Why is the discussion even about a better, more energy 
efficient refridgerator?  Let's discuss life without the refridgerator. 
 
Although you won't read about it in the New York Times, the refridgerator is as 
much an engine of sprawl and unsustainable growth as the automobile.   It is 
the one appliance that has permitted us to eliminate the daily trip to the 
market and the need to live close to our food retailers.   
 
Moreover it's an appliance that the vast majority of people outside the U.S.. 
get along just fine without.  They just treat and package their food sources in 
a manner that eliminates the need for refridgeration.  
 
Take milk for example.  Much of the rest of the world uses aseptic packaging 
technology for packaging milk.  As a result milk can sit on the shelf in a 
tropical environment for up to six months without refridgeration.  It is also 
available in small enough packaging that it can be consumed in a day or less, 
thus elimination the need for home refridgeration after the package is opened.  
 
Been there, done that.
 
Imagine how much our demand for energy and our generation of greehouse gases 
would drop if we just accepted room temperature milk and other beverages. 
 
It's not just the Third World that does nicely without refridgerators.  A 
substantial number of the new homes built over the past decade in Seneca County 
just to our north have been built not just off the grid but without electric 
service entirely.  
 
They are owned by Plain Sect Mennonite farm families.
 
George Frantz
 
   

--- On Thu, 12/25/08, Joel and Sarah Gagnon 
<[email protected]> wrote:

From: Joel and Sarah Gagnon <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [SustainableTompkins] Prius as an emergency generator
To: [email protected], "Sustainable Tompkins County listserv" 
<[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, December 25, 2008, 4:04 PM

At 07:02 PM 12/24/08 +0000, you wrote:
>Years ago I read about Amory Lovins setting up his fridge so it would vent 
>heat outdoors in summer and, in winter, using outdoor air for cooling 
>whenever the temp diff was propitious. Anybody doing that?  Should be done 
>by architects in designing a house.
>Andrejs

I remember reading that too, and it makes a lot of sense. To pull it off, 
though, you need not only to integrate it into the design of the house, you 
also have to design the refrigeration device for it as well. I know of no 
"off the shelf" product that is designed to take advantage of
exterior cold 
air in the winter.

In the summer, a ground source heat pump (operated to dump, rather than 
pump!) would be more efficient than trying to dump heat into already hot 
ambient air. It should be possible to use the same equipment that heats the 
house in the winter to cool refrigeration units in the summer.

When we first moved to this house, the refrigerator that came with it 
needed a new door gasket. It was some weeks before I got it on. In the 
meantime, it being January, we used the coldest room in the house as a big 
refrigerator. It was plenty cold (the rest of the uninsulated house wasn't 
much warmer). I know folks who keep refrigerators in unheated porches to 
minimize run times. Unfortunately, this does not work very well. You may 
have noticed that you have to adjust the thermostat in your fridge with 
changing ambient temperatures. Perversely, the warmer the ambient 
temperature, the colder the refrigerator gets at a given setting. The 
freezer compartment is even harder to regulate. The controls are designed 
for a relatively constant temperature environment. Better controls 
(including separate thermostats for freezer and refrigerator compartments 
and the needed ability to self-adjust the cooling to each compartment) 
would cost more, of course, and so far manufacturers don't see much of a 
market for high-end efficiency. The low-hanging fruit of energy efficiency 
has already been picked, with better insulation and more efficient 
compressors. Since the currently-produced products are not designed for the 
longevity of their predecessors, further improvement in efficiency could be 
rapidly introduced. I'd like to see a return to durability along with 
improved efficiency.

Joel

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visit:  http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/ 

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