"Smart, safe, and just: Goals for the global energy system" Robert Socolow Princeton University...
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Transcript of "Smart, safe, and just: Goals for the global energy system" Robert Socolow Princeton University...
"Smart, safe, and just: Goals for the global energy system"
Robert SocolowPrinceton [email protected]
Dennis Anderson Memorial LectureNovember 23, 2010
Imperial College, London South Kensington Campus, Lecture Theatre 220
Dennis Anderson 1937-2008
Source: Marsaleete Anderson
“A Sheffield lad”
Source: Marsaleete Anderson, photo from 2004. A model of a butane-powered York-Bolton Mill Engine and Steam Plant
Dennis’ Preferences
• Efficiency first• Nuclear power, as we know it, is a menace• Renewables are compelling• The poor get priority
I resonate with all four themes. I will be showing at least a few slides on each.
There is a big new idea here.
I am a science teacher. A teacher’s job is to prepare students for what lies ahead of them. We want especially to make our students comfortable with ideas that were not familiar to previous generations.
There is a big new idea here.
Human beings are able to change the small planet we live on
For the first time in history, for better or for worse, human beings are powerful enough to affect the whole planet. Forests have been cleared and fisheries have been depleted on a global scale. Most of the low-cost oil has been found. The surface oceans are already more acidic. These are quantitative observations.
Our new assignment: “Fitting on the planet.”
Our exuberance is the problem
The Earth’s smallness is the result of the dominance of democratic values, consumer values, and the values of self-realization.
The collision with environmental limits was prominently foretold in the 1970s (e.g., Limits to Growth), but we chose to shoot the messenger rather than to heed her.
Don’t shoot the messenger
Twice before, the messenger was shot.
Galileo argued that the earth wasn’t at the center of the universe and was excommunicated.
Darwin argued that human beings were part of the animal kingdom and was cruelly mocked.
This is a similar time. We can change the planet.
The idea that humans can’t change our planet is as out-of-date and wrong as the earth-centered universe.
We would much rather live on a planet that was harder to change.
When the first doctor we consult brings us a diagnosis we don’t like, we should seek a second opinion.
But there’s a time to move on.
Grounds for optimism
• The world today has a terribly inefficient energy system.
• Carbon emissions have just begun to be priced.
• Most of the 2060 physical plant is not yet built.
• Very smart scientists and engineers now find energy problems exciting.
Many new infrastructures
Infrastructures for efficient energy
Carbon dioxide infrastructure
Nuclear fuel cycle infrastructure
Renewables and the electric grid
The past 50 years: U.S. National Highway System
Efficient use of fuel
U.S. vehicle-miles traveled, two views
Sources: Left: U.S. PIRG Education Fund, 2007. The Carbon Boom: State and National Trends in Carbon Dioxide Emissions Since 1990, April 2007 (44 pp.), p. 27. Right: American Physical Society, 2008. Energy Future: Think Efficiency.
Efficient Use of Electricity
Measure, learn, iterate. (Trust, but verify.)
U.S. electricity growth rate is falling(3-year rolling average percent growth)
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030
ProjectionsPeriod Annual Growth
1950s 9.0
1960s 7.3
1970s 4.2
1980s 3.1
1990s 2.4
2000-2006 1.2
2006-2030 1.1
Exponential curve (20 years for rate to fall by half): EIA
Per
cen
t p
er y
ear
ProjectionsPeriod Annual Growth
1950s 9.0
1960s 7.3
1970s 4.2
1980s 3.1
1990s 2.4
2000-2006 1.2
2006-2030 1.1
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030Nothing in physics or economics forbids negative values! Blue dashed line: RHS.
Per
cen
t p
er y
ear
U.S. electricity growth rate is falling(3-year rolling average percent growth)
Is peak energy demand behind us?
If the OECD takes efficiency seriously, annual consumption from now on could be less than in any past year – for both:
• oil consumption
• electric power consumption
China’s appliance standards
Business as Usual: CO2 emissions from air conditioners in 2020 are 9x those in 2000.New Air Conditioner Standard: Down 25% (45 MtCO2/yr) in 2020.
