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russ_watters
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HVAC is roughly half of a building's energy usage (commercial or industrial). Energy is roughly $1.5 trillion or 15% of the US GDP (based on 100 quadrillion btu of annual usage at 5 cents per kwh). Someone check my math.cyrusabdollahi said:No, phase out the use of air-conditioning. You say it is significant, but I am curious as to how significant it is. Can you provide a statistic for that?
http://energy.cr.usgs.gov/energy/stats_ctry/Stat1.html
http://zone.ni.com/devzone/conceptd.nsf/webmain/6E14CD46F2DBE74586256E2100798272?opendocument&node=200768_US
It is also important to remember that cutting energy is a double-hit to the economy and cutting hvac makes it a triple-hit: Cutting energy usage hurts the energy industry and whatever industry you are cutting it from: cutting it from HVAC hurts the HVAC industry, and cutting HVAC hurts every industry that uses HVAC. Ie, buying a house without HVAC will cost less than buying a house with it, hurting the construction industry, construction hardware industry, finance industry, etc.
Just saying that doesn't tell us anything at all about how you'd go about doing it or what effect it would have.They would have to be replaced, but again that's the price you have to pay.
In my opinion, such baby-steps are counterproductive because they waste time. While we take baby-steps, the situtaion just keeps getting worse.Might not meet the goal, but it will take a step in the direction of the overall goal none the less.
It works out largely the same either way. In offices, the computers are responsible for most of the HVAC anyway. Whether you pipe the air conditioning to the computer itself or just to the room, the heat from the computer is still going back to the hvac unit.Then you cool the individual computers themselves, not the entire office building.
We already have a technology that works just fine. It's the subject of this thread.Don't get me wrong. If we can maintain our way of life, and find better ways to get power while reducing the effects on the environment, GREAT! But I find this very hard to believe, because when most of the world gets out of 3rd world status, we will have a major energy crisis on our hands. Eventually, cuts will be inevitable. (Unless we get some technologies that can supply the increased demands within that time frame, which is debatable)
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