• @[email protected]
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    5116 days ago

    That’s why we need passive daytime radiative cooling. In theory, it could completely eliminate the urban heat island, but it still seems to be mostly at the pilot project stage so far. I did read somewhere that you can DIY with some packaging tape (which somehow has the right properties?) over a reflective backing. Maybe I’ll experiment a bit this summer.

    • @[email protected]
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      15 days ago

      There is a lot of passive system to prevent heat to come in, in the first place.

      • Brise soleil (sun-breaker) - these systems prevent direct sun to go through the window in summer, but let it in to heat up the habitation in winter.

      A illustration of a "Brise-soleil"

      • Trees ! - Trees have a cooling effect in summer and a keep the warmth in winter. They also improve air quality, physical and mental health. Increasing the areas covered by trees in city could bring down there temperature by several degrees.

      Increasing tree coverage to 30% in European cities could reduce deaths linked to urban heat island effect

      A street in Brooklyn with cars park on both side and a full tree canopee

      • proper thermal insulation.
      • @[email protected]
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        815 days ago

        Yeah, I’m a big believer in shade trees! The one in our front yard has grown tall enough to provide blessed relief from a blazing afternoon sun. The only problem is the dude next door, who’s heavy into solar, is worried it’ll block his panels. And I’m a believer in solar too, so I don’t know what to say. Maybe we can come to some sort of compromise…

      • @[email protected]
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        715 days ago

        proper thermal insulation

        what an understatement. it’s very unsexy but also incredibly effective. if your house is over 20 years old, you don’t need fancy-ass blinds, you need to get your house insulated ASAP. everything else must wait.

        insulation is the number one most effective thing anyone can do to improve the energy use of their living space. only when your house is properly insulated can you think of shade management, greenery, passive ventilation, heat pumps, etc. in an insulated house, those either won’t work at all or will be wildly inefficient.

        • @[email protected]
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          215 days ago

          I’ve added it at the end because it seemed obvious to me but yeah, insulation is the first thing to do. Especially under the roof.

    • @mojo_raisin
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      15 days ago

      You totally can.

      I’m planning on making some panels to help cool my garden in an attempt to help plants survive extreme heat and sun by shooting some of that heat into space! The combination of partial shading with cooling mass vs heating mass should help a bit. People think it doesn’t work, but I’d imagine growing a garden on a asphalt blacktop vs white cement would make a few degrees difference. This technology does the same thing, it just pushes the boundaries further to cool below atmospheric temperature.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dNs_kNilSjk

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N3bJnKmeNJY

      You’re the first person I’ve seen bring this up, not sure why it’s not more popular, just new I guess. Also, usually when I bring it up people say it’s’ bad because it will encourage more fossil fuel growth and they totally miss the point.

  • @[email protected]
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    3815 days ago

    Smart enough to understand heat pumps dumb enough to think it’s has that large of an effect.

    • AggressivelyPassive
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      3415 days ago

      In cities it actually does have an effect, especially in crowded ones. Millions of people in a relatively small area blasting AC “exhaust” out of their windows heat up the crammed air and in turn the buildings, streets, etc. which increases the heat island effect of cities.

      Granted, it’s not a huge effect, but it’s measurable. First source I could find: https://www.euronews.com/green/2023/08/30/fact-check-is-air-conditioning-making-cities-hotter

      • Captain Aggravated
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        615 days ago

        see I’ve been wondering if a heat pump system could heat an oven hot enough to bake bread. use environmental heat to manufacture Wonder Bread or something.

        • @[email protected]
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          215 days ago

          I don’t know the answer, but it this did work it would both make the outside of the oven super cold and be so slow to warm up that it would be pointless. Keep in mind that you have to get stuff in and out so air exchange is inevitable, every time you open the door you’d be reducing the heat substantially and it would take a long time to rise back up.

          Also my gut feeling is that any practical implementation wouldn’t be as energy efficient as you’d hope.

          • Captain Aggravated
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            215 days ago

            The other part of the idea is use the heat pump to not only heat an oven to bake bread (or do some other industrial heating process) but have the other end cool some process that produces waste heat, such as a data center or something. Or air condition a warehouse.

        • @[email protected]
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          -115 days ago

          I don’t see why it shouldn’t be able to. You might need concentric shells depending on the power of the heat pump.

      • @[email protected]
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        15 days ago

        Huh guess so. But still 2.4 degrees ain’t a whole lot (well except on a global scale lol). Thankfully in this situation doesnt really cause additional global warming problems.

  • @CosmoNova
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    3415 days ago

    I remember a statistic claiming that at the peak of the Iraq war, the annually power consumption of US military ACs alone exceeded that of the African continent.

  • @buzz86us
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    3315 days ago

    If only there were these things that grew out of the ground that cooled you home with their shade… What were they called again?

