Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumNew Zealand's first eco-friendly hempcrete house
Mr Flavall has returned from the United States to look into developing hemp-cropping in New Zealand to export to the US, has seen the potential, and is now keen to stay. His aim is to see 1200 acres (485ha) planted in Taranaki.
To make the building product, the internal part of the hemp stem is mixed with a lime-based binder. It continues to harden or petrify over time and lasts hundreds of years.
The result is a cheap, breathable, non-toxic product which is non-combustible, power-saving, soundproof - and has a negative carbon footprint, he says.
"It's a breathable wall yet air doesn't pass through."
One of the oldest crops known to man, hemp was used in the Great Wall of China, Roman viaducts and by Henry Ford in his first car.
http://www.stuff.co.nz/taranaki-daily-news/news/8000805/Hemp-sown-to-start-eco-house-business
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msongs
(67,462 posts)freethought
(2,457 posts)Sorry, I just couldn't resist! ***sarcasm***
TlalocW
(15,392 posts)There's a great confusion in this country that hemp = marijuana, and politicians exploit that to protect lumber interests, etc. so it doesn't help if you look like you're stoned off your ass in the official publicity picture of your new product.
TlalocW
niyad
(113,628 posts)Sounds nice on the first pass but ...
> To make the building product, the internal part of the hemp stem is mixed
> with a lime-based binder.
> and has a negative carbon footprint, he says.
Given that making lime is an energy-intensive activity, the rest of the process
would have to be seriously carbon negative to counteract it.
Not saying that it's not true, just somewhat questionable on anything other
than a "man working in a shed" scale ...
But calcium hydroxide can be acquired besides mining and slaking limestone with water (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slaked_lime), also by burning organic material, "ash-lime", which is energy-positive activity.
Quite likely some homey combination of wood ash and clay and water would work just as fine; the main thing is that the mixture needs to be alkaline enough for the chemical process.