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Can we have our planet and heat it, too? P310/P510 Fall 2011 Climate Discussion My conclusions The greenhouse effect Climate change – CO2 Climate change - temperature What the models say Recent Data Frost Fair on the Thames 1683 During the mini-ice age the Thames froze solidly on many occasions. London Bridge with more than 100 shops was built in 1209 and was the only bridge across the Thames until the late 1700’s. My Conclusion That we are obliged to move away from our own non-sustainable and climatedamaging fossil fuel use as quickly as possible. BBB – 6/19/2010 “If not for the greenhouse effect, we may have been able to postpone (the decision to look beyond fossil fuels) to the 22nd century, because there are massive coal reserves available, and coal can be made into synthetic fuels. We could have developed the world economy based on fossil fuels …. But with the greenhouse effect, we have to make the transition much earlier, perhaps in the early 21st century. That means that we have to look very seriously at the alternatives.” Martin Hoffert, Professor, New York University Greenhouse Effect* Two transparent windows: Solar radiation – visible (0.3-0.8 mm) Earth radiation – infrared (7-15 mm) Major infrared absorbers: CH4, Natural Gas N2O, Nitrous Oxide O3, Ozone CO2, Carbon Dioxide H2O, Water CH4 N2O O2,O3 CO2 * Piexoto & Oort H2O Global Surface Temperature to 2010 Goddard Institute for Space Studies (US) The graph shows global annual surface temperatures relative to 1951-1980 mean temperatures. 1.) The last decade was the hottest ever recorded. 2.) 2010 is the hottest year since records have been kept. 3.) The brown line shows the 5-year average: Long-term trends are more apparent. (Image credit: NASA/GISS) 2011 Mauna Loa CO2 Mauna Loa Monthly Mean CO2 in parts per million (ppm). August 2011 390.02 ppm August 2011 388.15 ppm National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/ccgg/t rends/ Last 1000 years of CO2 280 ppm 390 ppm TOTAL Total Sun = 1367 W/m-2 Since 2007: Rapid loss of Arctic sea ice Ice-free Since 2007: Recent sea-level rise measurements Merrifield, et al., 2009: (1993-2008) (3.5 ± 0.4) mm/yr IPCC 2007: (1993-2003) (3.1 ± 0.7) mm/yr Climate Change: An Impacts Summary Snow pack in Himalaya, Rocky Mountains summer drought in downstream areas. Open Arctic water in summer absorbs far more solar energy than when ice-covered. [Positive feedback] Ocean expansion (warming) and Greenland, Antarctica, Northern Canada rapid melting rapid glacial flow Sea level rise Thresholds, when crossed, make rapid transitions: Fresh water melting into the North Atlantic slows the Gulf Stream. Ocean surface temperature above 27oC increased hurricane frequency and severity. MODELS J. Hansen et al., Science 308, 1431, 2005. Estimates of human & natural forcings 18802005. These forcings reproduce the last 125 years of observed temperatures. Extrapolate model? Atmosphere-Ocean General Circulation Model (AOGCM) Multi-model averages (IPCC 2007) SUSTAINABILITY – “roughly, the ability to meet our needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet theirs.” Brundtland Commission (1987) Depletion Present Oil/Gas/U Near Term Climate Change COAL COAL X OIL X oil X GAS X gas X URANIUM X uranium TAR SANDS Innovation Long Term CARBON SEQ. BREEDERS X SOLAR (P.V., Wind, OTEC, Biomass..) FUSION Martin Hoffert: If it were not for climate change, we would have had an additional 150 years to develop alternative energy sources. GAS CLATH. GEOTHERMAL “Wedges” of U.S. Carbon Displacement Am. Solar Energy Society’s “Tackling Climate Change in the U.S.” Conservation & Efficiency Carbon Displacement by Region in Am. Solar Energy Society’s, “Tackling Climate Change” Carbon-neutral Energies Biomass: Ethanol from sugar cane Biodiesel from soybeans, rape seed, jatropha curcas Ethanol from cellulose Gasification to syngas Pellets from compressed biomass waste – [CHP - UEA] Geothermal storage: Vertical/horiz. loop systems Solar: passive, active, wind [T] OTEC, waves, tides Photovoltaics [T] Direct Solar – e.g. Spain [T] Direct – Stirling Engine ------> Photovoltaics: An Example in Bloomington http://physics.indiana.edu/~brabson /PV/PV.html https://www.hobolink.com/p/61f4 eecea80fc72d9b573157ac4ddec6 Mass. Audubon Center - Boston Coal-driven steam – Norfolk, UK Zicer Centre – UEA – Norwich, UK Duke Energy - Grid PV Array Net Metering Inverter Home appliance DC to AC Breaker box An Assessment of Photovoltaics Yes 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Carbon neutral energy source In phase with need in summer Mature technology (e=1820%) Low maintenance Long lifetime (>25 years) Rapidly falling price (Germany) US Government subsidy (30%) Rising price of electricity (Cost of carbon) But 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Intermittent source (smart grid) Expensive (Installed cost ~$4/watt vs. $1.50/watt - coal) Fast developing technology Fragile (hail) Installation dangers (falls) Wind Turbines How they work: 1. All electric generators push wires through magnetic fields 2. The mechanical energy electrical energy (95% eff) 3. Bicycle generators and crank radios work the same way. 4. Converting from the turbine frequency to standard frequency (60 Hz) is easy. You convert to direct current and back to alternating current. Wind Energy in the US 1980-1996 US led wind power 1997-2007 Germany led. 2008 US took back the lead (24,000 MW total) 2009 China now leads (10,000 MW new wind power) 2008 World capacity 121,000 MW 27,000 MW new capacity (+29%) New US electric generating capacity in 2008: Natural gas 46% Wind 42% Coal 14% Texas has 9,000 MW capacity Indiana Wind Benton County Wind Farm 130.5 MW (87 turbines, 1.5 MW) April 2008 – Duke Energy will buy the power for 20 years. Fowler Ridge Wind Farm 400 MW (182 Vestas 1.65 MW turbines, 40 Clipper 2.5 MW) 200 MW (133 GE turbines, 1.5 MW) An Assessment of Wind Power Yes: 1.) Carbon-neutral source 2.) Large renewable source 3.) Mature technology 4.) Cost competitive (4¢/KWh) 5.) Off-shore (Cape Wind) approval But: 1.) Inadequate grid 2.) Land-based wind not near population centers 3.) Locally intermittent 4.) Noise/Birds/Esthetics My Conclusion That we are obliged to move away from our own non-sustainable and climate-damaging fossil fuel use as quickly as possible. (BBB – 6/20/10) 1.) Anthropogenic CO2 raises the Earth’s surface temperature. 2.) An estimated 80% reduction in CO2 by 2050 will avoid a 2oC temperature rise. 3.) Half of this reduction will come from the use of carbon-neutral energy sources. 4.) The other half will come from reduced energy use (conservation/efficiency) 5.) Changing our habits is not easy. End of P310/P510 slides