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Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Geothermal Energy Advocates Hope Systems Get a Second Look

The following is an excerpt from an article in:


The New York Times
Wednesday, November 07, 2012

Geothermal Energy Advocates Hope Systems Get a Second Look

By ALISON GREGOR

Advocates for geothermal energy say that the path of destruction cut by Hurricane Sandy, which unearthed fuel tanks, ravaged cooling towers and battered air-conditioners, has already persuaded some building owners to switch to geothermal systems that use underground pipes to harness the earth’s energy for heating and cooling buildings.

“We’re seeing dozens of these half-empty and empty oil tanks just popping up all over the place in the flooded areas,” said David E. Reardon, the manager of geothermal drilling for the Miller Environmental Group, an environmental response, remediation and restoration services company based in Calverton on Long Island that has been involved in poststorm environmental cleanup throughout the region.

“Those tanks become buoyant in all that water,” he said. But since geothermal systems don’t use fossil fuels or mechanical systems that are exposed to the elements, Mr. Reardon said, he started fielding calls from people asking for estimates on geothermal systems just days after the storm. “Often it’s a case where they were considering doing it, but were waiting for something to finally no longer be able to be repaired,” he said, and the storm has ended that wait.

Geothermal energy systems, common in countries like Iceland and China, use the constant temperature of the earth to heat and cool buildings.

Geothermal wells are dug to a depth where the earth regulates the temperature of water or a liquid circulating through the system. Geothermal systems may require one well or dozens to regulate a building’s temperature, depending on the size of a building and type of system installed. While the systems are called wells, they are actually an underground network of pipes connected to heat pumps to circulate water or some other liquid.

Because digging geothermal wells can be expensive and logistically difficult, the systems have been slow to catch on in New York City. Yet, according to the Rockefeller Foundation and DB Climate Change Advisors, “buildings consume approximately 40 percent of the world’s primary energy and are responsible for 40 percent of global carbon emissions,” said Jack DiEnna, the executive director of the Geothermal Heat Pump National and International Initiative, based in Washington.

Installing a geothermal system can significantly reduce a building’s carbon footprint, and over the last decade, the number of geothermal heat pump systems in the city has grown steadily. More geothermal systems are installed in New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania than anywhere else in the United States.

Most systems are being installed in institutional buildings, multifamily residential buildings and relatively small commercial buildings. There have been systems installed by several prominent organizations and sites in the city, including the American Institute of Architects, the Times Square TKTS Booth, the Brooklyn Children’s Museum, the Queens Botanical Garden and the Bronx Zoo Lion House. In some of the outer boroughs and the suburbs, geothermal systems for single-family homes are also becoming more popular.

For more, visit www.nytimes.com.

1 comment:

  1. Any home can surely take advantage of geothermal heating because this is considered as the most green option to have. The homeowners will be happy to know that the users will be able to save lots of money.

    Heating and Cooling Systems Vaughan

    ReplyDelete

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