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RE: Baldwin : "crushing ignorance in the United States"
Big deal!! There is an apartment complex in my Town that has been doing
that for over three decades. It works, except in very warm weather when it
is not as efficient.
Edmond J. Baratta
Radiation Safety Officer
Tel. No. 781-729-5700, ext 728
FAX: 781-729-3593
The above is my opinion and not that of my Agency.
-----Original Message-----
From: Franta, Jaroslav [mailto:frantaj@AECL.CA]
Sent: Wednesday, August 18, 2004 9:55 AM
To: Radsafe (E-mail); Multiple (E-mail)
Subject: Baldwin : "crushing ignorance in the United States"
As you know, actor Alec Baldwin is also a supporter of the Tooth Fairy
Project, another magnificent pillar in the battle against crushing
ignorance.....
The project itself seems like a good idea -- it remains to be seen what Lake
Ontario's zebra mussels think of it, and whether Enwave's "hopes of starting
to earn a return on its deep-lake investment by 2008" will not be dashed
(not to say "crushed") by shortened equipment life (as opposed to
ignorance).....
Jaro
http://www.cns-snc.ca/branches/quebec/quebec.html
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Project sends a chill through downtown;
Deep lake water cooling begins Actor helps launch innovative system
The Toronto Star, Wed 18 Aug 2004
John Spears and Bruce DeMara
Toronto has launched its project to cool downtown buildings with cold lake
water on a torrent of hot air.
Dozens of civic and business leaders jammed a stuffy room at the Steam
Whistle Brewery yesterday to hear a seemingly endless string of politicians
and notables, headlined by actor Alec Baldwin, laud the Deep Lake Water
Cooling Project.
"What's being announced here is a miracle," gushed Baldwin.
The miracle cost $169.6 million, the money being used to construct three
pipes thrusting 5 kilometres into Lake Ontario. Cold water is pumped from
the bottom and sent on to a heat-transfer station, where it cools water in a
separate network of pipes flowing into the air-conditioning systems of some
of Toronto's biggest office buildings. The treated lake water - now warmed
by one or two degrees - then flows into the city's drinking water pipes.
(Don't expect your drinking water to get warmer because of the project. If
anything, it'll be colder, because water from the normal, shallower intake
pipes serving the city is typically at 12 to 15C, according to Dennis
Fotinos, chief executive of Enwave District Energy Ltd.)
The project is the child of Enwave, owned 43 per cent by the City of Toronto
and 57 per cent by the OMERS pension fund. As of yesterday, it's cooling 20
buildings, including the Royal Bank Plaza, Toronto-Dominion Centre and Air
Canada Centre. But that represents only 32 per cent of the system's
capacity, Fotinos said. Clients include the Steam Whistle Brewery, although
Fotinos laughingly acknowledged that the air conditioning seemed to have
gone missing yesterday as the temperature climbed in the crowded room.
"It's a small glitch; we'll get to the bottom of it," he said. Enwave is
already in talks with the Sheraton Centre, Bell Trinity Centre and Old City
Hall to add them. Ironically, the city is not looking to add the new city
hall to Enwave's client list, since it only recently overhauled its
conventional cooling system.
But Enwave is talking with the province about running a new $14 million pipe
north to Queen's Park so lake water could cool the Legislature and nearby
government buildings. Signing Queen's Park would bring the portion of
cooling capacity in use to more than 50 per cent, boosting Enwave's hopes of
starting to earn a return on its deep-lake investment by 2008.
"I look forward to the day when we sign the deal," said Ontario Energy
Minister Dwight Duncan, who has promised to cut his government's own power
usage by 10 per cent. "Not only will this deep lake water cooling project
save the province 59 megawatts of capacity - the equivalent amount of
electricity required to power 12,000 air-conditioned homes - it also stands
as a shining example of the enormous potential we see for energy-efficiency
programs and for alternative forms of energy."
Federal Human Resources Minister Joe Volpe came bearing gifts a $10 million
low-interest loan for Enwave.
Baldwin, who has long campaigned for alternative energy in his native New
York state, heaped praise on everyone involved, hailing them as "heroes." He
also slammed businesses that are lobbying the province to back away from its
commitment to shut down Ontario's coal-burning power plants by 2007. And he
praised Canadian governments for backing the project. "For something like
this to succeed," he said, "you have to have a government that's not sitting
on top of you and crushing you with their ignorance, like we have in the
United States right now."
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