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
20002002200420062008201020122014201620182020
50 million new, efficient air conditioners per year in 2020
Many new infrastructures
Infrastructures for efficient energy
Carbon dioxide infrastructure
Nuclear fuel cycle infrastructure
Renewables and the electric grid
The past 50 years: U.S. power plants
Source: Benchmarking Air Emissions, April 2006. The report was co-sponsored by CERES, NRDC and PSEG.
Capacity, total by source
0
10000
20000
30000
40000
50000
60000
70000
80000
1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000
year of initial operation
meg
awat
t
Other
Renewables
Water
Nuclear
Gas
Oil
Coal
U.S. Power Plant Capacity, by Vintage
Issues: Grandfathering, retirement, relicensing, retrofit, repowering
Source: EIA. [email protected]
Zero minus zero equals zero
If there is no load growth* and there are no retirements, then nothing new is needed.
*Demand can grow in some regions and fall in others.
The future coal power plantShown here: After 10 years of operation of a 1000 MW coal plant, 60 Mt (90 Mm3) of CO2 have been injected, filling a horizontal area of 40 km2 in each of two formations.
Assumptions:• 10% porosity• 1/3 of pore space
accessed• 60 m total vertical height for
the two formations.
• Note: Plant is still young.
Injection rate is 150,000 bbl(CO2)/day, or 300 million standard cubic feet/day (scfd). 3 billion barrels, or 6 trillion standard cubic feet, over 60 years.
U.S. CO2 pipeline infrastructure
Source: "Reducing CO2 Emissions from Coal-Fired Power Plants," John Wheeldon, EPRI, presented at the CCTR Advisory Panel Meeting, Vincennes University, Vincennes IN, September 10, 2009. Reproduced in Science Applications International Corporation, Indiana and Coal: Keeping Indiana Energy Cost Competitive, June 2010, Fig. 2-15, submitted to Indiana Center for Coal Technology Research
Denbury proposes to send Indiana CO2 to the Gulf states.
An Ohio Valley CO2 pipeline network instead? Advantages:
More local jobs
Greater storage volume
Less climate change.
CO2 capture from Algerian gas
In Salah, Algeria, natural gas purification
amine contactor towers
AEP Mountaineer Plant, 2009, WV
Source: Alstom via Yale 360, February 18, 2010
Mountaineer is the first power plant in the world to capture and store carbon dioxide.
Many new infrastructures
Infrastructures for efficient energy
Carbon dioxide infrastructure
Nuclear fuel cycle infrastructure
Renewables and the electric grid
Site: Surry station, James River, VA; 1625 MW since 1972-73,. Credit: Dominion.
Fission power with dry-cask storage
Low-cost, concealable enrichment
Global Enrichment Capacity, 2008
Source: Alex Glaser, MAE Seminar, 4-15-09
Unit: ton-SWU/yr
1000 GW plant:100-150 tSWU/yr
≈ 50 tons owned by
Germany & Japan
Separated civilian plutonium
World stock of separated civilian plutonium: 30,000 Nagasaki-equivalents and still growing (International Panel on Fissile Materials)
France’s reprocessing plant, La Hague (1700 tons/yr)
Source: Robert H. Socolow & Alexander Glaser, “Balancing risks: nuclear energy & climate change,” Daedalus, 2009.
Military- and Civilian-Separated Plutonium
Proliferation and the futility of a two-tier, supplier-user world
A Story:
In May 2006, in Delhi, I asked several leaders of the Indian nuclear enterprise to comment on the merits of a supplier-user arrangement of the world. They refused to do so until they knew in which category India would be.
If the U.S. had informed them that they were users, would they have gone underground?
Wise global nuclear power
• Safety: Create counter-incentives to plant relicensing, so that aging plants are retired.
• Storage: Revise the contract with society in favor of retrievable storage. Deploy dry-cask storage.
• Proliferation, plutonium: Indefinitely postpone U.S. reprocessing and end reprocessing elsewhere.
• Proliferation, uranium: Place all enrichment facilities, including ours, under international governance.
• Governance: Establish a one-tier world.
Many new infrastructures
Infrastructures for efficient energy
Carbon dioxide infrastructure
Nuclear fuel cycle infrastructure
Renewables and the electric grid
Power Sector CO2 Emissions & Sharesof Nuclear Power & Renewables, 2004
Source: WEO 2006
Wind farms out of sight
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/04/nyregion/04wind.html?ref=nyregion, New York Times, October 3, 2008.
