The goal of this project is to demonstrate thermal solar power heating
and cooling of an energy-efficient building (the ME building),
augmenting the standard air-conditioning system. Our anticipation was that
the energy costs on maintaining the building temperature would be reduced by
20% or more, and the CO2 emissions associated with heating/cooling
our building would drop by 100 tons per year. The project construction is now
(May 2007) complete, and we are assessing the actual solar thermal system performance. We
hope that our original estimates of the system performance will prove to be
too conservative.
The UNM Solar Testbed Project was funded by the State of New Mexico Energy, Minerals,
and
Natural Resources Department in February 2006.
The conceptual design for the project was approved in April 2006.
Read about our project in UNM Today, April 2006:
Engineers Re-Commit to Solar Energy
More news coverage in New
Mexico Business Weekly.
The Daily Lobo coverage and interview.
About our logo... It's the skeleton of an Edaphosaurus, a reptile with what some paleontologists argue is a solar panel on its back, an adaptation evolved in response to global climate change during the Permian period.
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