Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
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Posted By: jamesingramhttp://www.sciencealert.com/how-graphene-could-help-solar-panels-produce-energy-when-it-s-raining" >http://www.sciencealert.com/how-graphene-could-help-solar-panels-produce-energy-when-it-s-rainingA short while ago, it seemed (to me) that PV economies-of-scale had been largely reached and set-up costs had reduced to a plateau where they were likely to stay.
Well that's an idea
Posted By: fostertomPosted By: jamesingramhttp://www.sciencealert.com/how-graphene-could-help-solar-panels-produce-energy-when-it-s-raining" >http://www.sciencealert.com/how-graphene-could-help-solar-panels-produce-energy-when-it-s-raining
Well that's an idea
Centralised electicity producers won't begin to compete; the grid will still be needed for a while more; near-PH buildings will cost nothing to power; the non-PH existing buildings will become prohibitive if not impossible to power.
Posted By: Simon Stillexplain how self generation with individual household solar panels and batteries is going to work in areas of high population densityAre you ruling out multifold increases in kWh collected per m2 of collector? I wouldn't.
Posted By: Simon Stillpayback time for a rebuild of a house (or retrofit to passive standard) based on average UK household energy costs of £1,264 p.a. (you can add a loading factor of c10 to that if you want - make it £10k p.a. for simplicity).You're saying major near-PH retrofit won't happen, by extrapolating all present factors as if they're not changing. c10 sounds generous but is greatly insufficient - we're talking exponentials here.
Posted By: Simon Stilland I think you're in the realms of fantasy and that it's dangerous to make these claims without actually providing the maths to back them up. Just waving your hands in the air saying "will eventually reverse", "exponential", "improve vastly" doesn't do it.
Posted By: bot de pailleas for electric cars, when they run on petrol they can only run on ... petrol.
Posted By: Simon StillA shift from fossil fuels for personal transport (which is certainly desirable) will vastly increase electrical demandAgain, just extrapolating the present:
Posted By: Simon Stillthose challlenges are largely humantrue - and therefore subject to overnight inversion, whether by old fashioned popular revolution, or by film, book, news event that floods the media. Just to look back 50, 10, even 1 yrear, is to see fantastic changes in general (not just fringe/greenie) awareness, not just national or even western, but worldwide.
Posted By: billt
If we go back to the 50s in other respects (no electronic devices except for a wireless, no internet, no domestic freezers etc) we could cut electricity demand significantly. Good luck, trying to do that without draconian interventions.