So in mid-July when temps and
humidity were soaring in the Midwest, my wife and I headed southeast to West
Lafayette, Ind., where I was to attend the Purdue University conferences that
involve the latest technologies in HVACR and building sustainability - and my
wife was to enjoy a few days of relaxing. (There was a Paneras and a Borders
next to the hotel, so she was totally content.)
The Purdue concurrent conferences
- dealing with compressor engineering, RAC, and high performance buildings -
were terrific. Lots of interesting technical papers, some way over my head, but
the ones that I understood equally fascinating.
About a week after the conferences
ended, I finished the first drafts of four stories about the events and they
came in at close to 4,000 words. And I really didn’t delve all that deeply into
the published papers; just summarized in a broad brushstroke way what was being
talked about. A lot of info was preliminary based on lab research and computer
models. What will become reality for contractors and service techs remains to
be seen. The main thing that comes out of the conferences is that a lot of
research in going into ways to either make contractors and service techs lives
a bit easier or allow them to better cope with regulatory changes - or both.
There are manufacturers, universities and “think tanks” aware of you guys out
there and they are working on the “better mousetrap.”
But I digress.
Along the way, driving down
Interstate 65 (always under construction it seems), we passed through one
stretch of road in which there were literally hundreds of wind turbines on both
sides of the road. They stretched for as far on either side as we could see and
for miles down the road. (The air was still that day and the turbines were
barely turning. But that’s another story for another time.)
Of course, all that caught my
interest because of the proposed wind farm near where I live in North-central
Illinois. One complaint was that the ones near us would be ugly and mar the
natural beauty of the landscape. And my wife and I agree that the ones along
I-65 were indeed ugly and marred the beauty of the land. Fact is, they were
big, tall, and a bit scary.
Just to bring things full circle,
while at Purdue I picked up a copy of the campus newspaper, The Exponent,
and saw this item under the headline, “Synergetic Energy.”
Wind energy will soon be
blowing solar energy away with wind turbines’ new high efficiencies, and its
potential is supported by research.
The story went on to talk about
Purdue’s own wind projects in conjunction with Duke Power. The writer’s
contention that wind will overtake solar as the most popular alternative may be
a bit premature. Fact of the matter is, one of the plenary speakers at the
conferences I was attending on campus spoke highly of solar and, in fact, most
of the roof of his house was a large solar panel.
So, now there appears to be a competition
as to what source of alternative energy is best and what will dominate in the
future.
Good thing I have a Sustainability
Fair coming up in August that I can visit. I’m sure various vendors of
alternatives will have their opinions. I’ll be writing about that in future
stories in The NEWS as well as this blog.