
Imagine a future where kilometre-wide solar arrays orbit the planet, beaming the sun’s energy to transmission stations on Earth.
In October 2007 the U.S. Pentagon’s National Security Space Office announced it was interested in exploring just such a concept. While the Pentagon’s interest is related to supporting global military operations remotely, the development of solar space technology could change the way the world uses energy.
There is just one problem: even if future studies and funding are forthcoming, the launch of the first satellite could be as far away as 2030, or more realistically, 2050. Finding abundant, non-polluting energy by tapping into space-based solar panels is just one of many promising ideas popularized by the mass media each year.
There are ubiquitous and glowing stories about fuel cells, wind farms, geothermal energy and solar technology. But more often than not, the technologies in question are decades away from practical implementation.
So what alternatives are available right now to homeowners seeking to wean themselves from the communal power grid? British Columbians enjoy some of the lowest energy prices on the continent, and as a result, the financial incentive is practically non-existent. That said, real incentives do exist. We currently rely on importing some of our energy from polluting sources, and the province’s goal of energy self-sufficiency by 2016 depends on small hydro projects, whose effect on the environment is subject to debate, and includes coal and natural gas as fuel sources.
A few local energy pioneers make it clear that the answer involves experimenting with new ways to produce heat and electricity at home, and more importantly, making our homes less reliant on power of any kind in the first place.
A visit to the semi-rural Highlands area, just north of Victoria, provides an early glimpse of what alternative energy might look like one day in Vancouver. The nearly completed home of Gordon and Ann Baird sits on three acres. Within a cob structure of their own design, the Bairds are experimenting with future energy alternatives that are so novel that the couple have struggled to get local electrical and plumbing inspectors to recognize them as legal.
The floor is earthen, and the walls are made from an insulating mixture of
Yet these features are secondary to the combination of solar and wind energy technologies that have been incorporated into the design. For at least eight months a year, solar energy will power their appliances and heat their house and water. Twelve solar photovoltaic panels on their roof feed into an inverter, at which point a small battery bank ties in to the BC Hydro electrical grid.
The solar panel feeds the batteries until they are full, after which point the excess solar energy is fed to BC Hydro, which will buy any power the Bairds do not use as part of Hydro’s Net Metering program. During cloudy winter months, the couple will be able to draw on the BC hydro grid as they need to.
Comments
I read about an interesting
Comment by Anonymous, April 1, 2009 at 07:45I read about an interesting program in Berkley, CA, where the municipality will loan homeowners money to purchase solar panel for home use, and the loan is secured with a lien on the house. Payment amounts are then added onto the property tax bill as an additional line item. Sounded like a good idea to me. The cost of the monthly payments back to the municipality are then offset by electricity bill savings.
This seems to be a great
Comment by kimberly, March 30, 2009 at 17:13This seems to be a great idea for most of us but I suppose each house design will have a different number of panels and a different energy distribution. On the other hand, each house has the same typical appliances, the difference between them is the appliances manufactures and their energy class. Do you think you can come with a model or an equation that would work for the rest of us? All my appliances are Kenmore parts, they are energy saving but I know I can do better than that.
May I suggest that the
Comment by Anonymous, April 20, 2008 at 07:19May I suggest that the reference in this article for a $200.00 tankless water heater unit is a typo and that another zero can be added. When all is said and done - installation, piping etc, to service a household, $2000.00 is more likely the price tag. The reference on Can Tire website for a unit at $200 is for a 10L under the counter plug-in unit, but would not work for laundry or showers.
Anyone have any further suggestions for units that can service a household but don't take 20 years to pay for themselves?
thanks
Did I read it right? A
Comment by Anonymous, April 15, 2008 at 12:40Did I read it right? A $36000 system produces 10 kwh a day, yet most people use 64 kwh a day?
wooo woooo
Comment by Anonymous, April 9, 2008 at 10:35wooo woooo
I searched for
Comment by michelmo, March 12, 2008 at 16:39I searched for “on-demand” or “tankless” water heaters on Canadian Tire's website, but didn't have any luck. Can anyone point me in the direction of another store that might have them?
Hi Michelmo -- check out
Comment by Shannon, March 13, 2008 at 09:29Hi Michelmo -- check out Home Depot -- there's a pretty interesting-looking buying guide for tankless water heaters on their website: http://www.homedepot.ca/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/DisplayTemplate?displa...
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