Carbon ration account for all proposed by Environment Agency – Times Online.
Archive for the ‘Home Zero Home’ Category
Carbon ration account for all proposed by Environment Agency – Times Online
Posted by ericww on November 9, 2009
Posted in Home Zero Home | Tagged: carbon emissions, carbon tax, Environment Agency | Leave a Comment »
We’ve signed up to 10:10… what about you?
Posted by ericww on November 7, 2009

10:10 is an ambitious project to unite every sector of British society behind one simple idea: that by working together we can achieve a 10% cut in the UK’s carbon emissions in 2010. Find out more at 10:10
Posted in Home Zero Home | Tagged: 10:10, carbon emissions, climate change, UK | Leave a Comment »
Solar Power When the Sun Goes Down?
Posted by ericww on November 4, 2009
November 3, 2009, 8:17 am By Todd Woody, New York Times
A California company hopes to store solar power by focusing thousands of mirrors on millions of gallons of liquefied salt. An artist’s rendering of such a solar plant is shown here.
The holy grail of renewable energy is a solar power plant that continues producing electricity after the sun goes down. A Santa Monica, Calif., company called SolarReserve has taken a step toward making that a reality, filing an application with California regulators to build a 150-megawatt solar farm that will store seven hours’ worth of the sun’s energy in the form of molten salt.
Heat from the salt can be released when it’s cloudy or at night to create steam that drives an electricity-generating turbine. The Rice Solar Energy Project, to be built in the Sonoran Desert east of Palm Springs, will “generate steady and uninterrupted power during hours of peak electricity demand,” according to SolarReserve’s license application.
So-called dispatchable solar farms would in theory allow utilities to avoid spending billions of dollars building fossil fuel power plants that are fired up only a few times a year when electricity demand spikes, like on a hot day. SolarReserve is literally run by rocket scientists, many of whom formerly worked at Rocketdyne, a subsidiary of the technology giant United Technologies.
Rocketdyne developed the solar salt technology, which was proven viable at the 10-megawatt Solar Two demonstration project near Barstow, Calif., in the 1990s. United Technologies has licensed the technology to SolarReserve and will guarantee its performance — a crucial advantage for the startup when it seeks financing from skittish bankers to build the Rice solar farm. As many as 17,500 large mirrors — each one 24 feet by 28 feet — will be attached to 12-foot pedestals.
The mirrors, called heliostats, will be arrayed in a circle around a 538-foot concrete tower. Atop the tower will sit a 100-foot receiver filled with 4.4 million gallons of liquid salt. The heliostats will focus the sun on the receiver, heating the salt to 1,050 degrees Fahrenheit. The liquefied salt flows through a steam-generating system to drive the turbine and is returned to the receiver to be heated again. SolarReserve isn’t the only developer planning to tap molten salt to store solar energy. Abengoa Solar, for instance, intends to use salt storage at its 280-megawatt Solana solar trough plant outside Phoenix. That project, however, will heat tubes filled with synthetic oil to create steam and transfer some of the heat to salt-filled storage tanks. By using salt for both steam and storage, SolarReserve can generate higher-temperature steam, which will allow the Rice power plant to operate much more efficiently, according to Kevin Smith, SolarReserve’s chief executive. “Consequently, our system can capture three times the energy for the same pound of salt,” Mr. Smith wrote in an e-mail message.
“Plus they have additional ‘bolt on’ equipment, plus multiple heat transfer steps to go from oil to salt to oil and then to steam for electricity generation.” SolarReserve’s plant will be built on private land — the site of a former World War II-era Army airfield — near the desert ghost town of Rice.
The company will air-cool the power plant, avoiding controversies over water use that have dogged other solar projects. But the height of the solar tower — 653 feet when a maintenance crane is attached to the top — could generate resistance from conservationists worried about the impact of the project on desert vistas. A proposed SolarReserve power plant in Nevada ran into resistance from Air Force officials concerned that the tower would interfere with radar at a nearby military base. The company said it is negotiating with California utilities to buy the electricity generated from the Rice project and expects the solar farm to go online in October 2013, barring unforeseen delays.
Posted in Home Zero Home | 1 Comment »
What about us?
Posted by ericww on October 30, 2009
There’s a scene in the new Michael Jackson movie ‘This Is It’ which bridges into ‘Earth Song’ in which he’s talking about his love for planet earth which really chimes with a thought that keeps whirring around my head. According to the late, great musical genius that is MJ, we’re killing the planet but, he says, it’s not just down to governments to do something about it. It’s down to all of us.
He’s right, of course. But how do you get ‘all of us’ behind a unified, common goal of such enormous scale – especially when the apparent short-term cost and effort seems to keep on clouding the long-term yet vital goal. It’s been an interesting week in which to weigh up this argument. Here are some of the UK news headlines:
The Daily Mail “The green car tax blitz: £3,300 levy on new vehicles as fuel duty soars” The Daily Telegraph “Green tax proposals ‘would increase household energy bills by £800 a year”
It’s not surprising that the real messages about climate change, and the responsibility on all of us to actually do something about it, are getting lost within all this ‘noise’. You can’t really blame consumers on a mass scale for caring more about Jedward being worthy of remaining in (or not) the talent competition that is ITV’s – or should I say Simon Cowell’s – X Factor. We are living in tough economic times, with declining property values, and the looming spectre of a return to the 1970s with postal strikes and, who knows, maybe even the odd power cut or two. It’s hardly surprising that a Saturday night TV entertainment event is a great if temporary escape from reality.
