China says, this Olympics will be the first to be carbon neutral

 

The use of carbon dioxide refrigerants at the Beijing Games will help reduce carbon emissions by an equivalent of 3,900 cars per year, cutting them to nearly zero. The system also has a cooling efficiency that is 1.2 times more efficient than traditional HFC refrigerants for the ice rinks. The waste heat generated during the refrigeration process is recycled and used for the stadium’s ambient heating and hot water for the showers. It is estimated to save up to two million kilowatt-hours of electricity annually compared to the traditional HFC systems. The games’ estimated footprint, equivalent to 1.3 million tonnes of carbon dioxide, is a drop in the ocean compared with China’s annual emissions of about 11 billion tonnes. Beijing has reduced the impact of the current games by repurposing seven of the venues used in summer Olympics of 2008 and for other sporting events. The sites where the snow sports including skiing and snowboarding are held are cold, but have very little precipitation, so China has had to pump in water from other regions to manufacture the snow. Beijing has redirected wind and solar energy through a newly built grid but still much of the electrical power comes from coal.



Photo ©2022 Getty Images

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

New photocatalyst made from an aerogel for more efficient hydrogen production

Spider webs near roads capture all types of Micro plastics and could be used for monitoring pollution

​ New artificial leaf can capture 100 times more carbon in normal conditions