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This Chimney Will Cool Your Entire Home WITHOUT Electricity. Why Did The Energy Industry Hide It?

13m 16s2,160 words363 segmentsEnglish

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There is a structural innovation that

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can cool a home by 15° Fahrenheit in the

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height of summer without a single moving

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part, a single fan, or even a single

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watt of electricity being consumed.

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While the modern construction industry

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relies on mechanical HVAC systems with a

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coefficient of performance that degrades

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every season, this technology turns the

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very walls of a building into a cooling

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system.

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It is a system that utilizes the density

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of air and the ideal gas law to create a

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continuous, silent flow of ventilation

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that clears [music] toxins, prevents

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mold, and reclaims your financial

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independence from the power grid. Yet,

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despite being the most cost-effective

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cooling solution in human history, this

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technology has been sidelined by a

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building industry that prioritizes

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airtight, plastic-wrapped boxes over

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structures that actually live and

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breathe.

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So, what is it? How does it work? And

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more importantly, how can you benefit

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from it? Let's find out.

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To understand why this technology is a

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threat to the modern energy status quo,

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you have to understand the crisis it was

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designed to solve. The adoption of the

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solar chimney was never a matter of

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architectural preference. It was a

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necessity. The origin of this technology

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begins on the arid, blistering plateaus

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of ancient Persia, specifically in

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cities like Yazd. 3,000 years ago,

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architects faced a biological necessity.

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How to keep a city habitable when the

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ambient temperature regularly exceeds

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113°

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Fahrenheit? They didn't have the luxury

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of electricity or chemical refrigerants.

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What they had was an intimate

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mathematical understanding of the

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density of air. They developed the

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badgir, a vertical masonry shaft that

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utilized the thermal lag of high-mass

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stone. These weren't just decorative

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towers, they were the world's first

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solar thermal engines. By utilizing the

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pressure differential between the shaded

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courtyards and the sun-baked tower tops,

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they created a constant thermal siphon.

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In many cases, these towers were paired

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with qanats, underground water channels.

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The tower would pull air across the

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water, utilizing evaporative cooling to

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[music] drop the temperature of the air

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before it ever entered the living space.

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For centuries, this was the global

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standard for high-performance cooling.

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By the 19th century, as the British

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Empire expanded into regions like India

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and Africa, they encountered these

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systems and integrated them into

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colonial hospitals and barracks. The

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British Medical Journal documented that

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wards equipped with these thermal

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[music] stacks had significantly lower

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mortality rates during cholera and

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influenza outbreaks. [music] The reason

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wasn't medicine, it was physics. The

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stacks provided a constant atmospheric

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flush, removing pathogens and moisture

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that thrive in [music] stagnant air.

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The reason a solar chimney outperforms a

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mechanical fan

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>> [music]

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>> is not about horsepower. It is about the

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physics of the stack effect and the

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Bernoulli principle. To understand the

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engineering of a building that breathes,

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you have to follow the air.

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>> [music]

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>> At its core, a solar chimney is a

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vertical shaft designed to maximize

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solar gain. It consists of a

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high-efficiency absorber plate, usually

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a dark-colored metal or masonry surface,

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positioned behind a layer of

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high-transmittance glazing. As solar

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radiation passes through the glass, it

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hits the absorber plate and is converted

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into long-wave thermal energy. According

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to the ideal gas law, as the temperature

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of the air inside that shaft increases,

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its density decreases. The air becomes

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lighter than the surrounding atmosphere.

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These energized molecules begin to rise

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rapidly toward the exhaust at the top of

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the chimney. This upward movement

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creates a zone of negative pressure at

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the base [music] of the chimney. Because

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nature abhors a vacuum, the building is

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forced to inhale. It pulls fresh, cooler

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air from the lowest, most shaded part of

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the building, usually a north-facing

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intake or an underground earth tube,

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[music]

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and drags it through the living spaces.

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And because the system is powered by

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solar radiation, the pumping speed of

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the chimney is in direct proportion to

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the heat load on the building. On a 100°

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Fahrenheit afternoon, when an AC unit is

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struggling and drawing maximum current,

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the delta T, the temperature difference

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between the collector and the ambient

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air, is at its peak. The chimney is at

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its most powerful, moving thousands of

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cubic feet of air per hour without

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moving a single mechanical part. But,

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what happens in the winter? This is

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where the dual-mode engineering comes

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in. A properly designed solar chimney

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includes a bypass damper. [music] In the

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winter, you close the exterior exhaust

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and open an interior return vent. The

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rising hot air is no longer dumped

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outside. It is recirculated back into

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the building's thermal mass. This

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effectively turns your cooling tower

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into a massive solar air heater. The

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performance of this atmospheric engine

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is dictated by two primary variables,

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the height of the stack and the

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temperature difference.

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The taller the shaft, the greater the

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pressure differential, and the higher

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the velocity of the air. This is the

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engine displacement of your home.

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And the performance of these systems

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isn't anecdotal. It is backed by decades

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of bioclimate research.

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In 1995, researchers at the University

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of Arizona conducted an extensive audit

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of a residential solar chimney in the

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Sonoran Desert. They found that the

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system maintained an indoor temperature

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of 75° Fahrenheit [music] while the

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outside air was a blistering 106°

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Fahrenheit. That is a 17° Fahrenheit

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reduction using nothing but the weight

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of the atmosphere [music] and the heat

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of the sun. But, the real evidence is in

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the air changes per hour. The

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Environmental Protection Agency

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estimates that indoor air is often two

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to five times more polluted than outdoor

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air. In a modern, airtight home with a

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standard HVAC system, the air is mostly

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recirculated, providing less than 0.5

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air changes per hour of fresh air.

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This leads to the build-up of volatile

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organic compounds, CO2, and moisture. A

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solar chimney, on the other hand,

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provides between eight and 12 air

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changes per hour of 100% fresh, filtered

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air. This constant atmospheric flush

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prevents the sick building syndrome that

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plagues modern residential construction.

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It is the mechanical equivalent of

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leaving every window in your house open

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without the security risk or the loss of

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thermal control. On carbon and

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sustainability, the comparison is not

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remotely close.

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To manufacture, install, and operate a

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standard 3-ton central AC system over

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its 15-year lifespan carries an embodied

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carbon debt of approximately 25 tons of

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CO2. A solar chimney constructed from

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high-mass masonry, recycled aluminum,

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and glass has a carbon payback period of

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less than 6 months. Once the structure

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is built, the operating cost is zero. It

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is a carbon-negative asset that

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increases the value of the property

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while decreasing the operational

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overhead. And the impact these systems

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have on your energy independence is

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massive. A study by the University of

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Nottingham showed that buildings

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utilizing solar chimneys could reduce

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their total cooling energy consumption

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by up to 75%.

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In a world of rising energy costs and

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grid instability, this is a level of

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security that a mechanical machine

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    This Chimney Will Cool… - Full Transcript | YouTubeTranscript.dev