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Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition
Green Building Bible, fourth edition (both books)
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.

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    • CommentAuthortony
    • CommentTimeSep 1st 2010
     
    Wookey recently quoted "McKay estimated average UK personal consumption (including 'stuff', transport, food+agriculture etc) to be 195kWh per person per day".

    How much should we each use?

    At home I have used on average 16kWh per day for the past year.
  1.  
    Posted By: tonyAt home I have used on average 16kWh per day for the past year.


    Don't forget to count food
    Don't forget to count transportation of the food
    Don't forget to include energy used to grow the good
    Don't forget to include energy used to make the fertilizer to grow the food
    Don't forget to include the gasoline/diesel you use to get the food to your house

    You will quickly find that you have used far more than 16kWh per day unless you never leave your house and grow all your own food. In North America, it takes 10 Calories of oil energy to produce 1 Calorie of food energy. If you eat 2500 Calories a day, then you'll have used approximately 29kWh in fossil fuels to produce that food, raising your total to 45kWh - which is close to 2000W of power usage 24/7 365 days a year.

    Paul in Montreal.
    • CommentAuthorevan
    • CommentTimeSep 1st 2010 edited
     
    close to 2000W of power usage 24/7 365 days a year.


    That's interesting.. A person only produces, what is it, 100W of heat output on standby? Not a very efficient conversion rate.
    • CommentAuthorowlman
    • CommentTimeSep 1st 2010
     
    We should all strive to use less tony. but I believe you are now retired and consequently your needs are greatly reduced. The big question is how much did you use getting to where you are now.
    Your home efforts are admirable, I can't match them, few can, but I try to be very modest in other areas of my existance. I grow most of my own veg, I keep hens, I don't eat meat, I don't holiday outside the UK, I haven't been on a plane in over 16 years, and I drive, infrequently, a modest car. Short of demolishing my home to make way for another more "eco" model I've done about as much as I'm doing.
    I think I may be in favour of personal rationing though, provided all aspects are on the table. That would be selfish though, " pulling up the ladder ", while the next generation are still trying to get up on the roof.
    •  
      CommentAuthorDamonHD
    • CommentTimeSep 1st 2010 edited
     
    Our personal carbon footprint at home for my family of 4 is going to be about 250kgCO2e for the *year* for 2010 electricity and gas (ie heat and light) whereas 6 years ago for just two of us it was 6tCO2e for each year.

    Our net consumption electricity is about -1.4kWh/day/person, ie we are net exporters to the grid.

    http://www.earth.org.uk/saving-electricity.html#meter2010

    But that is only a smallish part of the picture as pointed out above. MacKay suggested to me that the UK gov produces about 5t+ of CO2e per year per citizen on thier behalf just for a start, ie ignoring food and what MacKay calls "stuff" (eg embodied energy in all the junk that we buy).

    And yes, pulling up the ladder after us on purpose would be selfish and unreasonable. We may be doing anyway by depleting reserves of oil, etc...

    Rgds

    Damon
    • CommentAuthorjamesingram
    • CommentTimeSep 1st 2010 edited
     
    What ever we use in energy and resource terms we should be looking at ways to reduce it by say 5% each year , this will allow us to reach CO2 reduction targets and gain many of the other benefits along the way .
    Unfortunately the developement ( improvements ) of modern society seems to be directly related to increased energy and resource use.
    I believe the way forward is to find ways to get more out of our resources , hopefully allowing this developement to continue ( moving people out of poverty )
    these programs seem to have a clear vision of the way forward
    http://www.zerocarbonbritain.org/
    zerocarbonbritain2030 is a positive, realistic policy framework to eliminate emissions from fossil fuels within 20 years.
    http://www.naturaledgeproject.net/factor5.aspx
    Transforming the Global economy through 80% improvement in resource productivity

    personally , our home for a family of 5 people currently uses approx 5 kWh/person/day and there's nothing particularly eco about our way of life or the design of the house in which we live. ( Seems low ! well the secret is its an upstairs masoniette )
    •  
      CommentAuthorDamonHD
    • CommentTimeSep 1st 2010
     
    Here was my page based on MacKay's "Can we live on (local) renewables" chapter. I had to invent^Wresearch some of the numbers but most of the substantive ones are his:

    http://www.earth.org.uk/can-we-live-on-local-renewables.html

    Rgds

    Damon
    • CommentAuthormarktime
    • CommentTimeSep 1st 2010 edited
     
    The easiest way to reduce energy/CO2 footprint is by changing the lifestyle paradigm from consumption to saving. I'm old enough to remember a time when that was so and I think the change came about during the Thatcher years. A recent thread by the not so jolly green giant epitomised this type of thinking and demonstrated greenwash to a T.

