• _pete_@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I think there is a big difference between the passive warming / cooling of clothing vs the huge energy requirement, spent resources and emissions required to basically run your entire home / office / factory / hotel as a giant fridge.

    • Barbarian@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      Ancient people developed technology to cool their buildings long before electricity. Windcatchers, awnings, evaporative coolers combined with good old-fashioned thermal insulation were all very effective technologies for keeping cool in otherwise inhospitable places.

      There are serious talks about reintroducing these in some places to reduce ballooning electricity use from AC.

      • Spiralvortexisalie@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        I think the debate in that is passive vs active rather than just using technology. If the Hoover Dam were to become inoperable, would residents of Las Vegas be able to survive? And if it’s questionable what does aid, or worse a middle of the desert mass evacuation, even consist of? And this avoids even discussing current residents who in the face of increasing temperatures and energy prices may not be able to keep up with cooling needs.

        • Barbarian@sh.itjust.works
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          5 months ago

          Oh, absolutely. That would be an instant massive humanitarian disaster. I was more trying to respond to this though:

          just pointing out that since the first human put an animal skin over their shoulders we’ve been developing technology to live in places that we’d otherwise not be able to exist in.

          I think there is a big difference between the passive warming / cooling of clothing vs the huge energy requirement, spent resources and emissions required to basically run your entire home / office / factory / hotel as a giant fridge.

          Essentially going through some of the ancient technologies used for cooling buildings.

        • dingdongmetacarples@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          If the Hoover Dam becomes inoperable, the entire Southwest US is in trouble. It provides water for farms and power, both mostly in California. Las Vegas would actually be the last to feel the effects of Lake Mead drying up because they’ve installed a deeper “straw” to draw water from, along with a pumping station.

          https://www.snwa.com/where-southern-nevada-gets-its-water/our-regional-water-system/intake-no-3.html

          • futatorius@lemm.ee
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            4 months ago

            There’s a lot of farming being done right in the US Southwest now that’s only profitable because the water is massively subsidized. The first thing to do is to make them pay something closer to the real cost. Nobody should be growing rice, cotton or almonds in the Central Valley. That’s just burning public money and squandering a scarce resource. If they can’t figure out a more suitable alternative crop, let 'em go bust.

            As for A/C, it’s a lousy, wasteful solution to hot climates compared to passive construction, insulation, heat pumps and other technologies (some very old). But anyone in Vegas with a pool or lawn needs some immediate education. And I’d be reluctant to encourage people to live in places like that when there are more temperate places they could live in if they wanted to.

            • dingdongmetacarples@lemmy.world
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              4 months ago

              The farmers have the most senior water rights, so there’s a lot of legal hurdles to that solution. It’s definitely something that needs to happen though. Letting them go bust means the Southwest US needs to get food from somewhere else, most likely shipped in on trucks. It’s not as simple as people make it out.

              Heat pumps are AC in reverse, so why’s that so much more efficient? And most new homes are built with good insulation and lawns are illegal for new homes. Most grass has been removed and replaced with rocks, only older homes are allowed to keep their lawns. There’s cash incentives to get them to remove it though. In fact, Las Vegas has actually decreased it’s water usage in the past few decades, while increasing the population.

              More energy is used in the US to heat homes than to cool them, so I’m really not seeing why people should live elsewhere. At least not from a pure energy use standpoint.

      • Tja@programming.dev
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        4 months ago

        Serious talks? At least insulation is the standard in new construction, at least in Germany. Works for winter and summer. Add ventilation with energy recuperation, solar panels and a heat pump, many homes produce more energy than they consume in a yearly scale.

        • No_Eponym
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          4 months ago

          Hold up there pardner, homes producing more energy than they consume? That sounds vaguely communistic-like, and we don’t take kindly to that sort of thinkin’ round here. Just gonna hunker down and let the invisible hands of Jesus and the market take care of us 'cause this here’s the greatest nation on the whole earth. /S

        • Barbarian@sh.itjust.works
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          4 months ago

          I meant to imply that thermal insulation is a prerequisite to any cooling tech, new or old. Looking at my comment again, I just worded it badly.

          That’s pretty cool. Getting modern insulation on older apartment blocks here in Romania is an uphill struggle. You need every occupant of the block to sign off on it, and that always results in massive headaches from someone who doesn’t want to pay the 30 Euros per person.