mash head
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 14/12/08
- Messages
- 372
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Whats that skip you havnt read the whole post and Sonnys down the creek with his home made still. Its ok Gary will be here in the chopper soon :lol:
Whats that skip you havnt read the whole post and Sonnys down the creek with his home made still. Its ok Gary will be here in the chopper soon :lol:
snip/ my girlfriend likes to drink my homebrew,
snip/ she likes to drink my stout
snip/ is my post just
snip/ Sometimes I make stout.
snip/ My girlfriend likes it.
snip/ it makes me fart.
There were some comments about ants and worms on the first page of this thread. Until last year I was maintaining some worm farms for composting reasons and as food for the axolotls. I once made the mistake of grabbing a handful of boiled hops from the hopsock and feeding them to a container of worms. They all died! I think this could be one of the dangers in feeding kettle trub to your compost worms.
If HB produced dangerous byproducts, like mercury or PCBs, I might give it a thought. As it isIs Hb Good For The Environment?
How much electricity does a brewery consume in a 24hr period?? Probably more than you do at home all year ( including non brewing )
How much paperwork does a brewery consume?? A shitload more than you ever will
How many workers in a brewery who drive to work everyday?? Lots of greenhouse gas there
How many delivery trucks driving beer all over the country?? Shitloads, and we know how enviro friendly the big rigs are!!!!
That's just a start. I seriously doubt HB'ing leaves a bigger eco footprint than a mega brewery.
Think about the huge reduction in your carbon emissions though. Less travelling in a car to buy beer, which is delivered and distributed in fossil fuel burning trucks.
Even a trip to the LHBS would get you enough ingredients to brew a lot more beer than you could fit in your car in just one trip to the local bottle-o.
Looking at this question as a process (hb) vs process (mega) to achieve beer in your glass, doesn't IMO result in a meaningful answer. The impact of the HB process should certainly be looked at, but it can only really be compared to what YOU might otherwise be able to achieve with that time, water, money etc.
the corporate worldview that is essentially selfish, rewarding the few while demeaning the many and devastating nature,
Explains how corporate mega-breweries are saving the world by pioneering industrial ecology;
How much electricity does a brewery consume in a 24hr period?? Probably more than you do at home all year ( including non brewing )
How much paperwork does a brewery consume?? A shitload more than you ever will
How many workers in a brewery who drive to work everyday?? Lots of greenhouse gas there
How many delivery trucks driving beer all over the country?? Shitloads, and we know how enviro friendly the big rigs are!!!!
That's just a start. I seriously doubt HB'ing leaves a bigger eco footprint than a mega brewery.
Can you tell me how much power the mega brewery you work in uses each week, roughly??. I guarantee no one here uses that much in a year. I know that a Mega brewery is more efficient on a large scale, but they STILL use more energy in a week than we do in a year. Just because they do it more efficiently is irrelevant. The total amount is waaaaaaaaaaaay bigger than any of us. The environment doesn't say " Oh well, all the power you use, and the size of your carbon footprint is ok, because you've done it efficiently" does it??
The efficiency of the system doesn't matter, its the TOTAL volume/footprint/enery consumption that is important. Yes, i understand that if our home brewing setups were magnified to produce the same amount as a brewery, we'd be screwed, but my point is, we DONT brew the same volume as a brewery.
Individually we don't brew as much as a big brewery but collectively our foot print would be quite large. To me the fact they are so effiecent is irrelevant. I don't work for any brewery but this site all ways comes back to large brewery bashing.Can you tell me how much power the mega brewery you work in uses each week, roughly??. I guarantee no one here uses that much in a year. I know that a Mega brewery is more efficient on a large scale, but they STILL use more energy in a week than we do in a year. Just because they do it more efficiently is irrelevant. The total amount is waaaaaaaaaaaay bigger than any of us. The environment doesn't say " Oh well, all the power you use, and the size of your carbon footprint is ok, because you've done it efficiently" does it??
The efficiency of the system doesn't matter, its the TOTAL volume/footprint/enery consumption that is important. Yes, i understand that if our home brewing setups were magnified to produce the same amount as a brewery, we'd be screwed, but my point is, we DONT brew the same volume as a brewery.
Can you tell me how much power the mega brewery you work in uses each week, roughly??. I guarantee no one here uses that much in a year. I know that a Mega brewery is more efficient on a large scale, but they STILL use more energy in a week than we do in a year. Just because they do it more efficiently is irrelevant. The total amount is waaaaaaaaaaaay bigger than any of us. The environment doesn't say " Oh well, all the power you use, and the size of your carbon footprint is ok, because you've done it efficiently" does it??
The efficiency of the system doesn't matter, its the TOTAL volume/footprint/enery consumption that is important. Yes, i understand that if our home brewing setups were magnified to produce the same amount as a brewery, we'd be screwed, but my point is, we DONT brew the same volume as a brewery.
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