Title: Energy Environment Economy: Motivation for Energy Efficient Manufacturing
1Energy Environment EconomyMotivation for Energy
Efficient Manufacturing
- Kelly Kissock Ph.D., P.E.
- Professor
- Department of Mechanical and Aerospace
Engineering - Director Building Energy Center
- University of Dayton, Dayton, Ohio
2What on Earth Are These?
World Energy Use
World Population
3Converting Heat to Work
- Since pre-history we knew how to
- Work
- Heat
- Industrial Revolution to
- Work
- Heat
4Newcomens Steam Engine1712
5Revolutionary Change Transforms
- Economy textile production increases 150 fold
and prices drop 90 - Place cities grow from 5 to 50
- Family parents leave home to work
- Geography steam ship and railroad
- Technology
- Population
6Economic Explosion
- Pre-industrial revolution per capita annual
income 600 -
- Industrial revolution US/Europe income 600 to
18,000 - Increases 30x!
7Energy Revolution Creates Modern World
8Single Most Important Event in Human History
9Weve Come a Long Way
- Newcomens steam engine 0.5
- Watts steam engine 1
- Gasoline engines 30
- Coal Rankine cycles 35
- Turbines 40
- Diesel engines 50
- Combined-cycle turbine/Rankine engines 60
10But Energy Conversion Largely Unchanged
- 1. Use hydrocarbon fossil fuels
- 2. Employ combustion to release heat
- CH42(O2 3.76 N2)CO22H20(NOxSOx)
-
- 3. Convert heat to work via thermal expansion
1184 Of World Energy From Fossil Fuels
- In U.S. 86 from non-renewable fossil fuels
- Source U.S. D.O.E. Annual Energy Review 2005
12Resource Constraints
M. King Hubbert
13Hubberts 1956 Prediction of US Oil Peak
14Actual U.S. Oil Production (Peaks in 1972)
Source www.ab3energy.com/hubbert.html
15Hubberts 1956 Prediction ofWorld Oil Peak
16Cambells World Oil Peak
17ASPO World Oil Peak
18EIAs World Oil Peak
19EIA Predictions Questionable
20World OilNear Peak Production
Peak production 2015 Based on 1,800 BB World
Oil Resources, WRI 1994
21World Natural GasNear Peak Production
Peak production 2018 Based on 6,044 TCF World
Dry Natural Gas Reserves, Oil and Gas Journal,
IEA 2004
22World CoalPeak Production 2050?
Peak production 2060 Based on 997,506 MT
World Estimated Recoverable Coal, IEA 2004
23Consequences of Peak Fuel
- Rising demand and falling supply rapidly
increases fuel prices - Rising fuel prices reduce expendable income and
cause recessions - Rising fuel prices drain fuel importing
economies and increase trade deficits - Competition for dwindling supply increase
national security risks - Rising fuel prices support undemocratic regimes
(Russia, Middle East, Venezuela, etc.)
24Natural Gas Price Trends
Source U.S. Dept. of Energy, Annual Energy
Review 2005, Report No. DOE/EIA-0384(2005)
25Natural Gas Price Volatility
- Source Canada National Energy Board,
http//www.neb.gc.ca/energy/EnergyPricing/HowMarke
tsWork/NG_e.htm
26Electricity Price Trends
Source U.S. Dept. of Energy, Annual Energy
Review 2005, Report No. DOE/EIA-0384(2005)
27Electricity Price Volatility
- Residential electricity prices will increase 2.6
in 2007, compared to 2.2 over the last 10 years - Those regions with States undergoing market
restructuring may experience more price
volatility. For example, residential prices in
the East North Central region are projected to
rise by nearly 6 percent in 2007, compared to the
last 10-year average of only 1 percent.
Source U.S. Dept. of Energy, Short Term Energy
Outlook, May 2007, http//www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/ste
o/pub/contents.html
28Environmental Perspective
- Using energy in todays ways leads
- to more environmental damage than
- any other peaceful human activity.
- The Economist, 1990.
