You guys would **** if you saw the carbon footprint here in Baghdad. Sorry to go OT but that's all I'm thinking about right now.
I read somewhere that a single AB brewery uses upwards of $100,000 in water and electricity for each day it is in operation. And that's not even considering the cost/ impact of growing and transporting the stuff that goes into a batch of beer.
Now, tell me why should I be concerned about using 8 gallons of water and $3.00 worth of propane for a batch of homebrew?![]()
I dunno, but if we are all so worried about killing our planet by homebrewing, maybe we shouldn't be drinking beer.
Really? I mean really?
I think the best steps I could take personally is to find a use for my spent grain and to adjust my cleaning technique in order to reduce the water I'm using.
I think the best steps I could take personally is to find a use for my spent grain
CodeRage, thanks for the thorough and pointed analysis. It's a tricky thing, being truly green, but I think it's a goal worth attempting.
Your point about shipping grain instead of beer is an important one, as well as the clarification about CO2. I never even thought about global warming effects of yeast farts until I read through these posts.
Imagine if we tried to stop all the fermentation going on every minute in nature to "save the world". It would be disastrous.
I think the best steps I could take personally is to find a use for my spent grain and to adjust my cleaning technique in order to reduce the water I'm using.
Also I'm going to start wearing hemp clothes and become a fruititarian.![]()
The transportation costs are minor compared to the cost for moving pre-made beer, because the heaviest ingredient, water, is delivered by pipe. As far as the amount of water, I only use 2-3 gallons per gallon of beer, but some people seem to use much more.
The deeper I get into this hobby, the more I become aware that it isn't the most sustainable activity I could be involved in.
The fuel used for growing and transporting the main ingredients, especially if they are imported, are one problem, while the more obvious one is all the water that I use.
Has anyone thought about these issues, and if so, are there any ideas about ways to soften the environmental blow of brewing a batch of the good stuff?
What do hip breweries like New Belgium and Rouge do?
One Word: goat
Doesn't smell as bad as compost and quite tasty, too.
Don't forget, every time you exhale, you're releasing CO2 and H2O into the atmosphere.
I heard on the radio the other day about a guy who blames 99% of "global climate change" on the fact we eat meat.
I personally don't give a rat's arse about any of this crap. There's too many of us. Fortunately, no one in the current generation in my extended family (AFAIK) has, or plans to have, any children. My family will literally end in the next 50 years.
Anyway, I do recycle some. I use my chiller water on the lawn. Not because I should, but because it saves me $$$. And that's all I care about.
I kinda hope the Maya were right.![]()
what kind of goats do you have? My roommate's goats love my spent grain!
Yeast farts contribute to global warming.
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Actually I think they don't call it global warming anymore because it has been proven to not actually be the case. It is now called climate change. My dad was telling me about when he was younger the whole hype was that we were causing another ice age. The earth cycles and the overall temp changes. That is just what happens. I guess within the next few thousand years a pole change is supposed to happen. I am going to blame that on people reading books...
We think we have control, we don't. Be smart and not wasteful because that just makes sense.
As for wasting water I really can't wrap my head around that. Maybe that is because I get my water from a well and it doesn't have to be "treated." When I dump water on the lawn it seeps back into the well eventually. Not to mention the water isn't contaminated through the brewing process, at least mine isn't. I would drink any of the run off water with no worry about getting sick.
There is only kind of goat: Stupid.
I think homebrewing is pretty green. If you want to talk about waste, think about all the beer cups used only once at the last baseball game you went to. Each beer you had you used one cup and then you threw it away. I've been using the same 5 cases of bottles for the last 2 years. I've made at least ten batches with these bottles. Sounds pretty environmentally friendly to me.
The deeper I get into this hobby, the more I become aware that it isn't the most sustainable activity I could be involved in.
The fuel used for growing and transporting the main ingredients, especially if they are imported, are one problem, while the more obvious one is all the water that I use.
Has anyone thought about these issues, and if so, are there any ideas about ways to soften the environmental blow of brewing a batch of the good stuff?
What do hip breweries like New Belgium and Rouge do?
The World is Over populated, and it's an exponential equasion that defines the consumption needed to support this ever increasing population.