Off-grid: Meet the pioneers who are living without mains power or water


According to The Independent:

You won’t find the phrase in the Oxford English Dictionary, yet, but “living off-grid”, outside or in between, the criss-crossing lines of power, water, gas and phone that delineate the civilised world, is a skill that everyone may soon need. Rising energy prices, a weariness with over-consumption, fear of terrorism and economic collapse, and of course, the big issues of climate change and environmental degradation are leading to a mounting interest in unplugging ourselves from the system.

I’d like to pretend that I adopted the off-grid philosophy through a mixture of ideological purity and trend-spotting brilliance. In fact, I stumbled upon it quite by accident back in the mid-Nineties.

It was like living in heaven, overlooking the sea amid mountains that changed colour all day and all night. There was a steep track down to the hut, nestling among giant Pampas grasses. Water was gathered in a huge, ancient amphora that fed off the roof. Electricity was from the hire car, and heating from a smoky woodburner.

That was my first lesson in off-grid living. It’s not just about being eco-friendly – it’s also about living cheaper than a grid-connected existence. If it was easier to win off-grid planning permission in this country, it could help solve the housing shortage and let hundreds of thousands onto the property ladder for the first time.

A decade later, and I am adept at living this way – at least for a few weeks or months at a time. I have a fully-fitted outdoor kitchen, with calor gas fridge and cooker, as well as a built-in barbecue. I harvest rainwater, some of which is pumped back up to a tank on the roof, so I even have running water of sorts. I rigged up a hot water shower using a cheap combi boiler and more calor gas. Yes, that gas is a non-renewable resource, but I use it sparingly – because when it runs out, there is no one else to lug the bottle up to the car, down to the gas store and struggle back again with the fresh bottle. There are a couple of solar panels, as well as drawers full of torches, camping lights, candles and candlesticks of every type and size.

I discovered I was part of a wider phenomenon. By 2007 there were approximately 300,000 off-grid homes in the United States alone and another 40,000 in the UK. Locations ranged from rural houses and huts to tree-houses, container dwellings, tents and their ethnic variations, such as benders (traditional British shelters made by covering a framework of bent saplings with canvas) and Mongolian yurts (circular tents of felt or skin). The people living this way might be backpackers or right-wing survivalists, international business travellers with their own islands or groups of friends who decided to start a commune; they move around in buses and four-wheel-drives, yachts and houseboats, caravans and Winnebagos.

Reassuringly, I was part of a global movement, but meanwhile things had changed. There was a new awareness of the damage wreaked by tourism in general, and air travel in particular and it does seem a tad self-defeating to have an eco-home so far away that you damage the environment just getting there. Foreign breaks of a weekend or even a week were going out of style.

Read the full article at The Independent:

Off-grid living: the basics

  1. Take a room off-grid by installing a solar panel on an exterior wall. This can be used to power a light, a laptop and a phone charger.
  2. You can store and reuse rain water if you have an attic or a roof where you can place a storage tank, to reduce your consumption from the mains water supply.
  3. It is possible to have your own borehole water supply, even in a small back yard, which can cost up to 50 times less than public water. But installation can be costly and you’ll need to obtain a geological survey first.
  4. If you’re away from the grid, you can buy an inverter for £30, from shops such as Halfords. This plugs into the cigarette lighter in your car and can power your electrical devices.
  5. Grow your own vegetables and herbs in pots or a garden. You can eat these yourself or exchange them for items such as beds and bicycles, via the Freecycle website (www.uk.freecycle.org)
  6. Planning laws allow you to install a small marine wind turbine to generate small amounts of power. A turbine should be fitted to a free-standing pole in your yard or garden. Buy online from marine stores such as www.ampair.com.
  7. Accommodate guests in a tent. However, your guests might prefer it if you take the tent and let them use the beds!

- These people are going to be pioneers of the life of the future…get ready folks!

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  • bluegal

    Dear all, some of you may have heard/read this on the radio/papers already, and for those who havent, this Saturday 29 March from 8pm to 9pm (local time) is Earth Hour™ .

