The power budget
Sep. 23rd, 2008 06:07 pmI am repeatedly surprised by energy statistics. I've spent lots of time calculating the costs of various things in my immediate environment, so I was astonished to read that the US as a whole uses about three terawatts of power on average. That's ten kilowatts per person! The average American uses about 1.4 of those kilowatts in gasoline. So automobiles - which are profligate energy consumers - are still only a fraction of the total power budget.
The human body uses only about 100 watts, and if you really exert yourself it is possible to generate about a kilowatt for short periods. A horsepower is also of the same scale, with one horsepower being about three-quarters of a kilowatt. Our house, with three people, uses about a kilowatt of electricity. It boggles the mind to consider that the machinery around us, whose work we appropriate to ourselves, is like an invisible slave galley with the power of a hundred men working twenty-four hours a day on our behalf. Or, less dramatically, a hundred very bright incandescent bulbs in some gigantic vanity mirror.
I hear a lot of that power, about half, is used for "buildings", which is a pretty broad category, and I'm not sure how it breaks down into heating, cooling, lights, and so forth. But for the life of me, I can't figure out where even the remaining half is going.
The human body uses only about 100 watts, and if you really exert yourself it is possible to generate about a kilowatt for short periods. A horsepower is also of the same scale, with one horsepower being about three-quarters of a kilowatt. Our house, with three people, uses about a kilowatt of electricity. It boggles the mind to consider that the machinery around us, whose work we appropriate to ourselves, is like an invisible slave galley with the power of a hundred men working twenty-four hours a day on our behalf. Or, less dramatically, a hundred very bright incandescent bulbs in some gigantic vanity mirror.
I hear a lot of that power, about half, is used for "buildings", which is a pretty broad category, and I'm not sure how it breaks down into heating, cooling, lights, and so forth. But for the life of me, I can't figure out where even the remaining half is going.
no subject
Date: 2008-09-24 01:49 am (UTC)Lots and lots of power goes into fixing nitrogen for fertilizer, right?
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Date: 2008-09-24 01:52 am (UTC)Aside from fixing nitrogen, isn't much of the price we pay for food spent on shuttling it around from place to place and running open-fronted coolers at the store?
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Date: 2008-09-24 02:01 am (UTC)For example, consider the power used in a Chinese factory to make stuff for the US market. Should it count in the US's total, or China's? Do you count the solar energy a farmer (passively) uses to grow crops?
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Date: 2008-09-24 02:11 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-24 02:45 am (UTC)I believe that this is energy used in the US so Chinese consumption is not counted. And it's marketed energy, so no, solar use by crops is not included.
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Date: 2008-09-24 02:47 am (UTC)The Heber process for nitrogen fixation is something like 1 or 2 percent of global energy use.
I have no idea of the cost of grocery store refrigeration. Maybe that's the missing 50 percent!
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Date: 2008-09-25 06:57 am (UTC)The FCC took a dim view.