Net zero homes don't need geothermal. Passive solar is enough if the design is done well as the thermal mass will release heat during the night. In our house the furnace doesn't come on during the day once the sun is shining. Cooking, lighting and other activities generate heat. We don't have enough thermal mass in our design. If your south facing glass to floor area ratio is too great, you will be opening your windows on winter days to cool down. We get a 1-3 degree gain above the thermostat with the sun alone in winter. The downside is without careful design, overheating in the spring summer and fall can be a problem. Thermal mass can help mitigate this problem as well, as mass will hold temperatures more steady like oceans or water bodies stabilize temperatures.
Net zero adds in the electrical generation with solar PV and can use solar thermal as well to add heat. All the technology is here it just needs to be applied.
The reason I can't answer the additional costs question is I am not in the business and Sask Power has the information. Why not ask them why they are installing wind and solar? There must be a good reason why they are considering wind and solar.
How many jobs are left in coal mining? Not many. The mines are open pit and the equipment is huge.
Manitoba has cheap hydro and lots of manufacturing because of it. Why can't we do the same?
Why not advocate smaller farms and keep more farmers farming. That would be good job creation.
Lots of value added industries would start here but the oil industry boom drove up the costs of labour.
Net zero adds in the electrical generation with solar PV and can use solar thermal as well to add heat. All the technology is here it just needs to be applied.
The reason I can't answer the additional costs question is I am not in the business and Sask Power has the information. Why not ask them why they are installing wind and solar? There must be a good reason why they are considering wind and solar.
How many jobs are left in coal mining? Not many. The mines are open pit and the equipment is huge.
Manitoba has cheap hydro and lots of manufacturing because of it. Why can't we do the same?
Why not advocate smaller farms and keep more farmers farming. That would be good job creation.
Lots of value added industries would start here but the oil industry boom drove up the costs of labour.
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