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Transitioning to a PostCarbon Economy

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Development of ever more sophisticated tools to leverage available ... Chevron: 'Oil production is in decline in 33 of the 48 largest oil producing countries, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Transitioning to a PostCarbon Economy


1
  • Transitioning to a Post-Carbon Economy
  • November 17, 2007
  • Parkland Institute
  • Richard Heinberg

2
Energy Transitions are Crucial
  • Adoption of fire
  • Agriculture
  • Domestication of traction animals
  • Development of ever more sophisticated tools to
    leverage available energy (horse collars, plows,
    gears)

3
World Energy
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6
Chevron
Oil production is in decline in 33 of the 48
largest oil producing countries, yet energy
demand is increasing around the globe as
economies grow and nations develop.
www.willyoujoinus.com
7
A simple observation -- or why peak will be
earlier than most people expect
  • Global production falls when loss of output from
    countries in decline exceeds gains in output from
    those that are expanding.

8
Global crude oil production
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10
The export quandary
  • Every year there are fewer exporters, more
    importers
  • Exporters are also consumers, so the amount
    available for export is production minus domestic
    consumption
  • With high prices, exporting countries are flush
    with cash, their economies are growing, domestic
    oil consumption is rising
  • Result Available exports will start to shrink
    before peak and shrink much more rapidly than the
    rate of decline in total global oil production

11
How serious a problem is this?
12
Peaking of World Oil Production Impacts,
Mitigation, Risk ManagementRobert L. Hirsch,
SAIC, Project Leader (commissioned by US
Department of Energy, February 2005)
  • EXECUTIVE SUMMARYThe peaking of world oil
    production presents the U.S. and the world with
    an unprecedented risk management problem. As
    peaking is approached, liquid fuel prices and
    price volatility will increase dramatically, and,
    without timely mitigation, the economic, social,
    and political costs will be unprecedented. Viable
    mitigation options exist on both the supply and
    demand sides, but to have substantial impact,
    they must be initiated more than a decade in
    advance of peaking.

13
What about the other fossil fuels?
14
Oil Sands of Alberta
  • A combination of sand, clay and bitumen, rich in
    sulfur
  • Unlike conventional oil recovery, oil sand
    extraction is usually a mining process
  • Extraction of oil sands takes massive volumes of
    energy in fueling heavy equipment, and in heating
    the substrate so that oil can be removed
  • 1Mb/d today, perhaps expandable to
  • 3 or 4 Mb/d--at enormous cost!

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20
Evaluating Energy Options
  • Energy return on investment
  • Size of resource
  • Infrastructure requirement
  • Convenience of use
  • Environmental impact
  • Renewability
  • Scalability
  • Location of resource

21
25 Options
  • Alternative fossil fuels
  • Deepwater, ultra-deepwater, and polar oil and gas
  • Gas liquids and condensates
  • Shale oil
  • Tar sands, heavy oil, extra-heavy oil
  • Gas-to-liquids
  • Coal-to-liquids
  • Methane hydrates (clathrates)

22
25 Options (continued)
  • Alternatives to fossil fuels
  • Ethanol
  • Biodiesel
  • Methanol
  • Thermal depolymerization
  • Hydrogen
  • Sources of electricity
  • Nuclear
  • Tides, waves
  • Wind
  • Solar (PV and thermal)
  • Hydro
  • Biomass

23
Options (continued)
  • Conservation
  • Efficiency
  • Curtailment
  • in
  • Transportation
  • Agriculture
  • Housing and construction
  • Urban design

24
Ethanol to the rescue?
  • Even if all of the 300 million acres (500,000
    square miles) of currently harvested U.S.
    cropland produced ethanol, it wouldnt supply all
    of the gasoline and diesel fuel we now burn for
    transport, and it would supply only about half of
    the needs for the year 2025. And the effects on
    land and would be devastating.
  • --The False Hope of Biofuels For Energy and
    Environmental Reasons, Ethanol Will Never
    Replace Gasoline (James Jordan and James
    Powell, Washington Post, July 2, 2006)

25
Nuclear renaissance?
  • A 30 increase in nuclear capacity is possible
    with a moderate increase in the price of uranium
    causing a mild increase in the price of nuclear
    electricity.
  • If nuclear energy is to become a major solution
    to our energy problems, the huge needed increase
    in nuclear capacity would make nuclear energy too
    expensive too be competitive with other
    alternatives.

26
Hydrogen carswhen?
  • Hydrogen is not an energy source
  • There are significant storage problems
  • Spending money on hydrogen research tends to take
    investment capital away from the development of
    primary renewable energy sources
  • Electricity is a more practical
  • carrier in most cases

27
Non-Fossil Electricity Sources
  • Nuclear
  • Hydro
  • Wind
  • Solar (PV and thermal)
  • Tides, waves
  • Ocean thermal (OTEC)
  • Biomass
  • Geothermal

28
Hydro
  • Hydro potential can be increased 50 with
    construction of new dams
  • However, environmental costs are often
    prohibitive
  • Microhydro workable in many remote areas

29
Wind
  • Existing capacity small, but much room for growth
  • Because of intermittency, a practical cap of 25
    of total electricity production
  • Vertical axis designs helpful in some areas

30
Solar
  • PV solar is expensive but good for remote areas
    new materials in development
  • Solar thermal works well only in very sunny areas
  • Solar hot water practical in most places

31
Tides and Waves
  • Potential is best in certain coastal estuaries
  • In those places, already economic

32
Biomass
  • Not intermittent (advantage over solar, wind)
  • Can use variable materials (wood, agricultural
    waste, sewage sludge)
  • Limited by soil, water, land

33
Geothermal
  • For major power generation, sites are limited
  • Renewable?
  • Ground-source heat pumps practical most places

34
Conservation Efficiency and Curtailment
  • Like alternative energy sources, conservation
    (efficiency) requires investment.
  • Investments yield diminishing returns.
  • However, at least in the initial stages,
    efficiency is almost always cheaper than new
    supply options.
  • Curtailment is the cheapest option of all, but
    requires changes in habits and expectations.

35
  • Agriculture transition from oil-based
    industrial model to more labor-intensive,
    localized, organic model

36
  • Transportation Rail and light railthe best
    long-term options for motorized land transport of
    freight and people

37
oildepletionprotocol.orgpostcarbon.orgrichar
dheinberg.com
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