I'm sure you know the basics:
1) Every refrigerator and air conditioner contains chemical refrigerants that absorb and release heat to enable chilling. Refrigerants, specifically CFCs and HCFCs, were once culprits in depleting the ozone layer. HFCs, the primary replacement, spare the ozone layer, but have 1,000 to 9,000 times greater capacity to warm the atmosphere than carbon dioxide. YIKES. Don't let your refrigerants leak into the atmosphere!
2) More manageable for most of us at home is to look at electricity usage. Here's a little comparison:
- A small table fan uses about 10-25 watts per hour.
- A ceiling fan uses about 40-50 watts per hour.
- Your central air unit uses between 2000 and 5000 watts per hour!
3) So here's your home climate solution: run your AC if you must, at no cooler than 78*. Then use fans to help circulate that gently cooled air in exactly the spot you need it. This reduces the load on your AC and reduces emissions at the power plant that feeds it; uses electricity much more efficiently; and is cheaper for you! (at least after you buy--or find/thrift/inherit--the fans 😊)
This information comes from a surprisingly authoritative article at eHow, and is corroborated by information from Project Drawdown. You can read more about how building-based solutions are an important contributor to reducing CO2 emissions fast here. Now pass this info on!
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Let's find some steamy cooling breezy poems to pair today....
Are We There Yet? Dobby Gibson (from Skirmish, Graywolf Press 2009)You only have to make her one grilled cheesein the suffocating heat of summerwhile still wearing your wet swim trunksto know what it’s like to be in love.And you only have to sit oncefor a haircut in the air conditioningwith the lovely stylist to forget all about it,and to forget that anything in the universeever existed prior to the small, pink sweaternow brushing softly against your neck.In this world, every birth is premature.How else to explain all of this silence,all of this screaming,all of those Christmas card lettersabout how well the kids are doing in school?We’re all struggling to say the same old thingsin new and different ways.And so we must praise the new and different ways.I don’t like Christmas.I miss you that much.For I, too, have heard the screaming,and I, too, have tried to let it pass,and still I’ve been up half the nightas if I were half this old,and like you, I hate this kind of poetryjust as much as my life depends upon it.They’re giving away tiny phones for free these days,but they’ve only madea decent conversation more precious.One medicine stops the swelling,another medicine stops the first medicine.Just like you, I entered this worldmad and kicking, and without you,it’s precisely how I intend to go.
In Passing | Gerald JonasOpen-backed dumpy junktruckstacked full of old floor-fans,unplugged, unsteady, undone,free whirling like kids' pinwheelsin a last fresh breeze--What a way to go!