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Prof. Trevor Davies

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Title: Prof. Trevor Davies


1
The Star of the EAST
A Landmark Project for the EAST of England
Prof. Trevor Davies Dean of School of
Environmental Sciences Dr Keith Tovey, CEng
MICE Director of Low Carbon Innovation
Centre
2
A Landmark Project for the EAST of England
  • Do we think the Star of the East the type of
    project EEDA is looking for?
  • Do we need to get the support of
  • The City?
  • The County?
  • The Region?
  • If so how do we go about it?

3
STAR of the EAST
Suspended Star
Observation Platform
glass
1. Baseline 2. Vision 3. Detail 4.
Outcome
Power Station
T.D.Davies 02/06/03
4
STAR of the East
  • World-class attraction, demonstration,
    awareness-raising, technology, leadership in East
  • Fire imagination
  • Statement that the East will lead the renewables
    revolution in the UK/Europe

5
Integrated time-lines 1the natural environment
  • Natural climate regimes and response of humans
  • West Runton Elephant biggest/best in world
  • Glacial geology- most spectacular in Europe
  • Earliest-known hominid presence in NW Europe
  • Only Neanderthal site in UK
  • Seahenge unique in the world
  • Cromer Forest Bed
  • The Elephant Bed
  • The Star Fish
  • Other Fossil Beds
  • New Museum of Climate Change at Cromer

6
Integrated time-lines 2the environment
influenced by the use of energy by humans
  • The Broads biggest tourist attraction in EE and
    unique in the world (new National Park) first
    industrial-scale use of non-renewables in UK
    (Europe?) hydrocarbon-1
  • Biggest concentration of pre-industrial
    renewables in world windmills/pumps for
    drainage/power major landscape feature
  • Most spectacular example of coastal erosion in
    Europe (revealed the Elephant!) lost towns
    (Dunwich)
  • Most vulnerable area to sea-level rise in UK
    (Broads also threatened)
  • New Broads Headquarters

7
Integrated time-lines 3global warming, now and
the future
  • Expertise-
  • School of Environmental Sciences
  • - Tyndall Centre
  • - Climatic Research Unit
  • - Low Carbon Innovation Centre
  • best in world (Gvt Chief Scientific
    Adviser)
  • Threats-
  • - EE one of most vulnerable in UK
  • - Coast (Sizewell?)
  • - Broads

8
Production of energy has been/will be critical
1Hydrocarbons- now
  • Hydrocarbon-3 North Sea
  • (Hydrocarbon-2 is 0.5km below)
  • Bacton N Sea and now Siberia
  • lights will go out in 2020s Radio 4 Today
    Programme July 2003
  • Innogy expresses concern over Electricity Supply
    from 2004/2005 EnergyQuotes 11th September
    2003.

9
Time, environment, energy and regional integration
  • EE can become renewables centre of England/UK
    (EEDA ambition?)
  • EE can lead way in awareness-raising and
    demonstration of link between energy and the
    environment
  • Increase in visitors to region stimulated
  • EE can organise/integrate what we already have
    and point to the future

10
Production of energy has been/will be critical 2
Beyond-Hydrocarbons
  • (Sizewell)
  • North Sea (wind)
  • Land (wind, biofuel/biomass EE major area)

11
Vision
  • STAR of the East
  • a complete, joined-up story of how the EE could
    and should show the way to the renewables
    revolution
  • Climate change environmental change-impacts-risk
    -reduce greenhouse gases-renewables
  • Hard- and soft-edge to the wow factor
  • A world-landmark

12
Norwich
  • Wind-turbine and sculpture unique in the world
  • Renewables power station biomass (local
    sources), sewage sludge (pipeline in river?),
    (waste), (future? hydrogen?) biofuels unique
    (in world?)
  • Rail/river transport
  • Historic heat-pump Hydro?
  • Major tourist and technological attraction
  • Connecting city and country

13
Norfolk
  • Visual links
  • Physical links rail/river (biodiesel?)
  • Remote links (tele-c, laser?)
  • To

- New Broads HQ (rivers, lakes,conservation,
wetland management, birds etc) - Old
windmills - Cromer Elephant Museum (turbine)
physical models of cliff collapse - Bacton
gas (CO2) import? - Scroby Sands (turbines,
SL, sediment transport, etc) new turbines -
Gas rigs?
14
The Region
  • Dunwich (Suffolk)
  • Canvey Island (worst affected in 1953 floods)
  • Sizewell (only nuclear station in UK in 2020s)
  • Further W via Swaffham etc, to other
    turbines/plant (EE has favourable topography)
  • Only biodiesel train service in UK (Europe?)
    Norwich-Cambridge?

15
Aerial Photographs
16
Detailed Aerial Photograph
17
View across Whittlingham Broad - Photo point 1
18
View from Thorpe Station - Photo point 2
19
from Thorpe Road - Photo point 3
20
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21
1. Baseline
Glacial debris landscape, much evidence of
natural climate change,coastal erosion, cliff
collapse, sea level rise threat. Finest whole
specimen of woolly elephant in UK and one of best
in world - not yet put on show.
  • North Sea
  • Fossil fuel extraction - oil/gas
  • Now a source of renewables
  • (wind energy)
  • - Govt. announcement July
  • 14th 2003

