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Module 9

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Summarize the environmental impacts of automobile use in North America. ... Many newer engines are ethanol-ready. 45:211: Environmental Geography ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Module 9


1
Module 9
  • Energy and Environment

2
Learning Objectives (1)
  • Explain the link between fossil energy
    consumption and environmental quality
  • Describe the major features of energy consumption
    in North America
  • Amount and trend by type
  • Know the present composition of world energy use

3
Learning Objectives (2)
  • Know what is meant by the terms resources and
    reserves, renewable and non-renewable energy.
  • Describe three types of fossil fuel and three
    sources of renewable energy.
  • Summarize the environmental impacts of automobile
    use in North America.

4
Basic Definitions
  • Energy The capacity for doing work
  • Work Work is done when a force moves its point
    of application through a distance
  • Work Force Distance
  • Force An external agency capable of altering the
    state of rest or motion in a body.
  • Mass The constant of proportionality between an
    applied force and acceleration

5
Energy and Work
  • Energy is the capacity to do work. Modern
    societies have been built on an increasingly
    effective harnessing of sources of energy to do
    work, from wood, coal, oil, gas, nuclear and
    beyond.
  • Understanding the role of energy and human energy
    use is critical to an analysis of environmental
    issues.

6
Fossil Fuels
  • Fossil fuels remain the world's most heavily used
    energy sources.
  • Petroleum comprises 41 percent of energy use,
  • coal comprises about 27 percent, and
  • natural gas 22 percent,
  • Nuclear power (6) and hydropower (2.5) comprise
    most of the remainder.

7
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8
History of Energy Use USA
9
Energy and Environment
  • Environmental problems such as urban smog, acid
    rain and global climate change are directly
    linked to the combustion of fossil fuels.
  • The six major air pollutants are Particulate
    Matter, Sulphur Dioxide, Ozone, Oxides of
    Nitrogen, Lead, and Carbon Monoxide.
  • All are the result of the burning of fossil fuels.

10
Energy and Economics
  • While a variety of environmental problems are
    attributed to the reliance on fossil fuels,
    increased use of energy is a primary indicator
    that a country is developing a higher standard of
    living.
  • Greater reliance on energy efficiency and
    alternative sources offers a means of maintaining
    economic development and environmental quality.

11
Energy and Economic Growth
In the past half century, global energy growth
has increased in lockstep with economic growth.
TPES Total Primary Energy Supply
12
Resources and Reserves
  • Resource - a naturally occurring substance of use
    to humans.
  • Reserve - the amount of a known deposit that can
    be economically extracted using current
    technology.
  • Reserve levels change as technology develops, as
    new discoveries are made, and as profit margins
    change.

13
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14
Energy Economics Externalities
  • External Costs are those attributable to an
    activity that are not borne by the party involved
    in that activity. They include
  • Hidden costs borne by governments, including
    subsidies and R D programs.
  • Costs of the damage caused to health and the
    environment, including acid rain damage and
    health impacts.
  • The costs of global warming attributable to CO2
    emissions.

15
External cost estimates
16
Energy Sources
  • Non-renewable energy - sources used faster than
    they can be replenished.
  • Coal Reserves - 200 yr
  • Oil Reserves - 60 yrs
  • Natural Gas - 100 yrs

17
Renewable Energies
  • Renewable energy - continuously present as a
    feature of the physical environment. For example
  • An immense amount of energy from the sun strikes
    the surface of the earth every day.
  • Hundreds of times the annual energy consumption
    of the global economy. An infinite supply!
  • In addition, there is wind and wave power and
    biomass from the sun, as well as geothermal and
    hydro.

18
Electrical Energy
  • Because electricity is easily transported and its
    uses are so varied, electricity is a major world
    energy source.
  • However, most electrical energy is produced from
    burning fossil fuels.

Thermal power generation is also the single
largest consumer of water
19
Energy Growth
  • Since 1950, energy use increased 400 percent with
    a doubling of world population and a quadrupling
    of Gross World Product.
  • The world now consumes the equivalent of 175
    million barrels of oil each day
  • equal to 85,000 gallons of gasoline every second.

20
Energy and Sustainability
  • The necessity of reducing and minimizing the
    environmental impacts of energy use, particularly
    those with potentially worrisome global effects,
    is perhaps the greatest challenge resulting from
    the twentieth century's economic advances.

21
Paths to Sustainable Energy
  • Energy conservation and energy efficiency
  • Over the next half century, energy efficiency
    could satisfy half of the world's energy demand
  • Renewable energy
  • Renewables could satisfy half of the remaining
    demand
  • Reform the transport sector
  • Controlling the automobile society

22
Renewables
  • There is a rapidly expanding global market for
    competitively priced, clean, "green" energy
    services that don't pollute or destroy natural
    resources.
  • These green goods include different renewable
    energy options like solar panels, wind turbines,
    biomass power plants, as well as geothermal and
    small scale hydro installations.

23
Wind Power
  • By the year 2010, Denmark plans to produce half
    its total electricity by wind power.
  • They are now the world leader in wind power
    technology, and its a growth industry.
  • The technology is being exported worldwide.

24
Solar Power space efficient
  • Solar energy systems need less space to produce a
    megawatt of electricity than coal-fired power
    when the land devoted to mining is factored in.
  • 10 of Arizona desert lands are sufficient to
    meet the whole of USA's electricity needs using
    present-day solar cell technology.
  • Most hydropower projects require at least 20
    times as much land per kilowatt-hour as solar
    power does.

