Monday, December 12, 2011

How do you consume energy at home and around your neighborhood?

We use energy in homes and commercial buildings in similar ways. We keep rooms at comfortable temperatures, provide lighting, heat water for bathing and hand washing, and power computers, copiers, appliances, and other technologies. Many of these luxuries weren’t even possible 100 years ago—and they require a lot of energy. In 2008, 41% of all the energy consumed in the United States went to powering homes and commercial buildings.

Whether you live in an apartment, townhouse, or a single-family home, chances are you want to keep it warm in cold weather. Data from 2006 show that space heating accounts for the greatest energy usage in the residential sector, with the rest devoted, in decreasing proportions, to appliances, water heating, and air-conditioning. At 7%, electronics usage surpasses washers/dryers and dishwashers, cooking, and computers in energy use. Appliances such asrefrigerators, water heaters, and washers/dryers are all considerably more energy efficient than they used to be, thanks to legislation that requires appliances to meet strict standards.

In U.S. homes, natural gas is the most widely used energy source (49%), followed by the secondary energy source, electricity, at 39%. That’s reversed in commercial buildings, where electricity (55%) is depended on more than natural gas (32%). The commercial sector includes a broad array of building types, including offices, grocery stores, sports arenas, schools, shopping malls, hotels, and hospitals. Practically any space where groups gather falls into this economic sector. The energy needs for these different buildings vary but when viewed as a whole, more than half of the energy used in commercial buildings goes to just heating (36%) and lighting (21%). Within this sector, retail stores and service buildings use the most total energy (20%), followed by office buildings (17%) and schools (13%).

For a fuller picture of energy use in these sectors, explore Our Energy System.

In the United States we use 28% of our energy to move people and goods from one place to another. The transportation sector includes all modes of transportation—from personal vehicles (cars, light trucks) to public transportation (buses, trains) to airplanes, freight trains, barges, and pipelines. One might think that airplanes, trains, and buses would consume most of the energy used in this sector but, in fact, their percentages are relatively small—about 9% for aircraft and about 3% for trains and buses. Personal vehicles, on the other hand, consume more than 60% of the energy used for transportation.

Over the past century, dependence on vehicles burning petroleum-based fuels has become a defining component of American life, bringing countless benefits. In fact, the United States, with less than 5% of the world’s population, is home to one-third of the world’s automobiles. In 2007, automobiles, motorcycles, trucks, and buses drove nearly 3 trillion miles in our country—about the equivalent of driving to the sun and back 13,440 times. Over the next 20 years, the total number of miles driven by Americans is projected to grow by 40%, increasing the demand for fuel.Over the next 20 years, the total number of miles driven by Americans is projected to grow by 40%, increasing the demand for fuel.


86% of all the energy used in this sector comes from gasoline and diesel fuels, a troubling fact. Combustion of gasoline and diesel fuel emits carbon dioxide, as well as particulate matter, oxides of nitrogen (a prime component of “smog”), carbon monoxide, and unburned hydrocarbons. Indeed, whenever any fossil fuels are burned, carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere, where it functions as a heat-trapping greenhouse gas. Also of concern is that we are dependent on foreign sources for two-thirds of our oil supplies.

Efforts are already well under way to find suitable alternatives to oil. Bio fuels are one possibility. Alternative types of vehicles—hybrids,electric vehicles, and vehicles powered by hydrogen fuel cells, for example—all have the goal of reducing our dependence on oil. Petroleum sources that could serve as alternatives to conventional oil, such as oil shale and tar sands, could reduce our dependence on foreign oil, but wouldn’t help solve the environmental issues surrounding burning fossil fuels. Mining these resources can have damaging environmental effects, as well. Converting coal to liquid fuel is another option but it, too, has significant implications on the environment. The AEF committee estimates that the coal-to-liquid plants could replace up to 3 million barrels of gasoline per day by 2035 but that would require a 50% increase in U.S. coal production.

Greater vehicle efficiency may be our greatest short term strategy for reducing demand for petroleum. The CAFE standards, initially adopted in 1975, made more stringent in 2007, and strengthened again in pending legislation, require automobile manufacturers to build cars with higher average fuel economy.

Robert Rodriguez

What are ways you can reduce your energy consumption? Research ideas.

Homes and commercial buildings consume 40% of the energy used in the United States. Of the $2,000 the average American spends paying for energy annually, $200 to $400 could be going to waste from drafts, air leaks around openings, and outdated heating and cooling systems. By reducing these losses through energy efficiency upgrades, you can save money and be more comfortable in your home or business.

