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Cooling Toronto Using Lake Ontario

Posted by michael on Wed Aug 18, 2004 05:30 AM
from the cool-running dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Air cooled by the frigid waters deep in Lake Ontario started bringing relief to buildings in downtown Toronto on Tuesday after the valves were symbolically opened on the multi-million-dollar project. The company says that they have the capacity to air condition 100 office buildings or 8,000 homes - the equivalent of 32 million square feet of building space. They note that the cooling system reduces energy usage, freeing up megawatts from the Ontario's electrical grid, minimizes ozone-depleting refrigerants and reduces the amount of carbon dioxide entering the air."
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  • by jonbryce (703250) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:32AM (#9999207) Homepage
    Will this not cause the lake to warm up? What are the envirnmental effects of this? Have they been considered?
    • by PedanticSpellingTrol (746300) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:34AM (#9999216)
      but then I had a better question: Can it cool my 64-bit prescott?
    • by Rxke (644923) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:40AM (#9999242) Homepage
      From the article:

      "...Brought to the John St. Pumping Station, the water's cold will be extracted and used to lower the temperature in downtown buildings. The water will then be treated and enter the city's drinking supply...."

      So might be a double whammy, the water isn't directly injected into the lake again.
      • by mdfst13 (664665) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @06:09AM (#9999380)
        From where were they getting their drinking water previously? My first guess is that this just substitutes water taken from the bottom of the lake for water that would otherwise be taken from the top. Net change in water levels (vs. not doing this) would thus be negligible.
          • by geoswan (316494) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @08:58AM (#10000697) Journal
            Your link is interesting. I have one [noaa.gov] too. It took me a minute or two to figure out this page. The map of lake michigan in the lower right hand corner has five lines drawn through it. The five color coded temperature charts each illustrate the temperature at various depths through a slice of the lake. The one closest to Chicago is slice "A", correct?

            There was an interview on the morning news yesterday with a guy who is a big fan of this technology. The interviewer asked him if this technology could be used in other cities on the Great Lakes. Yes, he said. There were various cities where it could be used. Rochester and Milwaukee were two examples he offered. But, he said, it could not be used in Chicago. Presumably because Chicago doesn't have easy access to a deep cold layer.

            Here in Toronto we have always taken our water from deep in the lake too. As you can see from this map [noaa.gov] the depth drops precipitously just off Toronto Island.

            The American fan of this technology was Alec Baldwin, the actor.

            The interviewer next asked him if any of those other cities were considering following Toronto's example. He replied that he was flying to Chicago that afternoon to make a presentation.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 18 2004, @06:24AM (#9999444)
        "the water's cold will be extracted"

        Hahahahahaha. Perhaps they can keep these rooms lit by extracting the dark from them.
          • by dead sun (104217) <(moc.liamg) (ta) (hcanara)> on Wednesday August 18 2004, @09:19AM (#10001022) Homepage Journal
            Yes, or we can stop bashing people trying to make technical processes understandable to Joe Schmoe...

            Here's a novel idea. How about we educate Joe Schmoe so he doesn't go around thinking completely backwards. If everybody were smart to a certain minimum level our engineers could stop trying to make a technical process understandable by explaining it either (a) incorrectly to the level of being the opposite of what is true, or (b) as though it were magic.

            I realize Joe Schmoe would like nothing more than to sit back and watch his TV absorb darkness, but people commonly recognize that it actually emits light. If they can grasp that then they can grasp that the colder water is taking energy from the warmer water with a little effort.

      • by JediTrainer (314273) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @07:47AM (#9999907)
        So might be a double whammy, the water isn't directly injected into the lake again.

        I live just north of Toronto, in Markham (part of York Region).

        We get our drinking water from Lake Ontario. All of the GTA (Greater Toronto Area), including the City of Toronto, York Region, Durham, Peel etc, use water pumped from the lake.

        Our sewage is sent back down to Toronto, where it is treated before being dumped back into the lake. In fact, they're in the middle of building an additional set of sewage pipes to further growth in York Region (sort of controversial, because they're affecting groundwater and the Oak Ridges Moraine while they're doing it. Long story - google for details).

        In other words, I don't think it would make any difference, because we've already been drawing our water from there. It's just coming from a different part of the lake.
    • by gowen (141411) <gwowen@gmail.com> on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:43AM (#9999257) Homepage Journal
      No it won't, because the water used to cool the air is the same water that would be extracted anyway, to provide potable water to the city. See this schematic [enwave.com]. Notice the warm water is not returned to Lake Ontario.
      • by Analogy Man (601298) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @06:22AM (#9999438)
        The scematic does not show the back half of the municipal system (sewer and waste water treatment).

