The Dirty Energy Solution
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Hot, Steamy Mormons: Are the Latter Day Saints Getting Sexy?
Liz Langley
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Zach Carter
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Too Fat to Serve: How Our Unhealthy Food System Is Undermining the Military
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David Bacon
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Why We're Fascinated by the Paranormal, Masonic Myths and Secret Societies
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Linda Milazzo
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Health-Care Bill After Compromise with Lieberman: Worse Than Nothing
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Can Boob Jobs Serve the Public Good?
Alexandra Suich
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Tiger Woods Syndrome: How the Golf Star's Affair Will Help Him Win Our Hearts and Minds
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Laura Flanders
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The 9 Surges of Obama's War
Tom Engelhardt
From his desk in an office in Chicago, Jeff Smith has a bird's-eye view of the American landscape. Combing through a huge database of information compiled by the EPA, he can, almost literally, peer down every smokestack in the nation and figure out what's going on inside.
And what he sees is heat. Waste heat -- one of the country's largest potential sources of power, pouring up out of those smokestacks. If it could be recycled into electricity, that heat would generate immense amounts of power without our having to burn any new fossil fuels. By immense, I mean, speaking technically, humongous. Even after he's winnowed the nation's half a million smokestacks down to the most likely customers, that leaves twenty-five thousand stacks. "An astronomical number," Smith says.
His boss at Recycled Energy Development, Sean Casten, leafs through the reams of data Smith has compiled. The biggest sources of waste heat are some gas turbines used to generate power, but there are endless other examples. "Let's look at Florida," he says. "Here's a Maxwell House coffee roaster in Duval County. They're roasting beans, so all that heat has to go somewhere. About twelve megawatts' worth of potential electricity is going up the stack."
Casten could take the equipment he sells, a "waste-heat recovery boiler," and stick it on top of the stack. "Basically, there's a network of tubes with water in them. The heat would hit one side of it, produce steam, and we'd use that to turn a turbine and generate electricity. It's like any other boiler, just without a flame, because the heat is already there."
| Reprint Notice: |
| This article appears in the September/October 2007 issue of Orion magazine, 187 Main Street, Great Barrington, MA 01230, 888/909-6568, ($40/year for 6 issues). Subscriptions are available online: www.orionmagazine.org. |
See more stories tagged with: environment, global warming, climate change, alternative energy, bill mckibben
Bill McKibben is the author of 10 books, most recently Deep Economy: The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future. He is a scholar in residence at Middlebury College in Vermont.
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