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Energy Sources

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Encouraging drivers to buy fuel-efficient cars : The new car tax banding system ... Introducing a new cooling system to the computer room, radio room, telecoms ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Energy Sources


1
  • REDUCING THE ENERGY GAP BY REDUCING ENERGY DEMAND
  • This can operate in 3 areas
  • 1 Reducing Energy Demand for Transport
  • 2 Reducing Energy Demand in Homes
  • 3 Reducing Energy Demand in Workplaces
  • Reduced Energy Use can be brought about by
  • Using alternative, more energy-efficient types of
    power
  • Reducing energy waste
  • Reducing energy demand through voluntary action
  • Reducing energy demand through pricing policies
  • Reducing energy demand better planning

2
  • Reducing Energy Demand for Transport
  • Fuel-efficient Public Transport London
    trialled 3 hydrogen fuel-cell buses in 2004.
    These run on hydrogen which break down to emit
    water vapour. This reduces CO2 emissions,
    improves the air quality of London streets, and
    reduces demand for oil-based fuel. After a
    successful trial, 10 more buses were ordered in
    2006 with the aim of having a fleet of 60 by
    2010. (see article)
  • Encouraging reduced use of private cars and
    increased use of public transport It costs 8
    to take a car into the inner-most congestion ring
    in central London with car number plates being
    read by electronic cameras as soon as they cross
    the boundary line. As a result more Londoners are
    using buses and the tube and leaving their cars
    at home. Other cities considered introducing the
    same ideas such as Manchester and Edinburgh but
    when the plans went to city votes local
    residents voted them down.
  • Encouraging drivers to buy fuel-efficient cars
    The new car tax banding system introduced in the
    UK in 2008 means that drivers pay a different
    rate of annual car tax depending on the CO2
    emissions of their car. The most fuel-efficient,
    small engine cars will only pay 35 for their
    road tax licence, whilst the big petrol-users
    will pay 400. This encourages drivers to buy
    small, fuel-efficient cars giving off less CO2.
  • Encouraging people to use bikes with bike lanes
    Bristol has been selected as the UKs first
    cycling city and has been given 11m to set up
    cycle lanes, bike parks, and a bike loan scheme
    to encourage people to leave their cars at home,
    get fit, and cut energy use.
  • ( For further ideas see transport page of
    energysavingsecrets.co.uk )

3
  • Reducing Energy Demand in the Home
  • Making sure existing homes are energy efficient
    There are grants available from the government
    to fit cavity-wall insulation, loft insulation
    draught excluders and insulation jackets for
    hot-water tanks. This means energy used to heat
    homes is not wasted and people can keep the
    heating turned down lower. (see article)
  • Designing homes that are carbon-neutral By
    2016 all new homes built in the UK should be
    carbon-neutral ie their building and use
    should not add to the earths carbon dioxide.
    (See the Bedzed Project.)
  • What Architects And Designers Need To Do To Make
    Housing Greener
  • Materials from bricks to wood to how much
    plastic is used house builders need to ensure
    theyre using the most sustainable (not just the
    cheapest) material option, including recycled
    products
  • Eco-design architects need to incorporate
    greener housing solutions, including insulation,
    double glazing and energy efficient fridges /
    cookers etc
  • Recycling facilities larger developments need to
    take into consideration the location and size of
    on site recycling facilities
  • Renewable energy solar panels, wind turbines,
    rainwater harvesting a green home needs to
    generate its own energy as standard (see website)
  • Designing New Towns to be Eco-friendly The UK
    government has plans for 15 new Eco-Towns to be
    built by 2020. Not only will the houses be
    eco-friendly, but the towns will be designed to
    reduce commuting and shopping trips, generate
    their own energy from renewable sources, make
    efficient use of water and recycle waste. The aim
    is to reduce energy demand and CO2 emissions.
    (see article)

