Does anybody have a good handle on the possible quantities of heat involved 
when protons inside a metal lattice begin paring "condensation"?

As per this paper by Julian Brown, who estimates that such phenomena may be 
exhibit by metals (like Ni, Pd, Nb) with high hydrogen loading.

http://arxiv.org/abs/cond-mat/0504019

Conclusion:

"In addition to the normal determinations of superconductivity such as the
Meissner effect, the exothermy associated with the pairing phase transition
would be quite considerable and should therefore by readily measurable by
infra-red or calorimetric techniques."

Comment:

The associated proton pairs that arise could explain the the decreased 
resistance observed by Celani, as the metal forms islands saturated with 
condensed proton pairs in the superconducting phase. Proton-pairing 
condensation would also explain the "quiessence" effect, when all available 
protons have reached a sufficiently entangled state there is no more energy to 
be given off by this phase change.

So it would not be fusion, or a nuclear reaction of any kind, but a very novel 
effect none-the-less. The high temperature proton-metal superconductors could 
have numerous technical applications and the proton-pairing phase-change latent 
heat effect could be utilised like a super-efficient, solid-state heat pump, 
with careful design of how to expose the cell to a "hot side" or a "cold side" 
depending on the stage of the cycle it is in (pairing or de-pairing).

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