Title: 4M14 7 Sessions Engineering for Sustainable Development
14M14 - 7 Sessions Engineering for Sustainable
Development
-
- Session 2
- Energy and Climate Change
- Charles Ainger
- V P for Engineering Design for Sustainable
Development, CUED - With Guest Dr. Chris Hope
- Judge Institute for Management Studies, U of C
2The smoking gun on climate change
CO2 at Mauna Loa, Hawaii
3Frying the Earth?
4What is Energy?
- The ability of matter or radiation to do work
- People dont demand energy - they ask for these
services - heating / cooling / lighting - buildings
- mobility / carrying capacity - transport
- making things power - industry
- IT/ communication / entertainment - all
In providing these services through our past and
present energy technologies, we have started a
process that may threaten our existence.
5If Development gave global equality - in
Affluence and energy use
- By 2050 we would need 8.5 Earths to supply as
much energy per capita as the UK uses now... - And energy use drives global warming...
So...wed better look hard at the way we use and
provide energy
62. Energy and Climate Change
- Global energy availability and use
- sources and availability fossil fuels, and
variations - uses - categories and variations
- Impacts of energy production and use
- local habitat and community damage and
pollution - global - climate change (Dr Chris Hope)
- Efficiency and Renewables - technologies, and
options - Sustainable Energy barriers and solutions
7Energy and Climate Change
- Global energy availability and use
- sources and availability fossil fuels, and
variations - uses - categories and variations
- Impacts of energy production and use
- local habitat and community damage and
pollution - global - climate change (Dr Chris Hope)
- Efficiency and Renewables - technologies, and
options - Sustainable Energy barriers and solutions
8Global energy production 2000
(Source BP Amoco Statistical Review of World
Energy 2001)
9UK Energy production by source- major changes
10Growth in Global Energy Use
11Forecast of Global Energy Demand
Kyoto
12World primary energy use
Data Source BP Statistical Review of World
Energy 2001 and UN Population Division )
13Primary energy use trends
Data Source BP Statistical Review of World
Energy 2001
14BUT Rest of the World includes China and
India...
- Nothing is more calculated to send a shiver of
unease through an environmentally concerned
audience than to conjure up a world in which over
a billion Chinese or Indians enjoy a Western
family lifestyle a car (or two), a fridge,
central heating (or air conditioning), a
dish-washer, an automatic washing machine - and
2.4 children. Vincent Cable, MP
15UK Energy Demand by User
16Passenger Transport by mode 1952 - 1999
Freight Transport by Mode 1953 - 99
300
800
700
250
600
200
Air - very small
500
Air
Billion Tonne Kilometres
Billion Passenger Kilometres
Pipeline
150
400
300
100
Water
200
Cars, vans and taxis
Road
Pedal cycles
50
100
Motorcycles
Buses and Coaches
Rail
Rail
0
0
1954
1952
1958
1962
1966
1970
1974
1978
1982
1986
1990
1994
1998
1953
1956
1959
1962
1965
1968
1971
1974
1977
1980
1983
1986
1989
1992
1995
1998
17In one year, the av. British household generates
this CO2
- We all do it.
- The average UK households energy use produces
25 of UKs CO2 emissions.. - (www.saveenergy.co.uk)
(Guardian, Earth Aug 2002 from Int. Energy
Agency, and www.risingtide.org.uk)
18 But of course we dont all use the same global
inequality in domestic use
1 US 2 UK 3 Hong Kong 5 Chileans 6 Iraqis 10
Chinese 12 Zambians 16 Indians 23 Nepalese 28
Ethiopians 50 Bangladeshis
Data Source World Development Indicators, 2001
19Energy and Climate Change
- Global energy availability and use
- sources and availability fossil fuels, and
variations - uses - categories and variations
- Impacts of energy production and use
- local habitat and community damage and
pollution - global - climate change (Dr Chris Hope)
- Efficiency and Renewables - technologies, and
options - Sustainable Energy barriers and solutions
20Impacts - Acid Rain and Air Pollution
(Source Phillips Atlas of the World
Millennium Edition)
21Impacts - Water Pollution
(Source Phillips Atlas of the World
Millennium Edition)
22Habitats
23Complex impacts energy and insecurity?
24Climate change - the record...