    It amazes me to hear that the way out of recession is to consume more tat. Perhaps I'm getting old. :sad:
  2.  
    Well you are mark time . any link with mark twain
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeSep 1st 2010
     
    How about my 48kWh a day challenge? The biggest problem we have as individuals are the things we have least control over, the countries infrastructure.
    Should we start a thread on out housing energy use? create a standard format that we can all easily post our figures to. Would take a bit of thought initially but should not be too hard to do. I am willing to keep a track of the incoming data and post monthly summaries if people are interested.
    Hope this does not constitute hijacking the thread.
  3.  
    Using energy isn't the problem. There's loads of it about. The problem is using the sort of energy that destroys our environment. That should be zero. Nothing more will do.
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeSep 1st 2010
     
    Biff
    If we are to get back to pre industrial levels of CO2 then surely we have to be create huge carbon sinks that are permanent storage. I use the term CO2 and Carbon interchangeably but I should use the term Basket of Anthropogenic Green House Gasses.
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeSep 2nd 2010
     
    Posted By: SteamyTeawe have to be create huge carbon sinks that are permanent storage
    It's great vision - put back into the ground all the hydrocarbon that we've taken out, in the form of e.g. charcoal.

    About two thirds as much energy as we've released in 150yrs by oxidising (burning, eating, rotting, composting) the stuff will have to be pumped back into the chemistry, to reduce all that carbon oxide back to pure carbon. We get to keep one third of the energy we released - the bit that came from the hydrogen in the hydrocarbon - we don't need to reduce the hydrogen oxide to pure hydrogen and put it back into the ground.

    Where will all that energy come from? The sun of course. Any scheme of massive carbon sequestration will require vast amounts of solar energy - no escape from that. Unless we can enlist the plants too do that job for us, e.g. trees/biomass embodies just such captured solar energy, including the hydrogen that when burnt provides not only a bit of useful energy, but also the input to chemistry that converts the rest of the tree/biomass to pure carbon/charcoal, which is fairly stable and immune to involuntary further oxidation, thus ideal to sequester 'permanently'.
    •  
      CommentAuthorDamonHD
    • CommentTimeSep 2nd 2010
     
    I'm not at all convinced that we're going to able to sequester enough carbon at a £ or kWh cost per kg that we can afford.

    But what we can sequester, eg by increasing stands of live woodland, or by burying biochar, or by pumping CO2 into old oil wells, we should try and could help.

    I'm on a personal campaign to get as much PV put up as I can work on, with my own capital or persuading others to do it; last week I spoke to one large country council's energy manager and tomorrow I will be speaking to my local council to help show them the financial (and PR) case with FiTs.

    The EROEI (ie energy ROI) is sufficiently large with PV in the UK, even if not as good as wind, that we should doing as much as we can afford. Germany is projected to be heading for more solar than wind at over 40GW of each (-9GW PV now), while by the end of 2009 the UK maybe only had 1/2000th of that installed! And PV works in urban areas where energy demand is greatest.

    Rgds

    Damon
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeSep 2nd 2010 edited
     
    Posted By: DamonHDby increasing stands of live woodland
    Yes, but to be clear, increasing woodland is only a one-off contribution to carbon sequestration - carbon is certainly sequestered in the increase, but once up and running all woodland becomes (in principle) neutral i.e. neither contributing to nor detracting from sequestration.

