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Energy Independence, Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation

Given the substantial relationship between water and energy, the relationship between local energy generation and local economic development, as well as the nexus between greenhouse gas emissions and watershed management, the North Coast IRWMP is integrating energy independence and emissions reductions elements into its programmatic regional approach. Learn more...


Geo-Exchange

A geo-exchange system is a central heating and/or air cooling system that actively pumps heat to or from the shallow ground several meters deep, where temperatures remain moderate all year (Hanova and Dowlatabadi 2007). Geo-exchange technology takes advantage of the cave-like conditions under the soil, using it as alternately a heat source or heat sink throughout the year. Geo-exchange, in contrast to utilities-scale geothermal power, does not rely chiefly on heat from true geological sources (Rafferty 1997) but draws energy from the sun-warmed ground to boost heating and cooling efficiency far above that of electrical heating (it may be combined with solar heating to create a geosolar system with even greater efficiency; see “Solar”). In a geo-exchange system, a pump circulates water or antifreeze through several hundred feet of pipes that have been buried in the ground (vertically or horizontally) or, alternatively, submerged in a pond or lake. The tubes of fluid serve both to supplement heat (with relatively warm fluid in winter) and to cool (with relatively cool fluid in summer) a structure. Using an electrically-driven compressor and heat exchangers, warm or cool air or fluid is pumped into either an air duct system or to radiant flooring.

The U.S. EPA has called ground-source heat pumps the most energy-efficient, environmentally clean, and cost-effective space conditioning system available (EPA 1993). It has significant potential to reduce GHG emissions if employed widely. Geo-exchange produces zero emissions, provided electrical power to run the system is supplied by some renewable source. Natural gas furnaces may be a more sound heating choice on balance, depending on the GHG intensity of the local electricity supply.  One barrier to employing geo-exchange is the high up-front cost, but the difference can be made up in energy cost savings in three to ten years, (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geothermal_heat_pump) and the system can last 30 to 50 years (http://apps1.eere.energy.gov/consumer/your_home/space_heating_cooling/index.cfm/mytopic=12640).

In Sonoma County, the Sonoma County Water Agency is studying the feasibility of using recycled water to heat and cool buildings using geo-exchange principles in a project called the Regional Geo-exchange Energy Efficiency Project (http://scwa2.computergrafixco.com/eNews/index.asp?issue=1/1/2009&campaign=Enews&article=2029).

 

Citations:

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). 1993. Space Conditioning: The Next Frontier. Report 430-R-93-004. Washington, D.C.

Hanova, J. and H. Dowlatabadi. 2007. Strategic GHG reduction through the use of ground source heat pump technology. Environmental Research Letters 2: 04400, 8 pages.

Rafferty, K.  1997. An information survival kit for the prospective residential geothermal heat pump owner. Geo-Heat Centre Quarterly Bulletin 18(2): 1-11. Oregon Institute of Technology, Klamath Falls, Oregon.