winsol3 wrote:
I agree + disagree: Borrowing from Europe's example, and given that we burn gazillion tons of biomass slash piles into open air, we need to get a small-medium scale biomass industry going and start tying our houses together - as in district/community energy sharing/distribution.
I guess your point, Lew, is that renewable energy in the USA is for 'dummies' and must be plug and play. I would put in a solar hot water system FIRST - way before PV... unless ya'll don't need a hot shower .
From where I sit the issue is education + consumer smarts. Everyone need to educate themselves on some of the technical aspects of this - like a basic physics/electrical/mechanical trade school class.
When it comes to the holy grail (LCA-life cycle assessment) of solar PV vs. biomass gasification (ala Euro Style) = it is lopsided in the favor of biomass for multi-unit housing. Solar PV can't get close to 10-20KW for less than $10k. Solar PV is good for single residential - but solar hot water would still be my first recommendation.
winsol3 ... I wasn't speaking about generalities or ideals, just to the practical (time and economic) issues that were being discussed.
If I'm not mistaken, this is a permaculture site with a lean towards independent living. We are so far from individual self-sufficiency, so I thought I'd add some helpful advice that might help some get closer, given our realities.
The GEK is great
. For community scale I'd recommend
http://www.eprida.com/home/index.php4 . There's some serious promise in providing for larger solutions with their technology. Why is it that the Chinese are investing in this and we are not [much]?
LCA of biomass gasification vs solar PV ... PULEASE!?! When you factor in initial capital outlays, maintenance, fuel harvesting and transportation, etc., you need a fairly large project to justify the numbers. And I am well aware that there is no magical crystal silicon tree
.
Yes, this is about bigger picture stuff, but boiled down to smaller and doable solutions (at an individual level). As an example, my brother-in-law is a master blacksmith/metal-worker and 'green' architect that chooses to use PV because it works best (search Lars Stanley, Austin TX). He has the skills and knowledge to build GEKs or even steam-powered systems, but chooses PV for power. If someone has the materials, knowledge, skill, time, and energy for it (pun intended), then go for it. If you want to take the world on your shoulders, then I will build you a soap-box. More power to you. I was addressing practical issues. Pardon me for assuming that most on this site would rather be in the garden than oiling up or scraping the creosote off of a clanking machine.
I'd be more than happy to discuss community sized solutions to energy needs at another time. In the mean time, feel free to spend yours on consumer [citizen] education and skills. Please keep me posted on how that goes. I will remain a pragmatist.
BTW, I do SHW systems too. Anything from evacuated-tube to 'bread-box' types (passive - for non freeze climates). They are wonderful systems. Most are not cheap. I always recommend efficiency first. "It is almost always easier/cheaper to save energy than it is to make it"
Amory Lovins? There are many ways to reduce resource consumption, but I'll leave that for another conversation.
Lew