Broads Major tourist area in EE, soon to be
National Park. Broads are a consequence of first
major use of fossil fuel in UK - peat.
(opportunity for interesting comparative
illustrations c.f. todays use). Important
landscape features and agents of past prosperity
- windmills/pumps. Susceptible to seal
level-rise/environmental change - sensitive
landscape/management issues. Production of
Biomass
22
2. Vision
Visual / high tech Link (microwave/laser)? To
turbine on Cromer Ridge - climate change museum
(mammoth, physical models of cliffs, erosion,
sediment transport etc.
Star of the East - a striking sculpture - star
suspended in air and generating electricity.
Yarmouth/Scroby visual / high tech
link also information on sea-level
Wonderful architectural counterpoint to the
catherdral - providing superb views over Norwich
and Norfolk to the sea.
glass mast with glass lift and observation
deck.
Solar panels
Many wind mills/pumps (some generating
electricity)?
Renewables Power Station wind biomass (from
Broads, Breckland, Norfolk Farmers, sewage works
(2km down river)- pre-processing of some biomass
at Thetford (existing renewables power station)
and shipped in by rail pre-processing of sewage
and shipped by river (boat or pipeline). Waste?
Future capacity for hydrogen (bio-ethanol from
waste) built in.
Physical links rail/river - biodiesel/hydrogen
boats and trains
23
3. Detail
  • An Angel of the North and an Eden Project
    with a hard edge.
  • In Norwich - the STAR of the EAST - a sculpture
    and a turbine.
  • Rotor could be star-shaped - invisible mast and
    observation deck. Flexible, future-proofed,
    renewable energy power station and development
    facility
  • biofuel pre-processed outside Norwich and
    shipped by rail/river (or pipeline).
  • Waste (pre-processed outside Norwich)
  • Built in Hydrogen / bio-ethanol capability (CHP
    from biomass plant)
  • Exhibition/learning area.

Will throw people out towards New Broads HQ,
new Museum of Climate Change, Yarmouth. Visual
links, high-tech links (turbines at Yarmouth,
Cromer, weather data, wind energy production,
sea-level changes, sediment transport etc.
STAR with draw people in first place - all
railway lines go past it as do both rivers - also
new Riverside development is close by as is
Carrow Road Football Ground.
24
3. Detail - continued
Broads HQ Visitor Centre - wetland of global
importance, major tourist area, new National
Park, peat workings (CO2) , conservation
issues, weltland management, climate change
impacts - Sea Level rise, salt water incursion,
effects on bird populations etc, produces
biomass fuel all making point of renewables.
New Museum of Climate Change, Cromer rail link,
the natural climate change story ice-ages,
woolly elephants, vegetation succession, coastal
erosion, cliff collapse etc - leading right up
to greenhouse gas induced climate change.
Yarmouth North Sea Wind farms and the old
fossil fuel provider
25
Some Technical and related Information
Biomass plant would have capacity of 30 - 40 MW
and would be sufficient to supply 30 of
electricity of Norwich could be sustained by 120
- 150 sq km of land from across region via rail
links. locally/community derived power - Energy
White Paper Plant would operate as CHP to
provide process heat for biofuel production
(improving CO2 benefit from these fuels). Wind
Turbine would probably reach a 15 load factor
(c.f. 30) because of importance of sculptural
form. Heat Pumps Historically, Norwich was
important in the development of the energy
conservation technology of Heat Pumps when John
Sumner (despite war time difficulties) installed
one in Duke Street. There are plans to re-install
a heat pump when the building is renovated for
city centre apartments.
26
4. Outcome
  • An architectural/sculptural statement of the
    highest order
  • A flexible, multi-process, renewables power
    station linking town and country.
  • A major boost to the profile of the East in the
    Renewables area.
  • A major tourist attraction in its own right -
    dramatic presence
  • impact (laser lights at night)
  • An effective mean of propelling people to the
    other three components of this integrated/distribu
    ted initiative.
  • A complete, joined-up story of why renewables
    are so important - climate change gtgt
    environmental processes gtgt reduce green house
    gases gtgt renewables

27
4. Outcome - continued
  • Hard technology put into context of the wow
    factor - superb woolly elephant specimen,
    high-tech remote links - and the softer element
    of windmills, birds, rivers, landscape - and the
    imperative of protecting them
  • Opportunity for continuing hard-edged development
    around the STAR (sustainable technology and
    renewables) Park in Norwich - including future
    hydrogen.
  • Opportunity for integrated plan (transport etc),
    and continuing development of low carbon links -
    rail shuttle bus (station - STAR), river, road
    etc.

28
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29
Future Global Warming Rates
30
Reasons for Concern
Range of predicted temperatures
Risks to Many
Large Increase
Net Negative for all marketsmost
Negative for most Regions
Higher Risk
oC
Some positive/ some negative Most people
adversely affected
Risks to Some
Negative for some Regions
Increase
Very Low Risk
I II III
IV V
I Risks to Unique and Threatened Systems II Risks
from Extreme Climatic Events III Distribution of
Impacts IV Aggregate Impacts V Risks from Future
Large Scale Discontinuities
31
The CRed ambition
  • To engage, enthuse and empower a large, diverse
    community to debate, plan and execute a programme
    to reduce carbon emissions by up to 60 by 2025
  • Can a local community take on the responsibility
    for starting to confront the challenge of climate
    change and make a difference?
  • Or will it continue to be - someone/somewhere
    else?
  • Can we encourage politicians/officials to be
    bolder on our behalf?
  • exemplar for the world

32
The CRed Community
  • Participatory/inclusive
  • Partnerships
  • Modes of participation (targets/methods)
  • Matrix of modes of participation representative
    of real-world complexity
  • Spark imaginations
  • Centred on Norwich/Norfolk, but links across the
    region, country, the world.

33
  • The right language?
  • 5 hot air balloons full of CO2 per person per
    year
  • (4 million per year over Norfolk)

34
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