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Home Energy Magazine Online January/February 1995
More Waterbed Data
I was dismayed after reading the article on waterbed
heating that you did not use data from the Residential Energy Consumption
Survey (RECS) relating to the energy use of waterbed heaters (see
"Waterbed Heating: Uncovering Energy Savings in the Bedroom,"
HE Sept/Oct '94, p.41). Do your readers know that this triennial survey
of households covers many important uses of energy in the home? For example,
the 1990 survey documented that 14.5% of U.S. households use one or more
waterbed heaters (11.6% have one and 2.9% have two or more). The 16.9 million
waterbed heaters were estimated to use 2% of the residential consumption
of electricity in 1990. These and many other data are available in publications
of the Energy Information Administration that report the results of the
RECS.
Data on low-E windows, aquariums, air cleaners,
home faxes and copiers, various types of fans, lights used more than one
hour per day, use of outdoor lights, and participation in demand-side management
programs are some of the new topics available from the 1993 survey. To
get these data, call (202)586-8800, or use your modem to sign onto our
electronic bulletin board at (202) 586-2557.
Wendel Thompson
Manager, Residential Energy Consumption Survey
Energy Information Administration
U.S. Department of Energy
Washington, D.C.
Waterbeds Unplugged
How timely your article on waterbed heaters was.
Our agency operates a low-income weatherization program, and during the
last year has begun a new emphasis on energy education. Just today, a colleague
provided me with a report on a low-income, payment-troubled family who
unplugged their waterbeds as part of our Weatherization Assistance Program
follow-up energy education.
As a result of weatherization, switching the
water heater from electric to gas, and energy education about the cost
of operating waterbed heaters, the family reported their lowest electricity
bill ever. Their electric bill last August had been $130.67 but this August
was $67.60. Electric usage went from 1,146 kWh to 759 kWh. In part because
the waterbed was unplugged, the family now has both a greater sense of
energy use and more money in their pockets.
Jeannie Jertson
Community Services Director
Gila County Community Action Program
Payson, Arizona
Fireplace Questions
I found the article on advanced-combustion fireplaces
to be informative, but I still have a number of questions regarding the
technology (see "Fireplaces: Studies in
Contrasts," HE Sept/Oct '94, p. 27). Many
new fireplaces and woodstoves advertise efficiencies better than 80%. This
would seem impossible, given Skip Hayden's maximum of 78% efficiency with
minimal excess air. Are they advertising combustion efficiencies or true
total efficiencies? Do they reflect realistic usage?
How do fireplaces and woodstoves compare to coal-,
oil- and gas-burning equipment, in terms of cleanliness?
What are the constituents of incomplete wood
combustion products? Are there significant amounts of dioxins or other
carcinogens?
Do the new units really burn cleanly when their
air supply is choked down to reduce heat output and prolong burning?
My main concern is that even with the new technologies,
burning wood may produce pollution that is out of line with the lower levels
we we require from automobiles and boilers.
Noel Kurtz
Kurtz Consulting
Ithaca, New York
Author Skip Hayden responds: "Table 1
in that article was designed to show that excess air has a dramatic effect
on the maximum efficiency attainable. The fact that I listed no efficiencies
above 78% does not mean you can never have a system with a higher efficiency.
Indeed, if I ran at an excess air level lower than 100%, or if I took more
heat out within the appliance so that my flue gas temperature was less
than 300deg.F, or if my wood had a moisture content less than 17%, my stove
would be more efficient. On the other hand, all of the other characteristics
(as stated later in the article) of the advanced-combustion fireplace have
to be there in spades for the real seasonal efficiency of the appliance
to be at or above that level.
"As for pollutant emissions, NOx emissions
tend to be lower with wood, and carbon dioxide (and hence greenhouse emissions)
can be considered zero to the extent that the wood is harvested in a sustainable
fashion. Conventional wood stoves have high levels of incomplete combustion
products, including carbon monoxide, hydrocarbons, and condensible organics
(in the form of PAHs, carcinogens similar to those in cigarette smoke).
Indications are that in advanced technology stoves, all of these emissions
have been reduced by 80% to 90%. There is no evidence that there are significant
levels of dioxins in these advanced-combustion systems.
"The new units burn cleanly even when
run at low fire. Indeed, some designs actually burn their cleanest at that
point. To meet the emissions standard, they must have a clean low burn,
so they cannot be as completely choked off as could the "dirty"
stoves of the 1980s. Furthermore, the viewing window allows the operator
to see when combustion is optimum--he or she tends to keep it there because
the flame is "prettiest" at that point, as well as being more
efficient.
"The continuing evolution of this alternative
to the outmoded fireplace will permit an environmentally benign use of
renewable energy."
Where to Find Efficient Wood Fireplaces?
Would you be kind enough to send me a list of
manufacturers of advanced combustion wood-burning fireplaces meeting the
EPA 1990 or CSA B415 performance standards?
Evan W. Fletcher
Williamstown, Massachusetts
Editor's Note: For a list of Environmental
Protection Agency-certified wood heaters that includes emissions rates
as tested, default efficiencies, and BTU ranges, contact EPA's Manufacturing,
Energy and Transportation Division, 22-23A US EPA, 401 M St. S.W., Washington,
DC 20460, Attention: Wood Heater Program. The list is available at no charge.
A list of certified comfort conditioning equipment, which includes advanced-combustion
wood-burning fireplaces, is available from the Canadian Standards Association
for (Can)$20. Contact: CSA, 178 Rexdale Blvd, Rexdale, Ontario, M9W 1R3.
Tel: (416)747-4044; Fax: (416)747-2475.
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