The following was sent by contributor Martin Hoffert of New York University, who has recently written extensively on energy technology requirements for stabilizing the climate. The most dramatic image here is the chart of US government funding priorities for the past 5 decades:
showing an absolute abdication of responsibility by the US since 1980 in funding relevant energy research.
Low-Carbon Sustainable Energy in the Greenhouse Century?
presented at
"Whole Earth Systems: Science, Technology and Policy.
A Festschrift for Steve Schneider"
Stanford University, Feb. 10-12, 2005
by
Marty Hoffert, Physics Department
New York University, New York, NY
Limiting atmospheric carbon dioxide emissions to minimize "dangerous
anthropogenic interference" with climate as the human economy
continues its historical growth will require a revolutionary change
of the world energy system. For example, holding global warming
below "only" 2 degrees Celsius -- an amount which could itself
create serious adverse impacts -- implies adding the equivalent of
one large power plant per day emitting no CO2; or comparable
reductions in demand in the sense of Lovins' "negawatts " by
improvements in energy efficiency and/or energy-conserving behavior.
Massive emission cuts increasing with time relative to those that
would be produced if carbon intensity (C/E) remained constant will
be needed, with emissions declining to near zero by the century's
end.
Civilization today is energized overwhelmingly by fossil fuels,
increasingly we predict by high-carbon-emitting coal, as oil and
gas production will likely peak in coming decades, and energy demand
continues to rise. Beyond the screen of obfuscation and denial of
global warming by "skeptics" and special interests are emerging
policy questions: Can "existing" energy technology simultaneously
run the world economy and stabilize the fossil fuel greenhouse? Or,
as I will argue, is an aggressive R & D effort led by the US urgently
needed to develop new high-technology energy sources in parallel
with implementation of existing emission-limiting measures? Holding
that "technology exists" is the IPCC Third Assessment Report
mitigation working group who in their Summary for Policymakers said
"known technological options could achieve a broad range of atmospheric
CO2 stabilization levels, such as 550 ppm, 450 ppm, or below over
the next 100 years," defining "known technological options" as
already existing in operation or in pilot plants. This definition
excludes carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) plants -- perhaps
the most "market ready" technology -- because first pilot plant
won't exist until 2010 at best. Likewise, Pacala and Socolow claim
that "Humanity already possesses the fundamental scientific,
technical, and industrial know-how to solve the climate problem for
the next half century." This might be the case in the sense that
humanity had the know-how to build nuclear weapons in the late 30s
or go to the Moon in the 50s. But it took the Manhattan and Apollo
programs to make it so.
Stabilizing climate change is a hard problem. I will argue that
although technologies capable of slowing global warming cost and
otherwise effectively over the next fifty years don't exist in an
operational sense, they can be developed, and deployed in time to
matter, if broad-spectrum research, development and demonstration
were initiated now, preferably with the urgency of World War II
mobilization. This is justified by the threat of global warming,
but is no excuse for not deploying emission-limiting measures that
can be implemented today.
An assessment is presented of fossil fuel (with CCS), nuclear and
renewable energy technologies options, and of enabling transmission
and storage technologies, to supply the required amounts of
emission-free power at the required times. In light of the 10-100
year time scale -- roughly 60 years separate the Wright brothers
from Neil Armstrong's walk on Moon -- emphasis is placed on innovative
opportunities from recent discoveries in material science
(high-temperature superconductivity, carbon nanotubes); the geophysics
of available energy fluxes in space (solar power satellites, lunar
power systems), at Earth's surface (Massive offshore wind farms,
PV panels in the US southwest and the Sahara), tropospheric jet
streams (tethered high-altitude autogyros) and in ocean boundary
currents (seawater uranium harvesting) and geothermal heat flows
(hot rock drilling & mining for heat); and electric grid and storage
systems supportive of renewable energy (direct current, superconducting
and smart grids, distributed generation, hydro, flywheel and
inductive electrical storage); and approaches to replacing liquid
hydrocarbons derived from fossil fuels (hydrogen, CO2 removal from
the atmosphere, biofuels, microwave beaming to cars and aircraft).
As with biological evolution, technology evolution requires mutations.
Most mutations are unsuccessful. But without them evolution stops.
