// lecture 35 Flashcards

1
Q

benefits of fracking

A
  • domestic oil and natural gas production in the usa
  • less dependence on imported oil
  • lowers gasoline prices
  • provides jobs in north dakota
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2
Q

willie soon: climate denier

A
  • from the harvard-smithsonian center for astrophysics scientist
  • documents show that he accepted money from the fossil fuel industry to write papers for scientific journals and did not disclose the source of his funding.
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3
Q

exxon mobil and GW denial

A
  • formerly standard oil from which the rockefeller family made its fortune
  • rockerfeller family has gone out of its way to show that
  • exxon mobil worked to deny climate change, even though they knew based on numerous briefings from their own scientists that it was a serious problem directly related to fossil fuel use
  • they undertook a program to deny and obfuscate the facts
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4
Q

stabilizing atmospheric CO2 at ~500 ppm

A
  • in 2004, Pascala and Socolow proposed a scheme to achieve this goal
  • phase 1: no further increase in emissions until 2054, with energy production still increasing rapidly. ramping up existing technologies to do this.
  • phase 2: after 2054, rapid reductions in global emissions. final emissions of all GHGs must level off by ~2100 to ~1.5 Gt/yr or ~20% of present global emissions
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5
Q

what is a wedge?

A

a wedge is a strategy to reduce carbon emissions that grows in 50 years from zero to 1.0 GtC/yr so total 25 gigatons of carbon reduced.

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6
Q

pholtovoltaic (solar) power

A
  • effort needed for 2055 for one wedge:
  • 2000 GW (peak) - 700 times current capacity
  • 2 million hectarces (about 12% the size of WA): roofs can be used though
  • would require 14% increase per year (we’re currently increasing at 30% per year)
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7
Q

nuclear electricity

A
  • effort needed by 2055 for 1 wedge: 700 GW displacing coal power.
  • No new nuclear power plants have been built in the US for a long time, because of Three Mile Island and Chernobyl problems. Problem with waste disposal. NIMBY
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8
Q

fuel switching

A
  • effort needed by 2055 for 1 wedge
  • substitute 1400 natural gas electric plants for an equal number of coal fired facilities
  • one wedge requires an amount of natural gas equal to that used for all purposes today
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9
Q

carbon capture and storage

A
  • effort needed for 1 wedge by 2055
  • implement CCS at 800 GW coal electric plants
  • implement CCS at 1600 GW natural gas electric plants
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10
Q

efficient use of electricity

A

effort needed by 2055 for wedge:

  • Use best efficiency practices in all residential & commercial buildings
  • 25% - 50% reduction in expected 2055 electricity use in commercial and residential buildings
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11
Q

Changing all light bulbs to CFL would be

A

1/3 of a wedge! now we have LEDs

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12
Q

CFL vs LED cost

A
  • cost about a factor of 2, but life time is factor of 5

and energy efficiency is factor of 2. So if you are going to keep it for long enough, get the LED.

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13
Q

efficient generation of electricity

A

Effort needed by 2055 for 1 wedge:
- Improve the efficiency of coal power plants from 40% to 60%, and double efficiency from which we take fossil fuels from the ground.

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14
Q

efficient use of fuel

A

effort needed by 2055 for 1 wedge
- decrease the number of miles drive per car: 5,000 instead of 10,000 mi per year

effort needed by 2055 for 1 MORE wedge
- double fuel efficiency of cars: 60 mpg instead of 30 mpg

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15
Q

deforestation

A
  • eliminate all tropical deforestation
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16
Q

reforestation

A

plant new forest over an area the size of the Continental u.s.

17
Q

conservation tillage

A
  • use conservation tillage on all cropland (1600 Mha)
  • leaves at least 30% of crop residue on the surface
  • stores more carbon within the soil
18
Q

no till agriculture

A
  • saves energy and money
  • preserves the soil
  • buries carbon in soil
  • can be just as productive as full tillage methods
19
Q

are the wedge strategies scalable?

A

can the wedges keep growing?

  • are the first million two-megawatt wind turbines more expensive or cheaper than the second million two-megawatt wind turbines?
  • The first million will be built at the more favorable sites.
  • But the second million will benefit from the learning acquired.

The question generalizes to almost all the wedge
strategies:
- Geological storage capacity for CO2, land for biomass, river valleys for hydropower, uranium ore for nuclear power, semiconductor materials for photovoltaic collectors.
- First ones are the low-hanging fruit, but then you learn to pick the fruit more efficiently.

20
Q

What’s appealing about wedges?

