Whether you grew up in Texas or Tasmania, Manitoba or
Macedonia, you were probably raised in a modernised Western culture like me,
with electricity and motorcars and other modern infrastructure. If so, you
probably grew up blithely spending massive quantities of energy to do the
simplest of tasks.
Instead of boiling water by lighting a fire and putting a
kettle on the stove, for example, we might blow up the oldest mountains in the
world to mine the remains of forests older than dinosaurs, set those old forests
on fire to boil water, and then use the steam to turn turbines to send
electricity through miles of cable to an outlet on your wall to power a kettle
to boil water. The details might change depending on where you are, but most of
us live this way – and so does my family, to an extent. It’s not easy to live
any other way these days; one must deliberately and daily choose, on abstract
grounds, a life of greater inconvenience, and slowly learn a different set of
skills.
We do this, of course, because we have so much energy at our
disposal – the equivalent of 300 slaves by one common estimate, making each of
us richer than medieval kings. Of course, we can’t keep doing this forever –
there were only so many ancient forests to burn, and doing so has played with
the knobs and dials of the world’s weather control panel. Thus, most
discussions of the future focus on producing enough energy to meet our
escalating needs -- escalating because each generation grows up with more
comfort and convenience, and because there are more of us.
The same is true in our personal lives; most of us fantasize
about making more money, not about spending less, even though it amounts to the
same thing, and even though your current spending might not be making you
happy. Adverts and articles tout new and more fuel-efficient cars, not buying
fewer or older cars and driving them more slowly. A major magazine a few years back showed their
concern for the future with an “eco-issue;” I showed mine by refusing to buy
the magazine. Most discussions of energy, similarly, ignore the central and salient factor of how much we don't need.
Take, for example, the old technique of hay-box cooking,
done by people here a few generations ago and by the British during the lean
times of the Second World War. A hay box is just what it says, a box lined with
hay or some other insulating material that will keep heated food hot and
cooking for hours. Manufactured hay-boxes were built in the early part of the
20th century, and stores used to sell elegant and decorated models,
but to make one at home all you need is a box – or in my case, two smaller
boxes, one flipped upside-down and placed over the other – with blankets
stuffed around the sides.
To use this method I started by making a few litres of
lentil soup with vegetables from our garden, and brought it to a rolling boil.
On the stove I would have to cook it for an hour or more until the lentils were
soft, but here I only needed to bring it to the boil, take the pot off the
stove and place it in the hay-box. I surrounded the pot with blankets in lieu
of dry hay – people here make hay while the sun shines, so there hasn’t been much
of either in Ireland this year – covered it over with more blankets, and went to bed. In
the morning I took the cool pot of soup out of the box and found it had cooked
perfectly, after using a fraction of the fuel.
Another example of using what you have comes in an even more
unassuming package, the tea cozie. The Irish are among the most prolific tea-drinkers
on Earth, and a “cuppa” is the standard greeting offered to family, friends and
just passers-by. Boiling tea cools quickly, and if you like your tea strong –
sitting in the pot a while – or want a second cup, you want to conserve the
heat. The tea-cozie solves that by insulating the pot like the hay-box
insulates tomorrow’s dinner, keeping it hot longer. A thermos does the same
thing for a drink on the go.
The same logic applies to our houses; most of us in the
modern world live in homes far larger than we need, and if many people heat
their entire homes in winter while wearing summer clothes indoors. The UK-based Building Research Establishment reports that British homes in 1970 had an average temperature
of 12 degrees in winter – 55 degrees – and I’m betting that in poorer and more
traditional Ireland it was colder still. Yet people got by; they were more
psychologically accustomed to colder temperatures, , they gathered in rooms
together and allowed their body heat to raise the temperature, they remained
physically active, they wore heavy clothes indoors, and they heated certain
central rooms and let unused rooms provide insulation
As Kris De Decker notes in Low-Tech Magazine, “the reduction
in energy use for space heating thanks to more efficient homes was less than 20
per cent from 1993 to 2005. Lowering the thermostat by 2° C (or 4°F) would thus
result in energy reduction comparable to that. Turning down the thermostat from
22° to 18° C would initiate an energy savings of at least 35 per cent.”
DeDecker notes that insulating the body itself is the most
efficient option, as there is so much less space to cover. Using American “clo”
units, where one clo equals the thermal insulation required to keep one person
comfortable at 21 degrees centigrade, he notes that briefs provide 0.05 clo,
light socks 0.10 clo, a heavy shirt with long sleeves .25 clo, a sweater .30
clo, and long pants .30.
Someone wearing the ensemble described above would feel
comfortable in a home heated to 21 degrees Centigrade – the level assumed for
the modern USA by the standards company ASHRAE -- but in just a t-shirt would
need 24 degrees. With long underwear they would only need the house to be
heated to 17 degrees to feel the same comfort, which DeDecker reckons saves 50 to 70 per cent on heating costs compared to the t-shirt.
All of these are things we could change quickly in theory,
but realistically, they will take time to grow used to – I hail from a hotter
climate and am used to blasts of central heating in winter, and shifting away
from that was slow and sometimes uncomfortable. In this, as in so many other
areas, though, it helps to take the first steps in a different direction and
keep going, and then one day you look behind you and realise how far you’ve
travelled, and how little you needed after all.
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