        As a grandson of a plumber I can confirm that the water does eventually end up back in the lake. Rule #1 of plumbing ...water flows down hill.

        The beauty of this implementation is that the incremental warming of the water may actually further save energy if slightly warmer water comes into water heaters. From a thermodynamic standpoint this looks like a very large geothermal system. The economies of scale may make it quite cost effective too.

        • by gowen (141411) <gwowen@gmail.com> on Wednesday August 18 2004, @06:28AM (#9999461) Homepage Journal
          The scematic does not show the back half of the municipal system (sewer and waste water treatment).
          Well, yes, it does. Eventually. But by that time, the heat it gained in the exchangers has long been dissipated, so it's irrelevant. Waste water from this source will be no warmer than the waste water that was previously reaching Lake Ontario.
    • by Curtman (556920) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:45AM (#9999266)
      This has been covered extensively on Discovery Canada, which I watch regularly. Here's a quote that puts this into perspective:

      ...He said environmental studies show the system will cause a temperature increase [each year] equivalent to the heat the lake surface absorbs during seven seconds of sunshine....
      -Toronto cools off using Lake Ontario waters [greatlakesdirectory.org]
    • by VeryProfessional (805174) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:53AM (#9999310)

      We have to recognise that any interaction we have with the environment is going to have some impact on it. This impact will by definition be negative if we characterise any change to the existing equilibrium as being negative. The smart thing to do is to spread the impact by interacting in lots of different ways on a lower level, rather than abusing a single resource, as we currently do with fossil fuels.

      I applaud what they are doing in Canada. The more alternative energy sources we use, the better.

    • by Catmeat (20653) <mtmNO@SPAMsys.uea.ac.uk> on Wednesday August 18 2004, @06:25AM (#9999451)
      I suspect a little thing called Winter will have an effect.

      I'm annoyed by all this hysterical nonsense over environmental effects on the lake. Apart from the fact that the heat input is trivial given the size of the lake (do you know what the heat capacity of 393 cubic miles of water is?) People think the lake is not some finite reservoir of coolness - no, it's a heat store, it cools down in the winter people! Consider the hitorical effect of tens of thouands of summers if that were not true.

      In all this ranting, the very real envirnoemental benfits of reducing energy consumption and CO2 emissions get lost in the noise. I'd have expected better from the so-called technically literate.

    • by Junior J. Junior III (192702) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @09:29AM (#10001190) Homepage
      What do you know, now we ARE paying to heat the outside. My dad will flip his wig when he hears about this.
      • by jonbryce (703250) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:43AM (#9999260) Homepage
        If you take cold water from the bottom, then surely it will be replaced with warmer water from above. Is there anything that makes the water cool down once it is in the lake?
        • by black mariah (654971) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:53AM (#9999309)
          The water at the bottom of the lake isn't special. The only reason it's cold is because it's so far away from the surface that it can't be heated by the sun, and the water on top helps wick away any heat that might build up. Go dive into a lake. The first few inches of the surface might be warm, but down as little as five feet you're looking at a significant drop in temperature, and it just gets colder as it goes down.
          • by ShadowRage (678728) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @08:11AM (#10000220) Homepage Journal
            and the water will never reach freezing at the bottom, it'll always be a degree or just afew hundreths of a degree above freezing at the least, never lower than that? why? water in its solid form is lighter than its liquid form, it's one of the few elements that does this, which makes its liquid form rare in the universe. However, by utilizing this, they can cool office buildings and never worry about heating up the lake, unless they pumped the warmer water they used to the very bottom, but even then the water would chill, and would get colder again, because the amount of cold water outweighs the warm water.

            hell, if you wanna see a good example, look at the bottom of the ocean where there is no sun, but there are volcanic vents, the water at the bottom of the ocean isnt hot due to that, and that's more constant heat output than any city could produce in a million years.
          • by mwood (25379) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @09:06AM (#10000832)
            In sufficiently large bodies of water there's this thing called the thermocline, separating surface circulation from deeper circulation. It's somewhat like two different bodies of water stacked one on top of the other -- there's less mixing between the two than one would naively expect.