A
  • the stabilization triangle
    • does not concede doubling CO2 is inevitable
    • shortens the time frame to within business horizons
  • the wedge
    – Decomposes a heroic challenge (the Stabilization Triangle) into a limited set of heroic tasks
    – Establishes a unit of action that permits quantitative
    discussion of cost, pace, risk, trade-offs, etc
  • The wedge strategy
    • Does not change the fact there are winners (alternative
      energies) and losers (coal and oil become more expensive sources of energy), but brings many options to the table
21
Q

wind power

A
  • rapidly growing in Europe (denmark, germany, and spain) and the US (TX, IA, CA, OR, WA). still very underutilized.
  • We are the Saudi Arabia of wind. Could provide 9 times US electricity usage just in lower 48
22
Q

how is wind power generated?

A
  • wind blows past a turbine (like a propeller) and turbine is turned, which makes energy and power is produced which is proportional to wind velocity
23
Q

main problem: intermittentcy

A
  • wind doesn’t always blow
  • currently this isn’t a huge problem bc wind doesn’t provide most of the electricity anywhere but it could become more a problem in the future (nuclear/hydro/geothermal etc as backup). denmark deals with this by selling excess power to Norway
  • having a grid connecting distributed wind farm sites can help ensure that the wind is blowing somewhere
  • solar power tends to be complementary to wind in
    midlatitudes (windier in winter, sunnier in summer).
24
Q

renewable energy

A

currently small part of total - 1.3 GWatts, global

25
Q

in WA we have hydro power

A
  • about 7% of the u.s. electricity comes from hydropower, this is 67% of WA’s electricity
  • extremely expensive to build
  • possible extreme environmental damage to flooded area and fish migration
  • not likely to see more dams built in the u.s.
  • Actually removed Elwha Dams on the Olympic Peninsula for wildlife reasons – all 5 species of Pacific Salmon. Finished removal summer 2014
26
Q

wind power myths/fears

A
  • harms birds? all human structures harm bird life but wind farms are an extremely small fraction of the harm to birdlife and careful placement away from migration patterns can help
  • aesthetics? cape wind was long delayed due to concerns about views
27
Q

Wind Electricity

A

One million 2-MW windmills displacing coal power: - Would require land space the size of Montana (but land below could be used for grazing, farmland, etc)
- Wind energy would only have to increase by 8%
per year to achieve this (and recent increases have been 30% per year)

28
Q

biofuels

A

Effort needed by 2055 for 1 wedge:

  • 2 billion 60 mpge cars running on biofuels instead of gasoline and diesel.
  • To produce these biofuels: 250 million hectares of high-yield (15 t/ha) crops, one sixth of world cropland.
29
Q

offshore wind power pros

A
  • Produces no greenhouse gases after windmill is constructed
  • Decentralized production
  • Moderately priced in the long term compared to fossil fuel
  • Can use land underneath
30
Q

offshore wind power cons

A
  • Intermittent
  • Not available everywhere
  • Obstructs views/noise paranoia Hazard to birds? (probably not if placed away from migration zones)
  • Requires large area
31
Q

Solar Power types

A
  1. Passive solar: doesn’t use mechanical or electrical
    equipment
    - Uses sunlight to reduce heating/lighting/ventilation costs E.g., south-facing windows (in Northern Hemisphere) for more winter sunlight
  2. Solar thermal collection
    - Produces hot water or warm air for homes, industry, or
    electricity generation
  3. Solar photovoltaic
    - Generates electricity directly from sunlight using
32
Q

Type 2: Solar Power Towers (collector)

A

“Power tower” plant outside Madrid: mirrors heat steam in the central tower that drives a turbine (11 MW peak)

33
Q

Type 3: Photovoltaics

A
  • “Photovoltaic” solar cells
  • Growing rapidly in Europe and Japan
  • Expense has been issue: uses pricey raw materials. Subsidies have been to make these economically viable. Prices are falling though
  • Especially good for developing countries (can be installed one house at a time). Initial investment lower than coal plant per kwh
34
Q

Myth: Albedo Effect Causes Global Warming

A

Solar panels are dark: do they affect planetary
albedo?
- Wrong! The albedo change is small and
results in a negligible amount of heating. This is not a problem.

35
Q

Solar Energy and Albedo

A
  • All the electricity in the world could be generated by
    solar panels covering an area of the black box
    below
  • Total extra absorbed radiation if panels are above desert: 0.01 W/m2 (compare with 4 W/m2 for doubling CO2)
  • Solar panels can also be installed on dark roofs
36
Q

solar energy pros

A
  •   Produces no greenhouse gases after panel is installed - Unlimited
  • Long lasting (low maintenance cost)
  • Peak production in-sync with demand (we don’t need as much power at night)
  • Decentralized production
37
Q

solar energy cons

A
  • Expensive now
  • Somewhat limited by location (deserts are gold mines for solar energy, but storing/transporting the power is expensive/inefficient at present – needs a smart grid.)