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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    London :CRC Press LLC,
    Keywords: Technology. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: This report arises out of the Working Group set up by The Watt Committee on Energy to examine the issues relating to domestic use and affordable warmth.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (159 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9780203985885
    DDC: 333.796315
    Language: English
    Note: Book Cover -- Half-Title -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Members of the Watt Committee on Energy Working Group on Domestic Energy and Affordable Warmth -- Contributors -- Foreword -- 1 Overview and policy recommendations -- 1.1 Background and context of report -- 1.2 Nature and magnitude of the problem -- 1.3 Costs and benefits -- 1.4 Current policies and initiatives -- 1.5 Some definitions -- 1.6 Possible solutions -- 1.6.1 WHY? -- (a) Should the policy on CO2 emissions reduction be balanced against other objectives? -- 1.6.2 WHAT? -- (a) What standards of 'warmth' should be adopted: full compliance or some staged compliance? -- (b) Should policies be related to climatic zones? -- 1.6.3 WHEN AND WHO? -- (a) What should be the time-scale for action? -- (b) Is action proposed for the 'poor' (those on a means-tested benefit) or the 'nearly poor'? -- (c) Should intervention be incremental or total? -- (d) Should the work be triggered by the quality of the house or the income of the household? -- (e) Should building legislation apply to new houses or be made retrospective? -- (f) To what extent can advice without investment achieve the objectives? -- 1.6.4 HOW? -- (a) What is the role of local authorities? -- (b) What is the role of energy rating? -- (c) Should ratings be used as a way of identifying stock to be acted on or as a way of guiding action? -- (d) Should ratings be carried out on the whole stock or only part of it? -- 1.6.5 HOW MUCH? -- (a) What total resources are required? -- (b) Should available resources be used on capital investment or in income support for fuel? -- (c) What economic criteria should guide investment decisions? -- (d) Should there be investment in projects that cannot be shown to be 'economic' by any criteria?. , (e) Should the resources or energy improvements be regarded as part of the total housing programme or a separate policy requiring its own resources?or a separate policy requiring its own resources? ... -- (f) Should policies be focused on the landlord or the tenant? -- 1.7 Policy recommendations -- 2 Defining the problem -- 2.1 Domestic energy consumption -- 2.2 Energy use and carbon dioxide -- 2.3 Fuel poverty -- 2.3.1 NUMBERS AFFECTED -- 2.4 Affordable warmth -- 2.4.1 WARMTH -- 2.4.2 AFFORDABLE -- 2.5 Health and social effects of cold, damp housing -- 2.5.1 PATHOGENS -- 2.5.2 PHYSIOLOGICAL CHANGES -- 2.5.3 EMOTIONAL DISTRESS -- 2.5.4 CHILDREN: LONG-TERM EFFECTS -- 2.5.5 VULNERABLE GROUPS -- 2.6 Financial costs -- 2.6.1 COSTS TO THE OCCUPANTS -- 2.6.2 COSTS TO SOCIAL AND NATIONAL AGENCIES -- 2.7 Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- 3 Existing and likely initiatives -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Current programmes -- 3.2.1 HOUSING INVESTMENT PROGRAMME -- 3.2.2 CAPITAL RECEIPTS -- 3.2.3 ESTATE ACTION -- 3.2.4 THE GREEN HOUSE PROGRAMME -- 3.2.5 PRIVATE SECTOR SUPPORT -- (a) Housing Renovation Grants -- (b) Minor Works Assistance -- 3.2.6 