Could We Recycle Excess Subway Heat? - podcast episode cover

Could We Recycle Excess Subway Heat?

Nov 14, 20193 min
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Episode description

Heating homes and other human hangouts requires a huge carbon footprint -- but meanwhile, we're wasting heat every day (and sweating) in systems like subways. Learn how one project hopes to use that excess heat for the greater good in this episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff production of iHeart Radio. Hey brain Stuff, Lauren Vogel bomb here. With a ridership of more than one billion passengers per year, the London Underground, better known as the Tube, varies an impressive number of residents and tourists across the city. It opened its first line in eighteen sixty three as the Metropolitan Railway, which provided locomotive

trains that carried nine point five million passengers. In eighteen nine, the line began running electric cars, making it the first subway or metro system in the world. But it's also impressively hot due to those very old, deep clay tunnels containing few ventilation shafts, which lock in excess heat from the metro system and make many a Londoner sweat on

their daily commute. The hottest stations without air conditioning routinely get to eighty six degrees fahrenheit that's thirty degrees celsius or more, and rising temperatures due to global warming don't help. But one enterprising collaboration between the London Borough, Islington and Ramble, a consulting company that works on many issues including energy and urban design, will harness some of that excess subway heat for the benefit of Londoners, with a completion date

for the project as early as late twenty nineteen. Ramble has been commissioned by the Islington Council to quote deliver a district wide heating network to provide cheaper and greener heat to one thousand, three hundred and fifty homes plus

community buildings in North London. According to their press release of those homes, the Islington Council and Ramble have already brought cheap green energy to more than eight hundred through the bun Hill Heat and Power Network, but the Islington Council wanted to do more in order to reach their goal of providing efficient and sustainable heat to the remaining homes.

So Ramble proposed extracting wasted heat for the London Underground's northern line, specifically through a ventilation shaft connected to an abandoned tube station, to serve as an innovative, low carbon heat source for five hundred homes in North London. The plan is to use heat pumps to harness that excess

heat of the London Underground. According to the press release, Ramble says that these heat pumps that recycle industrial heat will prove to be a far more efficient and cheaper use of carbon than gas powered energy sources, which is a great win for the residents of North London whose homes will be fueled by the waste energy from the

Northern Line. Riders on the Northern Line will sigh in relief at cooler tunnels on their commute, and all Londoners will reap the benefits of reduced air pollution and lower carbon emissions. Could this innovative model be applied to other cities with notoriously hot subway systems and more high density housing. With the concerns of climate change looming, leaders all around the world are hoping to decarbonize or remove carbon from the global economy in order to move toward a carbon

neutral future by twenty fifty. Plans like the one in Islington could be the first step in getting there. Today's episode was written by Terry er Lagatta and produced by Tyler Clang. Brain Stuff is a production of I Heart Radio's How Stuff Works. For more in this and lots of other hot topics, visit our home planet how stuff Works dot com. And for more podcasts from my heart Radio, visit iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to your favorite shows,

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