Electrifying everything sounds like the obvious path off fossil fuels, but it requires critical minerals we can’t source quickly enough. Alternative technologies and interventions can cut emissions faster, cheaper, and without mineral bottlenecks.
If I didn’t live in the woods (and thus mostly in shade all day) I’d totally build a solar hot water heater. I’ve managed to reduce my showers to about 3 gallons, heating that much up with some black pipes on my roof or driveway would be extremely doable.
How do you connect it to your existing hot water system though? Already got a heat pump too, when you have the most sun the heat pump barely uses any power for hot water and don’t need much.
I have wondered about solar/fire heated pool or hot tub, but that is adding energy demands in the first place. That said with the heat lately a cold pool could be nice. Can get 5000L for just under £100, 3-4m wide. Heating it could make it usable into autumn though.
There’s different ways to do it iirc. It can either remain as a separate system for hot water or connect directly into the hot water heater and offset the energy costs for running it.
My showers are about three gallons because I’m not actually using my plumbing, I’m using a separate camp shower. It’d be pretty simple to just dump the hot water from the solar heater into the shower bucket in that case.
Check out https://solar.lowtechmagazine.com/
If I didn’t live in the woods (and thus mostly in shade all day) I’d totally build a solar hot water heater. I’ve managed to reduce my showers to about 3 gallons, heating that much up with some black pipes on my roof or driveway would be extremely doable.
How do you connect it to your existing hot water system though? Already got a heat pump too, when you have the most sun the heat pump barely uses any power for hot water and don’t need much.
I have wondered about solar/fire heated pool or hot tub, but that is adding energy demands in the first place. That said with the heat lately a cold pool could be nice. Can get 5000L for just under £100, 3-4m wide. Heating it could make it usable into autumn though.
There’s different ways to do it iirc. It can either remain as a separate system for hot water or connect directly into the hot water heater and offset the energy costs for running it.
My showers are about three gallons because I’m not actually using my plumbing, I’m using a separate camp shower. It’d be pretty simple to just dump the hot water from the solar heater into the shower bucket in that case.