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Opportunities in Energy Ray Hammarlund Director, Energy Programs Division Kansas Corporation Commission Top Ten Problems of Humanity for the Next 50 Years • • • • • • • • • • 1) Energy 2) Water 3) Food 4) Environment 5) Poverty 6) Terrorism & War 7) Disease 8) Education 9) Democracy 10) Population • Source: Professor R.E. Smalley – Rice University May 3, 2003 U.S. Energy System Human Development Index vs. Energy Usage World Energy GDP vs. Energy Consumption 14,000 UAE Energy Consumption (thousand metric toe per capita) 12,000 10,000 Kuwait Iceland 8,000 Canada Trinidad & Tobago Sweden 6,000 Russia 4,000 Turkmenistan Oman Czech Estonia Slovakia Singapore Finland Norway Belgium Netherlands Germany France Japan UK Switzerland Ireland Austria Denmark Italy Australia Saudi Arabia Mozambique United States New Zealand S. Korea Slovenia Greece Israel Spain 2,000 Argentina China Portugal Chile Uruguay 0 0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 GDP per capita (million Int. $ at PPP) 25,000 30,000 Energy Efficiency, Conservation • “A clean world takes a lot of dirty work” Mike Rowe – Dirty Jobs – Discovery Channel • There is plenty of work to be done in Kansas for 50 years on energy efficiency and conservation ARRA funding from KCC • Revolving loan fund for Residential and Light Commercial – Two options • Payments on the utility bill • EE loan through participating banks – Details • Average dollar amount of upgrade around $6000 with $1500 usually paid for upfront by homeowner • Requires an energy audit Meridian Way Wind Farm 201 MW - 2008 Smoky Hills Wind Farm 250 MW - 2008 Central Plains Wind Farm 99 MW - 2009 Spearville Wind Farm 100 MW - 2006 Elk River Wind Farm 150 MW - 2005 Gray County Wind Farm 112 MW - 2001 Flat Ridge Wind Farm 100 MW - 2009 Top Ten Wind Manufacturers (as of March 2008) Source: BTM Consulting • • • • • • • • • • 1) Vestas (Denmark) 2) GE Energy (United States) 3) Gamesa (Spain) 4) Enercon (Germany) 5) Suzlon (India) 6) Siemens (Germany) 7) Acciona (Spain) 8) Goldwing (China - PRC) 9) Nordex (Germany) 10)Sinovel (China - PRC) U.S. Nuclear Power Plants Agriculture Offsets vs. Carbon Sequestration Geologic Storage of CO^2 Biomass Production Long Range Goal: Develop a Continuous Process for the Production of Algal Biomass Public sources of water/wastewater Fossil fuel-based electric power plants Areas meeting criteria for sun exposure & temperature Pate, R., “Biofuels and the Energy-Water Nexus”, Sandia National Laboratories, AAAS/SWARM, April 11, 2008, Albuquerque, NM Energy Supply Chain (Stylized) Fuel Extraction Fuel Processing Major Emitting Sources All Direct Sources All Indirect Emission Sources Refinery Power plant Mine/Drilling Factory Residential/Commercial Upstream (fuel producers) Source: Dallas Burtraw – Resources for the Future Downstream (consumers) Innovation is on the consumer side • Dynamic Pricing-Pricing for incremental and time of use, not bulk sale of averaged price electricity. • Smart Grid defined – Self healing/correcting – Motivate customers to be active grid participants/controllers of grid – Resist attack-physical/cyber – Increased power quality for modern uses – Accommodate all generation/storage options – Facilitate markets – Optimize all assets/operations So, you want to make money in energy solutions • Ray’s advice for what it is worth – Get as close to the consumer as you can • This is not production solutions, it is consumption solutions – The answer is simple: Consumers want to “TiVo ®” energy • • • • • Let them Real time pricing Instant consumption feedback Information Remember Dirty Jobs…… Questions? Ray Hammarlund (785) 271-3179 [email protected]