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The Guardian's Chris Goodall makes some
interesting points about the 10 energy myths. It's is a worthwhile
read clearing up some popular misconceptions. Well done Chris!
Robert Lee Founder The Climate Change Challenge
Myth 1:
solar power is too expensive to be of much use
In reality, today's bulky and expensive solar panels capture only
10% or so of the sun's energy, but rapid innovation in the US means
that the next generation of panels will be much thinner, capture far
more of the energy in the sun's light and cost a fraction of what
they do today. They may not even be made of silicon. First Solar,
the largest manufacturer of thin panels, claims that its products
will generate electricity in sunny countries as cheaply as large
power stations by 2012.
Other companies are investigating even more efficient ways of
capturing the sun's energy, for example the use of long parabolic
mirrors to focus light on to a thin tube carrying a liquid, which
gets hot enough to drive a steam turbine and generate electricity.
Spanish and German companies are installing large-scale solar power
plants of this type in North Africa, Spain and the south-west of
America; on hot summer afternoons in California, solar power
stations are probably already financially competitive with coal.
Europe, meanwhile, could get most of its electricity from plants in
the Sahara desert. We would need new long-distance power
transmission but the technology for providing this is advancing
fast, and the countries of North Africa would get a valuable new
source of income.
Myth 2:
wind power is too unreliable
Actually, during some periods earlier this year the wind provided
almost 40% of Spanish power. Parts of northern Germany generate more
electricity from wind than they actually need. Northern Scotland,
blessed with some of the best wind speeds in Europe, could easily
generate 10% or even 15% of the UK's electricity needs at a cost
that would comfortably match today's fossil fuel prices.
The intermittency of wind power does mean that we would need to run
our electricity grids in a very different way. To provide the most
reliable electricity, Europe needs to build better connections
between regions and countries; those generating a surplus of wind
energy should be able to export it easily to places where the air is
still. The UK must invest in transmission cables, probably offshore,
that bring Scottish wind-generated electricity to the power-hungry
south-east and then continue on to Holland and France. The
electricity distribution system must be Europe-wide if we are to get
the maximum security of supply.
We will also need to invest in energy storage. At the moment we do
this by
pumping water uphill at times of surplus and letting it flow back
down the mountain when power is scarce. Other countries are talking
of developing "smart grids" that provide users with incentives to
consume less electricity when wind speeds are low. Wind power is
financially viable today in many countries, and it will become
cheaper as turbines continue to grow in size, and manufacturers
drive down costs. Some projections see more than 30% of the world's
electricity eventually coming from the wind. Turbine manufacture and
installation are also set to become major sources of employment,
with one trade body predicting that the sector will generate 2m jobs
worldwide by 2020.
Myth 3: marine energy is a dead-end
The thin channel of water between the north-east tip of Scotland and
Orkney contains some of the most concentrated tidal power in the
world. The energy from the peak flows may well be greater than the
electricity needs of London. Similarly, the waves off the Atlantic
coasts of Spain and Portugal are strong, consistent and able to
provide a substantial fraction of the region's power. Designing and
building machines that can survive the harsh conditions of
fast-flowing ocean waters has been challenging and the past decades
have seen repeated disappointments here and abroad. This year we
have seen the installation of the first tidal turbine to be
successfully connected to the UK electricity grid in Strangford
Lough, Northern Ireland, and the first group of large-scale wave
power generators 5km off the coast of Portugal, constructed by a
Scottish company.
But even though the UK shares with Canada, South Africa and parts of
South America some of the best marine energy resources in the world,
financial support has been trifling. The London opera houses have
had more taxpayer money than the British marine power industry over
the past few years. Danish support for wind power helped that
country establish worldwide leadership in the building of turbines;
the UK could do the same with wave and tidal power.
Myth 4: nuclear power is cheaper than other low-carbon sources of
electricity
If we believe that the world energy and environmental crises are as
severe as is said, nuclear power stations must be considered as a
possible option. But although the disposal of waste and the
proliferation of nuclear weapons are profoundly important issues,
the most severe problem may be the high and unpredictable cost of
nuclear plants.
