Originally posted by: sirjonk
I could reply better if I knew what amount of usage constituted 100w of electricity.
		
		
	 
as a base system -
E6700
Seagate 320 GB
eVGA 7600GT
4 GB RAM
17" samsung LCD - 40 watts in use, 3 watts on
standby.
ballpark guess for the base system - in the range
of 200-300 watts.
as far as "energy efficient" goes, the Athlon BE
chips come to mind.
though i believe the person who said this is laptop-
range power consumption, 100 watts.
having used the hand pump water pump myself,
i agree, nothing wrong with it.  maybe that was
the wrong comparison.  maybe electricity for
a refrigerator, is a better example, in terms of
the energy/electricity needs of people in other
countries.
i've been reading about massive energy shortages
in other countries, along with a few in the US,
England, etc.
i was also pummeled by some heat this summer,
in a second floor apartment with no AC.  i was
counting every watt, turning the fridge off during
the hot hours, using gallon bottles of water to
help keep the fridge cold when the electricity
was off.
a related question - how much should Canada
sacrifice, in order to provide the United States
with electricity ?  as it is, the tar sands operation
consumes massive amounts of water and totally
f*cks up the environment.  it produces about
3 million barrels a day.  in order to heat the
bitumen, they use natural gas.
is Canada obligated to expend water and natural gas,
so they can sell us oil at $90 a barrel ?  what if
they decide that being able to take hot baths
is more important than providing that bit of
extra oil to the US ?
actually, via NAFTA, they are obligated.  but,
NAFTA is a trade agreement, which can be
re-written.
it's very clear from looking at reports in the
energy industries that these kind of trade-offs
are occurring and will occur more.  also, that
there is an inter-related ness involved.  a finite
amount of water, a finite and declining amount
of fossil fuel energy sources to move the water
around.
Georgia could use some more right now,
and there's some states that got extra.
i looked at some property in Oregon last year.
one of the guys who would have been my
neighbor told me about neighbor#2,
who ripped out the pump neighbor #1 put,
legally, in the farm water canal they share.
neighbor #1 was 6 foot plus and in real good
shape; i was surprised neighbor #2 was messing
with his water pump.
it was mighty odd to see grown men fighting
over a small solar-powered pump in a small
town in Oregon.