            Taking deep water, warming it, and returning it disturbs the system, and it would be prudent to understand the effects of that disturbance. If the city's already doing that for drinking and washing, well, now they are doing a whole lot more of it and the effects will be more pronounced, so again it's prudent to understand the effect of increasing the pressure on the system's equilibrium.

            I don't study large lakes and I don't know what significant effects, if any, might be expected. I just hope that someone *does* study this particular lake and *does* understand the issues and *was* consulted.

            I do hope it works out well. It's a nifty idea.

            Finally, this ignorant Yank must admit that his first thought was, "Toronto needs *cooling*?" :-)
              • by L0C0loco (320848) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @06:51AM (#9999555) Homepage
                What??? Water is its densest at a temperature of 4C. Cold water pumped out during the summer cooling months has a chance to be replenished during the next winter. As the winter ice melts and the melt water warms it begins to sink due to the relative increase in density as it approaches a temperature of 4C. So long as the winter cooling capacity of the lake exceeds the summer cooling needs of the city, this should be a sustainable practice. It is true that the thickness of the cold layer will thin during the summer pumping season, but it will thicken again during winter. Obviously, this pumping will cause the mean thickness to decrease - they just need to hope it doesn't thin too much. The problem with free lunches is that people eat too much, get fat, and die!
                • by macthulhu (603399) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @07:40AM (#9999840)
                  I live about 90 miles south of the Canadian border in Western NY... The winter cooling capacity 'round these parts is pretty high. It's about time somebody figured out a way to use the area's largest natural resource... Snow. My only question is what happens to algae growth if the lake warms up even a couple of degrees?
                  • Re:Convection? (Score:5, Insightful)

                    by Emperor Igor (106953) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @09:09AM (#10000880)
                    This is the ying and the yang of every decision. There is a side effect to everything.

                    The question is whether this kind of pollution is better than the carbon dioxide/refrigerant chemicals/coal power plant pollution. It is likely the answer is "yes".
      • by Tuzanor (125152) <hylaride@@@capybara...org> on Wednesday August 18 2004, @06:43AM (#9999520) Homepage
        Actually, Greenpeace is completely backing this endeavor. The water they're taking was also part of an overall plan to upgrade the drinking water plants, so the water is just being diverted before going into the drinking water. Then the water just returns through where the water has always been going (sewers, water treatment, and then probably the lake).
      • by An dochasac (591582) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @08:24AM (#10000345)
        Forgot the link, and me login: Toronto's solution will have far less impact than Milwaukee's solution of building more coal power plants [greatlakesdirectory.org] which will suck 2.2 billion gallons of water and fish from Lake Michigan every day and convert it to mercury contaminated steam, or discharge it at a much higher temperature... all in order to inefficiently cool buildings to the temperature of lake michigan, a stone's throw away from the power plant. Can I burn some karma points with a duh here? Canadian industry finally cops onto an idea that every 7-year-old has when his toes are in 40F degree water and his head in 100F air. If only American industry wern't so hung up on our industrial past, we could see the way to the future.
  • Nice :) (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Killjoy_NL (719667) <palli@@@stc-r...nl> on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:33AM (#9999211)
    This is the kind of stuff I like to see :)

    Ok, it costs a lot of money, but in the long run it has the possibility to save so much more than money: the enviroment.
      • by geoswan (316494) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @10:21AM (#10001927) Journal
        but in the long run the lake will evapourate, making the climate in the region less stable (water holding a lot of heat is one of the main reasons the earth has such a (relatively) mild climate) with hotter summers and colder winters, leading to the requirement of more heating in winter and more air conditioning in summer... brilliant

        Lake Erie and Lake Ontario have about the same surface area. But Lake Ontario is much deeper and so has a greater volume. I have links here to charts showing the temperatures, at various depths across various slices of Lake Erie [noaa.gov] and Lake Ontario [noaa.gov].

        Note that Lake Erie is much warmer. But most of the water in Lake Ontario came from Lake Erie? Why is it so much colder? It cools off in the winter time. It takes water from the Niagara River six years before it flows down the St Lawrence.

        If, for the sake of argument, Rochester, Kingston, Hamilton all used deep lake cooling, and they all grew so much that they exhausted the Lake's deep layer, Lake Ontario would still not evaporate, any more than Lake Erie evaporates away to nothing.

        Yes, there are deep areas of Lake Ontario that have been at 4 degrees celsius for a long time. How long? Since the last ice age? The glaciers covered the entire Great Lake basin a few tens of thousands of years ago. So that is how long a unique deep lake water ecosystem would have had to evolve.

