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The following is a review of Amory Lovins, "More Profit with Less Carbon",
Scientific American, September 2005, p. 74. In short, Lovins throws a lot of numbers around, but far too many
of the ones he provides are irrelevant, meaningless, or misleading.
The September 2005 Scientific American, a very good issue generally
on "Crossroads for planet Earth" and the major near-term issues we're
facing, includes an article by Amory Lovins that misleads far
more than it informs. In the article's five sections Lovins pushes
his two major themes of energy efficiency and hydrogen, with a nod
to renewables, asserting that all we need do is take advantage
of existing technologies to both save money and greatly reduce our
use of oil and emissions of carbon dioxide. But the arguments and
numbers he uses to make his case don't add up.
Let's start with Lovins' clearest abuse of numbers in this article,
two instances where reasonable explanation is provided,
as it calls into serious question the care with which the less
well explained numbers have been used. The first example here is
the "Compounding Losses" figure and associated discussion, which
describes the energy lost on the way from a power generator to an
industrial plant moving fluid through a pipeline, with less than 10
percent of the initial fuel energy delivered to the energy of fluid
motion. The clearer, but quite parallel, example is the discussion
following his statement that "the modern car remains astonishingly
inefficient", conveying less than one percent of the energy in
fuel to motion of the driver.
These may well be accurate numbers averaged over modern driving
patterns and industrial fluid use. However accurate they are,
they are not useful because the real purpose in both cases is
not "energy conveyed to driver" or fluid,
dissipated on deceleration. The important measure
is the distance the driver or fluid has been moved. That's why we
count "miles per gallon", not "joules per gallon". If we were
launching the driver into orbit then "energy conveyed to the driver"
would be a useful measure, but space travel is not the transportation
sector Lovins claims to be addressing.
To better see the absurdity of Lovins' metric, imagine how one
could improve it. Because the energy transfer happens only during
acceleration, constantly accelerating and braking a vehicle
would be one way to convey more of the fuel energy to motion of
the driver. Driving at a steady speed, in contrast, conveys no
extra fuel energy to the driver: 100% of the fuel input is lost
to heating the air and road and other waste. Hybrid cars with
regenerative braking recover the energy of the driver (and vehicle)
so the net energy transfer to acceleration is much less in a hybrid
than in a conventional car. Would Lovins argue on this basis that hybrids
are less efficient?
In fluid flow similarly, for steady-state flow down a long pipe, ALL
the energy loss goes to "pipe losses" and those further up the line
and none of it goes to the energy of fluid flow, because that fluid
is already flowing and we're not making it go faster. As with
regenerative braking, flow energy could be recaptured by
turbines at the other end of the pipe, if the fluid flow energy
was that large. Just as with hybrid cars that would reduce the
fraction of net input energy going to Lovins' metric, apparently
making things worse by that number.
The relevant quantity that we are expending energy on in these two
examples is not the energy of motion but the consequence of
motion: moving things from one point to another in a given amount
of time. We're turning our fuel energy into things with economic value,
and the less that's lost in "energy of motion" or other side
quantities, the better.
Another problem with the "Compounding Losses" figure, the "astonishingly
inefficient" modern car comment, and similar statements for example
on "waste heat discarded at U.S. power stations" is a neglect for
the important distinctions between thermal energy and the energy
available for useful work. The laws of thermodynamics imply that thermal
energy (heat) is "low quality" energy and at typical temperatures
(boiling water in coal-fired generators for instance)
only about one third of that heat energy can even theoretically
be converted to mechanical, electrical, or other forms of useful
high quality energy. Some of the inevitable waste heat from
such a generator can be "recycled" through co-generation arrangements,
but efficiency and generating capacity numbers in those cases should
be reduced because heating is a low quality application of energy.
It is not evident Lovins has made this separation in the numbers
associated with his "Electricity Alternatives" graph.
Heat pumps can provide up to three times as much heat energy
as electrical input, for instance, so thermal and electrical
energy capacities and efficiencies should never be just lumped together.
So the "70%" (really 65-67%) waste in coal-electricity generation
or the 75-80% waste in vehicle internal combustion engines is simply
not in a territory that's available to significant efficiency
improvements, as long as we're turning fuel into useful work
through combustion.
There are other ways to convert the chemical energy of fuel to
useful work. In particular fuel cells can have efficiencies as high as
90% when run slowly under lab conditions. But in practice when
producing useful levels of power for their size, they do only
marginally better than combustion. That leaves theoretical room
for improvement, but we have nowhere near the technology today
to recover any significant part of that wasted 50-70% of our fuel.
Nevertheless, Lovins repeatedly harks back to this inevitable waste
when he emphasizes that "small reductions in
the power used at the downstream end can enormously lower the
required input at the upstream end", "every unit of energy saved
at the wheels ... will save an additional seven units of energy now
lost on route", "Europe and Japan ... are up to twice as efficient
as the U.S., but they still have a long way to go." and so forth.
Are these statements even relevant or informative? A 10% average
improvement downstream would cut upstream energy use the same 10%; that's
what we care about generally, not the exact number of kW-hrs saved by
the more efficient appliance or vehicle.
The "Compounding Losses" figure also misleads in another rather
subtle way. While in the text Lovins usually makes numerical
comparisons on a total energy basis, in the figure the percentages
quoted are losses at that stage relative to input to the stage,
not losses relative to the original fuel input. For instance, the
9% quoted loss to transmission and distribution is not 9 units out
of the 30 units of energy delivered to the grid, but only 2.7 units
of those 30. The graphic design makes this clear enough, but from
the numbers some readers might end up thinking grid-related
losses are much more significant than in reality.