4
  • The Bed ZED Project, London An Eco-Housing
    Project
  • The Bed ZED Project, or Beddington Zero Energy
    Development, is the UK's largest carbon-neutral
    eco-community in the UK. It was built in 2002 in
    Wallington, Surrey, and comprises of 82
    residential homes. The intention with this
    project, built in partnership with both an
    architect and an environmental consultancy firm,
    was to create a housing project that incorporates
    new approaches to energy conservation and
    sustainability, and also to build a thriving
    community to live within it.
  • The houses are equipped with key features
  • designed with south facing terraces to maximise
    solar heat gain
  • utilise renewable, and conservable, energy. A
    small-scale combined heat and power plant on
    site, powered by wood off-cuts, provides most of
    the energy to the estate.
  • All buildings have a thick insulation jacket,
    made from recycled materials.
  • The project has a legally-binding green
    transport plan, incorporating a car pool system
    for residents, great public transport links, and
    is linked in to a cycling network.
  • For these, and many more social and environmental
    initiatives and technologies, Bed ZED has won
    many national and International awards for
    sustainability, design, Innovation and more.

5
  • Reducing Energy Demand at Work
  • Paper-less offices Many offices are trying to
    reduce the amount of paper, photocopying and
    printing they do by storing and sending
    information electronically. Doctors surgeries
    now use electronic health records of patients
    which can be seen by whichever doctor you may be
    seeing anywhere in the country.
  • Office design new office buildings are being
    designed to make more use of natural light
    (sunlight) rather than electric lights by
    having south-facing office windows with
    photo-reactive glass which reduces the need for
    heating in winter, and the need to
    air-conditioning in summer.
  • Home-working by working from home and
    communicating with fellow workers by internet,
    skype, video-conference and email, many
    journalists, for example, dont go in to the
    office but work from home. This reduces the
    need for office space, and cuts down on fuel used
    in commuting.
  • Green Councils Many local councils aim to be
    green as an example to others in the local
    community. This extends to recycling schemes at
    work (paper, glass, cardboard, electrical
    equipment) as well as trying to cut down on
    energy use (computers on time-switches that
    automatically go off at night) See article on
    West Oxfordshire Council, and what Woking Council
    are doing.
  • For further ideas see energysavingsecrets.co.uk
    - at Work
  • Also Direct.gov advice on energy saving at work

6
  • Miller UK Ltd
  • Northumberland based Miller UK Ltd manufactures
    and repairs excavator buckets and attachments for
    construction vehicles. Suggested actions from an
    energy survey were to
  • Monitor monthly fuel usage
  • Establish a site energy policy
  • Educate staff about how their everyday
    activities impact on carbon emissions
  • Fit automatic lights which switch off when there
    has been no movement for a certain period of
    time.
  • Upgrade existing lighting systems to low energy
    light bulbs
  • The survey identified that Miller UK Ltd could
    potentially save around 64,706 per year and see
    an overall 25.5 per cent reduction in energy
    consumption as a result of implementing these
    recommendations.

Case-Studies of Energy Saving at Work
  • Merseyside Police identified savings of 13,000 a
    year, but this was just the beginning for the
    6,500-strong force.  It has trained 99 Energy
    Champions across 66 sites and 93 per cent of its
    electricity is green, reducing carbon emissions
    by 60 per cent
  • Recommendations included
  • Installing automatic lighting controls to the
    main underground car park (savings of more than
    1,800 per annum)
  • Introducing a new cooling system to the computer
    room, radio room, telecoms (savings of more than
    3,100 per annum)
  • Installing water saving devices like tap
    conversions to turn off after a set time
    generating further savings of 2,400 in the first
    year alone.
  • Training 99 volunteer Energy Champions to act as
    site-based energy representatives to encourage
    colleagues to be more energy-aware
  • switched to Internet billing, which can provide
    earlier energy-use data.
  • Installed section-meters which can show the
    amount of electricity being used at any one time
    by any department.
  • purchased more energy efficient equipment, such
    as LCD PC monitors.

7
Sustainable Energy Policies
Some people say these strategies are just
playing at energy conservation, and that to
secure the future of the planet we will have to
take much more radical action than changing a few
light bulbs and turning off our TVs at night.
What might be the radical action they think is
necessary?
Of all the strategies for reducing energy
consumption, which 3 do you think will make the
biggest impact and why those.
Suggest 5 ways in which Withernsea High School
could reduce its energy use, ranked according to
energy saved.
How might future communities be planned to be
energy sustainable?
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