The new nuclear power station on the island of Olkiluoto in western
Finland is a clear example. Electricity production was originally
supposed to start this year, but the latest news is that the power
station will not start generating until 2012. The impact on the cost
of the project has been dramatic. When the contracts were signed,
the plant was supposed to cost €3bn (£2.5bn). The final cost is
likely to be more than twice this figure and the construction
process is fast turning into a nightmare. A second new plant in
Normandy appears to be experiencing similar problems. In the US,
power companies are backing away from nuclear because of fears over
uncontrollable costs.
Unless we can find a new way to build nuclear power stations, it
looks as though CO2 capture at coal-fired plants will be a cheaper
way of producing low-carbon electricity. A sustained research effort
around the world might also mean that cost-effective carbon capture
is available before the next generation of nuclear plants is ready,
and that it will be possible to fit carbon-capture equipment on
existing coal-fired power stations. Finding a way to roll out CO2
capture is the single most important research challenge the world
faces today. The current leader, the Swedish power company
Vattenfall, is using an innovative technology that burns the coal in
pure oxygen rather than air, producing pure carbon dioxide from its
chimneys, rather than expensively separating the CO2 from other
exhaust gases. It hopes to be operating huge coal-fired power
stations with minimal CO2 emissions by 2020.
Myth 5: electric cars are slow and ugly
We tend to think that electric cars are all like the G Wiz vehicle,
with a limited range, poor acceleration and an unprepossessing
appearance. Actually, we are already very close to developing
electric cars that match the performance of petrol vehicles. The
Tesla electric sports car, sold in America but designed by Lotus in
Norfolk, amazes all those who experience its awesome acceleration.
With a price tag of more than $100,000, late 2008 probably wasn't a
good time to launch a luxury electric car, but the Tesla has
demonstrated to everybody that electric cars can be exciting and
desirable. The crucial advance in electric car technology has been
in batteries: the latest lithium batteries - similar to the ones in
your laptop - can provide large amounts of power for acceleration
and a long enough range for almost all journeys.
Batteries still need to become cheaper and quicker to charge, but
the UK's largest manufacturer of electric vehicles says that
advances are happening faster than ever before. Its urban delivery
van has a range of over 100 miles, accelerates to 70mph and has
running costs of just over 1p per mile. The cost of the diesel
equivalent is probably 20 times as much. Denmark and Israel have
committed to develop the full infrastructure for a switch to an
all-electric car fleet. Danish cars will be powered by the spare
electricity from the copious resources of wind power; the Israelis
will provide solar power harvested from the desert.
Myth 6:
biofuels are always destructive to the environment
Making some of our motor fuel from food has been an almost
unmitigated disaster. It has caused hunger and increased the rate of
forest loss, as farmers have sought extra land on which to grow
their crops. However the failure of the first generation of biofuels
should not mean that we should reject the use of biological
materials forever. Within a few years we will be able to turn
agricultural wastes into liquid fuels by splitting cellulose, the
most abundant molecule in plants and trees, into simple
hydrocarbons. Chemists have struggled to find a way of breaking down
this tough compound cheaply, but huge amounts of new capital have
flowed into US companies that are working on making a petrol
substitute from low-value agricultural wastes. In the lead is Range
Fuels, a business funded by the venture capitalist Vinod Khosla,
which is now building its first commercial cellulose cracking plant
in Georgia using waste wood from managed forests as its feedstock.
We shouldn't be under any illusion that making petrol from cellulose
is a solution to all the problems of the first generation of
biofuels. Although cellulose is abundant, our voracious needs for
liquid fuel mean we will have to devote a significant fraction of
the world's land to growing the grasses and wood we need for
cellulose refineries. Managing cellulose production so that it
doesn't reduce the amount of food produced is one of the most
important issues we face.
Myth 7: climate change means we need more organic agriculture
The uncomfortable reality is that we already struggle to feed six
billion people. Population numbers will rise to more than nine
billion by 2050. Although food production is increasing slowly, the
growth rate in agricultural productivity is likely to decline below
population increases within a few years. The richer half of the
world's population will also be eating more meat. Since animals need
large amounts of land for every unit of meat they produce, this
further threatens food production for the poor. So we need to ensure
that as much food as possible is produced on the limited resources
of good farmland. Most studies show that yields under organic
cultivation are little more than half what can be achieved
elsewhere. Unless this figure can be hugely improved, the
implication is clear: the world cannot feed its people and produce
huge amounts of cellulose for fuels if large acreages are converted
to organic cultivation.
