Sentences with phrase «from btu»

In that case selling BTU for BTC early on will «double» your bitcoin holdings and partially protects you from BTU's sharper loss of value.
I'm also not quite sure about your units; energy use is measured in a wide variety of units from BTU's to kWH; your use of KW is a power measurement.

Not exact matches

From its high in 2007 of 34.7 quadrillion British thermal units (Btu), the difference between exports and imports has fallen steadily to 7.32 Btu, slightly above the 7.25 Btu in 1982.
In order to avoid any bad situation from the hard fork of bitcoin, CoolWallet would provide BTU supported tools when the new chain reach minimum stable.
Between 2015 and 2040, the EIA is estimating that global energy demand will rise 28 % — from 575 quadrillion British thermal unit (Btu) to 736 quadrillion Btu!
How can I get more heat from my 36,000 btu natural gas grill?
Turkey fryers — a heavy - duty stand with a high - BTU propane burner — are available from a number of sources at a range of prices.
The country wasted 1 percent less energy in 2015 going from 59.4 quadrillion BTU in 2014 down to 59.1 quads in 2015.
It sees coal as remaining dominant in the electricity generation sector: global consumption will rise by 1.3 percent a year — from 147 quadrillion British thermal units of energy in 2010 to 180 quadrillion Btu in 2020 to 220 quadrillion Btu in 2040.
The team found that removing crop residue from cornfields generates an additional 50 to 70 grams of carbon dioxide per megajoule of biofuel energy produced (a joule is a measure of energy and is roughly equivalent to 1 BTU).
The US Energy Information Administration's (EIA's) International Energy Outlook 2013 (IEO2013) projects that world energy consumption will grow by 56 % between 2010 and 2040, from 524 quadrillion British thermal units (Btu) to 820 quadrillion Btu.
This is evident by the decline in bituminous coal being burned in the U.S. for electricity and the increasing share of coal production and consumption coming from the lower btu sub-bituminous and lignite coal.
In terms of inbound business travellers to Scotland, interest from France has been gaining momentum over the past 18 months, while the BTU is noting a sudden upswing from Germany late 2010 onwards.
BTU member and Co-Editor of the Boston Union Teacher Garret Virchick penned an insightful Op - Ed in CommonWealth about teachers in the unassigned pool, a group we often hear about, but not from:
BTU President Jessica Tang added her voice to those of hundreds of young people from across the... Read more about Mass. teens demand more funding for job opportunities
High School Educators PD Event: May 15 The BTU and BPS have been awarded two grants from the Nellie Mae Education Foundation to empower educators in 7 - 12 and high schools to drive their own interest - based professional learning and retool their classrooms and schools.
Statement from BPS Superintendent Tommy Chang and BTU President Jessica Tang Today, Boston Public Schools...
In other words, the amount of power you can gain from the same BTU's would be aproximately 1.6 times greater.
Options Included: Freedom Value Package Entertainment Package Power tongue jack 15,000 BTU A / C 50 Amp service w / 2nd A / C prep Sofa Hide - A-Bed MANUFACTURER FREIGHT INCLUDEDMSRP $ 43,538 Message from Country Roads RV Center - 9 miles South of Winston - Salem, NC As one of the largest dealers in the state, Country Roads RV Center carries many different lines of 5th Wheels & Travel - Trailers, as well
30K BTU A / C 65K BTU FURNACE 3 A / C UNITS 10 G. HOT WATER HEATER CENTRAL VACUUM Message from 460 RVs We are a family owned business for over 8 years in the camping business and over 35 years in the car buisness.
Mobile Hospital • Florida licensed mobile animal hospital (setup as vaccination clinic) • Two 15,000 BTU roof - top air conditioning units • 7kw Onan generator with outlets and fluorescent lighting • Exterior body wall is aluminum, no rusting • Flat exterior walls with room for large graphic signage • Interior floor is aluminum for easy cleanup with no odors • Sliding aluminum door separates hospital from driving compartment • Permanently mounted aluminum steps with handrails • Interior walls are cabinet grade laminate with Formica finish • Insulation in most exterior walls • Electronic floor scale • Backup camera • Refrigerator • Over 14 ft of counter space with storage under • Sink with fresh water tank • Gray water tank and discharge port
iow — total world energy consumption rises from 575 quadrillion British thermal units (Btu) in 2015 to 736 quadrillion Btu in 2040, an increase of 28 %.
If energy source A costs $ x / BTU, and energy source B costs $ 2x / BTU, then you can not (in the short run) save net money from going from A to B.
From the document we can infer that it will take about 1400 BTU to extract 44 grams of CO2 and obtain enough electrolyzed hydrogen to turn it into methanol (please check my math).
It's nice to frame the question of coal or no coal from a Western perspective, but for Indians, it's a case of burning low - Btu cow dung vs. burning high - Btu coal.
