This college is turning the Earth into a giant battery » Yale Climate Connections

Date:


Transcript:

Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania will soon heat and cool its buildings by using the ground as a giant thermal battery.

The college is building a central geoexchange plant connected to pipes that stretch 800 feet underground.

In summer, the system pulls heat from buildings, transfers it to water in the pipes, and then pumps the warm water underground to store the heat in the earth.

Drake: “In the winter, the system runs in the opposite direction. We extract heat from the ground, lift the temperature of that water using the geoexchange plant, and send that warm water to our campus buildings to heat them.”

Elizabeth Drake is the assistant vice president for sustainability and strategic initiatives at Swarthmore.

The geoexchange system will run on renewable energy and replace the school’s aging heating system, which runs on fossil fuels. So it will help Swarthmore reach its goal of eliminating or offsetting all of its carbon pollution by 2035.

The system is under construction, but a few buildings are already hooked up.

And Drake says that students and faculty are excited.

Drake: “And I think that the commitment to climate action and decarbonization that we’re doing through this project is a point of pride for the campus.”

Reporting credit: Ethan Freedman / ChavoBart Digital Media



Share post:

Subscribe

Popular

More like this
Related

Protecting Small Streams, Wetlands, and Seasonal Channels Protects Rivers  

More than two decades ago, Where Rivers Are...

Tenemos que prepararnos para otro año de abundante sargazo » Yale Climate Connections

Los niveles de sargazo han sido excepcionalmente altos...

The future of NCAR remains highly uncertain » Yale Climate Connections

This week’s mammoth U.S. winter blast wasn’t the...