Offshore New Jersey: 96 turbines, 346 MW, 16 to 20 miles from coast. $1 billion project. Power “starting in 2013.”
Offshore “transmission backbone”
Announced, Oct 12, 2010
$5 billion project. $200 million initially from Google, Good Energy.
350-mile, 6000 MW transmission line,
federal waters, 15-20 miles offshore.
Source: October 12, 2010, NYT
Electric transmission for the low-carbon future
Every “solution” can be implemented well or poorly
Every “solution” has a dark side.
Conservation Regimentation
Renewables Competing uses of land
“Clean coal” Unsafe mining, land impacts
Nuclear power Nuclear war
Geoengineering Technological hegemony
Risk management
We must trade the risks of disruption from climate change against the risks of disruption from mitigation…
…and search for an optimum pace.
Hippocratic oath
I will apply, for the benefit of the sick, all measures that are required, avoiding those twin traps of overtreatment and therapeutic nihilism.*
* Modern version, Louis Lasagna, 1964, http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/doctors/oath_modern.html
Safe vs. Fair
Safe vs. Fair
If “fair” is a per capita concept and the unit of attention is the nation:
Safe is not fair.Fair is not safe.
Including historical emissions, “fair” is in even sharper conflict with “safe.”
Beyond per capita
We can’t solve the climate problem without moving beyond “per capita” – looking inside countries.
Where do the “high-emitters” live?
We project that in 2030, 1.2 billion “high-emitters” will be responsible for 60% of the world’s emissions…
… and half of these high-emitters will live outside the OECD.
2030
2003
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1
2-10
<2
2030
2003
0.00% 20.00% 40.00% 60.00% 80.00% 100.00%
USA other OECDChina other nonOECD
2030
2003
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1
>10
Four-way distribution of emitters
National Emissions
Target
Required ReductionsPersonal Emissions Cap
+ + + + +
+
=
=
Individual emissions above a cap determine national reductions
Source: Steve Pacala, private communication, 2008
What about the low emitters?
No. 1 health impact of energy
2030
2003
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1
2-10
<2
2030
2003
0.00% 20.00% 40.00% 60.00% 80.00% 100.00%
USA other OECDChina other nonOECD
2030
2003
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1
>10
Population distribution across 4 regionsThe poor need not be denied fossil fuels
Combine a global-emissions cap and an individual-emissions floor
Individual cap:without floor: 10.8 t CO2
with floor: 9.6 t CO2
1
The world’s poor do not need to be denied fossil fuels
What does 1 tCO2/person-yr allow?
Direct Energy Use
Household rate of use (4.5 people)
Individual emissions (kgCO2/yr)
Cooking 1 LPG canister per month
120
Transport 70 km by bus, car, motorbike per day
220
Electricity 800 kWh per year 160
Total 500
1 tCO2/yr: Double the “direct” emissions to account for “indirect” emissions.
Required: a multiplicity of empathies
Planetary and collective
Abstract
Uncertain risks, havoc possible
Entails a half-century of action
Local and individual
Vivid
Bounded outcomes
Produces benefits in days
The developing world will decide what kind of planet we live on.
For a while longer, the industrialized countries will lead.
Post-post-colonialism
The North-South relationship needs marriage counseling. The two partners are not listening to each other.
The UNFCCC, a post-colonial institution, affirms a two-tier world. Annex I expresses guilt. Non-Annex I expresses entitlement.
Needed: post-post-colonial institutions.
Planetary identity
In the process of taking climate change seriously, we develop a planetary identity.
We augment our previous loyalties to family, village, tribe, and nation.
Do you have a planetary identity?
Prospicience
Prospicience: “The art [and science] of looking ahead.”
In the past 50 years we have become aware of the history of our Universe, our Earth, and life.
Can we achieve a comparable understanding of human civilization at various future times: 50 years ahead – vs. 500 years and vs. 5000 years?
We have scarcely begun to ask: What are we on Earth to do?
Co-authors, recent papersWedges
Steve PacalaRoberta HotinskiJeff Greenblatt (now, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory)
Nuclear powerAlex Glaser
One-billion high emittersShoibal ChakravartyMassimo Tavoni (FEEM, Milan)Steve PacalaAnanth Chikkatur (then, Harvard; now ICF in D.C.)Heleen de Coninck (ECN, Netherlands)