        How much water would the cities have to draw from the deep layer to use up all the cold layer? I don't think you understand how deep the Lake is, and how great its volume. Look at these three maps. West [noaa.gov] Centre [noaa.gov] East [noaa.gov]. So, lets say the deep layer is currently something like half to one third of the volume of the lake. The cities would have to use up the equivalent of the flow of two or three niagaras worth of water in order to drain all the deep cold water.

        So long as our winters continue to get cold enough for the lake to cool to 4 degrees the cold layer gets regenerated every winter.

        I think it could be argued, if Global warming every gets bad enough that using deep lake cooling exhausts the cold layer in mid-summer that, since we have the infrastructure in place, we use it every summer until it is exhausted. What about the cold deep lake water ecosystem? I am all for preserving interesting, unique ecosystems. But I doubt that a few tens of thousands of years is long enough for it to become interesting and unique.

  • Just two questions (Score:5, Interesting)

    by cyclop (780354) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:36AM (#9999222) Homepage Journal

    (1). What will happen when the lake water will be warmed up? Ok,it will perhaps take a long time,but...

    (2). How does the energy required for pumping / distributing the water and maintaining pipelines and machinery compares with electrical conditioneers?

    Said that, it looks like a nice idea.
    • by jonbryce (703250) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:38AM (#9999231) Homepage
      Q1 is a valid concern.

      Q2 is apparently answered in the article. Approx 25% of the energy requirements for electrical air con.
        • by ediron2 (246908) * on Wednesday August 18 2004, @07:28AM (#9999751) Journal
          Man, I can't believe I'm getting sucked into this moronic, paranoiac debate.

          1 - Lake Ontario doesn't freeze over, but it does have some surface ice in midwinter. Ice implies a surface temp at or below 0 degrees c. Right?

          2 - Having lived next to another sizeable lake (Lake Champlain, which typically does freeze over), and as an EXPERT in hydrodynamic modelling, I can assure you that that niggling little physics detail about water having maximum density at... (drum roll) 4 degrees C is accurate. However, twice a year, lakes like Ontario have all their water churned about as ambient average temp falls below 4 degrees C, then as ambient temp rises above 4 c. Wierd, but true. Frankly, seiche's are wierder [wisc.edu].

          3 - So, as winter gets cold enough, any water not AT 4 degrees C rolls to the surface, where it is... say it with me... chilled by the Toronto winters. Before any ice is made, everything in the lake chills to 4 degrees C (this is my biggest oversimplification here, since inversion layers can exist in large water bodies. It doesn't matter in the overall calcs to follow, since all I was interested in showing is the mechanics for recharge of the cold zone).

          4 - The thermal mass of Lake Ontario (one site says 86 m average depth, x 19,000 km^2 in area... 19,000,000,000 x 86 x 100 ^3 cm^3 per meter x 1 degree c x 0.0039683 btu's per calorie x .000000293 btu's per megawatt hour = 2* 10 ^9th Megawatt hours needed.

          The Fact Sheet on Enwave's site [enwave.com] says they're gonna free up 59 megawatts. Now, I should be able to disregard a part of this as an efficiency improvement (electricity for cooling is gawdawfully inefficient, compared to non-compressive heat exchangers like this'll use), but I'll eat the inefficiency because that's the nice guy I am. 59 x 24 x 365 (megawatt-years to megawatt-hours) gets us *finally* to matching units. If I haven't completely bolluxed the calculation, we're looking at a capability of handling 3673 of these facilities. Or, the temp of Lake O going up 1/3673 of a degree.

          Oh. Yay. The little fishies aren't even going to notice this. In fact, there's room for exporting this capability and if we're willing to warm Lake O by a few degrees I think it'd take care of the AC demands of most of North America, if them clever Canadians can just figure out a way to export this.

          When she's working hard, the sun 'wastes' enough energy warming up dirt and water around the world to fuel our needs a thousandfold over. When she's not paying attention (at the poles, nights and winters), earth's radiating it off like gangbusters.

          The risk of us boogering up our surroundings when we do BIG things is a valid one. But not here, not yet.

          We've reached the point where we're influencing the world in several spots: cfc's, pesticides, acid rain, particulate emissions, garbage, animal populations, etc. etc. etc.

