Catherine Mohr builds green

35,948 views ・ 2010-04-14

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:16
First of all, I'm a geek.
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00:19
I'm an organic food-eating,
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carbon footprint-minimizing, robotic surgery geek.
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00:24
And I really want to build green,
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00:27
but I'm very suspicious
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00:29
of all of these well-meaning articles,
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00:31
people long on moral authority
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00:33
and short on data,
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00:35
telling me how to do these kinds of things.
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00:37
And so I have to figure this out for myself.
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00:39
For example: Is this evil?
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00:42
I have dropped a blob of organic yogurt
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from happy self-actualized local cows
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on my counter top,
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00:49
and I grab a paper towel and I want to wipe it up.
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00:52
But can I use a paper towel? (Laughter)
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00:55
The answer to this can be found in embodied energy.
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00:58
This is the amount of energy that goes into
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01:00
any paper towel or embodied water,
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01:02
and every time I use a paper towel,
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01:04
I am using this much
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01:06
virtual energy and water.
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01:08
Wipe it up, throw it away.
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01:10
Now, if I compare that to a cotton towel
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01:13
that I can use a thousand times,
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01:15
I don't have a whole lot of embodied energy
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01:18
until I wash that yogurty towel.
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01:20
This is now operating energy.
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01:23
So if I throw my towel in the washing machine,
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01:25
I've now put energy and water
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back into that towel ...
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01:29
unless I use a front-loading, high-efficiency washing machine, (Laughter)
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01:31
and then it looks a little bit better.
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01:34
But what about a recycled paper towel
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01:36
that comes in those little half sheets?
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01:38
Well, now a paper towel looks better.
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01:40
Screw the paper towels. Let's go to a sponge.
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01:42
I wipe it up with a sponge, and I put it under the running water,
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and I have a lot less energy and a lot more water.
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01:47
Unless you're like me and you leave the handle
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in the position of hot even when you turn it on,
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01:51
and then you start to use more energy.
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01:53
Or worse, you let it run until it's warm
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to rinse out your towel.
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01:57
And now all bets are off.
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01:59
(Laughter)
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02:01
So what this says is that
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sometimes the things that you least expect --
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02:06
the position in which you put the handle --
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have a bigger effect than any of those other things
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02:10
that you were trying to optimize.
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02:12
Now imagine someone as twisted as me
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02:14
trying to build a house.
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02:16
(Laughter)
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02:19
That's what my husband and I are doing right now.
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02:22
And so, we wanted to know, how green could we be?
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And there's a thousand and one articles out there
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02:26
telling us how to make all these green trade-offs.
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02:28
And they are just as suspect
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in telling us to optimize these little things around the edges
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and missing the elephant in the living room.
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02:35
Now, the average house
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has about 300 megawatt hours
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of embodied energy in it;
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this is the energy it takes to make it --
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millions and millions of paper towels.
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02:46
We wanted to know how much better we could do.
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And so, like many people,
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we start with a house on a lot,
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and I'm going to show you a typical construction on the top
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and what we're doing on the bottom.
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So first, we demolish it.
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It takes some energy, but if you deconstruct it --
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03:02
you take it all apart, you use the bits --
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you can get some of that energy back.
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03:06
We then dug a big hole
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to put in a rainwater catchment tank
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to take our yard water independent.
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03:12
And then we poured a big foundation
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for passive solar.
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03:16
Now, you can reduce the embodied energy
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by about 25 percent
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by using high fly ash concrete.
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We then put in framing.
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03:25
And so this is framing -- lumber,
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composite materials --
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03:29
and it's kind of hard to get the embodied energy out of that,
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but it can be a sustainable resource
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if you use FSC-certified lumber.
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03:37
We then go on to
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the first thing that was very surprising.
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03:41
If we put aluminum windows in this house,
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we would double the energy use right there.
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03:47
Now, PVC is a little bit better,
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but still not as good as the wood that we chose.
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03:52
We then put in plumbing,
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electrical and HVAC,
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and insulate.
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03:58
Now, spray foam is an excellent insulator -- it fills in all the cracks --
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but it is pretty high embodied energy,
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and, sprayed-in cellulose or blue jeans
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is a much lower energy alternative to that.
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04:09
We also used straw bale
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04:11
infill for our library,
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04:13
which has zero embodied energy.
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04:15
When it comes time to sheetrock,
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04:17
if you use EcoRock it's about a quarter
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04:19
of the embodied energy of standard sheetrock.
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04:22
And then you get to the finishes,
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04:24
the subject of all of those "go green" articles,
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04:27
and on the scale of a house
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they almost make no difference at all.
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04:31
And yet, all the press is focused on that.
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04:33
Except for flooring.
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04:35
If you put carpeting in your house,
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it's about a tenth of the embodied energy of the entire house,
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04:40
unless you use concrete or wood
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04:42
for a much lower embodied energy.
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04:44
So now we add in the final construction energy, we add it all up,
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04:47
and we've built a house for less than half
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of the typical embodied energy for building a house like this.
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04:52
But before we pat ourselves
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too much on the back,
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04:56
we have poured 151 megawatt hours
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of energy into constructing this house
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05:01
when there was a house there before.
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05:03
And so the question is:
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05:05
How could we make that back?
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05:07
And so if I run my new energy-efficient house forward,
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compared with the old, non-energy-efficient house,
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we make it back in about six years.
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05:16
Now, I probably would have upgraded the old house
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to be more energy-efficient,
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05:20
and in that case,
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it would take me more about 20 years to break even.
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Now, if I hadn't paid attention to embodied energy,
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it would have taken us
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over 50 years to break even
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compared to the upgraded house.
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05:34
So what does this mean?
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05:36
On the scale of my portion of the house,
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05:39
this is equivalent to about
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as much as I drive in a year,
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05:43
it's about five times as much
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as if I went entirely vegetarian.
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05:47
But my elephant in the living room flies.
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05:50
Clearly, I need to walk home from TED.
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05:53
But all the calculations
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for embodied energy are on the blog.
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05:58
And, remember, it's sometimes the things that you are not expecting
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to be the biggest changes that are.
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06:04
Thank you. (Applause)
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