Ice? Just Say "No"

wet1

Wanderer
Registered Senior Member
Don't really know where to put this one. It has a little of several subjects in it.

Ice? Just Say "No"

Americans take ice for granted. They expect it in a glass of water at every restaurant. They want it in every soft drink. Most produce a continual supply of it at home in their refrigerators. And for parties we go and buy bags of it to fill up our buckets and bathtubs. But at what cost?

Estimating how much ice we consume each day is not easy. In addition to the ice we melt in our drinks and ice buckets, there is all the ice that is produced, only to melt away, unused, in the drain. As a rough guess we probably each "consume", either directly or indirectly, an average of around a pint of water a day as ice.

Ice as a commodity is basically energy, or, more accurately, the absence of it. To freeze water, energy (latent heat) must be extracted from it. When the ice melts, it sucks this energy back, cooling its immediate surroundings.

The latent heat of ice is about 300 joules per gram. (I shall use approximate figures throughout; it makes the calculations easier, and there is no point in using more accurate figures when the amount of ice consumed is only a guess). A pint of water weighs around 450 grams, so the energy consumed in ice by each of us, each day, is around 135,000.

There are around 270 million people in the USA, making the national daily energy consumption in ice around 36 trillion joules.
Most of us have no idea how much a joule of energy is, so let us convert this figure to a more meangingful unit, the kilowatt-hour (kWh) which is the amount of energy a one kilowatt electric fire consumes in one hour. One watt is one joule/sec; so a kilowatt-hour is 1,000 x 60 x 60 joules, i.e. 3.6 million joules. Thus our national daily ice consumption represents around 10 million kWh of energy.

To generate this amount of energy takes 5,000 tons of coal, or 17,000 barrels of oil. Here's the rub. We are trying to conserve the energy we use in heating fuel, gasoline and electricity, yet at the same we are melting away a vast quantity of energy as ice -- what a city the size of San Francisco consumes in gasoline each day.

Not only does the production of ice contribute to the energy crisis, it also contributes (somewhat ironically) to global warming. Each kilowatt of energy generated produces about 1.5 lb of carbon dioxide. Our daily ice consumption thus releases an additional 7,000 tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere each day, making its own contribution to the greenhouse effect. In addition, we must factor in the cost of the equipment used to produce the ice, plus the damaging effect on the ozone layer of all the CFCs released into the atmosphere when our ice-making machines fall apart on the scrap heap.

Why do we want all this ice? We certainly do not need it. Europeans do not expect it in every glass of water or soft drink. Its cooling effect on the body is negligible. It has no health benefit. Just the opposite. The temperature stress on our teeth can crack the enamel, increasing the likelihood of tooth decay. The lining of the stomach is weakened by having to cope temperatures for which it was not designed. The cooling in the stomach unnecessarily draws blood from other regions of the body. Ice-making machines have been found to harbor Legionnaire's Disease and other unsavory microbes. You may drink bottled water, but the chances are the ice that's put in it is tap water.

Ice is a social addiction. We don't need it, but we've been led to believe we can't do without it. Yet we get nothing from it but an oral stimulation.

But every addiction has its cost. Here the cost is unnecessary energy consumption, increased environmental degradation, and possible damage to your health. So the next time you are offered ice, just say "No".

Source
 
"I think there’s only one thing that can be called by the wider name American, one true specialty with us, and that’s the national devotion to ice water."
--Mark Twain

"At least we drink our beer COLD!"
--Xev teasing a Brit
 
Blue moon is the best beer out there. That is American I think.
 
I think, americans are the only one that serve ice with water in restaurant, at home etc.

Cold drinks are not good for you except when the body needs to cool down. Drinking iced drinks with food reduces the acid and enzyme reaction in the stomach to digest food. The chinese do better with hot tea or hot soup with food....

So, wake up America....

(I admit, it is a habit that is difficult to break....)
 
When we go to the States for hockey our team generally reffers to American beer as Dragon Piss. I'm not sure who first came up with the name but we all agreed that's how it tastes compared to Canadian beer.

And German beer is even better than ours.
 
I agree that German beer is quite good. Nice to is the difference in acholic content. It is served at room temperature. Do not make the mistake of storing it for a few months or putting it in the refriderator and forgetting about it. Unopened, it will turn moldly inside the bottle. Bottling methods are not up to US standards.

After returning to the states, American beer had a taste simular to soapy water and no punch. It is all what you get used to.
 
When I was in China, I took Tingtao beer. It was pretty good. Recently I found them at Albertson. Though they are close to the taste - it felt more flat - may be alcohol content is different....
 
Originally posted by kmguru
I think, americans are the only one that serve ice with water in restaurant, at home etc.


as self-appointed Thailand correspondent just want to add that yes, it goes on here too, a lot.
 
dickbaby.

Since you live in Thailand and I would love to check out that place, can you start a new thread in say Eastern Philosophy about Thailand , the people and your observations etc?

And why is most thai people have names that are a bastadized version of Sanskrit? Was it due to Buddhism?
 
Good points. I've never given it much thought but I'm gonna stop getting ice. Especially at restaurants...the drinks are cold already anyway you don't need ice.
I wish I had the balls to throw away my refrigerator like Kramer and eat only fresh food.
 
Originally posted by kmguru
dickbaby.

Since you live in Thailand and I would love to check out that place, can you start a new thread in say Eastern Philosophy about Thailand , the people and your observations etc?


I shall conside it an honour, though it's only fair to warn you that I may not be presenting you with an image of a perfect tropical paradise :D

You could even go so far as to say I'm a bit cynical.

But I'll post something. Just not quite sure how to begin...



:)
 
Originally posted by fadingCaptain
I wish I had the balls to throw away my refrigerator like Kramer and eat only fresh food.

That is the excuse of women...what is yours....just kidding....just could not help it...

Originally posted by dickbaby
But I'll post something. Just not quite sure how to begin...

Just start with the social issues. Every society has their share of problems...I have always thought that Thailand would be a power economy like Taiwan or Korea - but one does not hear much.
 
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