25
Renewables are Clean
  • Photovoltaic power generation has zero emissions.
    For each month of use, a one kilowatt
    photovoltaic system
  • prevents 75 kg of coal from being mined
  • prevents 150 kg of CO2 from entering the
    atmosphere
  • avoids 105 gallons of water from being consumed
  • avoids NO and SO2 from being released into the
    environment

26
The Automobile Society
  • The transportation needs of most North Americans
    are met largely by the automobile.
  • The automobile has allowed a freedom of movement
    unequaled in human history, and has become a
    status symbol important to our culture.
  • Fueling individual passenger cars now accounts
    for gt25 of the worlds oil consumption.

27
Autos and Environment
  • It is now apparent that the convenience of the
    automobile has come at a cost to the environment
    and some unintended consequences threaten to
    outweigh the gains.
  • The gasoline powered automobile in its present
    form is the cause of a great number of
    environmental problems.

28
Exhaust Emissions
  • Exhaust emissions from transportation have
    overtaken those from the industrial sector in the
    U.S.
  • The environmental impacts of automobile emissions
    include urban smog, acid rain and global warming
  • As well there are land use and waste disposal
    concerns related to automobile use.

29
Autos, Energy and Materials
  • Manufacturing an automobile requires
    approximately 450,000 litres of water, which
    comes in clean and goes out polluted in one way
    or another. 
  • The energy required to produce a vehicle is equal
    to about 12 of the energy used by the vehicle in
    its lifetime. 

30
Convenient Transportation?
  • Americans spend an average 9 hours behind the
    wheel every week.
  • The greater mobility of the private car has the
    paradoxical effect of lengthening how far people
    go, rather than saving them time.
  • Longer commutes, greater sprawl and worsening
    congestion all translate into lots of time in the
    car.
  • Worsening congestion brings deterioration in
    urban air quality, with effects on health and
    quality of life.

31
Urban Sprawl
  • The ultimate source of the problem is automobile
    dependency created by sprawling patterns of urban
    development.
  • Changes in urban land use patterns to reduce
    necessary travel distances, and
  • Increased use of alternatives to the automobile
  • are the long term solution to the
    environmental problems caused by the automobile. 

32
Autos and Land Use
  • Patterns of land use have been drastically
    altered by the increased use of the automobile.

Millions of acres of agricultural land, forests
and urban space have been paved over and
dedicated to the automobile. In some inner city
areas, up to 60 of the land area is paved over
for use by cars. 
33
Other Land Use Issues
  • Paved roadways and parking lots result in more
    rainwater runoff, less groundwater infiltration,
    and increased temperatures in urban areas. 

Large amounts of land are also required to
dispose of used automobiles and automobile parts
such as tires and batteries. Many of these waste
disposal sites have a negative effect on local
air and groundwater. 
34
Electric Cars?
  • Electric powered vehicles have no tailpipe
    emissions, and can lead to improvements in air
    quality.
  • The net environmental impacts of electric
    vehicles depends upon the source of the
    electricity used. 
  • Electric cars recharged with electricity from
    coal fired power plants could have net carbon
    dioxide and other emissions far higher than those
    for gasoline powered automobiles. 

35
Ethanol a liquid renewable
  • Fuel ethanol (or 'Gasohol') is a high octane,
    water-free alcohol produced from the fermentation
    of sugar or converted starch.
  • Ethanol is made primarily from grains or other
    renewable agricultural and forest feedstocks.
  • Ethanol is blended with gasoline to form an E10
    blend (10 ethanol and 90 gasoline), but it can
    be used in higher concentrations (E85).
  • Many newer engines are ethanol-ready.

36
Ethanol environmentally-friendly
  • The US Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 mandated
    the sale of oxygenated fuels in areas with
    unhealthy levels of carbon monoxide.
  • Since that time, there has been strong demand for
    ethanol blended with gasoline.
  • In the United States each year, more than 1.5
    billion gallons are added to improve the
    emissions quality of gasoline.
  • Emissions of CO, CO2, SO2 and NO2 are all
    reduced. Smog hazard is also reduced

37
Ethanol a viable alternative?
  • An acre of U.S. corn yields about 7,110 pounds of
    corn for processing into 328 gallons of ethanol.
    But planting, growing and harvesting that much
    corn requires about 140 gallons of fossil fuels
    and costs 347 per acre.
  • Thus, even before corn is converted to ethanol,
    the feedstock costs 1.05 per gallon of ethanol.

38
A fair argument?
  • Ethanol from corn costs about 1.74 per gallon to
    produce in the US, compared with about 95 cents
    to produce a gallon of gasoline.
  • The growers and processors can't afford to burn
    ethanol to make ethanol.
  • U.S. drivers couldn't afford it, either, if it
    weren't for government subsidies to artificially
    lower the price.

39
Public Transit
  • Public transit vehicles such as buses, subways
    and trains consume far less energy and have much
    lower emissions per passenger kilometer than
    automobiles. 
  • Governments could promote and support mass
    transit projects to improve urban air quality,
    more efficient use of energy and preservation of
    land resources.

40
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41
SUMMARY
  • A correlation exists between the amount of energy
    used and economic development (standard of
    living).
  • Wood furnished most early energy.
  • Fossil fuel consumption and labor-saving machines
    resulted in the Industrial Revolution.
  • The enormous growth of fossil fuel use has led to
    serious environmental problems.

42
SUMMARY
  • Fossil Fuels are non-renewable
  • Reserves are known deposits from which materials
    can be profitably extracted using current
    technology.
  • Reserves are ultimately finite and will
    eventually have to be replaced with other
    (renewable) sources.
  • Conservation and efficiency could greatly reduce
    energy use without noticeable changes in standard
    of living.
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