Your local Better Buildings Neighborhood Program partner can help you get started.
Start with an Energy Evaluation

Completing a home or building energy evaluation, also known as an energy audit or assessment, is a wise first step to assess the ways in which your home or building consumes energy. An energy evaluation will identify what specific measures you can take to make your building more energy efficient. The evaluation might include a walk-through check-up or inspection, use of an infrared camera, a blower door, or other techniques to reveal the most effective approaches to upgrading your home or building.

Watch a 3:30 minute video that describes a thorough home energy assessment process. Or learn how to conduct an initial home energy assessment yourself.
Understand How Typical Home Energy Improvements Can Result in a Better Building

Below are the most commonly recommended measures from a home energy evaluation that can help you save energy and save money—resulting in a better, more efficient, and more comfortable building. Your local Better Buildings Neighborhood Program partner can help you identify the specific improvements that make sense for your home or business.



Typical home energy improvements:
A          Seal air leaks around floors, walls, ceilings, windows, doors, and fireplaces with caulk, spray foam, and weather stripping. Warm air leaking into your home during the summer and out of your home during the winter can waste a lot of your energy dollars. The potential energy savings from reducing drafts in a home may range from 5% to 30% per year, and the home is generally much more comfortable afterward.
B          Add insulation to the attic, crawl space or basement, and exterior walls in conjunction with air sealing to help keep your house cool in the summer and warm in the winter. Increasing your home's insulation is one of the fastest and most cost-effective ways to reduce energy waste.
C          Install more energy efficient windows, doors, and skylights by looking for ENERGY STAR products and install storm windows and doors to save energy and improve the comfort of your home or building. Air infiltrates into and out of your home through every hole and crack. About 20% of this air infiltrates through openings in your windows, doors, and skylights. Storm windows alone can reduce heat loss through windows by 25% to 50%.
D          Install and set programmable thermostats that save energy by automatically regulating your home or building's temperature when you are home, asleep, or away. You can save as much as 10% a year on your heating and cooling bills by simply turning your thermostat back 10% to 15% for 8 hours.
E          Seal ducts and make sure they are straight and properly connected. Many duct systems are not insulated properly or have gaps or holes where air can leak out. You can lose up to 60% of your heated air before it reaches the register if your ducts are not insulated and they travel through unheated spaces such as an attic or crawlspace.
F          Tune-up or upgrade heating and cooling systems. Heating and cooling your home uses more energy than any other system in your home. Typically, 43% of a home utility bill goes to heating and cooling. By combining proper equipment maintenance and upgrades with appropriate insulation, air sealing, and thermostat settings, you can cut your energy use for heating and cooling from 20% to 50%.
G          Install an energy-efficient hot water heater, such as an energy-efficient tank water heater or an on-demand tankless water heater. Water heating is the third largest energy expense in your home, typically accounting for about 12% of your utility bill. Also consider using less hot water, turning down the thermostat on your water heater, and insulating your water heater.
H          Install thermostatic control valves in your shower, which shut off the shower once the water turns warm, saving hot water and energy until you are ready to enter the shower.
I           Upgrade household appliances and electronics to ENERGY STAR or ENERGY STAR Most Efficient qualified products. Appliances account for about 15% of your household's energy consumption, with refrigerators, clothes washers, and clothes dryers at the top of the consumption list.
J          Install energy efficient lighting by choosing ENERGY STAR qualified light bulbs and lighting fixtures for the most used fixtures or light bulbs in your home or building. An average household dedicates 11% of its energy budget to lighting. Using new lighting technologies can reduce lighting energy use in your home by 50% to 75%.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

how climate change effected katrina


































A great example of how climate change effects our community would be the horrible hurricanes we've been getting, such as hurricane katrina. Hurricane katrina had a greater impact becuase it destroyed homes cars and it killed many. I can definitley say katrina left her mark on the world.



























Friday, November 18, 2011

Climate change

     
      [1]Climate change is a significant and lasting change in the statistical distribution of weather patterns over periods ranging from decades to millions of years. It may be a change in average weather conditions or the distribution of events around that average.

      Climate changes in response to changes in the global energy balance. The decline in Arctic sea ice, both in extent and thickness, over the last several decades is further evidence for rapid climate change.





