YOU'D BE SURPRISED HOW MUCH WATER...
MANY COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL COMPLEXES use cooling towers
to effectively aid in cooling. An
average public high school’s* cooling tower uses about 30,000 gallons of fresh
water per day when it’s hot outside. That’s enough to fill a good sized back-yard
swimming pool. Twice.
A major airport can consume close to a million gallons of fresh
water on a hot summer day, just for cooling tower operations. It’s great that
we are honoring watering restrictions, fixing drips in faucets and leaky toilet
valves; however there are billions of gallons of fresh water being evaporated
and discharged into the sewer from cooling towers every day.
Cooling towers use the process of evaporative cooling to
increase the energy efficiency of the air-conditioning equipment that serves
the building. In the process, a lot of water is evaporated, and nearly as much
more is flushed down the drain to purge out impurities.
The US had about 81 billion square feet of commercial space
in 2010, served by 300 million tons of cooling capacity (based on floor
space estimates from DOE report). This represents between 5-billion and 15-billion
gallons of fresh water consumption each day.
Buildings + Geothermal = More Fresh Water for US!
Industry has begun to embrace geothermal (elimination of cooling towers) for all the right reasons:
- Elimination of water consumption associated with cooling towers
- Elimination of tower related noise
- Elimination of chemical treatment for cooling towers
- Reduction in annual maintenance costs for HVAC system
- Storm proofing through elimination of outdoor equipment (the cooling tower)
- Impressive federal tax incentives
- Reduced capital expenditures for regular cooling tower replacement
The advantages that can be cited that make a geothermal
sourced building more sustainable are many. With a reduction of water
consumption (which can be close to half of all the freshwater consumed by a
building), your client is saving money and doing a good thing for the
environment.
Cooling towers can be rather noisy, and most will agree that
elimination of this outside noise would be of benefit to both the public and
occupants of the building.
Geothermal is Renewable and Energy Efficient, Too
Geothermal sourced chiller plants and heat pumps are more
efficient by design, because the condenser water is cooler than can be supplied
from an evaporative cooling tower, increasing the EER (Energy Efficiency
Rating) substantially.
The average life of a chiller is about three decades, and
most chiller plants live through two or three cooling tower replacements. With
the geothermal source, these expensive planned expenses go away.
By placing a chiller plant, or any cooling tower-sourced
building using water source air-conditioners/heat pumps on a geothermal source,
you have created an entirely geothermal sourced building, making the entire building’s
HVAC system eligible for federal tax credits. This means that when upgrading
chillers and water sourced heat pump, they may be eligible for the current tax
credits for geothermal systems.
Most regions of the country and the world have storm events periodically
such as hurricanes, tornadoes, blizzards, etc. These storm related events can
destroy outside equipment. Many insurance companies will provide credits for
elimination of this equipment. The New York Times said, “Geothermal
Systems Arise as a Storm-Proof Resource”. Additionally, outside
equipment often needs to be winterized, and properly installed geothermal
sources may save you these seasonal costs and headaches.
The federal government gives a 10% federal tax credit, and
five year depreciation through the Maximum Accelerated Cost Reduction System
(MACRS) on commercial geothermal systems.
With 50% bonus depreciation the first year, a $1 million upgrade can net
federal tax incentives amounting to 48% of the entire cost, or federal tax
incentives of $480,000.
A Helping Hand for the California Drought (and everywhere else)
The USGS says that the average American uses 80 to 100 gallons of
water each day. Cooling towers use
as much fresh water as 50,000,000 US residents each day. I think that
California could put that water to good use. This is in the neighborhood of 20%
of the volume of water that flows over Niagara Falls
each day (65 Billion gallons of water flow over Niagara Falls each day).
- Geothermal HVAC technologies save our energy and water resources. Get Ready to GEO
- New York New York Approves Landmark Thermal Network
- Presentation on the Utility Thermal Energy Network and Jobs Act: A Renewable Transition https://youtu.be/l1BEQCH47Hc
*based on national average of 752 students per high school,
2000 https://nces.ed.gov/pubs2001/overview/table05.asp
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete