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G'Day from "Down Under"
Posted: 11 May 2012, 13:01
by BritDownUnder
Actually I am from the UK originally but now live in Australia. I have been watching this forum for a while now and hope to take part in discussions when the time difference allows.
Peak oil and its possible consequences is what prompted me to leave the UK for a less populated country in the first place. I am hoping to pick up lots of advice or suitable preparations from this site though what is good for the UK may not necessarily be good for Australia.
Posted: 11 May 2012, 13:04
by emordnilap
Hi BritDownUnder and welcome.
Australia - coal, gas, uranium.
Posted: 11 May 2012, 13:38
by madibe
And lots of free sunshine
lots of wide open available land to put the mirrors and collectors on.
no problem
Posted: 11 May 2012, 14:00
by Aurora
G'day mate and welcome.
Can you send us some sunshine when you get a chance.
It's the middle of May and it's still bloody freezing over here.
Posted: 11 May 2012, 14:47
by ArowxGames
Climate Change, the other side of the peak oil dilemma.
The main issue with Australia will be water, and the impacts of climate change, which you are already seeing as drought followed by flooding.
Posted: 12 May 2012, 12:42
by BritDownUnder
Thanks for the warm welcome. Lots of sun here this week.
Probably the most usable resource I have is the sun. I have a 1.5kW PV grid-tied array and solar water heating and have had them for about 6 months. Except for 2 days I have not had the immersion heater on at all saving about 6kWh per day. The solar array is averaging about 8-10kWh per day. Note it is summer here so the winter figures will be more interesting. The house is all electric at the moment but I am getting a wood burner and bottled gas is also installed but not used. Woodburners are becoming a trend over here too. I wish we had the Rayburn we used to have when I was younger. Wind is next to useless here. Hydro is probably fully exploited already.
Australia has lots of coal, some gas and uranium. There have been lots of ideas for utility scale solar energy and not one has been started. I read that a 100km x 100km square of the outback covered in PV cells would power the world.
Climate change will be the biggie here. Diesel could always be made from coal as a vehicle fuel if lack of availability of conventional oil were the only consideration.
Posted: 12 May 2012, 21:48
by ujoni08
Welcome! I like your cool avatar
I agree that water will be a big challenge in Australia, but as Maudibe said, you have all that wonder sun energy beating down every day, free! Very little, if any, heating needed, and a growing season that lasts ages. With well-designed houses, you won't even need air-conditioning. Big country, small population, lots going for it. Climate change, droughts and floods, etc. mean it's not all going to be plain sailing though...
Posted: 12 May 2012, 22:55
by madibe
Re the water issue - if you're coastal based, as are most settlements in Aus, then with all that sun de-salination should really not be an issue if the PTB pulled a finger out.
Great to hear about your PV set up. Yea....bring on some sun here. It's lousy... and my plants are still in pots on the windowsill!
Posted: 12 May 2012, 23:21
by Kentucky Fried Panda
What hunting opportunities are there where you live?
I mean being in Hunter's valley and all that...
By that I really mean, learn to shoot and buy some guns
Posted: 14 May 2012, 11:30
by BritDownUnder
Kentucky Fried Panda wrote:What hunting opportunities are there where you live?
I mean being in Hunter's valley and all that...
By that I really mean, learn to shoot and buy some guns
I have heard that goats and wild pigs are in the gunsights here. Also kangaroo of course if you can prove that they are a pest. Hunter Valley was named after John Hunter but there is some goat hunting about 50 miles away.
Learning to shoot is on the cards for me but getting the house as energy efficient is more important as well as learning to grow food. Only then I will learn to shoot what I cannot grow.
Posted: 14 May 2012, 11:35
by featherstick
BritDownUnder wrote: Only then I will learn to shoot what I cannot grow.
For me, that would mean shooting brassicas, garlic, oh, and plum tomatoes too. Tried them for 5 years running, can't grow them at all.
Posted: 15 May 2012, 11:40
by emordnilap
featherstick wrote:BritDownUnder wrote: Only then I will learn to shoot what I cannot grow.
For me, that would mean shooting brassicas, garlic, oh, and plum tomatoes too. Tried them for 5 years running, can't grow them at all.
Brassicas no problem here and garlic! Tons of the stuff. Made garlic soup the other day and I haven't seen a single vampire since.
As for plum tomatoes, we have started some off; we'll let you know how we get on.
Posted: 15 May 2012, 13:19
by snow hope
Seeing as it seems to be still winter in most of the British Isles, then good luck with the round things, I hope they go red sometime! Snow forecast for the Cotswolds, Pennines and hilltops in N Ireland tonight and tomorrow. Nevermind Scotland of course.
Posted: 15 May 2012, 13:24
by emordnilap
Hey, we have grape vines for the first time this year! They're thriving, though whether they reward us fruit-wise remains to be seen.
Posted: 15 May 2012, 13:44
by jonny2mad
I'd think the big issue for both Australia and new Zealand will be china and Indonesia, and being invaded by hordes of people from Asia if times get bad there .
But unlike the last time when you feared a invasion from Asia in the form of imperial Japan, you may not have the UK or USA to help this time