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. |
Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
Posted By: SteamyTeaDon't get the kWh price mixed up with the kWh price.Think one of those should be kWp but I can't work out which one
Posted By: Jeff Norton (NZ)So if this continues and solar can create an Abundance of cheap energy then where does that leave us energy conservers, do we really need passive houses… I would love to know your thoughts?If you want to give 10 billion people 2000 watts each with PV which is 25% efficient (pretty good by current standards) and you can put it somewhere with a capacity factor of 25% (the highest you can get for a fixed panel - somewhere with no clouds at all) then you'd still need the equivalent to an area
Posted By: Ed DaviesThink one of those should be kWp but I can't work out which oneMagic time travel has fixed it overnight. Thanks for spotting it.
Posted By: Ed DaviesPosted By: SteamyTeaDon't get the kWh price mixed up with the kWh price.Think one of those should be kWp but I can't work out which onehttp:///newforum/extensions/Vanillacons/smilies/standard/tongue.gif" alt="
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Posted By: Jeff Norton (NZ)So if this continues and solar can create an Abundance of cheap energy then where does that leave us energy conservers, do we really need passive houses… I would love to know your thoughts?If you want to give 10 billion people 2000 watts each with PV which is 25% efficient (pretty good by current standards) and you can put it somewhere with a capacity factor of 25% (the highest you can get for a fixed panel - somewhere with no clouds at all) then you'd still need the equivalent to an area<>560 km on a side.
>>> math.sqrt(10e9 * 2000 / 1000 / .25 / .25)
565685.4249492381
2000 W is a lot less than most people likely to be using this forum use now. Typical for Europeans is a little less than 6000 W.
So, no, I don't think that even if PV panels were free we'd be wanting to waste too much energy.
Posted By: Jeff Norton (NZ)listen to Raymond McCauley if you want to scare yourself!Having barely glanced at his website, would it be fair to say what's scary about him, in talk of 'disruptive start-ups to address humanity's greatest needs', is the unspoken 'and make a monopolistic fortune while doing so'?
Posted By: Ed Davies10 billion people using 2000 W each would be 20 TW, not 4 TW. For Europeans, antipodeans and, particularly, North Americans that'd still mean an awful lot of conservation compared to current usage.
Re 6.4 TW of solar by 2030, where does Ramez Naam say that? I've just skip re-read that page and Part 4 on how far renewables can go and searched both for “2030” but didn't see it. Does he mean 6.4 TW capacity of solar? So actual production would about 2 TW given that it's dark at night and so on?
Posted By: TimSmallWhilst PV will continue to fall in price, I think - the storage and distribution problem isn't fixed, and it'll (probably) take a while to get down to prices where it competes with natural gas generation.
I don't think low energy building will become obsolete (at least in cold climates) for a whilst, since when it's cold it's also dark, which either means massively larger pv capacity (10x?), massive storage, or very large "super grids", or some of all of those. Wind complements reasonably well in the UK, but not everywhere, and there is still the odd "slack" week to account for too.
15 minute talk on storage etc. followed by a longer one on one emerging PV technology:https://youtu.be/hzywt2bDP54?t=2m13s" rel="nofollow" >https://youtu.be/hzywt2bDP54?t=2m13s
Posted By: Jeff Norton (NZ)Along the bottom of this chart 6,400GWOK. 2035. With a question mark and “difficult to estimate” annotation.
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