HOUSING ASSOCIATIONS -- 3.2.7 HOME ENERGY EFFICIENCY SCHEME (HEES) -- 3.3 Assessment of current programmes -- 3.3.1 HIP -- 3.3.2 THE GREEN HOUSE PROGRAMME -- 3.3.3 HEES -- 3.3.4 HOUSE CONDITION SURVEYS -- 3.4 Action by the fuel utilities and Energy Saving Trust (EST) -- 3.4.1 FUEL UTILITIES -- 3.4.2 THE ENERGY SAVING TRUST -- 3.4.3 EVALUATION -- 3.5 Energy pricing and its effects -- 3.6 European Union directives -- 3.6.1 ENERGY AUDITS -- 3.6.2 ENERGY TAX -- 3.6.3 EU FUNDING SOURCES -- 3.7 Energy audits -- 3.8 Building Regulations and other standards -- 3.8.1 BUILDING REGULATIONS -- 3.8.2 THE FITNESS FOR HUMAN HABITATION STANDARD (ENGLISH AND WALES) AND THE TOLERABLE STANDARD (SCOTLAND) -- 3.9 Summary -- References. , 4 Appliances and affordable warmth -- 4.1 Summary -- 4.2 The appliance-purchase/energy-use interface -- 4.3 Ownership and utilization -- 4.4 Energy consumptions and savings -- 4.5 Discussion -- 4.6 Conclusions -- 4.7 Policy ecommendations -- 4.7.1 ENERGY LABELLING SCHEME -- 4.7.2 EFFICIENCY THRESHOLDS -- 4.7.3 TEST LABORATORIES -- 4.7.4 APPLIANCE USE -- 4.7.5 RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT -- References -- 5 Identifying policy objectives -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Policy context -- 5.2.1 THE CURRENT POLICY POSITION IN THE UK -- 5.2.2 CURRENT LEVERS FOR CHANGE -- 5.3 Policy options considered by the Group -- 5.4 Policy option selected by the Group -- References -- 6 Strategies for action -- 6.1 Providing affordable warmth -- 6.2 Time-scale -- 6.2.1 STRATEGY CHOICE -- 6.2.2 RECOMMENDED APPROACH -- 6.3 Complete coverage -- 6.3.1 STRATEGY CHOICE -- 6.3.2 RECOMMENDED APPROACH -- 6.4 Energy audits -- 6.4.1 STRATEGY CHOICE -- 6.4.2 RECOMMENDED APPROACH -- 6.5 Additional Social Security benefits -- 6.5.1 STRATEGY CHOICE -- 6.5.2 RECOMMENDED APPROACH -- 6.6 Regulations -- 6.6.1 STRATEGY CHOICE -- 6.6.2 RECOMMENDED APPROACH -- 6.7 Energy efficiency bias -- 6.7.1 STRATEGY CHOICE -- 6.7.2 RECOMMENDED APPROACH -- 6.8 Cost effectiveness, cost benefit or affordable warmth? -- 6.8.1 STRATEGY CHOICE: -- 6.8.2 RECOMMENDED APPROACH -- 6.9 Administrative costs and economies of scale -- 6.10 Fuel poverty vs the environment (or warmth vs energy saving) -- 6.10.1 STRATEGY CHOICE -- 6.10.2 RECOMMENDED APPROACH -- 6.11 Occupant vs owner -- 6.11.1 STRATEGY CHOICE -- 6.11.2 RECOMMENDED APPROACH -- References -- Further reading -- 7 Administrative issues and mechanisms -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Energy auditing -- 7.3 The need to make energy auditing mandatory -- 7.4 Programme of work -- 7.5 Job creation/training -- 7.6 Monitoring by central government -- 7.7 Conclusion -- References. , 8 Cost implications of a policy for affordable warmth -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 The cost of warmth versus energy consumption -- 8.3 Cost of warmth -- 8.4 Cost of adequate warmth -- 8.5 Energy rating -- 8.6 A standard for affordable warmth -- 8.7 Cost of achieving a Standard -- 8.8 Heating additions -- 8.10 Conclusion -- Acknowledgement -- References -- Source material -- Appendix -- Objectives, historical background and current programme -- Member institutions of the Watt Committee on Energy -- Publications of the Watt Committee on Energy -- WATT COMMITTEE REPORTS -- OTHER PUBLICATIONS -- Index.
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  • 2
    Keywords: Forschungsbericht
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: Online-Ressource (85 S., 5,84 MB) , Ill., graph. Darst.