Temperature and atmospheric CO2 correlation over
the last 400,000 years (Vostok ice cores)
(Source Royal Commission on Environmental
Pollution (22nd Report), 2000)
25Contribution of Greenhouse Gases to Climate Change
26Sources and Lifetimes of Greenhouse Gases
- Carbon Dioxide (CO2) 100 years
- Methane 10 years
- Nitrous Oxide 150 years
- Chlorofluorocarbons 100 years
- (Source Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and
Research)
27Summary there is plenty of uncertainty and room
for debate - BUT
- The scientific debate about whether climate
change is a problem is over. - The debate now is
- What kind of a problem?
- How bad a problem?
- What should we do about it?
- When?
- How much will it cost?
- Who should pay?
28One group who are paying - insurance claims due
to weather claims
29 IPCC predictions - Dr. Chris Hope
R
e
a
s
o
n
s
f
o
r
C
o
n
c
e
r
n
Lar
ge
Negative
Net
Higher
Risks to
Increase
for Most
Negative
Many
Regions
in
All
Metrics
Positive
or
Negative
Market
Impacts
Majority
Negative
of People
for Some
Adversely
V
ery
Risks to
Increase
Regions
Af
fected
Low
Some
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
V
V
I Risks to Unique and threatened systems
IVAggregate Impacts II
Risks from Extreme Climate Events
V Risks from Future Large-scale III
Distribution of Impacts
discontinuities
30Brainstorming - how should we share out the
global commons?
- The atmosphere, and CO2 into it, is the classic
example of a global commons so - which is the fairest way of sharing it out,
among the people of the Earth? - starting from where we are now, with unequal use
of it - what are the possible ways of getting to
that fair share?
31International Debt - who owes who?
- Financial debt
- the countries and banks of the north are owed
200 Billion, by the developing and intermediate
countries - those countries pay Billion in interest every
year - much more than aid flows the other way
BUT..
- Ecological debt?
- The norths 30? of world population uses 70?
of the Earths atmospheric capacity - What is this worth as an ecological debt - the
other way? - What would be the equivalent of paying
interest on this?
32(No Transcript)
33Energy and Climate Change
- Global energy availability and use
- sources and availability fossil fuels, and
variations - uses - categories and variations
- Impacts of energy production and use
- local habitat and community damage and
pollution - global - climate change (Dr Chris Hope)
- Efficiency and Renewables - technologies, and
options - Sustainable Energy barriers and solutions
34So - can we improve energy resources Technology
- by a Factor 4 - or 10?
- Overall energy use
- The whole economy is less than 10 as
energy-efficient as the laws of physics permit - (Natural Capitalism,1999)
- Efficiency - 3 elements (at least)
- Renewables
- Hydro
- Wind
- Solar
- Nuclear
- Biomass
- Geothermal, tidal .
35Efficiency 1 System efficiency - fat pipes,
small pumps
Water Pumps Life-Cycle Costing
- one industrial pumping example (Natural
Capitalism) - - 90 saving on conventional thin pipe approach
- similar approach for buildings - system
efficiency for design/structure/energy services
as a whole
36Efficiency 2 Fuel conversion/distribution - from
the energy source to the motor
(Natural Capitalism, 1999, Ch.6)
coal to actual work 90 losses
37Hydropower - dont give up on it!
Engineers responsibility follow WCD 2000
Guide.
1. Gaining public acceptance 2. Comprehensive
options assessment 3. Addressing existing
dams 4. Sustaining rivers and livelihoods 5.
Recognising entitlements and sharing
benefits 6. Ensuring compliance 7. Sharing rivers
for peace, development and security
- renewable energy source, when constructed - can
still be appropriate - potential for 10-15 power retrofit on
existing dams - M E only - large, mini and micro applications
38Wind energy- rising star
- huge resource, although low conversion
efficiency so far - research increasing - regional variations (best where solar not so
good?) - visual impact - NIMBY - clash with communities
- offshore costs more, but less visual impact
- can be harnessed directly - see Errol lagoons
39PV Solar - large and small
- major research efforts - cost is all investment
- dropping by a factor of 10 over 1993 - 2003
(IPPR) - best decentralised - down to roof level
- best if integrated with building design and
architecture - eg. glazing - can be very low tech for developing countries
Munich conference centre generates 1MW
40Nuclear - costly, risky and centralised, but a
big investment...
