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“Let’s Talk Energy” WINTERSESSION 2017 Program of Topics Introduction: Why Energy? Oil/Gas Alternative Energy Solar Wind Nuclear Biofuels Why should we care about energy? Why should we care about energy? ● Energy powers our world ● Energy consumption correlates with GDP, quality of life Why should we care about energy? ● Developing countries need better access to energy to enhance growth ○ Two of three Africans have no access to power ● Population growth will increase energy needs ○ Must supply energy sustainably ■ Avoid over-extraction of resources ■ Limit damage from climate change... A primer on climate change A primer on climate change A primer on climate change A primer on climate change Energy usage can enhance climate change ● The energy sector is the largest contributor to worldwide CO2 emissions ○ A shift from fossil fuels to cleaner renewables could reduce this ○ Complications: ■ Technological concerns (i.e. intermittency, storage) ■ Longevity of existing fossil fuel plants, economic concerns ■ Political desires Oil and Gas ❧ What is it? ❧ ❧ Crude Oil ❧ Brent vs. WTI ❧ WTI – Light ❧ Brent – Less Light ❧ API Gravity ❧ Sweet vs. Sour ❧ Natural Gas (Shale Gas) ❧ Seismic surveys to locate ❧ About 45% of American natural gas production and 17% of American oil production depend on fracking ❧ Combined vs. Open Plants Where is it found? ❧ Previously, heavily pressurized and heated packs of dead phytoplankton ~ hundreds of millions of years old. ❧ ❧ Photo of us reserves of oil and methane How does drilling occur? ❧ ❧ Economics of O/G ❧ ❧ A classic economic commodity, supply-and-demand ❧ Current oil price: flooding of US markets by OPEC driving prices down ❧ Solution? ❧ 1.6 trillion barrels proven, 35 billion consumed/year, at least 50 years of oil without anymore exploration The future of O/G ❧ ❧ Makes 60% of our current energy consumption, can we drop altogether? ❧ Benefits: easy energy storage; high energy density ❧ Natural gas: water contamination, methane leakage? Solar Energy Technology: Photovoltaic Cells ▶ ▶ Energy conversion efficiency: ▶ Commercial cells ~20%. ▶ Research labs demonstrated ~40-50%. Different materials and designs. ▶ Cost vs. efficiency? Technology: Solar Thermal Collectors ▶ Energy conversion efficiency: ▶ (Sunlight to heat) x (heat to electricity): ~ 20% Trends ▶ 0.4% of U.S. energy consumption. ▶ Over 1% of global energy consumption Future of Solar Energy Wind Energy Key terms Scale Utility: Large, > 20 MW of electricity Land or offshore Distributed (smaller) Residential, commercial Horizontal Axis Turbines Vertical Axis Turbines History Originated from windmills used in agriculture Research accelerated due to... 1970s oil crises 1990s tax credits Currently ~75 GW of wind energy in the US ~450 GW globally Picture: 1980s wind farms installed in California Current Events and Economic Trends China’s wind construction Gansu Wind Farm -> Expected to produce 20 GW of power Europe: becoming established (42% of energy in Denmark from wind) US: cheaper than coal; comparable to natural gas Price reduced through recent tax credits Prices down; Installations up Future of Wind Energy US: More offshore projects? Large capacity in China and the US Bladeless turbines and kite systems in development Improvement of current systems - new materials, dimensions Projected wind installations by 2030 First US offshore wind: off Block Island (RI) Roadblocks Aesthetic displeasure Threat to birds (?) Noise Intermittency/Variability Reliance on governmental tax cuts Changes with current political climate? Biofuels First and second generation biofuels; biomass What is a Biofuel? -fuel produced through biological processes -typically used as transportation fuels ⚫First Generation – from sugars, grains, or seeds ⚫Alcohols (ethanol, butanol) ⚫Biodiesel (esters) ⚫Plant oil ⚫Second Generation – from lignocellulose ⚫Alcohols (ethanol, butanol) through enzymatic hydrolysis ⚫Thermochemical fuels (methanol, Fischer-Tropsch liquids) ⚫Algae lipids Pros Cons ⚫Mostly renewable ⚫Land and resource intensive ⚫“Cleaner” ⚫Food security issues ⚫Potentially carbon-neutral ⚫Infrastructure adaptability Why Biofuels? Source: Energy Technology Perspectives. International Energy Agency, 2014 Production and Challenges Source: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Energy Resource -Goal: commercially produce energy-intensive biofuels that can be readily integrated into current infrastructure and have minimal social and environmental impacts Estimated Land-Use Requirement in 2030 (km2/TWh per year) Ethanol from Corn 347.1 Source: http://www.biofuel.org.uk Wind 72.1 Solar PV 36.9 Natural Gas 18.6 Coal 