WA Fossil Fuel Heating System

February 21, 2008

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Up until the 1970’s WA heated its campus by burning coal in a 1940 model boiler (middle photo above) located underneath the Megaron. Water was boiled into steam and pumped through large pipes (top right) throughout all of campus. This centralized heating system lost vast amounts of heat energy during transfer through contact with the cold earth, and by burning coal, the dirtiest of the three major fossil fuels, emitted carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, carcinogenic hydrocarbons and particulate matter, mercury, and arsenic.

WA used the same boiler when it switched over to heating oil #6, a thick high sulfur content fuel.
At some point in the 1990’s WA began decentralizing its heating system, placing gas boilers (below middle) in each building. Cleaner less polluting natural gas is burned to heat up water which is then pumped (photo of motors, below right) in pipes throughout the building in the form of hot water rather than steam. In 2003, WA installed oil #2 (lower sulfur content) boilers (below left) to replace the old Megaron boiler, the only campus system burning oil.

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WA typically burns up to 35,000 gallons of oil #2 to heat Walker, Megaron and Adams Hall, and 176,000 therms of gas for all buildings on campus.