- lowest direct CO2 impact
- highest waste risk - still no real solution
- hugely centralised and high tech for operation
- local visual and environmental impact
41Wave (and tidal) power - many ideas and
enthusiasts..
- large potential, varied locations
- wave favours medium size locations
- lots of different engineering solutions on trial
42Biomass - varied and flexible
- as wood burning, has been widely used
historically - but environmental impact - many varied fuels - wood, droppings, sludge gas,
MSW, etc - part solution to waste problem - air environmental impacts - to be watched
- can be small and decentralised
43Trends in energy costs - by source
Nuclear
Wind
(Power to the People IPPR, 2001)
Coal
Gas
44Comparison of the various renewables
45Carbon Emissions for Fuel Sources
(Grams C per kWh)
46So far, lower carbon intensities have related
to richer societies
(Source Economist, August 2002)
47Sustainable energy gathers momentum...
- Wind - costs falling dramatically growth
estimates 39 for 2001 30,000 employees already
in German industry Denmark targets 50 of energy
by 2030 market leader Vestas triples value in 2
years. - Solar - energy giants BP and Shell lead the way
costs beginning to drop success stories for in
PVs integrated with glass/cladding. - Fuel cells - fuelled by gas or hydrogen Ballard
of Canada to be the next Microsoft? - 250,000
fuel cells per year. Will fundamentally alter the
way electricity networks function. - Micro gas turbines CHP doubles the
fundamental conversion inefficiencies of gas
many on industrial/commercial scale domestic
scale promised by 2002/3 - 5 - 12 million
installations by 2020? - ABB changes corporate strategy - major player in
large power re-focusing on decentralised energy
48Energy and Climate Change
- Global energy availability and use
- sources and availability fossil fuels, and
variations - uses - categories and variations
- Impacts of energy production and use
- local habitat and community damage and
pollution - global - climate change (Dr Chris Hope)
- Renewable energy - technologies, and options
- Sustainable Energy barriers and solutions
49The new energy technologies are available - now
tackle the barriers
- Externalities
- Corporate control
- Decentralisation
- Prices
- Taxes/levies
- Incentives
50Corporate control decentralisation
- But
- utility commercial structures hinder it - no
incentive to sell less, nor buy back - practical aspects of power distribution
networks, charges, regulations dont help - current large, privatised energy companies want
to continue to control the key solution
technologies (CO2 sequestration) - so are happy
for change to take a long time...
I could fit solar PV roof tiles, and generate
100 of my electricity - for 10 - 20k per house
51Prices, taxes/levies and Incentives
- Pricing the externalities
- Climate change levies - including helping CHP?
- Direct carbon taxes
- Capital allowances for high energy efficiency
plant - Car and petrol taxation New markets, fair
prices - Renewables network access pricing
- Carbon trading schemes
52Standards regulation local global
- Global (governments)
- Kyoto Marrakesh - when will USA learn?
- Well need 60, not 20, reductions in CO2
(Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution) - Local
- Change building and construction standards NOW
- Introduce more information less paperwork
UK CO2 Emissions 1990 -2020?
53Global regulation - very hard the Ozone - CFCs
precedent
- CFCs and Ozone
- The hoped - for impact of CFC control on the
ozone layer - 26 years from 1st science to control
- then 100 years to end of impact
Stratospheric CL2 concentration in ppb
(Source Beyond the Limits)
54Rapid reaction to global controls on CFCs CO2 is
much harder?
(Source Tomorrows Markets, WBCSD, 2002)
55Micropower Vision 2020- a very different energy
system from today?
- Far less energy used for heat, light and other
energy services, by employing much higher
standards of efficiency for new buildings and
high penetration of micro CHP in the existing
stock. - Energy supply companies are now energy service
companies and distribution networks facilitate
electricity markets with a mix of local energy
supplies, demand side measures and energy storage
options. - Millions of homes and offices have their own
electricity generators, such as fuel cells or
solar roofs. - Up to 30 per cent of electricity supplies come
from renewables, some decentralised, some
offshore. Input from nuclear and coal have
declined gas remains the most popular fuel for
heat and electricity. Many renewable technologies
are now cost competitive, so no risk of over
dependence on gas. - Hydrogen is emerging as another form of energy
carrier. - (Power to the People - IPPR,
2001)
56Energy and Climate Change- an engineering
starting point?