9.7 Nuclear 2.4 Source: Energy, Water, and Land. National Climate Assessment 2014 Howitworks • Currentlyprovide20%ofpower- butmanyareshuttingdown • Allactivenuclearpowerplantsusenuclearfissiontogeneratetheirenergy • Fissionistheprocessofsplittinglargeatomsinsmallercomponents • Thereactionreleasesnucleithatgoontofurthersplitmorelargeatoms (inducingachainreaction) • Inareactor,carefuldesignandcoolingmechanismsareusedtocontrolthe chainreaction • Thissplittingalsoreleasesimmenseamountsofenergyintheformofheat • Thisheatisusedtoproducesteamthatfeedsintoturbinethatproduces electricitywiththehelpofagenerator TypesofReactorscurrentlyinuse: • BoilingWaterReactor(mostoutdated) Keypoints: • Waterwhichpassesoverthereactor coreisusedformoderatingthe reaction,coolingtherodsand producingsteam • Dangeroffuelleakmightmakethe waterradioactiveandspreadtorest ofreactor • Typicaloperatingpressureof70 atm (wherewaterboilsatabout285C) • GivesaCarnotefficiencyof42%with apracticaloperatingefficiencyof around32% TypesofReactorscurrentlyinuse: • PressurizedWaterReactor(mostcommon) Keypoints: • Herethewaterwhichpassesoverthe reactorcoretomoderate andcool doesnotflowtotheturbine. • Theprimaryloopwaterproduces steaminthesecondaryloopwhich drivestheturbine.(sonodangerof radioactivedamagetoturbinegiven fuelleak) • PWRcanoperateathigherpressure andtemperature,about160 atmand 315C. • ProvidesahigherCarnotefficiency • Reactorismorecomplicatedand morecostlytoconstruct. TypesofReactorscurrentlyinuse: • Fast-BreederReactor Keypoints: • Coolingandheattransferisdonebya liquidmetal(usuallysodiumor lithium) • Requiresahigherenrichment ofU235thanalight-waterreactor(15to 30%) • Nomoderatorisusedinthebreeder reactorsincefastneutronsaremore efficientin transmuting U-238toPu239 Dangers • Concernswithwastestorage(wherewillwebein10,000years) • Previousaccidents(Fukushima,Chernobyl,ThreeMileIsland) • Relatedtonuclearweapons,proliferation LookingForward • Economics:Manyplantsareshuttingdown,solarand windarebecomingcheapermuchfaster,newplant designstakeyearstocommercialize • PebbleBedGascooledreactors(allowsforrefueling withoutshuttingdownthereactorandsmallerscale designs) • saferreactors? • NuclearFusion • • • • Heatatomsuntiltheyfuse(+100MC) Difficulttocontaintheplasma Hugepotentialfornetenergypositive Highcosts Energy Storage Importance Energy Production Oil/Gas, Solar, Coal, Wind, Nuclear, Biofuels, Hydroelectricity, etc. Doesn’t mean much if you can’t store the energy Demand fluctuates “Energy storage captures excess electricity at high efficiencies for optimal use during outages, peak hours, or whenever effective grid management is a challenge.” Endgame – Sustainability, Consider – Storage, Economics Accumulators (Energy Storage Devices) Categories: Electrical, Mechanical, Thermal, Chemical • Batteries (Lead Acid, Nickel Cadmium, Lithium Ion, …) • Flywheels • Compressed Air • Thermal • Pumped Hydropower • Etc. Grid-Scale (Centralized) Storage • Pumped hydropower – “The largest-capacity form of grid-scale energy storage available today” Efficiency Account for 99% Worldwide 70% - 75% Distributed Energy Storage Microgrid Energy Policy The US in an International Context Paris Climate Agreement (COP21) ▶ ▶ ▶ ▶ First universal, legally binding, global climate deal 195 countries Global action plan - avoid dangerous climate change, limit global warming to 2 degrees Celcius (compared to pre-industrial levels) The Obama initiatives for CO2 reduction, cap and trade program, and sustainable energy development Cap & Trade Vs. Carbon Tax ▶ Basic idea: provide economic incentives for reducing pollutant emissions, don’t need to know where to cut beforehand, encourage new R&D, generate government revenue ▶ Cap and Trade: Government allocates a specific number of permits to emit specific quantities of a given pollutant over a time span; can auction and trade ▶ Guarantees falling below emissions ▶ Proposed by Obama administration but not passed ▶ Carbon tax - price on greenhouse gas emissions, charged $ amount ▶ Stable carbon prices, can go cheaper than target (but probably won’t in near future) ▶ In the US, we have a national market targeting acid rain, regional markets in nitrous oxide, and state markets in carbon dioxide (CA only) Trump & Energy ▶ “Unleash America's $50 trillion in untapped shale, oil, and natural gas reserves, plus hundreds of years in clean coal reserves.” ▶ No more Clean Power Plan ▶ Open more federal lands to energy production… more pipelines? Lower prices? ▶ Bring back coal? Trump will remove regulation, but can’t make coal competitive ▶ Supports nuclear power and hydropower ▶ Solar and wind industry will lose subsidies… but they don’t need government subsidies to be competitive?