Looking at the sun as an energy source is attractive, but the fact that at optimum conditions the sun only provides 300 BTU per hour per square feet, it clearly is not enough to replace the energy from fossil fuels.
By comparison, «renewable» and «sustainable» corn - based ethanol requires 2,510 to 29,100 gallons per million Btu of usable energy — and biodiesel from soybeans consumes an astounding and unsustainable 14,000 to 75,000 gallons of water per million Btu!
The United States faces a vexing challenge in switching from conventional to clean sources to generate electricity: How do we replace fossil fuel when natural gas costs $ 4 per million BTU and demand for electricity is expected to increase by over 20 % by 2035?
The heat content of bituminous coal ranges from 21 to 30 million Btu per ton on a moist, mineral - matter - free basis.
Biomass gas: A medium Btu gas containing methane and carbon dioxide, resulting from the action of microorganisms on organic materials such as a landfill.
The residential sector is estimated to use about 21 quadrillion Btu of primary energy every year, primarily from burning fossil fuels on site or from fossil fuel - generated electricity (EIA 2009).
From there, it drops from more than 16 quadrillion Btu per year to under 12 quadrillion Btu by 2From there, it drops from more than 16 quadrillion Btu per year to under 12 quadrillion Btu by 2from more than 16 quadrillion Btu per year to under 12 quadrillion Btu by 2050.
The vulnerability of an investment in fossil fuel reserves or hardware to competition from renewable energy and decarbonization doesn't just depend on the carbon intensity of the fuel type — its emissions per equivalent barrel or BTU — but also on its functions and unique attributes.
Natural gas does emit less GHG than coal on a per Btu basis when burned, but the analysis assumes there are no methane leaks from both conventional and unconventional wells.
Meanwhile, use of natural gas is expected to jump from just under 28 quadrillion Btu per year to more than 41 quadrillion Btu.
That is the reason that the BTU's derived from Bituminous Coal in the preceding chart ranges from 11,000 - 14,500 BTU.
The heat output drops from about 5000 BTU / hr down to about 3500 BTU / hr — a hit of about 30 %.
I can see two effects — reduced need for A / C (one estimate I saw was 6 - 10 tons of A / C (12,000 BTU = 1 ton) from spraying a flat black rubber roof with water in a dry environment and letting it evaporate — but a white roof wouldn't need spraying in the first place), and the other is from increasing reflection into space?
In 2005, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) projected that U.S. buildings would be consuming approximately 57 quadrillion Btu (Quads) of energy by the year 2030 — a 17 - Quad increase from 2005 consumption.
The problem is both the high cost per BTU and importing it from countries that hate us, neither of which is a great concern for electricity unless you're worried about CO2 production and I'm not concerned about CO2 production which I consider a huge net benefit to agriculture and, in the future, a handy source of carbon for the fabrication of durable goods.
Indeed, since 2010 GAT has been falling off a cliff and if the current rate of cooling continues for another decade we'll be in a world of hurt from global cooling as growing seasons grow shorter, late spring and early fall frosts take their tolls, and colder winters requiring more fuel with a rising price per BTU attached to it.
From a peak of $ 10.54 per million btu (mbtu) in July 2008, the spot price of gas at the well - head had fallen to less than $ 2 / mbtu by April 2012.
With the exception of Figures 2 and 9, the data in this report are directly from the published values in the EIA's Monthly Energy Review (MER) or based on relatively simple calculations such as CO2 / Btu of energy.
ENVIRONMENTAL OVERVIEW Minister for the Environment & Heritage: David Kemp Minister for Forestry & Conservation: Ian McDonald Total Energy Consumption (2000E): 4.89 quadrillion Btu * (1.2 % of world total energy consumption) Energy - Related Carbon Emissions (2000E): 96.87 million metric tons of carbon (1.5 % of world carbon emissions) Per Capita Energy Consumption (2000E): 255 million Btu (vs U.S. value of 351 million Btu) Per Capita Carbon Emissions (2000E): 5.1 metric tons of carbon (vs U.S. value of 5.6 metric tons of carbon) Energy Intensity (2000E): 10,804 Btu / U.S. $ 1995 (vs U.S. value of 10,918 Btu / $ 1995) ** Carbon Intensity (2000E): 0.21 metric tons of carbon / thousand U.S. $ 1995 (vs U.S. value of 0.17 metric tons / thousand $ 1995) ** Sectoral Share of Energy Consumption (1999E): Transportation (42 %) Industrial (37 %), Residential (13.5 %), Commercial (7.5 %) Sectoral Share of Carbon Emissions (1998E): Industrial (46.4 %), Transportation (26.5 %), Residential (15.2 %), Commercial (11.9 %) Fuel Share of Energy Consumption (2000E): Coal (44.2 %), Oil (34.8 %), Natural Gas (16.6 %) Fuel Share of Carbon Emissions (1999E): Coal (55.4 %), Oil (32.6 %), Natural Gas (12.0 %) Renewable Energy Consumption (1998E): 396 trillion Btu * (0.9 % increase from 1997) Number of People per Motor Vehicle (1998): 1.7 (vs U.S. value of 1.3) Status in Climate Change Negotiations: Annex I country under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (ratified December 30th, 1992).
