His speech highlighted two important
pieces of the energy efficiency pie.
Not exact matches
In certain sorting and ejection systems for large
piece sorting applications (e.g. whole vegetables and whole fruit), the choice to use a sorter that is fitted with finger ejection (such as the TOMRA 5A), as opposed to air ejection, significantly reduces the use
of compressed air, which improves the overall
energy efficiency of a food processing line.
In addition, heat
energy recovery and thus turbo
efficiency is significantly improved based on the fact that a traditional two -
piece design effectively insulates some
of the heat
energy at the joint / gasket area.
In addition, heat
energy recovery and turbo
efficiency significantly improve based on the fact that a traditional two -
piece design effectively insulates some
of the heat
energy at the joint / gasket area.
Energy Efficiency / Demand Response / Use Curtailment will be another
piece of the puzzle... simply put we need to consume less power, especially curtailing use during peak demand.
This Twitter item leads to a Grist / Climate Desk
piece on «Political ideology affects
energy -
efficiency attitudes and choices,» a fascinating new study in the Proceedings
of the National Academy
of Sciences that, in part using light bulb choices, shows how polarization over the merits
of cutting greenhouse gas emissions appears to torque the behavior
of conservatives away from commonsense
energy choices.
The analysis found that by 2030, enhancing the
energy efficiency provisions in the two
pieces of legislation would increase direct
energy savings from
energy efficiency provisions from 5 % to 16 %, drive up the number
of new jobs created from just over 100,000 to about 360,000, and increase annual consumer
energy bill savings from $ 256 to $ 448 per household.
As
energy efficiency is the largest
piece of the GHG emissions reduction solution, improving
energy efficiency in buildings is a priority.
In the chapter, «If it isn't boring, it isn't green,» on page 290 he starts a new section by saying «But to get the most
efficiency gains and to make the
Energy Internet - smart grid complete requires that one more big
piece of the puzzle be put into place — electrifying transportation, and moving as many cars, trucks, buses and trains away from exclusively combustion engines and into plug - in electric hybrids or plug - in all - electric cars.»
Martin Holladay resurfaced this
piece of superinsulation / passive house history in his 2009 article, Forgotten Pioneers
of Energy Efficiency on Green Building Advisor and republished nearly the entire
piece.
Through a new state policy toolkit
piece and a convening
of state regulators with the Institute for Market Transformation (IMT), ACEEE is digging deeper into the connection between building
energy data access and greater
energy efficiency.