Some who characterize advanced energy technologies to reduce carbon
emissions as "blue sky" might have said the same of flying machines
and radio a hundred years ago, when innovations like computers and
nuclear reactors would have been to most pundits unimaginable.
History suggests we avoid such dismissals. Particularly telling
is the recent 911 Commission finding that the greatest failure by
intelligence organizations in anticipating fundamental challenges
to our civilization like 911 was "failure of imagination."
[Editors's note: the remainder of this article derives from Hoffert's actual presentation, so images outweigh the text.]
Global warming in the last millenium
Very rapidly we've entered uncharted climatic territory - the
anthropocene. Over the 20th century, human population
quadrupled and energy consumption increased
sixteenfold. Near the end of the last century, a critical threshold
was crossed, and warming from the fossil fuel greenhouse became
a dominant factor in climate change. Hemispheric mean
surface temperature is higher today than at any time in the last
millennium -- the so-called Mann et al. "hockey stick."
Temperatures are likely to go "off the scale" in the 21st century.
Ken Caldeira, Atul Jain, and Martin Hoffert published on
"Climate Sensitivity Uncertainty and the Need for Energy
Without CO2 Emission", in the March 28, 2003
issue of science:
The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change calls for
"stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations at a level that
would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the
climate system." Even if we could determine a "safe" level
of interference in the climate system, the sensitivity of
global mean temperature to increasing CO2 is known
perhaps only to a factor of three or less. Here we show how a factor
of three uncertainty in climate sensitivity introduces
even greater uncertainty in allowable increases in atmospheric
CO2 concentration and allowable CO2 emissions.
Nevertheless, unless climate sensitivity is low and acceptable amounts
of climate change are high, climate stabilization will require a massive
transition to CO2 emission-free energy technologies.
Figure 3: Mean rate of increase in installed capacity
in carbon-emission-free primary power
required over the period from year 2000
to year 2050 to stabilize climate, shown as
a function of climate sensitivity to a carbon
dioxide doubling and equilibrium global
warming for the GDP and energy demand
growth assumptions of the IPCC IS92a
scenario. To hold global warming below 2oC
with a climate sensitivity of 2.5 degrees C/CO2
doubling requires adding the equivalent of
one 1000 MW (thermal) emission-free
power plant every day for the next 50 years.
Figure 5: Per Capita Carbon Emissions Versus Per Capita GDP
of 100 Nations
Note that carbon intensity is defined as the ratio of
carbon emissions to GDP (gross domestic product). It can
be broken down as the product of energy intensity E/GDP and
the carbon emission factor, C/E
What does the SRES emission uncertainty range mean?
(Editor's note: SRES = IPCC Special Report on Emissions Scenarios)
Figure 6:
Global carbon dioxide emssions related to energy and industry from 1900 to
1990 and for 40 SRES scenarios from 1990 to 2100, shown as an index (1900 =
1). Colored lines are individual SRES scenarios. The area shaded in blue is the
range of scenarios in the literature documented in the SRES database.
Fossil Fuel Emissions and Stabilization Triangles
ExxonMobil Energy Projections
Milestones in predicting the probable evolution of societies
- Isaac Asimov in his sf "Foundation" novels imagines the science of
"psychohistory" -- a fusion of statistics and psychology capable of
predicting the evolution of socio-economic "conglomerates,"
including collapses (e.g., of galactic empires patterned on Rome's).
- US Central Intelligence Agency founded in early cold war with the
expectation that social sciences
would attain the predictability of the physical sciences. In light of the
CIA's repeated failures to predict critical events (US hostage-taking by
Iranians, collapse of Former Soviet Union, Iraq attack on Kuwait,
Al Qaeda attack on US, WMD fiasco, etc.) it hasn't worked out that way.
- Meadows et al. in the 70s produce "Limits to Growth" study
sponsored by Club of Rome incorporating resource limitations and nonlinear
computer model of social system pioneered by Jay Forrester of MIT.
Results are attacked by economists.
- That nonlinear dynamics and chaos limit actual predictability of in
principle deterministic systems (I.e., from "the butterfly effect") and
that unpredictable "emergent behaviors" characterize complex
systems is increasingly appreciated.
- Paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould emphasizes the role of historical
contingency in biological evolution. "Rewind the tape of evolution
and replay it and we'd likely not be here." Likewise, for human
history: Had Hitler been killed in Munich, or Rickover joined the
Army, or bin Laden's mother miscarried, we'd be on different
historical trajectories.
- Mainstream physics & cosmology accept "many worlds" interpretation:
". . .If one accepts that formalism and reality are isomorphic, then in
the quantum theory one is obliged to accept a stupendous number of
simultaneous realities, namely, all the possible outcomes of quantum
measurements as well as all the possible "classical" worlds that
emerge spontaneously from the wavefunction of the universe through
the phenomenon of decoherence." -- Bryce DeWitt
Many Worlds?
A popular hypothesis of cosmology and quantum mechanics is that
universe is continually split into infinite parallel versions, with outcomes
covering every possible situation. Their probabilities are described by
wavefunctions, much as an electron's position is. If we only knew
them for the 40 SRES scenarios. . .
Will civilization crash this century?
Plots are the "standard world model" run
from Meadow's (1974) "Limits to Growth"
sponsored by the Club of Rome which
assumed no major change in physical,
economic or social relationships that have
historically governed the devlopment of the
world system. All variables follow historical
values from 1900 to 1970. Food, industrial
output, and population grow exponentially
until the rapidly diminishing resource base
forces a slowdown in industrial growth.
Because of natural delays in the system,
both population and pollution continue to
increase for some time after the peak of
industrialization. Population growth is
finally halted by a rise in the death rate due
to decreased food and medical services.
That resource scarcity limits economic
growth as embodied in this model is
fundamentally opposed by the boundless
growth paradigm of market economics
embodied in IPCC SRES scenarios.
Fossil fuel electricity from steam turbine cycles:
Fossil fuel CO2 sequestration and burial
rates to generate 10 TW emission-free:
Mass-produced widely distributed PV
arrays and wind turbines may eventually
generate 10-30 TW emission-free:
Nuclear choices
(LEFT) The conventional light water reactor (LWR)
employs water as both coolant and working fluid.
(RIGHT) The helium-cooled, graphite-moderated, pebble
bed, modular nuclear fission reactor is theoretically
immune to loss of coolant (TMI) and criticality
(Chernobyl) accidents.
Pathway to Stabilization of Atmospheric Emissions
Physics offers both opportunities and limits on new technologies;
but predicting winners can be hazardous. For example:
There has been a great deal said about a 3,000 mile high
angle rocket. In my opinion such a thing is impossible for
many years. The people who have been writing these things
that annoy me, have been talking about a 3,000 mile highangle
rocket shot from one continent to another, carrying an
atomic bomb and so directed as to be a precise weapon which
would land exactly on a certain target, such as a city.
I say, technically, I don’t think anyone in the world knows
how to do such a thing, and I feel confident that it will not be
done for a very long period of time to come . . . I wish the
American Public would leave that out of their thinking.
Vannevar Bush, Head of US scientific WW II effort (in 1945)
Arthur C. Clarke's Laws of Technological Prophecy
- When a distinguished but elderly scientist states
that something is possible he is almost certainly
right. When he states that something is impossible,
he is very probably wrong.
- The only way of discovering the limits of the
possible is to venture a little way past them into the
impossible.
- Any sufficiently advanced technology is
indistinguishable from magic.
"Bucky" Fuller's global electrical grid:
- proposed in the
1970s augmented with computerized load management and high-temperature
superconducting (HTS) cables could transmit electricity
from day to night locations and foster low-loss distribution from
remote, episodic or dangerous power sources. The resistivity of
copper oxide HTS wires vanishes below the 77 K boiling point of liquid
N2 available from air.
Could HTS nanotubes do the job someday?
Capturing and controlling space solar power:
Figure 18: (Left) Wireless power from space could enable developing nations
to avoid fossil-fuel-based industrialization. Ultralight large SPS aperture
antennas and other components could be fostered by nanotechnology.
(Right) Deflecting sunlight with a 2000 km flat lens at the L1
Lagrange point or intentional aerosol injections to the stratosphere
are potential "worst case" mitigators of global warming.