This chart from EIA data shows the change in annual U.S. energy consumption by fuel source over the past decade, as measured in quadrillion Btu:
ENVIRONMENTAL OVERVIEW Total Energy Consumption (2000E): 2.7 quadrillion Btu * (0.7 % of world total energy consumption) Energy - Related Carbon Emissions (2000E): 36.4 million metric tons of carbon (0.6 % of world carbon emissions) Per Capita Energy Consumption (2000E): 73.2 million Btu (vs. U.S. value of 351.0 million Btu) Per Capita Carbon Emissions (2000E): 1.0 metric tons of carbon (vs U.S. value of 5.6 metric tons of carbon) Energy Intensity (2000E): 9,226 Btu / $ 1995 (vs U.S. value of 10,918 Btu / $ 1995) ** Carbon Intensity (2000E): 0.12 metric tons of carbon / thousand $ 1995 (vs U.S. value of 0.17 metric tons / thousand $ 1995) ** Sectoral Share of Energy Consumption (1998E): Industrial (48.6 %), Transportation (23.7 %), Residential (18.8 %), Commercial (8.8 %) Sectoral Share of Carbon Emissions (1998E): Industrial (44.8 %), Transportation (32.7 %), Residential (16.2 %), Commercial (6.2 %) Fuel Share of Energy Consumption (2000E): Natural Gas (45.2 %), Oil (36.3 %), Coal (1.5 %) Fuel Share of Carbon Emissions (2000E): Oil (48.1 %), Natural Gas (49.3 %), Coal (2.5 %) Renewable Energy Consumption (1998E): 393 trillion Btu * (0.5 % decrease from 1997) Number of People per Motor Vehicle (1998): 5.6 (vs U.S. value of 1.3) Status in Climate Change Negotiations: Non-Annex I country under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (signed June 12, 1992 and ratified on March 11, 1994).
The 1500 BTU / day heat loss would cool 50 gallons of water by (1500 BTU / day) / -LRB-(50 gal)(8.3 lb / gal)(1 BTU / lb - F)-RRB- = 4 F a day from heat loss through the bottom and sides.
ENVIRONMENTAL OVERVIEW Secretary of Environment & Natural Resources: Victor Lichtinger Total Energy Consumption (2000E): 6.18 quadrillion Btu * (1.6 % of world total energy consumption) Energy - Related Carbon Emissions (2000E): 103.2 million metric tons of carbon (1.6 % of world total carbon emissions) Per Capita Energy Consumption (2000E): 62.5 million Btu (vs U.S. value of 351.0 million Btu) Per Capita Carbon Emissions (2000E): 1.0 metric tons of carbon (vs U.S. value of 5.6 metric tons of carbon) Energy Intensity (2000E): 16,509 Btu / $ 1995 (vs U.S. value of 10,918 Btu / $ 1995) ** Carbon Intensity (2000E): 0.28 metric tons of carbon / thousand $ 1995 (vs U.S. value of 0.18 metric tons / thousand $ 1995) ** Sectoral Share of Energy Consumption (1998E): Industrial (54.7 %), Transportation (24.8 %), Residential (15.9 %), Commercial (4.6 %) Sectoral Share of Carbon Emissions (1998E): Industrial (50.9 %), Transportation (31.1 %), Residential (13.2 %), Commercial (4.8 %) Fuel Share of Energy Consumption (2000E): Oil (63.2 %), Natural Gas (23.7 %), Coal (4.0 %) Fuel Share of Carbon Emissions (2000E): Oil (73.5 %), Natural Gas (20.4 %), Coal (6.2 %) Renewable Energy Consumption (1998E): 713.7 trillion Btu * (1 % decrease from 1997) Number of People per Motor Vehicle (1998): 6.9 (vs U.S. value of 1.3) Status in Climate Change Negotiations: Non-Annex I country under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (ratified March 11th, 1993).
We can calculate the carbon pollution from these lease sales by looking at the tons of coal in each lease, the energy content of the coal in each lease (in BTU / lb), and the amount of carbon pollution released per BTU, which varies depending upon the type of coal.
Because the vast majority (96.5 %) of this coal is from mines in Wyoming, these average results will most closely reflect those coal leases, which are sub-bituminous coal, with relatively low BTU values between 8501 and 9011, and as noted above, expected by the Interior Department to be mined between 2015 and 2030.
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