Title: Science and Technology for Sustainable Well-being*
1Science and Technology for Sustainable Well-being
- An open discussion among 5 PMPs Energy,
Climate, Limits to Development, Water, and
Pollution - Erice, August 19, 2008
John P. Holdren, Science Mag. 319, p 424-434,
Jan. 25, 2008
2Workshop was organized by the 5 PMP Chairs
- Energy Bill Fulkerson for Art Rosenfeld
- Climate Bill Sprigg
- Limits to Development Geraldo Serra
- Water Bob Clark
- Pollution Lorne Everett Frank Parker
Moderator Bill Fulkerson Rapporteur Jef Ongena
3Science and Technology for Sustainable Well-being
John P. Holdren, Science Mag. 319, p 424-434,
Jan. 25, 2008
4To Holdren sustainable well-being entails
- pursuing sustainable development to achieve
well-being where it is now most conspicuously
absent. as well as converting to a sustainable
basis the maintenance and expansion of well-being
where it already exists but is being provided by
unsustainable means.
5Holdren identified 5 specific challenges
- Meeting the basic needs of the poor.
- Competition for land, water and biota.
- Anthropogenic changes in the oceans.
- The energy-economy-environment dilemma (the E3
dilemma). - Moving toward elimination of nuclear weapons.
6India just issued its National Action Plan on
Climate Change
- Maintaining a high growth rate is essential for
increasing the living standards of the vast
majority of our people and reducing their
vulnerability to the impacts of climate change.
(p,2) - But India is determined that its per capita
greenhouse gas emissions will at no point exceed
that of developed countries even as we pursue our
development objectives. (p.2) - In other words for India poverty trumps climate.
7What might result?
- Joint plans for 2009 and beyond?
- Specific proposals for Professor Zichichi?
8Energy is at the heart of solving Holdrens E3
Dilemma
- It is a driver of climate change.
- It is a driver for development
- Making development sustainable means making
energy services sustainable - Developed and developing countries are
interlocked by climate change. - But the developing world will drive climate
change from now on.
9Energy and sustainable well-being goals can
conflict in a carbon constrained society
- To avoid climate change planetary emergencies the
worlds energy systems (and the collective
management of the biosphere) must be reinvented
and rebuilt. - The problem will be confounded by conventional
oil production peaking. - The transition will be expensive.
- But the developing world wants to grow rapidly to
enhance economic well-being. - This is the E3 dilemma.
10Science and technology can reduce the cost
making the transition more palatable. .
11Edmonds J.A., and S.J. Smith (2006) "The
Technology of Two Degrees" In Avoiding Dangerous
Climate Change, Schellnhuber, H J., Cramer, W.,
Nakicenovic, N., Wigley, T. and Yohe, G. (Eds)
(Cambridge, UK, Cambridge University Press), pp.
385-392.
12Some needed technological improvements
- Cleaner, more fuel-efficient motor vehicles
hybrids (diesels, plug-in hybrids) - More energy-efficient commercial residential
buildings and industrial processes - Improved coal technologies to make electricity
hydrogen with CO2 capture storage - Advanced nuclear reactors with increased safety
and proliferation-resistant fuel cycles - Improved batteries fuel cells
- Biofuels that dont compete with food forests
- Cheaper photovoltaic cells
- Source John Holdren Talk to Council on
Competitiveness, June, 08
13Oh Lord, give us a silver bullet. Ans Not yet,
you havent suffered enough. For one thing you
are seriously under-funding energy technology
RD globally, both by the public and by the
private sectors.
14There may be one silver bullet Efficiency
1515
1616
17Governor Schwarzeneggers and Californias Efforts
- June 2005 Executive Order on Climate Change
- Reduce greenhouse gases
- to 2000 levels by 2010
- to 1990 levels by 2020 (30 below BAU!!)
- to 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050
- AB 32 the Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006
- Confirms the Governors Executive Order
- Adopt regulations to achieve maximum feasible and
cost-effective GHG reductions - Adopt market mechanisms, such as cap and trade
- Establish mandatory reporting of GHG emissions by
major industries - Adopt a statewide GHG emissions limit for 2020
matching 1990 emissions - www.ClimateChange.ca.gov
17
18Supply curve for GHG abatement in 2030
McKinsey, 2007
19An International Partnership on Energy Efficiency
has just been initiated by the G8 Ministers.
20The developed world should take on the task to
electrify one billion people in twenty years with
low emitting supply and very efficient end use
technologies1.
- Electrification can advance well-being as few
other single activities can. - Developed world would pay the difference in cost
between sustainable (low emission) efficient
systems and least first-cost systems ( 100B
over 20 y). - Developing countries would pay 3/4 of total cost.
- Efficient end-use technologies can cut family
electricity bills in half.
1Fulkerson, William et al., Sustainable and
Efficient Electricity for a Billion People,
Energy for Sus. Dev., IX,2, p26, 2005
21Strawman proposal for 09
- Organize around the developing world.
- Create a special multi-PMP task force.
- Pick a country e.g. China, India or an African
nation. - For each expose the E3 dilemma as seen through
their eyes. - Develop ST recommendations.
22E3 Dilemma Issues in China, India, Africa, etc.
match the 5 PMPs
- Energy future planning for climate and oil
security. - Water resources planning.
- Adaptative capacity building, e.g. for famine
avoidance and to manage globalization. - Pollution control ecosystem protection.
- Managing the population bomb.
- Partnering for progress --the role of the
developed world.
23Two other ideas might be vetted in 09.
- Work out the details of creating sustainable
efficient electricity services for the developing
world. - Develop a comprehensive geoengineering RD plan.
24Questions?
25The five PMP chairs will initiate the discussion
- Energy Bill Fulkerson for Art Rosenfeld
- Climate Bill Sprigg
- Limits to Development Geraldo Serra
- Water Bob Clark
- Pollution Lorne Everett Frank Parker
Moderator Bill Fulkerson Rapporteur Jef Ongena