Wonderful news!

Friday, September 4, 2009

hot-air

03 Sept 2009 – Press Release – Appointment at DECC

David MacKay, Professor in the Department of Physics at Cambridge University and author of the influential book ‘’Sustainable Energy – without the hot air” has been appointed Chief Scientific Advisor to the Department of Energy and Climate Change.

The Chief Scientific Advisor’s role is to ensure that the Department’s policies and operations, and its contributions to wider Government issues, are underpinned by the best science and engineering advice available.

Professor MacKay said:

“Climate change and secure energy are two of the most urgent issues facing the UK and the global community. The solutions must be rooted firmly in the science and I look forward to advising the Government on how it can help deliver these important goals.”

Secretary of State Ed Miliband said:

“David MacKay is known for making science accessible and helping to explain clearly the urgency and the challenges of moving to a low carbon economy. I want him to bring all of these qualities to the job of advising DECC on how we can meet Britain’s carbon targets and energy security needs.”

Notes to editors

  1. David MacKay is a Professor in the Department of Physics at the University of Cambridge. He studied Natural Sciences at Cambridge then obtained his PhD in Computation and Neural Systems at the California Institute of Technology. He is internationally known for his research in machine learning, information theory, and communication systems, including the invention of Dasher, a software interface that enables efficient communication in any language with any muscle. He has taught Physics in Cambridge since 1995. Since 2005, he has devoted increasing amounts of time to public teaching about energy. David MacKay is a Fellow of the Royal Society and a member of the World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council on Climate Change.
  2. The appointment was made on merit and in accordance with the Recruitment Principles of the Civil Service Commissioners. He will be seconded from Cambridge University from 1 October and will receive an annual salary of £108,000, working 4 days a week.

[Bealers has been reading this book since he got his reading list for his forthcoming MSc course. I've been sneaking a read of it too when I get to bed and it is one of the best. The author clearly knows his subject and sets out his arguements in a logical, humourous way. I'm a big fan so am beyond delighted to hear of his appointment of Chief of Sceince to the Dept of Energy & Climate Change. The government are now, in my eyes, being pro-active in making the necessary preparations for this country's population and are no longer sticking their fingers in their ears whilst shouing 'La-la-la-lahhhh...'.
Prof Mackay is so very nice that he has made his book available online for free.]

Posted in Cathie's Blog  |  Comments (1)

Goodbye TV

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Today I packed our lounge’s LCD TV and all the AV equipment into the car ready to deliver tonight to my sister in Bristol. This will mean we have zero ability to receive a terrestrial television signal so we can cancel the TV licence.

We’re getting rid of the telly for a number of reasons the main ones being:

  • We don’t use it. We’re mostly reading, talking or listening to the radio if we’ve the time to be hanging out in the lounge;
  • There’s no temptation to allow the kids to watch it. Our boy has a bit of an addiction and can get really cranky after even half an hour of usage so this way he knows there’s no possibility of getting a fix;
  • What it represents. It’s a symbol of mass consumption and, frankly, we’re embarrassed to own it;
  • Space. It’s huge (40″) and we’re likely to be living in a small house soon;
  • Power. It is power hungry;
  • Asset value. Whilst it is still worth something we thought release that cash back into our pockets;

It might take a few days to get used to not having it anymore but I can’t see it being a big deal. Should there be something that we really want to watch there’s always the laptop and iPlayer.

Posted in Darren's Blog  |  Comments (3)

Reduced home electricity usage win

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

I recently posted that our ambient home electricity usage was obscenely high at ~ 900 W with nothing being ‘used’. Well for #earthday I’m very pleased to find that I’ve managed to make my initial < 300 Watt target and as I write this the CC meter showing around 280W usage.

How did I do this?

  • Got rid of my power hungry Dell XPS desktop and took it to work. This also allowed me to sell my work Mac pro for a tidy sum. I now use my laptop at home.
  • Freecycled an always-on home development server leaving just our one file server
  • Put all of the lounge AV devices onto a single extension lead and religiously switch that off at the wall every night
    • Actually soon after I did this I decided to get rid of it all completely so we’re soon to have no telly at all now but this is primarily a lifestyle choice rather than being driven my energy usage concerns.
  • became really anal about turning off all the lights when not needed. Those little halogen down-lighters are the worst culprits

It wasn’t very hard at all.

Next is to remove the file server and replace it with something like a NSLU-2 and see if I can disable some of the halogen down-lighters (we rent so I can’t change the fittings).

Posted in Darren's Blog  |  No Comments »

Current Cost home electicity usage monitor

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Ackers bought me a Current Cost Cc128 for my birthday and I’m absolutely stunned to see that we’re using ~ 900 Watts ambient. Obscene.

Shutting my home desktop down, something I never do (!), reduces it down a bit but I’m sure we should be < 300 Watts as a default. Switching the electric oven on spikes it to over 3 KWatts.

Methinks a massive audit on our electricity usage is needed, urgently.

*all optional items switched off.

Posted in Darren's Blog  |  No Comments »

Book

Recommended reading

The Post Petroleum Cookbook

Available at Amazon