Sustainable heating and cooling systems for agriculture
โ Scribed by Mohamad Kharseh; Bo Nordell
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 346 KB
- Volume
- 35
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0363-907X
- DOI
- 10.1002/er.1699
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Space heating/cooling systems account for approximately 40% of the global energy consumption. Such systems contribute to global warming by emitting 4 ร 10 10 MWh of heat and 3 ร 10 10 tons of CO 2 . There is a general understanding that the way to reduce global warming is a more efficient use of energy and increased use of renewable energy in all fields of the society. Ground-coupled heating/cooling systems, which have proven to make huge contributions in reducing energy consumption in Europe and North America, is here applied for poultry industry in Syria, as an example for the Middle East. There are e.g. 13 000 chicken farms in Syria producing 172 000 tons of meat per year. This industry employs directly almost 150 000 people. The total investments in chicken farming are 130 BSP (2 Bh). The annual mean air temperature in Syria is 15-181C with winter temperatures close to freezing during two months. The chickens need a temperature of 21-351C, depending on age, and the heating of all Syrian chicken plants consume 173 ร 10 3 tons of coal (1196 GWh). In the summer time, the ambient air temperature in Syria could reach above 451C. The chicken farms have no cooling systems since conventional cooling system is too expensive. The elevated temperature inside the farms reduces the chicken growth and lots of chicken die of overheating.
The ground temperature at 10 m depth is roughly equal to the annual mean air temperature. Using the ground as a heat source means a sustainable and less expensive heating of the chicken farms. During the summer, the ground is used as a source for free cooling, i.e. used directly for cooling of the plants without any cooling machines.
Current study shows the design and simulated operation of a ground-coupled heating/cooling system for a typical chicken farm in Syria. Performed national potential study showed that the implementation of such ground coupled heating and cooling systems in the Syrian poultry sector would mean increased poultry production and considerable savings in money, energy, and the environment.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Central Office ICID supports food security and promotes methods to conserve water, increase the productivity per unit of water, reducing non beneficial uses, even relocating uses from low to high value crops, tapping uncommitted outflows from systems, and seeking new sources to meet the additio
A cogeneration system (CGS) generating both power and heat for district heating and cooling is required to be able to cope efficiently with its heat demand change. In this paper, two types of gas turbine CGSs were investigated: (1) a CGS using a dual fluid cycle; and (2) a CGS using a combined cycle