          But this isn't one of them. As a side joke, I bet there are a few million Toronto residents that'd be more than happy to let the thermal average temp of Lake O go up 30 degrees, just for the lake-effect warmth it'd impart on their town each winter and the ability to swim without turning blue in midsummer. Back during a nasty winter ('93), a favorite bumper sticker of mine was 'Another Vermonter *for* global warming'.

          Rock on Toronto & Enwave.com
          • by Yaztromo (655250) <yaztromo AT jsyncmanager DOT org> on Wednesday August 18 2004, @10:23AM (#10001938) Homepage Journal
            Man, I can't believe I'm getting sucked into this moronic, paranoiac debate.

            You and me both :P.

            Just to amplify your already excellent response, the other thing people here are forgetting is that Lake Ontario isn't a closed hydrolic system. It is fed by hundreds of rivers which dump tons of sun-warmed water into the lake in summer, and which dump tons of frozen and near-freezing water into it during the winter and spring thaws.

            This input vastly outnumbers the amount of cold water the Enwave system will be extracting, along with vastly outnumbering the amount of warm water input to the lake.

            In the end, the lake will be the same as it's always been, and less air-polluting fossil fuels will be required to run the existing air conditioning systems. Looks like a win-win situation to me.

            Yaz.

  • by hazman (642790) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:39AM (#9999234)
    Halliburton, Bechtel and General Electric have signed a multi-billion dollar deal to refrigerate the waters of Lake Ontario.

    The temperature of the lake has inexplicably begun to rise. Algae blooms, moss growing on surronding trees and Corona beer bottles scattered on the shore have alarmed the Canadian Department of the Interior to take swift, albeit expensive action the save the ecosystem of the lake.
  • by Capt'n Hector (650760) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:46AM (#9999270)
    Several times in recorded history, lakes have "belched" massive amounts of carbon dioxide, killing off not only fish, but people in surrounding areas. Lake Nyos [bris.ac.uk] is one such example. The circumstances vary, but always involve extremely deep water, saturated with CO2, being shifted to a shallower depth. When this happens, water has a much lower capacity for CO2, and it is released into the air.

    Not that I'm predicting this will happen here, but it's usually best not to heat deep water like that.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 18 2004, @06:07AM (#9999370)
      I think this is unlikely to be a problem.

      Lakes 'turn over' like this when there has been long-term stratification of the water. Stratification occurs when a layer of warm, less dense, water forms over the colder, denser, lower layers. This is stable since the heat of the sun reinforces the stratification. Only a seasonal reduction in sunlight, or strong winds, can mix the layers.

      Lake Nyos is in a tropical area where there is a permanent, marked stratication due to year-round abundant sunlight. Since mixing of layers is so rare, hug amounts of gas can accumulate in lower layers. This is dangerous should something trigger a rapid breakdown of the stratification - such as the landslide in Nyos.

      In temperate areas stratification is confined to the summer, only then is there sufficient sunlight. In other seasons stratification breaks down and mixing occurs such that a potentially dangerous build up of gas is not possible.
    • by No Such Agency (136681) <abmackay@gmai[ ]om ['l.c' in gap]> on Wednesday August 18 2004, @06:08AM (#9999376)
      They're not sending the warmed (by 8'C) water directly back - it goes to drinking water supply. The CO2 thing IS super-scary though, imagine living by a lake like that (which people still do) :-O
  • by bit4byte (210625) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:47AM (#9999279)
    According to the site they use the city water supply
    that feeds from the bottom of the lake to cool down
    a closed loop system, which is then used to cool down the offices/homes. No warm water is fed back into the lake. So the lake should not heat up at all.
  • by arska (145934) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:49AM (#9999287) Homepage
    RTFA !
    Look at the diagram on http://www.enwave.com/enwave/dlwc/ They warm up the city's drinking water by a few degrees.

    A
    • by frovingslosh (582462) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @06:14AM (#9999397)
      Actually, it's unlikely that the city was drawing it's drinking water from this deep before. They were almost certainly taking it from a point higher up and warmer. So the city drinking water may not be warmer at all as a result of this; it might even be cooler. And, since the lower water can hold more CO2, it might be slightly carbonated! (Look for the interesting side effects when somewhat more acidic carbonated water is flowing through old pipes.)

      On the other hand, since the cold water is being taken from the lake now rather than warmer water, the thermal barrier between the warmer top water and the lower cold water may slowly lower (and it is a very sharp layer, not the gradual drop in temperature you might expect). This may indeed have some effect, but that doesn't seem very likely.

