Thursday 21 November 2013

practical sustainable hot water ...

I've always assumed that we would find hot water very hard to come by in the future and that cold showers would be the order of the day. So what a BRILLIANT idea this is. We all have compost heaps, obviously, so all we then need is the piping to bring the water to where it's needed. This could also be done on a larger scale in a farm etc.

Remember - as a practical idea this info should be printed off and kept somewhere safe - the Internet won't always be around!

Compost Water Heaters From Jean Pain

by Resilient Communities on November 4, 2013 · 11 comments
For those of us who have successfully composted in the past, we know that a properly made compost pile produces a substantial amount of heat. In fact, when the pile stops creating heat it is usually done “cooking” and ready for the garden.
We focus a lot on leveraging technology to become more resilient. So what can we learn from a Frenchman who died over three decades ago?
A lot!

Who is Jean Pain?

jeanpain1
Jean Pain was a French innovator who lived in southern France from 1930 until his passing in 1981. He was able to create a compost-based energy production system that was capable of producing 100% of his energy needs.
Using compost alone, Jean was able to heat water to 140°F. He used this water for washing, cooking and heating his home. We aren’t talking about a small amount of water either. His system was able to heat water at a rate of 4 L per minute; or almost 1 gallon per minute.
Many of our modern hot water heaters can’t even boast figures that impressive.
In addition to heating water using compost, Jean also distilled methane to run a generator, a stove, and fuel his vehicle.
The work he did is still viable today. Sometimes known as Jean Pain Composting or the Jean Pain Method, we can learn a lot from the work of this Frenchman about resiliency.
Interestingly enough, just about all of Jean’s work is in French. There are English translations available around the Internet, however, so with a little bit of research we can take advantage of Mr. Pain’s successes as one of the early innovators of modern resiliency.
If you are interested in learning more about the work of Jean Pain, check out the book entitled “Another Kind of Garden.”  It is translated from the original French so it is a little hard to read, but the information is extremely interesting and we could all learn a thing or two from his work.

How Does it Work?

It may seem unbelievable that a simple compost pile filled with anaerobic bacteria could heat water to temperatures hot enough to scald skin. It is, however, entirely possible and easily replicated at home.
You only need to search YouTube for a few minutes to find thousands of videos detailing variations of Jean Pain’s design being used in towns and cities around the world.
The basic idea behind a compost water heater is that tubing is coiled throughout the compost pile and then filled with water. The water within the tubing heats up substantially (and relatively quickly).
Looking back at the work of Jean Pain, his compost piles were massive. In some cases, he was employing 60 tons of compost in a single pile to provide his energy needs. More recently, however, experiments have used piles that are as small as 6’ x 6’ to create a similar effect. Some of these modern piles are producing temperatures of 150°F or more.
The trick to improving the original design is the use of more polyethylene tubing. In the typical 6’ x 6’ compost pile mentioned above, you might expect to use at least 300 feet of 1 inch diameter polyethylene tubing. This tubing is carefully coiled and layered in between the layers of compost to repeatedly heat the water as it moves through the various layers of the coil system.
As a general rule, the pile will start with a compressed layer of compost followed by a layer of coiled tubing followed by a layer of compressed compost until you reach the desired height.
Since a compost water heater does not have a hot water tank, the tubing becomes the “tank” in this example. This means that the more tubing you use, the more hot water you will have available at a given time. Think long, relaxing shower versus being the last one in the house to get a shower before work.
Although the original designs of Jean Pain did not include a hot water tank, there has also been some interesting research done in the last few years where this technique is combined with the use of a conventional hot water tank as a way to preheat water entering the tank. This is an excellent way to save on your energy bill without relying completely on the benefits of a compost water heater.
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Once the decomposition process is functioning properly within the compost pile, you can expect several weeks of reliable water temperatures. In the early 80s, Mother Earth News tested a design very similar to Jean Pain’s system and was able to achieve consistent water temperatures above 130°F for several months before the heating action began to dwindle.
The length of time your compost water heater provides a reliable energy source depends on its construction. Not only do you have to consider how large your pile will be, but the ingredients you put in it and the amount of tubing you use are also considerations when designing your own compost water heating system.