    To recap, sequestration means taken out of the carbon>CO2>carbon>CO2 cycle, which means CO2 is removed from the atmosphere and put somewhere safe 'forever'.
    It must not seep out 'ever' if it's sequestered as CO2 e.g.
    Posted By: DamonHDby pumping CO2 into old oil wells
    If it's sequestered as reduced (i.e. de-oxidised) carbon it must also be 'forever', either as pure carbon e.g.
    Posted By: DamonHDby burying biochar
    'forever', or as hydrocarbon/biomass e.g. timber stored warm and dry 'forever' within building fabric.

    The 'forever' bit is vital - it's no good sequestering now if it either slowly escapes, or is carelessly burnt or allowed to rot sometime in the future (when the building is demolished or decays). Particularly, sequestration must not depend upon flawless human maintenance 'forever', otherwise it becomes a political weapon/blackmail tool/magnet for madmen, just like we're creating with nuclear waste. Sequestration must continue to work 'forever' even if there's breakdown of civilisation.
    •  
      CommentAuthorDamonHD
    • CommentTimeSep 2nd 2010 edited
     
    If we *increase* the wooded area/mass, even though there is turnover, the increase in wood mass has withdrawn CO2 from the atmosphere. But it's only increase that counts.

    On another point: there is so much more oxygen that carbon in the atmosphere that pumping some of the oxygen down with the carbon, ie sequestering CO2 underground, is no problem.

    Rgds

    Damon
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeSep 2nd 2010
     
    Posted By: DamonHDthere is so much more oxygen that carbon in the atmosphere that pumping some of the oxygen down with the carbon, ie sequestering CO2 underground, is no problem
    I agree. But I don't understand what happens to the CO2 once it's down there, long term.
    Does it stay as CO2 forever? I doubt it - must surely react with something - to become what?
    At depth, it must be under pressure, so does it really not escape via crevices eventually back to the surface? It's so much less viscous than the oil that was there previously, which does naturally escape to the surface.
    Is the CO2 expected to eventually become inert solid, as limestone or something? Is energy-input available e.g. earth-core heat, to drive endothermic reactions?

    Anyway, how come the cavity is still there to fill? As pressure drove the oil up the oil-well, why hasn't the same pressure either collapsed the emptying cavity, or filled with water? Coal mine workings soon collapse to nothing, if not constantly maintained.
  4.  
    No matter what you think! If you fill uk with wind and sollar you must have a back up, so you will never be able to get rid of power stations so they will never go, so live life to the full but dont waist the power you buy ! ,on the other hand if you make your own from sun wind ect use as much as you like as it is harming nothing at all ,
    Morral being dont become a power hermit do your bit and live live to the full, big power consumtion is fine as long as it is green power whats the harm there .
    Any how most of the people in uk are in no position to fit sollar ect there house location and finances wont go there so get real solar is good but not going to save the world well not in uk any how
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeSep 2nd 2010
     
    Posted By: fostertomSequestration must continue to work 'forever' even if there's breakdown of civilisation.

    I agree with that statement in principle but it sets the bar awfully high.

    If there's a breakdown in civilization then people won't be able to use fancy wind turbines or solar panels. But in order for civilization to recover, they'll have to repeat the industrial revolution and subsequent changes (hopefully in a better-informed and less destructive way) to the point they can practically and economically make and use renewable energy sources again. So what we need to sequester is fuel. Figuratively, we need to refill the coal mines and the oil wells.

    After people have thought about the practicalities and likelihood of that for a while, many find themselves strongly supportive of space development, so we don't keep all our eggs in the one basket.
    •  
      CommentAuthorDamonHD
    • CommentTimeSep 2nd 2010
     
    I think that gas wells in particular have already held a lot of gas (methane and CO2) for millions of years, so it's quite likely that they could go on doing so safely without further intervention. But I am no expert. theoildrum.com would be a better place to follow up on that.

    The cavity is something that we took natural gas (and ad-mixed CO2, H2S, etc) out of to burn, so putting CO2 back is a quite sensible thing to do, and would help stabilise them against future collapse I should imagine. Again I'm no expert and it will no doubt vary from well to well.