Myth 8: zero carbon homes are the best way of dealing with
greenhouse gas emissions from buildings
Buildings are responsible for about half the world's emissions;
domestic housing is the most important single source of greenhouse
gases. The UK's insistence that all new homes are "zero carbon" by
2016 sounds like a good idea, but there are two problems. In most
countries, only about 1% of the housing stock is newly built each
year. Tighter building regulations have no effect on the remaining
99%. Second, making a building genuinely zero carbon is extremely
expensive. The few prototype UK homes that have recently reached
this standard have cost twice as much as conventional houses.
Just focusing on new homes and demanding that housebuilders meet
extremely high targets is not the right way to cut emissions.
Instead, we should take a lesson from Germany. A mixture of
subsidies, cheap loans and exhortation is succeeding in getting
hundreds of thousands of older properties eco-renovated each year to
very impressive standards and at reasonable cost. German renovators
are learning lessons from the PassivHaus movement, which has focused
not on reducing carbon emissions to zero, but on using painstaking
methods to cut emissions to 10 or 20% of conventional levels, at a
manageable cost, in both renovations and new homes. The PassivHaus
pioneers have focused on improving insulation, providing far better
air-tightness and warming incoming air in winter, with the hotter
stale air extracted from the house. Careful attention to detail in
both design and building work has produced unexpectedly large cuts
in total energy use. The small extra price paid by householders is
easily outweighed by the savings in electricity and gas. Rather than
demanding totally carbon-neutral housing, the UK should push a
massive programme of eco-renovation and cost-effective techniques
for new construction.
Myth 9: the most efficient power stations are big
Large, modern gas-fired power stations can turn about 60% of the
energy in fuel into electricity. The rest is lost as waste heat.
Even though 5-10% of the electricity will be lost in transmission to
the user, efficiency has still been far better than small-scale
local generation of power. This is changing fast.
New types of tiny combined heat and power plants are able to turn
about half the energy in fuel into electricity, almost matching the
efficiency of huge generators. These are now small enough to be
easily installed in ordinary homes. Not only will they generate
electricity but the surplus heat can be used to heat the house,
meaning that all the energy in gas is productively used. Some types
of air conditioning can even use the heat to power their chillers in
summer.
We think that
microgeneration means wind turbines or solar panels on
the roof, but efficient combined heat and power plants are a far
better prospect for the UK and elsewhere. Within a few years, we
will see these small power plants, perhaps using cellulose-based
renewable fuels and not just gas, in many buildings. Korea is
leading the way by heavily subsidising the early installation of
fuel cells at office buildings and other large electricity users.
Myth 10: all proposed solutions to
climate change need to be
hi-tech
The advanced economies are obsessed with finding hi-tech solutions
to reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Many of these are expensive
and may create as many problems as they solve. Nuclear power is a
good example. But it may be cheaper and more effective to look for
simple solutions that reduce emissions, or even extract existing
carbon dioxide from the air. There are many viable proposals to do
this cheaply around the world, which also often help feed the
world's poorest people. One outstanding example is to use a
substance known as biochar to sequester carbon and increase food
yields at the same time.
Biochar is an astonishing idea. Burning agricultural wastes in the
absence of air leaves a charcoal composed of almost pure carbon,
which can then be crushed and dug into the soil. Biochar is
extremely stable and the carbon will stay in the soil unchanged for
hundreds of years. The original agricultural wastes had captured CO2
from the air through the photosynthesis process; biochar is a
low-tech way of sequestering carbon, effectively for ever. As
importantly, biochar improves fertility in a wide variety of
tropical soils. Beneficial micro-organisms seem to crowd into the
pores of the small pieces of crushed charcoal. A network of
practical engineers around the tropical world is developing the
simple stoves needed to make the charcoal. A few million dollars of
support would allow their research to benefit hundreds of millions
of small farmers at the same time as extracting large quantities of
CO2 from the atmosphere.
• Chris Goodall's new book, Ten Technologies to Save the Planet, is
published by Profile books, priced £9.99.
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