Title: Vision 2050 The Change to a Sustainable Energy Path
1Vision 2050The Change to a Sustainable Energy
Path
By Gunnar Boye Olesen, Emil Bedi Ann
Vikkelsoe INFORSE-Europe Article on Vision 2050
at www.inforse.org International Network for
Sustainable Energy Europeis a network of 55
NGOs. INFORSE-Europe is supported by EU
Commission DG Environment, Danish Open Air
Council and others Sustainable Energy for Europe
INFORSE-Europe seminar Brussels 27-28
November 2002
2Vision 2050 - Background
- The world energy system
- is beyond the environmental limits
- does not provide basic energy needs as light and
healthy cooking facilities to 2 billions of the
worlds population - To avoid dangerous climate change we must limit
global warming to 1ºC in the 21st Century - We should provide all with basic energy needs and
allow developing countries to develop, including
use of cheap energy supply
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3Environmental Limit Climate Change
- To be sure to keep global warming below 1ºC
century, we must limit global CO2 emissions to
about 250 Gigaton of Carbon in 21st century 35
years of current consumption (assumed climate
sensitivity of 3.5ºC) - The climate sensitivity is commonly accepted to
be in the range of 2 to 5ºC with an average of
3.5ºC.
4A Global Sustainable Scenario
1990-2000 64 GtC
After 2000 240 GtC
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5Scenario Energy Services
Energy Services per capita
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6Energy Demand
- Most energy consuming equipment will be replaced
several times before 2050 new generations of
equipment should maximize efficiency. Technology
learning can drive prices down. - One exception is houses. In EU houses could use
only 1/7 of todays heat demand in 2050. This will
require renovation/re-building of 2 p.a. / heat
consumption 20-40 kWh/year per m2Â - For transport is expected increase in efficiency
from todays 15-20 to 50, and re-gain of break
energy. Hydrogen and fuel cells as solutions
together with electrical driven vehicles. - Energy service demand will increase, also in
industrialized countries, energy demand decrease.
7Primary Energy (TWh/y)
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8Energy Supply
- Wind Follow Windforce10 growth from todays
20,000 MW to reach 3,000,000 MW in 2040, then
maybe less afterwards - Large wind power development programs are
cost-effective extra costs today will be paid
back with future cost reductions due to
technology learning. Some sites give
cost-effective electricity today. - Â Solar PV could reach 500 MWpeak in 2003, and
then grow 25 pr. year - Biomass and hydro Increase 30-50 in total
- Biomass can be used as transport fuel
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9Renewable Energy Potential
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10Electricity - Worldwide (TWh/y)
11Example Denmark
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12Electricity Supply - Denmark
13Economy - DK scenario until 2030
- The low-energy scenario is 2 cheaper than the
business-as-usual scenario with zero discount
rate - It is 1 more expensive with 5 discount rate
- If environmental costs are included or if fossil
fuel prices increases more than estimated by IEA,
the low-energy scenario is considerably cheaper
than business as usual. - expected lower growth in energy services need
for decoupling of economy and energy services
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14Example - Slovakia
OBS Preliminary data
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15Slovakian Renewable Energy Potentials
OBS Preliminary data
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16Energy Infrastructure
- Electricity grid still needed, as today
- Electricity grid needs more regulation with many
decentralised production units intelligent grid - Need for electricity storage to compensate wind
PV, in Slovakia hydro pump-storage, in Denmark
probably chemical storage after 2030 - New roles for electricity transport, heat pumps,
international energy trade - Nuclear phase-out 2010-2030 or earlier
- Because of large learning rates for the new
technologies, minimal costs.
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17More on Infrastructure
- decentralised power production, to use local
renewables and to cover heat demand (CHP) - more investments in demand-side efficiency, less
in energy supply, after transition phase
2000-2030 - gas demand stable until 2025, then decline
- hydrogen fuel cell systems for transport and to
replace gas where local renewables insufficient - some gas networks can be used for hydrogen
- heat networks to remain in densely built areas
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18Vision 2050simple spread-sheet model
- Based on energy balance
- Trends for RE-supply, energy consumption, other
fuels - 1990-2050. 2000 base year. 10-years interval
- 2002
- Denmark, Slovakia and EU
- 2003
- Hungary, Romania, Belarus (probably)
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