Ecotricity, the company from which I buy my electricity, have just put up two wind turbines at Ballymena in Northern Ireland which will be used to provide power to the Michelin tyre factory there.
This is what people did 100 years ago. The Lots Road and Greenwich power stations in London were built in the early 1900s to provide power for trams and underground trains.
There was no National Grid. If you wanted electricity for your business, you had to build a power station.
Over time, we built bigger power stations to provide power to whoever needed it and now, it is apparently the Government’s responsibility to ensure that we have enough generating capacity to keep all our fridges and iPads running.
Ecotricity are not just making money from supplying electricity, they are looking to find better ways of providing it. The wind turbines at Ballymena follow a couple Ecotricity put up in Dundee for the Michelin factory there. They say that delivering electricity to a specific business is more efficient than adding that capacity to the grid.
Good for them. We need new thinking in this business. Instead of calculating how much electricity we are using, how much we might use in the future and building gas or nuclear stations to deliver that, why don’t we work out how to use less electricity and how to generate some of it ourselves?
The ARM company which makes chips for mobile phones and tablets, got rich by producing chips which needed less power than those produced by Intel. A government would get lots of green points if it told manufacturers their fridges and TV sets had to use 30% less power by 2015 or else.
And it is possible to build houses which use next to no electricity for heating or cooling. Why not make this part of the building regs?
It is also possible to generate electricity from the daylight which falls on glass. Tiny amounts so far, but I’m confident that clever youngsters can work out how to generate enough power in our own homes to run the energy-efficient devices we will all have if the government takes my advice.
We don’t need more power. We need to work out how to use less.
Tuesday, 26 February 2013
Wednesday, 13 February 2013
Mutton dressed as lamb
Life is simpler if you are a veggie.
Mutton dressed as lamb, horse masquerading as beef, doesn’t matter at all.
What surprises me is that people are surprised to find that the stuff in ready meals is not what it says on the packet.
Processed meat has always has been made from the bits you cannot sell as ordinary meat. Sausages, kebabs, burgers, pies. Who knows what is in them?
This has been going on since butchers began. Sweeney Todd used customers instead of animals in his pies.
And what you do and don’t like to find on your plate varies from place to place. We like horses and dogs so we don’t want to eat them, in other places they don’t mind eating dogs or horses, but they would hate to find pigs or cows in their pies.
I became a veggie late in life with the help of my children and an American taxi driver.
My children, with the clarity of young minds, made me think about what I ate. And the American taxi driver told me we were raising our cows badly long before mad cow disease became news over here.
Maybe this latest media frenzy will make one or two others think more about what they eat.
Mutton dressed as lamb, horse masquerading as beef, doesn’t matter at all.
What surprises me is that people are surprised to find that the stuff in ready meals is not what it says on the packet.
Processed meat has always has been made from the bits you cannot sell as ordinary meat. Sausages, kebabs, burgers, pies. Who knows what is in them?
This has been going on since butchers began. Sweeney Todd used customers instead of animals in his pies.
And what you do and don’t like to find on your plate varies from place to place. We like horses and dogs so we don’t want to eat them, in other places they don’t mind eating dogs or horses, but they would hate to find pigs or cows in their pies.
I became a veggie late in life with the help of my children and an American taxi driver.
My children, with the clarity of young minds, made me think about what I ate. And the American taxi driver told me we were raising our cows badly long before mad cow disease became news over here.
Maybe this latest media frenzy will make one or two others think more about what they eat.
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