Okay, I’m possibly exaggerating for effect, but it stands that most people feel they have better things to do than worry about carbon emissions, and our news media doesn’t help that much in this situation – not that we should blame the Press for doing its job of reporting ‘the news’. Plus, we have a general election on the horizon in the UK in 2010, so let’s face it, a positive spin on saving the planet doesn’t stand a chance!
And so back to MJ. He may have had a somewhat troubled and eventful life that was tragically short. And he may divide opinion with regards to his private life. But he does leave a truly amazing legacy in his music and, also, the thought that we need to operate as a collective and take some pain in order to achieve some real gain on the planet stuff. The “£3,300″ car tax and the “£800″ energy bills may be utterly distasteful to the many, but we may actually have to wise up to the fact that this is a reality we must face up to in order to find new ways to generate and manage our energy and the demands we make on the planet’s natural resources.
These “green taxes” might just be the tip of an iceberg that even global warming cannot melt.
Posted in Home Zero Home | Tagged: cabon emissions, car tax, cliamte change, earth song, energy tax, Jedward, Michael Jackson, Simon Cowell, This is it, X Factor | 2 Comments »
C what you can do
Posted by ericww on October 24, 2009
DECC’s Act On CO2 campaign has gone live. Running on television, press, outdoor posters, cinema and online – the campaign is designed to raise awareness of climate change, convey the imminence and the need for urgent action. DECC is encouraging people to search online for Act On CO2 to find out what they can do to help.
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Electric va-va-voom… on a bike
Posted by ericww on October 19, 2009
We like a little style here, so how about parking this outside your zero home. The French have jumped into the electric bike market with the E-Solex 2, which has a blood line running back over 60 years.
The first version was the VeloSoleX a 50cc gas fueled motorized bicycle, which rolled out in 1946 in Paris. The new E-Solex drops the gas motor for an electric one, with 400 watts of power pushing this bike up to 21 mph in fast mode. There is also an option to run in eco mode, which brings the speed down to around 16 mph and will get you driving distance of 37 miles before needing a charge. The battery is a rechargeable Lithium-ion, which keeps the weight down and enables quick recharging.
The bike costs around £1,300, but we couldn’t find it for sale in the UK yet. E-Solex is Conquering the World in Eco-style – The funniest bloopers are right here
Posted in Home Zero Home | Tagged: E-Solex 2, electric bike, green living, style | Leave a Comment »
Zero living in a box?
Posted by ericww on October 14, 2009
The 2009 Lifecycle Building Challenge awards in the US has unveiled the recipients of its top gongs, which this year are all very ‘modular’ in style. Now, at Home Zero Home we’re not qualified architects (although we hang out with one or two now and again), but we are pretty sure that the term ‘modular’ could mean ‘box’ in this particular instance. We’re not suggesting this is an issue, however. The winning designs look really cool, especially the wood-constructed example pictured here.
The six winning buildings or projects are selected based on how they tackle reducing environmental and energy impacts. The competition is intended to spur innovation and highlight best practices that could be put to use by the building industry in ways to help it reduce the more than 88 million tons of constrution- and demolition-related debris sent to U.S. landfills each year, according to official US estimates.
Posted in Home Zero Home | Tagged: architecture, awards, energy, environment, green building, recycle, US EPA | Leave a Comment »
News from The Net-Zero Energy Buildings Conference II in NYC…
Posted by ericww on October 9, 2009
Here’s a quick 2 mins overview from the organisers of this conference, which has been on this week in New York. I was going to go but didn’t make it, so many thanks to Lisa Jaycox from The McGraw-Hill Companies for this link and lots of background. I’ll cover this further later. Definitely worth checking out!
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Twinterview…Ed Miliband
Posted by ericww on October 1, 2009

The real Ed Miliband
‘The Guardian‘ would normally be my newspaper of choice (not that I actually read newspapers much anymore… only the online versions), but hats off to those clever types working at ‘The Independent‘ for using the phenomenon that is Twitter to ‘twinterview’ Ed Miliband, the UK Government’s Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change. It’s not particularly revealing, especially on this Blog’s area of interest, but it is a neat idea well executed >> [Twinterview In Full]
Posted in Home Zero Home | Tagged: climate change, Ed Miliband, energy, secretary of state, The Guardian, The Independent, Twitter | Leave a Comment »
The Kangaroo Valley House
Posted by ericww on September 30, 2009
Here’s a stunning looking property: The Kangaroo Valley House, which is located two hours south of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
It was designed and built by Alexander Michael and completed in 2005. It is used as a weekend retreat. Some weekend retreat, right?!
Although it is not presented as a shining example of ‘green’ building by the designer, it does generate its own heat and light energy needs.
The property, which was constructed with concrete, galvanised steel, glass, and some timber, incorporates around twenty panels of solar (photo-voltaic) cells, delivering energy channelled into twelve massive batteries.
I share it here simply as an amazing looking near zero home. I want one! More information, including lots more pictures, can be viewed at the Contemporist.
Posted in Home Zero Home | Tagged: architecture, australia, contemporist, kangaroo valley, new south wales, photo-voltaic cells, solar panels, sydney | Leave a Comment »