Further on, Lovins strangely attacks gas turbine generators, which
are actually more efficient at converting fuel to useful
work than both conventional steam turbines and practical high-power
fuel cells, with waste reduced to perhaps 40-45% of the input energy.
Gas turbines manage this feat by creating both mechanical
and heat energy when burning instead of just heat; coal gasification
can allow coal to take advantage of this technology as well as
natural gas, possibly extracting 50% more energy out of each ton
of coal. Nevertheless, Lovins in a bout of illogic states
that gas turbines are "so wasteful ... saving 1 percent of
electricity would cut ... consumption by 2 percent and its price
by 3 or 4 percent". The alert reader will note that the sizes of those
percentages are not increased by the wastefulness of gas turbine
generators, rather the reverse: the fact that gas turbines are
so efficient makes natural gas that much more valuable when electricity
is needed.
The cause of Lovins' attack on use of natural gas for electric power
production seems to be a conviction that it can be more useful
for vehicle fuel - preferably by converting it to hydrogen. Use for
electric power drives up the fuel price, making hydrogen that
much more expensive. But surely, for somebody promoting efficiency,
isn't it better to have natural gas converted to useful work
where it can be done with the highest efficiently, ie. at a gas turbine
power plant?
Lighting is certainly one area where there is great room for
efficiency imrpovements, and some promise: Lovins rightly points out
the position of compact fluorescent bulbs now. There's little excuse
for anybody to buy incandescent bulbs for most purposes, though defects
in earlier generations of these bulbs have likely made many
consumers shy away so far. LED lighting should improve things even more
in the near future.
There certainly is also room in transportation for efficiency
improvements. It's odd that Lovins makes no mention of expanding
mass transit - rather he talks about the utopian "New Urbanism" where
all you need is within a five-minute walk. The specific vehicle
highlighted, the 5-passenger concept SUV "Revolution", is touted
as being capable of tripling average fuel efficiency through
"ultralight" materials. Strangely Lovins first talks about carbon-fiber
composites capable of absorbing 6-12 times more crash energy per unit
weight than steel, and allowing factories to be 40% smaller with no
need for painting, and then states that "new ultralight steels" could
subsitute if the composites "prove unready". How could less steel
provide higher crash protection and smaller factories again? In any
case, Lovins' SUV design is claimed to achieve a fuel economy
"equivalent to" 114 mpg, and with a small fuel cell requires "only one
third as much hydrogen" in "off-the-shelf" components to travel
530 kilometers (in a quick switch to metric, Lovins was perhaps
trying to hide the rather low 330 mile range).
One would think that the fact hydrogen requires an "ultralight" vehicle
to even achieve that limited range would suggest something is wrong here.
How efficient would a hybrid power train be in such a vehicle? And
if efficiency is the only goal, why not push for purely electric
(battery-powered) vehicles, which can have net efficiencies two to
six times that of hydrogen?
Some of Lovins' other discussion, on renewables and nuclear energy,
and on savings from efficiency, seem fine if a little on
the overly rosy side. In reality there's a lot of effort and probably
government investment required to make any of the steps he mentions
a significant factor in energy use, but that's all swept under the
rug here.
Lovins also repeatedly compares our energy intensity (energy use
per dollar of GDP) with that from 30 years ago, or the improvements
from 1977 to 1985 or 1978 to 1987 in a couple of cases. As we
should all remember, that brief period of the late 1970s was rather
exceptional due to the oil shocks and perhaps also
thanks to Jimmy Carter's presidential leadership on
energy issues. With oil prices rising to similar levels again today
there may be hope of a similar set of improvements in store; oddly
however Lovins opposes European-style high fuel taxes to accelerate
such progress, as these "cut driving more than they make new
cars efficient". Is that really a problem?
Lovins does quote an EPA official who claims a 2.1 percent annual
improvement in US energy intensity over the past ten years, attributed
to "prudent choices ... with the shift to a more
information- and service-based economy", indicating we have been making
real progress recently. But even if the number is
correct, it is meaningless on a world-wide scale, as the shift
in our economy has just exported energy-intensive industry elsewhere.
Lovins throws a lot of numbers around, but unfortunately too many
of the ones he provides are irrelevant, meaningless, or misleading.
There are some good points in here, but missing are the really important
numbers on real-world costs and realistic adoption rates. Those
numbers would show that in reality we have a very difficult road
ahead of us, far more so than the complacent picture of technological
readiness Lovins portrays. |
Arthur Smiths criticism lacks teeth Written by Todd Flach on 2005-11-03 14:44:47 Smith should have used his energy to realize that the average US automobile could easily get twice the gas mileage using simple, cheap, readily available technology. Applying more expensive but still available technology could triple the current US auto fuel efficiency. Instead Smith wrote 2021 words that split hairs on Lovins use of a graphics and analogies. Sorry Smith, Lovins still wins this debate! | Some bad news, some good ... Written by GRLCowan on 2005-11-11 21:26:34 The bad news is, you're no longer A. P. Smith. The good news is, you now have a distinguished playwriting resumé. --- Graham Cowan, former hydrogen fan boron as energy carrier: real-car range, nuclear cachet |
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