Finding
Solutions for Environmental problems
In finding solutions for environmental problems, Jorma Ollila,
chairman of Royal Dutch Shell argues that “in the global energy
debate over supply, demand and emissions trends, there are no easy
solutions. Rather, the pathways to improvements require simultaneous
actions and behaviour changes on many fronts”. True indeed.
The energy challenge is best understood in terms of “hard
truths.” The first hard truth is that global demand for primary
energy is not just growing, but that demand growth is accelerating.
The main causes are population growth, from six to more than nine
billion people worldwide by 2050, as well as higher levels of prosperity,
with China and India in particular entering the energy-intensive
phase of their development. Energy use in 2050 may be twice as high
as it is today or higher still.
The second hard truth is that the growth rate of supplies of “easy
oil” will struggle to keep up with accelerating demand. Just
when energy demand is surging, many oil provinces are going into
decline. The third hard truth is that continued fossil fuel dominance
in combination with a disproportional high use of coal will cause
higher CO2 emissions, possibly to levels scientists consider irresponsible.
This is a pretty grim picture. And it would indeed be easy to be
discouraged. What are the “solution pathways” that both
enhance energy security and help us to manage emissions? The first
and most obvious solution pathway is energy efficiency. Energy efficiency
has two closely related components. One is energy conservation,
the other is energy performance.
Energy conservation essentially means that we don’t use energy
unless we have to or use as little of it as possible. It involves
simple decisions and choices for each and every one of us. Billions
of energy consumers make tens of billions of small decisions each
day to either use or save energy. In many cases, people opt for
what is most convenient. But there is another side to human nature
the desire to overcome obstacles and improve our performance.
And we must improve our performance for our own sake and that of
future generations. Sustainable development requires sustainable
consumption. Governments may have to stimulate behavioural change
through education, incentives, taxes and regulations. The role of
industry will be to offer solutions that help people to save energy
in a convenient way.
Energy performance is about getting the most out of the energy we
use. Each day, the world generates 225-230 million barrels of oil
equivalent in primary energy. Less than half of that is used in
a productive way. In an average car, about 20% of every unit of
petrol goes into moving a car forward, while the rest is lost as
heat. For an aircraft during take-off, the figure is around 8%.
And only 35% of coal burnt in many existing power plants becomes
electricity. The rest, again, is lost as heat.
The law of thermodynamics dictates that there are limits to how
much we can improve our performance in burning fuels. But we must
improve and we can. In the area of road transport, where most of
the world’s oil is consumed, we are looking for more light-weight
and aerodynamic vehicles, with more efficient engines and clean,
high performance fuels be it diesel or gasoline synthetic fuels
like gas to liquids, biofuels, electricity, hydrogen, compressed
air, or any of these combined.
It can be done. A few years ago, Volkswagen’s then chief executive
Ferdinand Piëch averaged less than one litre per 100 km when
he drove an extremely light and aerodynamic diesel car from Wolfsburg
to Hamburg to join his company’s shareholders meeting. The
vehicle fleet in the European Union is already nearly 40% more efficient
than that of the United States, thanks mainly to higher taxes, which
have driven greater car and engine efficiency.
If U.S. cars were as efficient as European cars, this could cut
U.S. oil consumption by nearly 3.5 million barrels a day or the
equivalent of the combined daily oil consumption of France and Britain!
The global residential sector is another candidate for huge efficiency
gains. It is the largest consumer of energy, with 25% of global
end-use demand. So what else can be done? Take the insulation of
homes. In the Scandinavian countries, it is pretty common for houses
to be equipped with triple-glazed windows. But elsewhere in Europe,
and in other parts of the world, millions of homes are still to
be equipped with double-glazing.
A recent McKinsey report argues that, by implementing high-insulation
building shells, compact fluorescent lighting and high efficiency
water heating, the energy demand growth in the global residential
sector could be more than halved, from 2.4% per year to 1% per year.
A third candidate for better energy performance is the electricity
generation and distribution sector. While thermodynamics imposes
limits, the world would benefit from a higher churning rate of coal-fired
power plants. New plants tend to have higher combustion temperatures
to burn coal more efficiently. With new plants, efficiency typically
goes up to more than 40%.
Moreover, if you equip new power plants with gasification technology,
you can further improve their efficiency. Power plants equipped
with coal gasification technology typically consume less water and
produce less ash and solid waste. They also have lower emissions
of CO2 and much lower emissions of sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide
and particulates. They also enable the pre-combustion capture of
a relatively pure stream of CO2, facilitating CO2 sequestration.
As an illustration of what greater efficiency in the power sector
can do, the International Energy Agency says that if China’s
stock of coal plants had the same efficiency as the average plant
in Japan today, China would use 20% less coal. Building new plants
and introducing new technologies comes at a price. So societies
will have to strike a balance between higher capital and operating
costs on the one hand and energy security and fewer emissions, and
therefore lower environmental and health costs, on the other hand.
Regarding electricity distribution, another way to improve efficiency
in the power sector is to stimulate combined heat and power. Finland,
for example, has over a third of electricity and around 80% of heat
being co-generated rather than generated separately. Power plants
equipped with coal gasification technology have lower emissions
of CO2 and much lower emissions of sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide
and particulates.
The concept can be extended to refineries. A good example is Shell’s
Fredericia refinery in Denmark, one of the most energy-efficient
refineries in the world. Shell sells the surplus heat from the refinery
as district heating to three cities in the vicinity. Downtime for
maintenance at the refinery does not cause problems because the
customers have multiple suppliers.
Another good example is the U.S. state of New York, which has roughly
5,000 MW of combined heat and power capacity installed and is actively
looking for ways to expand that capacity.
(To be continued..)
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