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104 Chapter 10 frontispiece. Trains loaded with coal departing from the Rawhide coal mine near Gillete, Wyoming E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Photograph by J. Foster 105 Figure 10.1. The fuels used to produce all energy worldwide, 2005 E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Data from Energy Information Agency, DOE 106 Table 10.1. Some common units of energy and power Prefixes Kilo (K) 103 Giga (G) 109 Peta (P) 1015 Mega (M) 106 Tera (T) 1012 Exa (E) 1018 Units and Some Common Amounts Joule (J) = basic unit of energy exajoule = 1018 joules British thermal unit (Btu) = energy needed to heat 1 pound of water 1°F = 1,055 joules 1.055 exajoule = 1015 (1 quadrillion [quad]) Btu Toe = tons of oil equivalent = 41.868 x 109 joules 1 million toe = 41.868 petajoule Watt (W) = unit of power (work) = energy per unit time = 1 joule/sec kilowatt = 1,000 watts, megawatt = 106 watts, gigawatt = 109 watts Watt hours (WH) = energy = 1 W delivered over 1 hour = 1 joules/sec x 3,600 sec/hr = 3,600 joules 1 kilowatt hour = 3.6 x 106 joules, 1 megawatt hour = 3.6 x 109 joules, 1 gigawatt hour = 3.6 x 1012 joules, 1 kilowatt hour = 3,413 Btu Metric ton (t) = 1,000 kilograms E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. 107 Figure 10.2. Emissions of CO2 from fossil-fuel burning according to fuel type, 2000-2005 and projected to 2030 E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Data from Energy Information Agency, DOE 108 Figure 10.3. Annual emissions of CO2 from various sectors E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Source: Rogner et al., 2007 109 Table 10.2. World’s recoverable coal reserves in gigatons as of January 2003 Region/Country Bituminous and Anthracitea United States Subbituminous Lignite Total 112.2 100.1 30.4 250.9 Russia 49.1 97.4 10.4 157.0 China 62.2 33.7 18.6 114.5 India 90.1 0.0 2.4 92.4 Non-OECDb Europe, Eurasia 45.4 17.0 28.4 90.8 Australia, New Zealand 38.6 2.4 38.0 79.1 South Africa 47.2 0.2 0.0 47.3 OECD Europe 17.7 4.5 17.1 39.3 0.0 10.1 0.0 11.1 479.7 270.4 155.0 905.1 Brazil World total aAnthracite, bOECD bituminous, and lignite are different coal types with decreasing carbon and heat contents = Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Source: Energy Information Agency, DOE 110 Figure 10.4. Current and projected coal consumption in India, the United States, China, and the rest of the world E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Source: Energy Information Agency DOE 111 Table 10.3. Comparison of performance and cost of some coal-fired, electricity-generating technologies Subcritical Pulverized Coal (PC) SuperCritical PC UltraSuperCritical PC Subcritical Circulating Fluid Bed SubIntegrated critical Gas Combined PC-oxy Cycle (IGCC) CO2 capture? No Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes Yes No Yes Efficiency (%) 34.3 25.1 38.5 29.3 43.3 34.1 34.8 25.5 30.6 38.4 31.2 CO2 emitteda 931 127 830 109 738 94 1,030 141 104 832 102 Costb 4.84 8.16 4.78 7.69 4.69 7.34 4.68 6.98 5.13 6.52 aIn 7.79 units of grams per kilowatt hour. bCost of electricity (COE) in cents per kilowatt hour. The COE is the constant dollar electricity price required over the life of the plant to provide for all expenses and debt and bring in an acceptable rate of return to investors. E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Source: MIT 112 Figure 10.5. Simulation of the shape of a CO2 plume as it spreads through a porous layer over a 20year period E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Source: Doughty and Pruess, 2004 113 Figure 10.6. Schematic cross section and location of the Sleipner Project, Norwegian North Sea E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Source: Benson et al., 2005 114 Uranium-235 fission (example reaction) uranium-235 + slow neutron barium-144 + krypton-90 + 2 neutrons + 200 megavolts E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. p. 198 115 Figure 10.7. Metatorbernite E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Photograph by J. Newman, American Museum of Natural History 116 Table 10.4. Generating costs of wind and solar power in 2007 for three different amounts of sunlight received and wind velocities Received irradiance (watts per square meter per year) 1,700 2,000 2,300 Solar photovoltaic (cents per kilowatt hour) 29 25 21 Solar thermal (cents per kilowatt hour) 26 22 19 7.0-7.5 7.5-8.0 Wind velocity (meters per second at 50 meters above ground) On-shore turbines (cents per kilowatt hour) 4.6 Off-shore turbines (cents per kilowatt hour) 5.3 3.8 8.0-8.8 3.4 4.5 E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Source: Edmonds et al., 2007 117 Figure 10.8. Renewable sources of power as proportions of total U.S. electric net summer capacity, 2006 E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Source: Energy Information Agency, DOE 118 Figure 10.9. Wind farm E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Source: National Renewable Energy Laboratory, DOE 119 Figure 10.10. The growth of global installed wind power capacity, 1996-2007 E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. 120 Table 10.5. National installed wind power capacities as of the end of 2007 Capacity (Megawatts) Percentage of World Capacity Germany 22,247 23.6 7.0 United States 16,818 17.9 1.2a Spain 15,145 16.1 11.8 India 8,000 8.5 4.0b China 6,050 6.4 6.4 Denmark 3,125 3.3 21.2 Italy 2,726 2.9 1.7 France 2,454 2.6 1.2 United Kingdom 2,389 2.5 1.8 Portugal 2,150 2.3 9.3 Canada 1,846 2.0 1.1b Netherlands 1,746 1.9 3.4 Japan 1,538 1.6 0.5b Total Europe 57,136 60.7 3.8 94,123 100.0 1.8b World total Percentage of National Electricity Demand Note: Data are for countries with capacities greater than 1,000 megawatts. aFor 2006; bAs a proportion of total national electricity generation. E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Source: Global Wind Energy Council 121 Figure 10.11. An array of photovoltaic panels E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. National Renewable Energy Laboratory, DOE, photograph by S. Wilcox 122 Figure 10.12. Parabolic troughs E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. National Renewable Energy Laboratory, DOE, photograph by W. Gretz 123 Figure 10.13. The worldwide growth of capacity from photovoltaic cells E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press. Data from British Petroleum 2007 124 Figure 10.14. The stabilization triangle and wedge: a way of thinking about how to solve the emissions problem E.A. Mathez, 2009, Climate Change: The Science of Global Warming and Our Energy Future, Columbia University Press.