Video about climate change:


Sources.
[1]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climate_change

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Calander

Process Step
Date Due
Step 1 Getting Organized
11/5
Step 2. Research Process 5 Issues
11/12
Step 3. Publish your posts on the 5 Issues
11/19
Step 4. Visit other group blogs and leave comments/questions. Do about 5 for each group member.
11/25
Step 5. Respond to questions/comments left on your blog posts.
11/25
Step 6. Each member creates 3 blog posts describing how energy is consumed in their: 1. School, 2. Neighborhood, 3. Home.
12/1
Step 7. Each member creates one blog post proposing how to better manage the use of these resources in order to promote sustainability.
12/5
Step 8. Each member posts their reflection on participation in the project. What did you learn? What were the challenges and successes? What about the project could be improved?
12/12

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Climate Change

Impact on Home & School Community 


  1. "The actions of individual Canadians account for about 28% of Canada's total greenhouse gas emissions." If you're concerned about the quality of life, you will want to do what you can to reduce the impact of climate change which can affect your health, the economy and our environment. Every time you turn on a light, turn on the car, start up the computer, or do anything that uses energy you are responsible for producing greenhouse gases. But if you're part of the problem, you can also be part of the solution. At home, on the road and at work, there are simple things that all Canadians can do to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions and save energy and money in the process!Getting started is easier than you think. It's as simple as making a personal commitment to use energy and resources more efficiently in your daily life to reduce your emissions.
  2. Vernard Williams is about to drop some knowledge on the kids of Food and Finance High School in New York City's Hell's Kitchen neighborhood. He's not facing the easiest audience. It's a Friday afternoon in early October, the school year is still settling in, and the teenagers filing into the auditorium look less than engaged. Making things even less promising is the subject matter of today's assembly: climate change. Williams is a senior educator for the Alliance for Climate Education (ACE), a nonprofit based in Oakland, Calif., that sends speakers — armed with an original video produced by ACE — to schools to talk a little basic science. They're prepared for an uphill struggle. "We do this in a way you've never seen it," says Williams, a Brooklyn native and lawyer. "We know you have to engage them from the beginning."
  3. "Climate change is currently at the centre of our daily life, as its impacts and consequences are being experienced in all regions of the world. "But as we know climate change is not a natural phenomenon; climate has natural variability over time, but when we talk about climate change it refers to the alterations in the atmosphere that are over and above natural climate variations, and that are result of human activity.This means that the situation can be changed if human beings transform their ways of living to be more sustainable and friendly to the environment.
  4. Climate change is a long-term shift in atmospheric conditions occurring worldwide. For thousands of years, the Earth's climate has remained relatively stable. Temperatures, rainfall, the length of the seasons, and other environmental factors have sustained humans, animals, and plants. This stability has existed thanks, in part, to the greenhouse effect.
  5. Some climate change issues can be addressed at the local level, through work with your tribal community. For example, you may want to work with tribal schools or have an information booth at community events. Numerous outreach and educational resources about climate change are available online and can be adapted for your target audience. This page provides a list of resources available and some websites to help children learn about climate change. Human beings are exposed to climate change through changing weather patterns (for example, more intense and frequent extreme events) and indirectly through changes in water, air, food quality and quantity, ecosystems, agriculture, and economy. At this early stage the effects are small but are projected to progressively increase in all countries and regions.
  6. Besides the weather patterns getting very unpredictable, and in some cases extremely haphazzard, there is the issue of the melting ice.  This ice melting is hazzardous to us in many ways -To name just a few:  There are many species of the planet that may very likely become extinct because they are losing their habitat.Loss of any species to the planet is, or should be, a great concern to us all.  Some of these species are hunted for food by people, and losing them is a loss of a food source in an area where food sources are very scarce.  These same species are also hunted for their hides to keep people warm in climates that are extremely cold.Here some may suggest the warming climate could be good for these people, so they are not so cold.  This is such an outrageous thought and is why these kinds of articles are so important to better educate the people of our world.  Because, again I point out "cause and affect".  Nothing changes without a cause and affect.Affect:  Now we discuss the rise of the worlds sea level.  There are many communities that are actually below the worlds sea level, and its rising can cause horrible tragedies around the world.
  7. Consider your home and the environment in which it is situated. The very fact that you live in one place, something that was quite uncommon before the discovery of stored energy sources like fossil fuels, speaks to how your life is facilitated by these unique energy sources.Even your basic needs are dependent on fossil fuels. Your water, food, and fuel for heating and cooking likely travel hundreds if not thousands of miles to your home.This pattern couldn’t be sustained if humans didn’t have the ability to exploit dense energy sources such as coal, oil, and natural gas. However, their discovery transformed the face of the earth and the nature of humans.The effects on earth are dangerous. In the last 150 years, the human population has grown by more than five times and the average person uses more energy than ever. This energy comes largely from fossil fuels, the use of which is a direct and important cause of global warming.