Additional Thoughts

Based on the experimentation of others, there are a couple of things you want to keep in mind if you decide to create your own compost water heater. First, try to locate the compost pile near the intended usage location. Obviously, heat is lost as the water travels across large distances.
Some people have created separate outdoor showers that are located just a few feet from the compost water heater.
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As previously mentioned, you could also consider using a compost water heater as a way to preheat water entering your hot water tank. This is often easier than implementing a standalone compost heater and it will save significant amounts of energy typically used to heat groundwater in your hot water tank.
Other people have also used compost water heaters in conjunction with various solar water heating techniques. Although a compost water heater is a very effective solution by itself, the power of the sun makes it an even more reliable option.

Thinking of Building Your Own?

Creating a compost-based water heater is excellent weekend project. The only things you really need are compostable material, an area to devote to your compost pile, and lots of polyethylene tubing.
There are tutorials all over the Internet detailing various methods – some work very well while others fall short of the performance achieved by Mr. Pain himself.
One of the most important things to remember when creating your own compost water heater is to compress the compost pile very well. Since anaerobic bacteria are responsible for heating the pile, the more compressed your compost is, the better your water heater will work.
Another thing that some people have done successfully is create two small piles with tubing coiled in each of them. In areas where space is limited, this may be a good alternative that will still heat water practically as well as a single large pile. Truly, the key is to use lots of tubing and coil it throughout the compost pile – as long as you do that, you should have no issues heating up your water to 130°F or better.
With the cold winter months fast approaching in many parts of the country, the idea of hot water that does not require any external energy source is a welcome solution and an idea we should all think about incorporating into our current resiliency plans in the near future.

Friday 1 November 2013

the internet crash



This is an excellent article! I think we all know deep down that the internet is a transient thing and won't be around for ever, but despite that many of us are building our businesses and even lives around it - so where will that leave us as the internet grinds to a halt? I am slowly building an alternative that doesn't need the internet (or electricity) but at the moment my business is 100% (not 50%, not 99%, 100%!!) internet based. When the internet is gone then so is the business. I may be lucky and the real internet crash may be 10 or even 20 years off, and I may just sell it in time before the internet crash becomes obvious to everyone, but I'm not holding my breath! Read the article, the conclusions for a post-internet world are actually quite good, but I can see an awful lot of pain during the transition!

What Are You Going to Do When the Internet’s Gone?