      They could have gone the simpler and more direct route of just building a power plant that used the difference in tempersture between the cold bottom water and the top water to pump up that water and generate electricity. Such plants have been proven to work with ocean water, and should be even simpler in an environment without salt water's effects. I'm assuming they didn't because in Toranto that top water would also get pretty cold in the winter. Still, I don't expect they will need much air conditioning in the winter anyway, so a seasonal power plant might have been as good or better of an idea.

  • by carndearg (696084) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:49AM (#9999288) Homepage Journal
    The London Underground is doing this as well, though they are doing it with the ground water they pump out of the tunnels. If it relieves the sweaty hell of a crowded Tube train it gets my vote!

    Here's the BBC's story about it [bbc.co.uk].

  • by Bertie (87778) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:54AM (#9999316)
    Er, how? What does this mean? Cold's just the absence of heat, the only way to "extract" it is to heat something up.
  • by T.Hobbes (101603) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:54AM (#9999318)
    For me, at least, this is what renewables should be about: finding a local source of economical renewable energy, and applying the appropriate technology to make it useful. The key thing, though, is that the methods change depending on what's availible locally.
  • by MrKane (804219) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @05:57AM (#9999328)
    John St. Pumping Station has obviously found some way of overcoming The Second Law of Thermodynamics as:
    'the water's cold will be extracted and used to lower the temperature in downtown buildings'.

    Unit for Cold anyone?
  • Another link (Score:5, Informative)

    by Kernel Kurtz (182424) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @06:00AM (#9999346) Homepage
    From the CBC

    No registration required;

    http://www.cbc.ca/story/canada/national/2004/08/ 17 /enwave_040817.html

  • It's a GREAT Lake (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Titusdot Groan (468949) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @06:38AM (#9999498) Journal
    Just a reminder folks, Lake Ontario is one of the Great Lakes, it's REALLY big. Like you can't see the other side of it from the shore line. Big. Really big. Like it's huge. Average depth of 86 meters, surface area of almost 19000 km2. Big.

    Did I mention it's big?

    Plus water turns over automatically at 4C (that's the temperature when water is it's coldest). Lake Ontario is not meromictic and has a natural turnover anyways.

  • by PrebleNY (797307) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @08:41AM (#10000461)
    A similar lake source cooling project was implemented at Cornell while I was there. They tore up half the campus laying 36" pipe down to the nearby lake. Of course this project is much larger (with a larger lake as well), but from what I have heard the Cornell project has been a success despite the hand wringing of the radical environmentalist. The Toronto plan seems to be even better as they are not discharging the water directly back to the lake (as they do in Ithaca) but are processing it for drinking water. more information on the Cornell LSC website http://www.utilities.cornell.edu/LSC/default.htm
    • by FreeUser (11483) on Wednesday August 18 2004, @08:49AM (#10000558) Homepage
      Even if they are not putting the warmed water back into the lake, the removal of cold water will raise the average temperature of the water (as warmer surface water has more of an impact on the overall lake) and will cause the lake to get warmer. We've done enough (I'm from Toronto) to screw up the environment around this city, we should NOT be doing this!

      Yeah, the equivelent of eight extra seconds of sunlight hitting the lake will be death to the entire eco-system! Run away, run away! Burn freighters full of fuel and oil instead! (RTFA if you don't get the reference)

      Get a grip. YOU have a much bigger impact on the eco-system every day you use heat, airconditioning, refridgeration, eat, sleep, shit, work or play.

      The hydrocarbins the manufacture and use of the computer you typed your comments on probably have a larger impact on global warming than this entire project. The Canadian's approach is the smartest solution to this problem that anyone has come up with in a long time. Is it scalable to every city on the coast of that lake? No (8 seconds of sunlight is one thing, eight days equivelent would be another), but that doesn't mean we shouldn't be doing it in order to reduce the consumption of power in other areas.

      Nothing is a panacea, but this is a damn sound solution for Toronto, and they get to do it by being there first. Any overall solution to our energy, global warming, etc. problems will involve numerous clever solutions, and this project stands a good chance of being a part of that solution.

      And as for impacting the environment: 6 billion people breathing the air impact the environment. If you truly don't want to have an impact, slit your wrists. Oops, your decaying flesh will still have an impact, so you're out of luck there too. Better get used to it, because people do have an effect, and they always will. The impact of this project is benign and minimal, compared to every other public works project out there, including the sewage system in your town you probably make use of multiple times every day.