    Thursday, November 10, 2011

    Problem of climate change

    Life on Earth depends on energy coming from the sun. About half the light reaching Earth's atmosphere passes through the air and clouds to the surface, where it is absorbed and then radiated upward in the form of infrared heat. About 90 percent of this heat is then absorbed by the greenhouse gases and radiated back toward the surface, which is warmed to a life-supporting average of 59 degrees Fahrenheit (15 degrees Celsius).

    Most climate scientists agree the main cause of the current global warming trend is human expansion of the "greenhouse effect"

    Certain gases in the atmosphere block heat from escaping. Long-lived gases, remaining semi-permanently in the atmosphere, which do not respond physically or chemically to changes in temperature are described as "forcing" climate change where as gases, such as water, which respond physically or chemically to changes in temperature are seen as "feedback's."[1]

    Gases that contribute to the greenhouse effect include:
    1.Water Vapor
    2.Carbon Dioxide
    3.Methane
    4.Nitrous oxide
    5.Chlorofluorocarbons

    Climate change is becoming an ever more important issue in our lives. We have come to realise that the modern ways of man place a enormous amount of stress on the Earth that nature simply can not handle. Some of the climatic problems that are developing today, such as global warming, ozone depletion and El Nino, will have severe effects on reef ecosystems all around the world. Reefs might give us an early indication of the effects of global climate changes, as slight variations in sea temperature caused by climatic variations have already been shown to produce extreme responses from reef ecosystems.

    The Earths' Life Support System.

    The atmosphere is a gaseous envelope which surrounds the planet and revolves with it. It has a mass of about 5.15 x 1015 tons, and is held to the planet by gravitational attraction. The present day atmosphere is nearly uniform up to approximately 80 km above Earth's surface. The main constituents of the atmosphere are oxygen (21%), nitrogen (78%), and argon (0.93%). Other trace gases include water (0.01 - 1%), carbon dioxide (350 parts per million (ppm)), methane and nitrous oxide. The atmosphere plays a major role in controlling the planets' temperature. Only 58% of the energy crossing the outer edge of the atmosphere reaches the earth’s surface (on average) - more on a clear day at the equator. The rest of the incident radiation is either reflected (by clouds, vegetation) back into space or absorbed (by water (clouds), carbon dioxide and other gases). The energy that reaches the earth warms the land and oceans. To keep the system in balance, an equal amount of energy is radiated back out to space. The outgoing energy is of a different wavelength to the incoming energy, and greenhouse gases trap this energy more easily than sunlight, so some heat energy is retained (like under a blanket), and the earth stays at a temperature higher than space (lucky for us). Without the atmosphere, the average surface temperature of our planet would be -18°C. With the present day atmosphere, the average temperature is raised by approximately 33°C to 15°C. This is the Greenhouse Effect - the atmosphere acts like a blanket to hold in some heat. The problem we face today is the enhancement of the Greenhouse Effect, leading to global warming. This Enhanced Greenhouse Effect comes about because of the addition of huge volumes of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere throughout the industrial age. The increased levels of greenhouse gases means that more heat is retained, and temperature increases until a new equilibrium is achieved. The greenhouse gases are carbon dioxide (CO2), methane, nitrous oxide , water vapour, and CFC’s (Chlorofluorocarbons). The main sources of these greenhouse gases are combustion of fossil fuels, devegetation (clearing and burning of forests, urban development) and agriculture (eg cow farts).[2]

    [1]https://www.google.com/#pq=whats+the+problem+climate+change&hl=en&cp=13&gs_id=1u&xhr=t&q=problem+of+climate+change&tok=DieqOzCK9FdrIWEImDus6w&pf=p&sclient=psy-ab&source=hp&pbx=1&oq=problem+of+cl&aq=0&aqi=g4&aql=&gs_sm=&gs_upl=&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.,cf.osb&fp=59a1bbd79307d996&biw=1280&bih=909
    [2]http://www.reef.edu.au/contents/ps/fr_climate.html

    By: Robert Rodriguez