- target reducing energy use by a factor of 3 to 4
- challenge all new schemes - no net extra CO2
release - no fossil fuel schemes, if not with CHP
- de-centralise facilitate smaller renewable
suppliers and CHP - integrate building structures with energy
sources and use - fertile ground for innovation and R D
- set higher targets each year
The stone age didnt end because we ran out of
stones - the oil age wont end because we ran out
of oil (CEO, Shell)
57Feedback, please, in Groups - High Level
Questions...
- Q1. How should we share out the global commons
- the atmosphere? - Q2. What would be the simplest ways for
Governments to encourage renewables? - Q3. What is the biggest impact difference you
could make, as an individual?
58Ending - Coursework 2
- Coursework Assignment 2 Energy Strategy
- Will be issued NOW
- Return to me end of Session 4 - 5 November
- Marked, back to you end of Session 6 - 19
November
59Coursework Assignment 2 Education Centre Energy
Strategy, Scotland
- A new sustainable development education centre is
to be built on the island of Inch Kenneth, off
the West coast of Scotland. You are working for
the consultant engineer, who wins the contract to
design and build the centre and develop a total
energy strategy for it. You have to work with the
architect, and for the client. - The centre will be used all year round, housing
up to 20 people at a time. It will include a
boathouse, a drying room for wet kit,
outbuildings for pigs and goats, and an
administration office with two PCs, a fax machine
and a telephone. It must also incorporate
refrigeration, cooking and washing facilities. - Estimate the energy demand of the building and
develop an energy strategy to meet this demand.
There is no national grid electricity supply on
the island at present, but the area has a wealth
of other resources. - Any assumptions that you make regarding the
location of the centre, the energy demand and the
scale and nature of resources must be clearly
stated. - Your answer should take the form of a summary
report to the client and will require detailed
descriptions of the methods of meeting the
demand. Since design of some elements of the
building will be necessary features these should
be justified for the architect and illustrated
with sketches and diagrams in the report. - The report should be no longer than six sides of
A4, including diagrams, in a style acceptable to
the discerning client. It must be received at
the Cambridge University Engineering Department
Centre for Sustainable Development no later than
5pm on 5 November 2002 - If you have any problems with this assignment,
including meeting the deadline, please contact
Heather Cruickshank at hjc34_at_eng.cam.ac.uk as
soon as possible.
60Coursework Assignment 2 Education Centre Energy
Strategy, Scotland
61Next Session 3 - 29th October Water
- Global water availability and use
- Impact - environmental, social, economic
- Solutions - Sustainable water?
- Barriers and Challenges
- Are you coming?
WATER IS GOLD
62EXTRAS
63The Greenhouse effect
Source New Scientist
64Fuel conversion/distribution efficiency - from
the energy source to the motor
user energy
primary energy source
energy services
efficient energy
(Power to the People - IPPR, 2001)
65Delivering a 21st Century Energy System
- IPPR Report Power to the People 2001 - propose
for Government - 1. Change energy policy objectives economic
efficiency affordable access environmental
sustainability security and diversity of supply. - 2. Remove existing barriers NETA market changes
distribution network charges for smaller,
regional, intermittent suppliers - 3. Promote decentralised electricity pilot
micropower zones to uncover and try out
solutions on regulatory, cost and technical
issues - and apply them to solve fuel poverty
areas, too. - 4. Stimulate demand for clean energy Accept the
targets of 30 renewables by 2020 (FoF) and 60
CO2 reduction by 2050 (RCEP) increase Climate
Levy, exempt CHP introduce emissions trading
tax-incentivise lower domestic energy use price
roof-produced electricity at same rate as
buy-in price draw up a hydrogen strategy..
66Efficiency 2 Pump/motor efficiency
Economic Refurbishment - average 10 - 20 better
System Optimisation 16 Saving
(Source - AEMS Ltd.)
67Efficiency types eg. pumping - uses 20 of
electricity world-wide
- 1. System efficiency - fat pipes, small pumps
(savings possible 10 - 90 on standard practice) - 2. Pump/motor efficiency - maximum useful use of
electrical power applied (nearly all pumps on
average are running 10 - 20 less efficient than
optimum) - 3. Fuel conversion/distribution efficiency - from
the generation source to the motor (for instance,
coal to use 90 losses - ...with present technologies
68Wind - but what about visual impact?