Title: Harold S. Blackman
1Energy and Water-Globally and Locally
2Demand for Electricity and Water is Outpacing
Supply
3Global Population 2050
9 billion
4DESPERATE ENERGY NEED
ACCELERATING GROWTH
ONGOING DEMAND
5Energy and Water are Inextricably Linked
Energy production and generation require water
thermal electric power generation is the second
largest user of water in the United States
- Power Plants
- 132,000 Mgal/day withdrawn
- 3,000 Mgal/day consumed
- Irrigation
- 134,000 Mgal/day withdrawn
- 81,399 Mgal/day consumed
Water pumping, treatment, and distribution
require energy 80 of the cost of treating,
processing and pumping water is for energy
Source Estimated Use of Water in the United
States in 1995, USGS Circular 1200, 1998
6By 2020 our growing population will require
393,000 megawatts of NEW generating capacity
- This requires 1,300 to 1,900 new power plants
more than one built each week - Water will become a critical issue for the power
industry - Population grows, energy demands increase, and
freshwater supplies remain constant, which means
less water - Population shifts without regard to water (25
growth in intermountain west, 2 growth in
Northeast) - Growing population consumes more food, with the
two largest water users- energy and agricultural
producers, further complicates the problem
7Conservation Alternative Energy Sources Cannot
Meet the Demands
- Renewable/sustainable energy sources supply only
2 of U.S. electricity - Conservation and diverse energy technologies
could potentially save 33 of current energy
consumption if implemented over 10 years. This
is slightly greater than current U.S. oil imports - Conservation and use of renewables can help but
cannot meet global energy demands - Solar high land use demands, not cost-effective
in all areas of the world - Wind high maintenance, high land use demands,
harmful to migratory fowl, not effective
everywhere - Biofuels requires fossil fuel input, displaces a
food source - Hydro limited remaining siting locations,
impeding spawning routes of fish
8The Crucial Premise for Action
- Humankind cannot conceivably achieve a global
clean-energy revolution without a huge expansion
of nuclear power - To generate electricity
- To produce battery power and possibly hydrogen
for tomorrows vehicles - To desalinate seawater in response to the worlds
rapidly emerging fresh-water crisis - But, what are the local options for renewables?
9Geothermal Energy
- Geoscience Research
- INL is the Lead Lab for Geoscience
- EGS characterization and development
- Numerical tools for reservoir management
- Exploration and Drilling
- Numerical methods for Basin Range exploration
- Optimum exploration strategy development
- Energy Conversion
- Coupled reservoir/power plant management
- Performance enhancement and process monitors
- Outreach
- GeoPowering the West
-
10Hydropower
- Advanced Hydropower Turbine Systems Research
- Low-Head/Low-Power Resource and Technology
Assessment - Virtual Hydropower Prospector
- Unconventional technology field testing
-
11Wind and Power Systems
- Wind Energy
- DOD wind and hybrid power systems
- Resource assessments
- Wind turbine radar interactions
- WindPowering America
- Power System Technologies
- Integration of renewable and conventional power
systems - Power system control, reliability, and security
- Interconnect standard development
- Design and technical support
12Bioenergy
Develop and demonstrate a suite of key
technologies that enable a sustainable
biorefinery of the future to produce bio-based
energy, fuels, chemicals and other products.
- Biomass Refining RD Areas
- Filtration and Separation - biomass
hydrolysis/refining products - Extremophilic Biocatalysis and Catalysis -
chemical products/intermediates - Gasification
- CO2 Utilization (emerging) - synthesis fuel
products
- Feedstock Assembly RDAreas
- Plant Science/Production
- Harvesting And Collection
- Storage
- Preprocessing and Handling
13Biofuels RD Focused on Idahos Existing
Agriculture Industry
- Biofuels
- Bio Methane production from dairy waste
- Ethanol production from agricultural waste- non
food sources - Build on existing INL, U of I, ISU, and BSU
strengths - Work collaboratively with Idaho Office of Energy
Resources - Develop regional industrial partnerships
- Focus on Idaho and regional opportunities
14Dairy Waste has the greatest bio-methane
potential in Idaho
Idaho is the 4th largest dairy producing state in
the U.S.
Mature Animal Summary (July 2008, Idaho Bureau
of Dairying) 635 Total Producers 549,973 Mature
animals 252 dairies with lt 200 animals 86 dairies
with gt2000 animals
Density of Dairy Cattle in Idaho
Realistic estimates of gt30 MW potential
15Ethanol Production Potential in Idaho
1 ton of straw 80 gal. Ethanol
16A Balanced Energy Portfolio is Needed for Our
Future
ALL concentrated and large-scale forms of energy
generation have costs, risks, and environmental
impacts