Infographic Compares Summer Energy Consumption with Average U.S. Temperatures
Infographic Compares Summer Energy Consumption with Average U.S. Temperatures
With the need to use energy for stable temperature maintenance, especially during summer and winter months, renewable sources can still play a more significant role.
A critical and often overlooked variable in sustainability is temperature. Whether it’s creature comforts of daily life such as air conditioning, or very critical maintenance of specific temperatures for business operations (food vendors and retailers, industries, and more), everyone ultimately invests in resources to maintain the temperature they need. As temperature variances and extremes come into play, the investment for households, businesses, and communities into resources to compensate for these scenarios becomes more costly. As such, the sources of energy compensation become an important factor in pursuits of sustainability.
Exploring energy consumption of households during different months of the year, and in relation to sources of energy production, the following infographic highlights several facets of energy generation based on the temperature variable being discussed. Several statistics across different states, areas of temperature compensation, and other details are also explored.
Team Gemini collaborates with partners like 2G ENERGY to provide a variety of solutions to generate both electricity and heat in more sustainable ways. Combined Heat and Power Units (CHPs) are one of the best ways for industry-clients, in particular, to provide two sources of energy in one. Significant operating cost savings will be achieved with innate thermal heat distribution that can be utilized to maintain stable temperatures of facilities, water supply, and more; and electricity generation from the CHPs can offset any desired amount of power use in operations.
To learn more about Team Gemini’s diverse technology solutions, visit http://teamgemini.us/technologies/.
The original infographic can be found on this page.