Filed under: Using Weblogs and Technology — Dave Pollard @ 21:18
jackzieglercartoon
Cartoon by Jack Ziegler in the New Yorker. You can buy his stuff here.
What are you going to do when the Internet’s gone? That is the question that no one dares ask. I’m not talking about Net Neutrality and the takeover of the web by corporate interests. I’m talking about its simple disappearance, as infrastructure that’s simply unaffordable and unsustainable in a world of economic, energy and ecological collapse, stops working and falls apart.
The technophiles, the “bright greens” will tolerate no such talk, of course. They believe with a religious passion that technology will solve all the world’s problems (and let us live forever to enjoy the resultant eternal bliss of allknowingness). But the “dark greens” — the post-civs who see our society collapsing (“all civilizations do”) probably in this century — want to believe too. They want the Internet to help them organize resistance to the corporatists and globalists who are exacerbating the crises driving us off the edge of the cliff, if not in time to stop it, at least enough to be able to piece together some alternative models of how to live sustainably that the survivors (our grandchildren) will be able to use.
So asking this question generally raises a lot of scowls from all sides. Even the corporatists have become utterly dependent on it for the information and communication systems of their dysfunctional and plundering empires. A world without the Internet is simply…unthinkable.
Until you think about it. Consider that:
  • The Internet is a huge user of electricity and related electrical and telecommunication infrastructure. That infrastructure, as invisible as it is, requires massive amounts of continuous maintenance.
  • During the Great Depression of the 1930s, one of the first things to go was reliable phone and electrical service. The utilities went bankrupt like everyone else, because their customers couldn’t afford to pay the bills, so the utilities as a result couldn’t afford to pay repair, maintenance and service people to keep these services operating. (When farmers abandoned their unsustainable, monoculture farms, they left notes on their doors inviting other migrants to stay and take care of their homes to ward off poachers, and left the doors unlocked. No power, no phones.)
  • The Internet requires, for most of its value, a huge number of ‘volunteers’ working mostly at the ‘edges’ providing millions of hours of free labour to write the software to keep it running and to keep its content current. Most of these volunteers are people who have a source of income (other than the Internet) that allows them to volunteer this effort in their ‘spare’ time. No full-time jobs, no time for volunteer work.
  • The hardware that allows us to use the Internet is utterly dependent on large-scale, inexpensive global trade in metals, minerals and materials, some of them rare and scarce. You can’t build computers, servers and telecom lines from materials you can find locally. When global trade grinds to a halt, made worse by the end of cheap, affordable oil, where are we going to get these things? And what happens when supply of these materials simply runs out and there’s no money to research and develop alternatives?
Just as in the last Great Depression, the collapse of essential information and communication infrastructure won’t happen all it once. It will be a gradual decline. The first signs, I think, will be the loss of the generosity economy features that have made the Internet so ubiquitous — the free software and free services that advertisers and ‘free-mium’ service buyers and enthused volunteer labour funded. There are already some disturbing signs of this happening: Gaia.com, a large blog platform, has folded; Friendfeed has been bought out by Facebook (which, despite its immense popularity and reach, has surprisingly small revenues and must be operating on razor-thin margins); Yahoo has been closing many of its services and is rumoured to be in difficulty. And all the wonderful stuff we have from Google comes thanks to advertising revenues, even though there is almost no evidence that such advertising is effective.
So what you’ll see, I think, is a lot of consolidation, disappearance of free services (Ning recently announced it is abandoning all its ‘free’ services, and their customers) and an annoying increase in fees (the giant global right-wing news empire News Corp is again planning to start charging for its content). “The end of free” will drive millions of Internet readers (and writers) away. Advertisers will then flee. What will be left will be tons of people using ‘free’ bandwidth to try to download huge amounts of ‘free’ music and video, and ISPs will then find relatively little resistance to them bringing in huge increases in bandwidth fees (and the end of fixed rates). If you’ve ever dealt with the outrage of ‘roaming’ charges for data, imagine such charges for all use.
The next wave of the Internet’s decline will be when the next long Depression begins, probably in a decade or two. When communication and electrical service becomes intermittent as utilities cut back, Internet service, having been marginalized by the events described above, will be considered a non-essential service, and regularly shut down in favour of more critical uses of these services. And then, as PCs become less ubiquitous and people get used to finding alternative ways to get their information and entertainment, and as the availability of components and materials falls and their cost increases, computers will start to become community resources rather than personal ones, and you’ll have to go to the library or the neighbourhood school to find one in working order. And eventually even these will break down, and people will, as they always do, find workarounds.
I’m sure most readers of this article are shaking their heads, saying this will never happen. And I’m sure that most readers who are also students of history are probably nodding their heads, saying they can imagine this, and perhaps it wouldn’t be so terrible. True innovation blossoms when there is a real human need that is not being met, and the need for information and communication and entertainment is eternal. How to evolve and adapt to the end of the Internet? Maybe like this:
  • Instead of downloading music and film, create your own music and theatre, in live performance
  • Instead of taking photos, draw, paint, sculpt
  • Instead of blogging, write a journal, and meet in your community and share stories and ideas, cook together, rant, organize, build something together
  • Instead of playing online games, organize a real-space scavenger hunt, eco-walk, or bicycle rallye
  • Instead of taking online courses, unschool yourself in your own community, and learn about your place… or show/teach others what you know (including, most importantly, teaching children how to think and learn for themselves)
  • Instead of organizing online petitions and complaining online about the state of the world, go visit your local politician, get involved in community activities that make a difference (disrupt, show your outrage, satirize, or create something better)
  • Instead of looking for health information online, set up a local self-help health co-op, offering preventive care, self-diagnostic and holistic self-treatment information
  • Instead of porn… well, use your imagination
How well will you be prepared to adapt to the end of the Internet? Are you dependent on it, now, for critical information you need, for connection with those you love and those you seek to love, to work with, to partner with, and for what brings you joy or blessed escape? The biggest uses of the Internet today are music, porn, health information, games, and amateur photo/video sharing. To the extent you use the Internet for any of these things, do you have a way of doing them, with no or low technology, when the Internet’s gone?
And in the meantime, don’t take the Internet and all its ‘free’ offerings for granted. It’s a rare window of incredible opportunity, and it won’t last forever. Like everything else in our overwrought civilization, it’s unsustainable.
So blog like hell while you can.