    Rgds

    Damon
    • CommentAuthorJTGreen
    • CommentTimeSep 2nd 2010
     
    "big power consumtion is fine as long as it is green power whats the harm there"

    -----

    If every increase in green power capacity is accompanied by increase in power use, on the basis that the "big power consumption is fine", then it really makes no serious contribution to CO2 reduction overall. In order to be green, the purpose of building renewable energy capacity must surely be to replace fossil fuel production, not to create new arenas of guilt-free 'big power consumption'. (Solar-powered garden lights spring to mind)

    The power you don't use is still the greenest power of all - since there is no green power that does not involve some kind of EROI calculation.
    •  
      CommentAuthorDamonHD
    • CommentTimeSep 2nd 2010
     
    Plus, if we actually increase total energy use globally by about another factor of 10 (IIRC) then we will start *directly* warming the planet significantly even without any CO2 being involved.

    Rgds

    Damon
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeSep 2nd 2010
     
    Posted By: jolly-green-giantIf you fill uk with wind and sollar you must have a back up
    Who says? why? The 'back up' power stations are more likely to break down than wind, sun and tide. The latter, collected geographically widespread and averaged together, can produce a well-predictable and reliable supply, and storage is the holy grail under development to cope with demand spikes that remain after smart metering/pricing have evened them out.

    Posted By: jolly-green-giantlive life to the full
    too right but that doesn't necessarily equal power consumption. There's massive scope to do the same or even more 'living' while using a fraction of present power.

    Posted By: jolly-green-giantbig power consumtion is fine as long as it is green power whats the harm there
    That's also true - so where does
    Posted By: jolly-green-giantyou will never be able to get rid of power stations so they will never go, so live life to the full
    come into it? Seems to me that if you argue to keep power stations significant in the future supply picture, that's exactly what will necessitate consumption restraint, scarcity and high prices and continued large scale CO2 emission.
  5.  
    Posted By: SteamyTeaHow about my 48kWh a day challenge? The biggest problem we have as individuals are the things we have least control over, the countries infrastructure.
    Should we start a thread on out housing energy use? create a standard format that we can all easily post our figures to. .


    Sorry not sure what you mean by out housing energy use

    How about using http://www.imeasure.org.uk/ and setting up a carbon club for GB forum members , then linking it to a thread for discussion as you mentioned
    • CommentAuthorbiffvernon
    • CommentTimeSep 2nd 2010 edited
     
    Posted By: DamonHD
    The cavity is something...

    There aren't actually 'cavities' in the sense of great big holes. Natural gas is trapped in the pore spaces of rocks such as sandstone and sealed by overlying non-porous rock such as clay or salt. CO2 could equally be kept in such places effectively for ever.

    There are two big problems with carbon capture and storage. Firstly there are only limited places where the geology is suitable and not too far from where the CO2 is being captured. Secondly, and very importantly, capturing and pumping the CO2 down uses a lot of energy, thus making the power-station less efficient. This energy cost, just at the time we are running short of energy, will be the deal-breaker for most CCS schemes. Our economies will not afford the process.
    • CommentAuthortony
    • CommentTimeSep 2nd 2010
     
    Haw about solar capture into biomass then not burning or harvesting but keeping it as sequestered carbon? like wood straw mats etc
    •  
      CommentAuthorDamonHD
    • CommentTimeSep 2nd 2010 edited
     
    Biff: I'm not necessarily advocating, just saying why it could work given my limited understanding.

    Urban PV has a more clear positive EROEI which is why I'm doing my damndest to promote that for now, after conservation.

    Rgds

    Damon
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeSep 2nd 2010
     
    If you pump CO2 into chalk do you get limestone? never really understood chemistry, isn't that what using lime rendering and lime cement is all about?
    • CommentAuthortony
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2010
     
    Cobblers that!! if you squash chalk you get limestone
    • CommentAuthorwookey
    • CommentTimeSep 3rd 2010
     
    My understanding of CCS is that it only imposes about a 10-15% energy premium. That seems eminently possible, given that the main thing that matters is _total_ carbon moved from underground to the atmosphere (return time approx 1000 years). We either need to leave the rest of it in the ground (so far we've burned maybe 1/3rd of the aviilable fossil fuel), or carefully seqestrate the carbon on most of the rest. Seems to me this is (potentially - power-station scale trials are desperately urgent) a major part of the solution.
   
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