grants.gov.

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

OT: The Allure of the Forever Stamp


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On May 12 the price of a stamp is rising by one cent. (a 2.4 percent increase). Right now you have the opportunity to lock in the 41 cent price forever. Is there any doubt, given the cost of gasoline, that the price will be rising again soon? This might rank as one of the best investments opportunities for businesses in a long time.

The stamp is quite handsome as you can see.
Risky investments and rising prices seem to be everywhere these days
For the past year, branches have been selling “The Forever Stamp” for 41 cents each
INSERT DESCRIPTION
“The stamp will be good for mailing one-ounce First-Class letters anytime in the future — regardless of price changes,” the agency promises.
As the penny increase of May 12 nears, the forever deal is proving irresistible to millions of Americans, according to today’s news release:
In the past several weeks, Postal Service customers have been buying Forever Stamps at a rate of about 30 million per day, bringing the amount sold to more than 6 billion since they were first offered.
The Associated Press further detailed the climb, reporting forever stamp sales of $267,696,023 in March, $207,900,132 in February and $115,303,031 in January

When the standard stamp switches to 42 cents, so will the forever version, thus commencing a new round of forever stamp stockpiling.

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The World's Biggest Clean-Energy Projects


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Use the links to read the full story and to view the pictures and descriptions of the biggest clean energy projects.
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Monday, April 28, 2008

Free Cone Day at Ben & Jerry's


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Don't forget. Free cone day at Ben & Jerry's is Tuesday, April 29, 2008.
To find a scoop shop near you Go Here. Enjoy!!!
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OT: Why This Oil Shock is the Big One


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clipped from blogs.wsj.com
chart
Oil is up almost $30 a barrel in just four months, trading Friday as high as $119.50 a barrel.
Demand in China continues to fuel demand
Domestic oil demand has dropped 1.6% over the last year as the economy weakens
“an exogenous shock, similar to to the supply shortages of the mid-1970s, early 1980s and briefly in the early 1990s.”
spending on energy as a share of wage income has shot up above 6%
topping the 1974-75 and 1990-91 shocks to be the worst since the 1980-81 runup
the current shock is far worse than any of the three prior ones,
The figures “suggest that energy costs will crowd out other spending components because income growth is being stifled by weakness in payroll employment,”
“Moreover, relatively thin saving flows offer consumers little cushion against the rising oil prices.”
Weak retail sales — from cars to appliances to clothing — are clear signs of the effect
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Sunday, April 27, 2008

'Rent-a-solar-cell' on the drawing board


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One way photovoltaic power is spreading in other parts of the country is by firms installing their solar cells on top of other companies' buildings – basically, leasing roof space and sharing the resulting income from electric generation.
A Delaware company called CitizenRe wants to bring that model to homeowners. It's trying to establish a "rent-a-solar-cell" model around the country, using local agents recruited in an Amway-like, network-level marketing model.
Kesty, who has a degree in environmental studies, thinks people who want to cut greenhouse-gas emissions will jump at the chance of getting solar power with fewer hassles and without having to invest in the hardware
Details are still meager
This lack of details has produced plenty of skeptics who don't believe the cost of building and installing small arrays of photovoltaic cells on thousands of roofs can be covered by the power they generate.
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Saturday, April 26, 2008

A Peek at U.S. Energy Subsidies


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clipped from blogs.wsj.com
Ever wondered how much U.S. federal energy subsidies amount to—and who’s getting them?
So did Tennessee Senator Lamar Alexander
who almost a year ago asked the Energy Information Administration to cough up the latest numbers
This month, the EIA did.
Trough_art_200_20080425143056.jpg
Since 1999, federal energy subsidies have more than doubled—from $8.2 billion to $16.6 billion in 2007
Renewables” landed $4.8 billion last year, but that includes $3.25 billion for ethanol and other biofuels
Coal and cleaner-burning “refined” coal took home $3.3 billion
nuclear power industry got $1.3 billion
Federal energy subsidies seem to dominate discussion on the Hill (and overseas)
Sen. Alexander
argued against the current subsidy mix
After a doubling of federal energy subsidies in eight years, the EIA notes, U.S. total energy production is “virtually unchanged” at 72 quadrillion British Thermal Units
with the significant incentives provided to various production segments of the energy sector would tend to raise domestic energy production.
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