    Language: German
    Note: Förderkennzeichen BMBF 13N8260. - Verbund-Nr. 01022028 , Unterschiede zwischen dem gedruckten Dokument und der elektronische Ressource können nicht ausgeschlossen werden , Auch als gedr. Ausg. vorh , Systemvoraussetzungen: Acrobat reader.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    s.l. : American Chemical Society
    Journal of the American Chemical Society 114 (1992), S. 5876-5878 
    ISSN: 1520-5126
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2022-02-17
    Description: Germany 2050: For the first time Germany reached a balance between its sources of anthropogenic CO2 to the atmosphere and newly created anthropogenic sinks. This backcasting study presents a fictional future in which this goal was achieved by avoiding (∼645 Mt CO2), reducing (∼50 Mt CO2) and removing (∼60 Mt CO2) carbon emissions. This meant substantial transformation of the energy system, increasing energy efficiency, sector coupling, and electrification, energy storage solutions including synthetic energy carriers, sector-specific solutions for industry, transport, and agriculture, as well as natural-sink enhancement and technological carbon dioxide options. All of the above was necessary to achieve a net-zero CO2 system for Germany by 2050.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-05-13
    Description: To reach their net-zero targets, countries will have to compensate hard-to-abate CO2 emissions through carbon dioxide removal (CDR). Yet, current assessments rarely include socio-cultural or institutional aspects or fail to contextualize CDR options for implementation. Here we present a context-specific feasibility assessment of CDR options for the example of Germany. We assess 14 CDR options, including three chemical carbon capture options, six options for bioenergy combined with carbon capture and storage (BECCS), and five options that aim to increase ecosystem carbon uptake. The assessment addresses technological, economic, environmental, institutional, social-cultural and systemic considerations using a traffic-light system to evaluate implementation opportunities and hurdles. We find that in Germany CDR options like cover crops or seagrass restoration currently face comparably low implementation hurdles in terms of technological, economic, or environmental feasibility and low institutional or social opposition but show comparably small CO2 removal potentials. In contrast, some BECCS options that show high CDR potentials face significant techno-economic, societal and institutional hurdles when it comes to the geological storage of CO2. While a combination of CDR options is likely required to meet the net-zero target in Germany, the current climate protection law includes a limited set of options. Our analysis aims to provide comprehensive information on CDR hurdles and possibilities for Germany for use in further research on CDR options, climate, and energy scenario development, as well as an effective decision support basis for various actors.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Preliminary results are presented from the first validation of geophysical dataproducts (ice concentration, snow thickness on sea ice ( ) and ice temperature ( ) fromthe NASA EOS Aqua AMSR-E sensor, in East Antarctica (in September-October 2003). Thechallenge of collecting sufficient measurements with which to adequately validate thecoarse-resolution AMSR-E data products was addressed by means of a hierarchicalapproach, using detailed in situ measurements, digital aerial photography and other satellitedata. Initial results indicate that, at least under cold conditions with a dry snowcover, thereis a reasonably close agreement between satellite- and aerial photo-derived iceconcentrations i.e., 97.2 ±3.6% for NT2 and 96.5 ±2.5% for BBA algorithms versus 94.3±10% for the aerial photos. In general, the AMSR-E concentration represents a slightoverestimate of the actual concentration, with the largest discrepancies occurring in regionscontaining a relatively high proportion of thin ice. Although the AMSR-E concentrations fromthe NT2 and BBA algorithms are similar on average, differences of 〉5% occur on a point-by-point basis, again related to thin ice distribution. The AMSR-E ice temperature ( ) productagrees with coincident surface measurements to within approximately 0.5o C. Regardingsnow thickness, the AMSR retrieval is a significant underestimate compared to in situmeasurements weighted by the percentage of thin ice (and open water) present. For thecase study analysed, the underestimate was 46% for the overall average, but 23%compared to smooth ice measurements. An encouraging factor is that the spatialdistribution of the AMSR-E product follows an expected and consistent spatial pattern,suggesting that the observed difference may be an offset (at least under freezingconditions). Areas of discrepancy are identified, and the need for future work highlighted.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 8
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    In:  EPIC3Antarctic sea ice: Physical processes, interactions, and variability (M O Jeffries, ed ) Antarctic Research Series, AGU, Washington DC, 74, pp. 273-292
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , peerRev
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2021-10-14
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2013-09-11
    Description: Spin-dependent photoelectron transmission and spin-dependent electrochemical studies were conducted on purple membrane containing bacteriorhodopsin (bR) deposited on gold, aluminum/aluminum-oxide, and nickel substrates. The result indicates spin selectivity in electron transmission through the membrane. Although the chiral bR occupies only about 10% of the volume of the membrane, the spin polarization...
    Print ISSN: 0027-8424
    Electronic ISSN: 1091-6490
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General
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