2995 Of Local/Regional Air Pollution from Fossil
Fuels
30Global CO2 Concentration
- Keeling Curve Mauna Loa, Hawaii
- 2005 Concentration 380 ppm
31Coincident Global Warming
Hansen, J., Is There Still Time to Avoid
Dangerous Anthropogenic Interference with Global
Climate?, American Geophysical Union, 2005.
32Molecules with Odd Number Atoms (CO2 CH4) Trap
Heat
Changing Climate, Stephen Schneider, Scientific
American, 10/1989
33Historical Temperature CO2 Correlation
Changing Climate, Stephen Schneider, Scientific
American, 10/1989
34Greenhouse Gas Trends
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 2001,
Summary for Policymakers
35Todays Concentrations Off the Chart
Hansen, J., 2005, A slippery slope How much
global warming constitutes dangerous
anthropogenic interference?, Climatic Change,
Vol. 68, No. 3., 2005, Pages 269-279.
36Result Earth Quickly Warming
- Hansen et al., Journal Geophysical Research
37Time Lags Amplify Effects
- Source Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, Summary, 2001
38Warming Fastest at Pole
Changing Climate, Stephen Schneider, Scientific
American, 10/1989
39Melting Polar Greenland Ice Caps
40Rising Sea Level Low Elevation Flooding
41And the List Goes On
- Drought
- Severe weather
- Mass extinctions (30 of species lose range)
- Accelerating non-linear irreversible process
- Methane release from thawing perma-frost
- Lower albedo from decreasing ice cover
42 Debate?
- Consensus view from
- Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
- Every U.S. scientific body (NAS, AMS, AGU, AAAS)
- Every G8 National Academy of Science
- Literature review (Oreskes, Science, Vol. 306,
2004) - All scientific peer-reviewed journals from 1993
2004 with key words climate change. - Found 983 papers
- NONE disagreed with consensus position
43Linear Model of Production
Fossil Fuel Resources
Atmosphere
Fossil Fuel Energy
CO2 Pollution
Energy Out
Economy
- Running Out of Energy Resources While Atmosphere
Filling Up
44Ecological Model of Production
Technical
Biological
45US CO2 Stabilization Scenario (NRDC)
Socolow and Pacala, Scientific American,
September, 2006
46US CO2 Stabilization Scenario (ASES)
Kutscher, C., Tackling Climate Change in the
US, Solar Today, March, 2007
47U.S. CO2 Emissions 6 GT/yr Can reduce 1.3 GT/yr
at Negative Cost
- Miller, P., 2000, Saving Energy It Starts at
Home, National Geographic, March
48U.S. CO2 Emissions 6 GT/yr Reduce additional 2.0
GT/yr at lt 50/T
- Miller, P., 2000, Saving Energy It Starts at
Home, National Geographic, March
49Global CO2 Reduction Potential
- Source The Carbon Productivity Challenge,
McKinsey Global Institute, http//www.mckinsey.com
50Energy Efficient Manufacturing Initiatives
- ISO Standards
- 9001 Quality
- 14001 Environment
- 50001 Energy
- Requires energy management personnel and
organizations within a company to determine
baseline energy use, determine energy efficiency
targets, identify and implement energy efficiency
opportunities, measure effectiveness of energy
efficiency improvements.
51Government Energy Efficiency Programs
- U.S. Department of Energy
- Energy audits
- Whole plant energy audits by universities for
mid-sized manufacturers - Steam, process heating, compressed air and pump
energy audits for large manufactures - Energy system software and best practice case
studies - U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- E3 energy, waste and productivity audits
- Ohio utilities must improve energy efficiency by
20 by 2020 - DPL, Duke, AEP offer rebates on energy efficient
equipment and retrofits.
52Energy Engineering Courses at UD
- MEE 420/569 Energy Efficient Buildings
- MEE 478/578 Energy Efficient Manufacturing
- MEE 471/571 Design of Thermal Systems
- MEE 473/573 Renewable Energy Systems
- MEE 472 Design for Environment
- MEE 499/599 Environmental Sustainability
53Thank you!
54Making Sense of it All
- Chicago City Lights, Photo by Jim Richarson,
http//ngm.nationalgeographic.com/earthpulse/hayde
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