PAT LEHANE
Congratulations Fergus
Swine before pearls?
Fergus Daly, a long-standing and prominent figure in the building services sector, has been appointed Sales Director of Hoctor Refrigeration Services. Fergus has held a number of senior posts with some of the leading multi-nationals in the industry and this will undoubtedly serve him well in his new role. Hoctor Refrigeration Services was established in 1981 and company founder and Managing Director Liam Hoctor has built a thriving and very successful business over the last 30 years. The arrival of Fergus signals a new chapter in the annals of the company.
While I fully recognise the need for detailed market analysis and evidenced-based data, I still wonder at the resources being applied to some “green” research projects. For instance, did we really need a team from the University of Queensland and the University of Canterbury to apply predictive models, together with advanced mapping techniques, to determine the climate damage caused by wild pigs on five continents? The recent publication of their findings made for fantastic “colour” pieces across all media formats but really, to what productive end-use? Surely their findings only confirm what we already know … when soil is turned over by man, machine or animal, it releases carbon into the air. Methinks this is a case of swine before pearls, rather than the other way around.
60 years young No, not me, but Building Services Engineering. This issue is Volume: 60, No: 5, making it the fifth edition in this, our 60th year of continuous publication. Apart from our own website, every issue – from April 1961 – can be downloaded in pdf format at https://arrow.tudublin.ie/bsn/
What do I know? Can’t quite figure this one out. Apparently, the Hassyan “clean” coal power station in Dubai is designed to support the Dubai Clean Energy Strategy 2050. Back-up fuel? Nat gas.
CIBSE action plan The second revision of the CIBSE Climate Action Plan has now been published and includes many important updates on CPD, new and upcoming guidance, energy benchmarks, a new embodied carbon award, and much more. This is an invaluable aid for consulting engineers when designing indoor environment solutions that need to meet all present and anticipated best practice, along with regulations and standards compliance.
Scientists in California have successfully demonstrated “fusion ignition” for the first time, something that has been
Ozone layer good news While there is no denying the catastrophic consequences of global warming, a recent report says that, thanks to the Montreal Protocol Agreement of 1987 that banned CFCs, the subsequent recovery in the ozone layer has saved 2.5ºC of warming.
Computer models show that there would have been 580 billion tonnes less carbon stored in forests, vegetation and soils by 2100 without the treaty. No harm rejoicing in a win, even if it is a small one.
Obtuse Angle.indd 1
Boil a kettle with fÕsion energy …
hailed as “a phenomenal breakthrough”. Unlike fission, the reaction used in nuclear power plants, nuclear fusion is the process that powers the sun and involves joining rather than splitting atoms, so there is little or no radioactive waste. However, it is still very early days. Apparently, the $10 billion experiment released only enough energy to boil a kettle! Still, we have to start somewhere I guess.
24/08/2021 15:18