Fusion paths
The most successful approach to fusion so far
has been has been confining a D-T plasma (in
purple) with complex magnetic fields in a "bagel"-shaped
chamber (a tokamak). "Breakeven" requires that the plasma
triple product (= number density X confinement time X temperature)
attain a critical value; as it has nearly done in recent
experiments. A fusion-fission hybrid breeder based on tokamak
research may be feasible prior to a fully fusion power reactor.
Experiments on advanced fusion fuel cycles and simpler designs are also
needed -- like the levitated dipole experiment at MIT shown above.
Energy Applications of Carbon Nanotubes
Figure 20: CG image of carbon nanotube.
Hydrogen Storage: High H2 sorption may result
from polarization inside tubes enhanced by dopants
Figure 21: Superconducting nanotubes inside zeolite pores (inset),
against backdrop of zeolite crystals. COURTESY OF PING SHENG AND
NING WANG.
Superconductivity: So far, electron-hole doped
fullerenes superconduct at temps < 52 K
Nanotube-Enabled Space Elevators
Climbing into space on ultrastrong tethers --
possibly carbon nanotubes -- a space
elevator could provide cheap access to orbit
someday. This visualization appeared in
an article by T. Ferris in the NY Times Magazine
28 Nov. 1999, where the price of carbon nanotubes
was estimated at ~ $1000/gm. Cost
breakthroughs could enable this technology, as
well as large aperture microwave antennae and
solar polar satellites even sooner.
History of US Federal Government R&D
deja vu: The double-finned beast
on a microwave tower in the middle
right of the collage at left is the
Lebost Wind Turbine (LWT). The top
is an image from an interview Jane
Pauley of the NBC Today show did
with me live from the Barney
Building roof in the summer of '79
shortly after the LWT went up. The
winning architectural design for the
WTC reconstruction, the Freedom
Tower by Daniel Liebeskin and David
Child, is projected to contain wind
turbines inside its open cabletensioned
upper structure, sufficient
to generate 20% of the building's
electricity -- the first wind turbine
in lower Manhattan since we built
the NYU LWT during the "Energy
Crisis" of the 1970's.
We don't have 25 years to wait for
the next ones.
Research and Demonstrations
- An Apollo-like program in alternate energy is needed over a
broad spectrum of mitigation technologies. US should provide
leadership. Goal is to provide options capable of transforming
global energy system to one that can generate 10-30 TW
primary power CO2-emission-free by 2050.
- Strategic technologies need to be identified and
demonstrations conducted in user-friendly, energy-efficient
renewably-powered communities, "zero-emission" fossil-fueled
plants with CO2 sequestered, "air capture" of CO2,
hydrogen storage, global scale and "smart" electrical transmission grids,
operationally safe and proliferation resistant fission reactors &
breeders, wireless power transmission and space solar power,
fusion power, fission-fusion & particle accelerator hybrids.
- Near-term emphasis on "leapfrog" technologies for alternate
industrialization paths (i.e., solar power satellite demonstration
collaborative project of US/NASA, IPCC, developing nations).
- Nanotech can be major player if cost barriers fall. Are
molecular assemblers ("Engines of Creation") real or SF?
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hmmm... Written by alizard on 2005-02-02 07:28:58 I don't recognize conservation as a viable option. The expanding demand of the Third World dwarfs anything which we can do short of duplicating the Third World lifestyles the Third World itself is quite reasonably trying to escape. An Apollo-like program in alternate energy is needed over a broad spectrum of mitigation technologies. This is the only portion I really disagree, and only in part. I think we need to identify a handful of the most cost-effective technologies and make business and political cases for them. If sufficiently good business cases can be made for developing and deploying the most cost-effective technologies, we win. This means we need to look at the lowest development costs to bring to market and the lowest costs per unit energy. If a sufficiently good case can be made politically for Federally funding R&D projects to get them to the point where the business case is obvious, there is a good chance of being able to mobilize enough people and business support to get the money out of Congress. But I doubt that this can be done for more than a handful of the most promising projects. Equally important, we need to take technologies OFF the table. Hydrogen isn't the only dead horse that needs to be beaten. Another example of Very Bad Ideas: The case against carbon sequestration needs to be made. The simplest reason is that if coal energy isn't cheap energy, why bother with it? Does anybody see cheap energy solutions that include piping CO2 to coastal areas and pumping it into the ocean? What else should be taken off the table for the next generation or so? |
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