    What is Earth Hour™? It’s a baby step forward for some of us, to get involved in saving the earth from global warming.

    Let’s us all turn off our lights for just one hour… (a great excuse to get romantic with your spouse/partner!)

    What can one hour do? Yes, an hour of darkness by itself may seem miniscule, but a collective exercise from all of us, will contribute to a positive impact in reducing global warming. Here’re more tips on what you can do:

    Take household appliances off standby; unplug any home appliances – mobile phone charger, TV, microwave, MP3 player, computer monitor, printer – that are not being used and are on standby. Appliances left on standby account for up to 10% of the average household’s electricity use (hey! you save on electricity bills too)

    Sign up to Earth Hour by visiting http://www.earthhour.org and commit to turning off your lights on this Saturday, 29 March from 8pm to 9pm

    Please support this event and take it seriously.

  • bluegal

    Oh the price of gold is rising out of sight
    And the dollar is in sorry shape tonight
    What the dollar used to get us
    Now won’t buy a head of lettuce
    No the economic forecast isn’t right

    But amidst the clouds I spot a shining ray
    I can even glimpse a new and better way
    And I’ve devised a plan of action
    Worked it down to the last fraction
    And I’m going into action here today

    I am changing my name to Chrysler
    I am going down to Washington D.C.
    I will tell some power broker
    What they did for Iacocca
    Will be perfectly acceptable to me
    I am changing my name to Chrysler
    I am headed for that great receiving line
    So when they hand a million grand out
    I’ll be standing with my hand out
    Yessir, I’ll get mine

    –Tom Paxton, “I’m Changing My Name to Chrysler”

  • bluegal

    Anybody on for the Earth Hour besides myself and Simon? Please sign up at http://www.earthhour.org and commit to it. It takes everybody to save the earth !

  • Harry
  • bluegal

    Simon, did you participate for the Earth Hour? Let me know how you feel during the 1 hour of darkeness.

  • chris

    bluegal, there is no need to stock up any food. Read this !

    http://sg.news.yahoo.com/cna/20080329/tap-338077-231650b.html

  • Simon Tay

    The article states that there will be available …..the question is…at what price.

    I bet those who can afford it will still continue to buy the food. Those who cannot, it’s unfortunate.

  • chris

    Why always think of yourself as the person who can’t afford it?

  • Simon Tay

    bluegal,

    I had my Earth Hour back in 2004 June 29 when part of Singapore blacked out because of a small pressure drop of natural gas from Indonesia which was blamed on faulty valve.

    Total darkness are scary, self powered off electronic is different from total complete darkness even in the streets and traffic lights off.

    The Earth Hour recent ones I did was just switch off all my electronics and lights and went out for some makan and shopping. That’s what all my friends did…haiz. 90% of the people I know don’t stay at home all the time to waste energy, it’s the offices and public amenities requires some changes.

    Anyway home electricity prices is up so price will curb demand eventually.

    The next problem is the social impact on families who cannot afford the expensive electricity and the implication of desperate people in the streets without jobs.

  • bluegal

    Is ok Simon, I am just disappointed with some of my friends who said they support the Earth hour but not doing what should be done. They continue to play their playstation or watch TV. At least you did something.

  • Simon Tay

    Be patients with others who not know the truth about energy…the real danger and cost that is coming.

    Let them find out naturally via the news or their pocket. It’s not going to be easy on them but at least they will find out one way or another.

    Earth Hour is basically environmentally friendly instead of cost saving. It might be more easier if we approach them a the angle of saving money and preparing for rainy days…or in the form of investment…for future.

    Life is not a straight line, do in alternative ways…and human shall still survive, in many ways there are hope.

  • bluegal

    No new updates so far ?

  • Simon Tay

    I am currently at reservist 8 to 5.30pm type…hehe…pretty lazy to blog recently…too tired.

    Don’t worry…soon the barrage of updates coming … :)

  • bluegal

    Simon,I can’t seem to view your movie blog. Can you give me the url ?

  • Simon Tay