      • @Scolding7300
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        1315 days ago

        +1 although trees can shade the ground around the building and cool the area that way too

        • @Fedizen
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          715 days ago

          they also convert some of the sunlight turning air into sugar instead of getting warmer

      • @[email protected]
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        1215 days ago

        It is still highly beneficial in term of heat when there is a lot of shade in a city.

        The tarmac gets really hot and release that heat for a long time.

      • @buzz86us
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        415 days ago

        That is an urban planning problem

    • Meowing Thing
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      315 days ago

      If everyone had ACs and did this we could revert global warming!

      • @[email protected]
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        415 days ago

        You shouldn’t, it’s a terrible idea. I was just trying to make a joke implying opening the window will solve the problem by helping to cool the outside as well.

        • @[email protected]
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          15 days ago

          Yeah I deleted my comment after realizing it was sarcasm lol. Read too many of the other comments and forgot the original title.

  • Alto
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    515 days ago

    Already happens in a very round a bout tangential way. At least in America, most homes have far more heating capacity than they will ever actually use.

    • @someguy3
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      15 days ago

      This doesn’t follow the meme or make any actual valid criticism. Furnace use doesn’t feed into itself. And furnaces kick on and off based on the thermostat, so sizing with a factor of safety doesn’t matter.

  • Dave Coe
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    516 days ago

    Nope. An AC just moves temperatures around. If it heats one area, it cools another.

    • @pm_me_your_titties
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      16 days ago

      Except it is not 100% efficient. It will have losses, which will add extra heat to the surrounding area over what was removed from the target area. Thus contributing to the increase of entropy in the universe. And bringing us one step closer to the heat death.

      • @[email protected]
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        1316 days ago

        The real trick is to reverse-cycle your AC, and pump the heat into your home. Because of math and algorithms, this one trick will decrease entropy and take us further away from the heat death.

    • @hperrin
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      1716 days ago

      ACs also generate heat as a waste product (they’re not 100% efficient), but I’m not sure that actually heats up the surrounding area to a noticeable degree.

      • Jojo, Lady of the West
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        215 days ago

        They’re more than 100% efficient (they move more watts of heat than they produce), but they’re less than ∞% efficient (they use Watts of energy still, so they still produce Watts of heat)

        • @hperrin
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          215 days ago

          100% efficient would mean they do their job without any waste heat. They create waste heat, therefore they are not 100% efficient.

          The only thing that is 100% efficient is an electric heater, because its job is to create heat, so it doesn’t create “waste heat”.

          • Jojo, Lady of the West
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            215 days ago

            A heat pump can heat a home by more than the energy in the electricity it uses. It’s more than 100% efficient at “converting electricity into heat in your home”. It does that by not actually covering electricity but by moving heat, and it is less than 100% efficient at converting electricity into motion, and introduces some waste heat

            • @hperrin
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              115 days ago

              The efficiency of a machine isn’t measured at how effective its job is, but how efficiently it does that job. If it moved heat without producing any waste heat, it would be 100% efficient. If it produces any waste heat at all it’s not 100% efficient. No machine can ever be more than 100% efficient. That would violate the laws of thermodynamics.

    • @wabafeeOP
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      16 days ago

      Yes your right should have been more clear. If AC moves hot air from a house. This hot air goes out then imagine hundreds of AC doing that. Would that in turn heat up the area around it.

      • @[email protected]
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        616 days ago

        As long as the temperature inside remains constant, as much cold leaks out as is transported inside. So the only residual heating outside would be from inefficiensies in the system, not the moving process itself.

      • @[email protected]
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        415 days ago

        To be extra clear: An AC transports the heat, not the hot air. It removes heat from the air and transfers that heat to the outside air.

        There’s also heat pumps that work with water instead of air. So they remove heat from the air and push it into water. This water can be a closed loop, or be open where the water is lost. It can also work the other way around where the heat pump takes heat from outside and pumps it into water, heating up the water to then be used for heating a home or taking a shower. There are also water-water pumps that work on water on both ends.

        Because heat pumps pump the actual thermal energy, the medium doesn’t really matter much.

      • @Coreidan
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        415 days ago

        You need some lessons in thermal dynamics my man.

  • @TrickDacy
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    416 days ago

    I don’t think that’s how anything works

    • @[email protected]
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      615 days ago

      It does and in two ways

      1. running a refrigerator with an open door in a closed room makes the room warmer not cooler. The fridge just moves heat around but there is inefficiency too that comes out as excess hear

      2. using energy to cool your personal space, increases global warming leading to a need for more air conditioning

  • NarendraCzar
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    14 days ago

    I’ve thought about the same shit and that’s true lol
    Covid lockdown was the best days with climate Hope everyone will understand what’s causing global warming