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Powell’s Ponderings: Global Warming Blame
by Peter Powell
March 6, 2009

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“Climate Warming Gases Rising Faster Than Expected” was the headline of an Associated Press story published in mid-February.

It summarized a report from the Carnegie Institution for Science given at a Chicago conference of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. It was a report on carbon emission increases, claiming they have been growing by 3.5 percent per year since 2000 up from 0.9 percent in the 1990s.

Oh no, I thought, here come HFC refrigerants into the environmentalists’ cross hairs since they are considered global warming gases.

But, the blame game in this case was leveled elsewhere and at a much more worthy target. “The largest factor (for global warming) is the widespread adoption of coal as an energy source,” said Carnegie’s Christopher Field. “And without aggressive attention, societies will continue to focus on the energy sources that are cheapest and that means coal.”

Well now, here is the HVACR industry in which HFCs are kept in contained systems so they don’t leak into the atmosphere. And we are constantly coming up with more energy-efficient equipment and technologies designed to burn less fossil fuels like coal.

Frankly, we as an industry welcome solar, hydroelectric, or wind as a generator of power, because we can certainly plug our heating, cooling, and refrigeration equipment into any such generator.

Let’s hope this most recent finding has environmentalists focusing more attention on the generators of power, than us users.



Peter Powell
Refrigeration Editor. E-mail him at peterpowell@achrnews.com.

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  Comments (1)Post a Comment
Title: Blame, Blame, For Shame



It seems all carbon emitters(direct or indirect) are looking to position themselves as a special case worthy of (of course) special treatment.
Since you mentioned coal; it is one of the biggest carbon emitters looking to game the system anyway it can. Check out the millions it regularly spends to confuse the public about its true nature. Think Clean Coal. Or, better yet it's ability to influence legislation in our government bodies.
Refrigerants are of course a special case. Just ask the Industry. Better yet just ask our legislators, many of which are regularly influenced by Industry lobbyists. So the question we are left with is this. If any emitter is worthy of special treatment, can anything worthwhile get accomplished?








a special case


 
 


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