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ENERGY Energy is the capacity of a system to do work Energy is always conserved but … … can be transformed from one form to another Energy, E (unit: 1 joule = 1 J or N m) Power, P = dE / dt (unit: 1 watt = 1 J s-1 or 1 W) (where time, t / s) 1 J is about the energy required to raise 100 g (e. g., a mobile phone) vertically 1 m against Earth’s gravity at sea-level (g =9.81 m s-2) I W is the power required to do this in 1 s Many different kinds of energy: kinetic, potential, mass (chemical, electrical, magnetic, gravitational, thermal, nuclear, ...) Here we are interested in energy used directly or indirectly by people for heat and power, and related key issues. World population 1950-2050 net current growth rate about 9,100 people per hour 6.9 billion now Economic growth Increased energy demand 1 quad = 1 quadrillion Btu = 1015 Btu =1.055 1018 J = 1.055 EJ 528 EJ world energy consumption in 2009 ↔ 16.7 TW globally or 2.5 kW per person on average Peak oil … and coal, gas, uranium Anthropogenic climate change Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, IPCC (2007) Energy Policy enlightened affordable energy on demand UK Energy Policy UK Energy Policy largely set by Energy White Paper (2007) and The UK Low Carbon Transition Plan (2009) Energy Conversion • Energy cannot be created or destroyed (first law of thermodynamics). Ex • However energy in one form Ex (heat, work, chemical, mass) may be converted into energy of another form Ey via suitable technology. technology Ey Contributions of Process Industries to Global Environmental Problems Energy • Many global problems arise from energy use, and resulting depletion of raw materials and increasing emissions. we are interested in the case where the product is energy (in a different form than input) Raw Materials Process Main product(s) Co-products (waste) World primary energy supply Sectors Industry Domestic Transport Services Scope • Energy used in sectors: industry, transport, domestic, services (agriculture, hospitals, …) • Consider main energy conversion technologies. Fossil Fuels • coal, oil, gas • power generation and transport • SOx, NOx, VOC, CO, waste heat • CO2 • efficient land use • non-renewable • sensitive to political instability? Nuclear • • • • • • • • fission, fusion fuel reprocessing de-commissioning short/long term radiation hazard nuclear arms no direct CO2 emissions terrorism non-renewable Biomass • • • • broadly CO2 neutral requires large land areas significant water usage competes with food production • has niche as by-product of waste disposal Wind Power • variable power available • can be land or offshore • moderate area use • intermediate technology • planning? Water Power • hydro, wave, tides, currents • clean reputation • low running costs • can be environmentally disruptive • can destroy land • can arise from political oppression • some real technical challenges Solar Power • photovoltaic, passive solar heating, solar concentrators • fairly efficient land use • intermittent • depends on latitude • some cost issues with PV Geothermal Energy • hot water from underground reservoirs or via cold water pumped from surface • turbine power or direct heating • depends on local geology • green though undeveloped technology World Energy http://www.iea.org/ UK Energy http://www.decc.gov.uk/en/content/cms/statistics/ Digest of United Kingdom Energy Statistics 2010 (“Dukes”) UK Energy in Brief 2010 Energy Forecast (UK) • central issues are energy sustainability & security • remains largely fossil based throughout 21st century? • off-shore wind and wave power? • next generation of nuclear power? • hydrogen economy?? • effects of global warming may be discovered the hard way