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Water,
Water Everywhere
This new technology could simplify
geothermal.
Source: BUILDER Magazine
Publication date: 2002-03-11
Arrival time: 2002-03-12
By BUILDER Magazine Staff
An Indiana company has patented a method
that lets any geothermal heat pump use the municipal water
supply as its working fluid. If successful, it could make
geothermal cost competitive with gas.
"The water utility is a huge geothermal
system already in place," says Jim Hardin, president
of the Indianapolis-based Hardin Technologies, which owns
the patent. Hardin has partnered with heat pump maker WaterFurnace
International in Fort Wayne, Ind., to promote the technology,
which would require return water lines from neighborhoods
to utility substations. Hardin believes that the system
would use 40 percent less energy than a standard gas furnace
"by the time you pay for water, you'll probably save
20 percent on your heating and cooling bill."
Hardin Technologies vice president Lily
Cramer says that most utilities have been receptive, as
long as they can ensure the purity of their drinking water.
The system has been successfully tested on a school in Comanche,
Okla., for two years, and the company is seeking approval
from state utilities.
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