Message #735 From:
TheMachine Date: May 25, 2009 02:47:34 PM
Renewable energy – our downfall? This is a very good read.
For the record, let me say that I support some of the renewable
energy ideas, even putting money where my mouth is, putting solar on my
own home and a local school. However, neither project would have been
possible without state subsidies. For renewable energy to work in our
economy, it must move past the government subsidy stage and become
more efficient. It took over a hundred years t create our current
energy infrastructure, anyone who believes we can completely rebuild it
with the current crop of renewable energy technologies is not
realistic. – Anthony
The government, under pressure from a disparate confederation of
environmentalists and greens, have agreed to press ahead with a host of
renewable energy sources, including wind, tidal and wave power. Yet,
despite the vast sums of public money that will be allocated to these
projects and the fundamental enormity of the decisions that have been
made, there has been very little in the way of open debate on the
subject. Like many aspects of today’s governmental system, the powers
that be appear to have made a decision about future energy production
based upon image, spin and the number of votes the policy will capture,
while ignoring the basic truths and science that should be the
foundation-stone of any policy. Nobody has even debated the absolutely
fundamental question of whether any of these energy generation systems
actually work. The media’s reaction to this steamrollered, image-based
decision-making process has been muted to the point of being inaudible,
and I can only assume that either very few in the media have any grasp
of the calamitous implications of the government’s policy, or they are
cowering behind their desks for fear of losing their jobs.
So why, then, do I consider renewable energy to be a danger to the
entire nation, both economically and socially? This is, after all,
‘free energy’, and what can be the problem with a free resource? Well,
as readers will probably be fully aware, no resource is free even if it
appears to be so, and this is the first of the many lies about
renewable energy that have been peddled by industry spokesmen and
government ministers. Oil is not free, despite it just sitting in the
ground; water is not free, despite it falling from the sky; nuclear
power is not free, despite the raw materials being ridiculously cheap,
and neither is any renewable energy resource ‘free’. In fact, the
conversion process from ‘free’ renewable energy to usable grid
electricity is remarkably expensive and its enormous costs are being
subsidised by the consumer. In the UK, this subsidy is achieved through
Renewables Obligation Certificates, the cost of which are eventually
passed onto the consumer. In 2006 the cost to consumers was £600
million, and this is predicted to rise to £3 billion in 2020. 1 That is
about £200 per household per annum, on top of current energy bills, for
the privilege of using of ‘free’ energy.
Now one might argue that that is not very much money to demand from
the public, given the advertised prospect of clean, renewable energy
that will fuel our homes and our economy for the next few generations.
Power at the press of a button, and not a drop of noxious emissions of
any nature in sight – just an array of perfectly silent, gently
rotating wind-turbines stretching towards the horizon – it is
dream-world picture direct from the cover issue of an environmentalist
magazine, and the answer to a politician’s prayers. In one
master-stroke the environment is magically healed, and votes are
captured by the million – roll on the next election.
However, it is my belief that this sublime day-dream actually holds
the seeds for our economic decline and for social disorder on an
unprecedented scale. Why? Because no technical and industrial society
can maintain itself on unreliable and intermittent power supplies. In
2003 there were six major electrical blackouts across the world, and
the American Northeast blackout of August 14th was typical of these.
The outage started in Ohio, when some power lines touched some trees
and took out the Eastlake power station, but the subsequent cascade
failure took out 256 power stations within one hour.
The entire Northeast was down onto emergency electrical supplies,
and the result was social and economic chaos. Nothing, in our
integrated and automated world, works without electricity. Transport
came to a grinding halt. Aircraft were grounded, trains halted and road
traffic was at a standstill, due to a lack of traffic lights and fuel.
Water supplies were severely disrupted, as were telecommunications,
while buildings had to be evacuated due to a lack of fire detection and
suppression systems. Without any available transport, many commuters
were forced to sleep in offices or in Central Park, and while the
summer temperatures made this an office-adventure to remember, had this
been winter the results of this electrical failure could have been
catastrophic.
This is what happens to a major technical civilisation when its
life-blood, its electrical supply, is turned off. Chaos looms, people
die, production ceases, life is put on hold. Yet this was just a
once-in-a-decade event, a memorable occasion to laugh about over
dinner-parties for many years to come, but just imagine what would
happen to a society where this happened every week, or if the power was
cut for a whole fortnight or more. Now things are getting serious.
Without transport, refrigeration, computers and key workers, food
production and distribution would cease. Sleeping in Central Park on a
balmy summer’s night is a memorable inconvenience, whereas fifty
million empty bellies is getting very serious indeed. In fact, it is a
recipe for violence and civil unrest.
But what has all this doom and gloom got to do with the government’s
drive for renewable energy, you might ask? Well, the entire problem
with renewables – almost all renewables – is that they are dangerously
intermittent power sources.
Perhaps the first renewable source we should discuss is tidal power.
Unfortunately, while tidal power initially looks like a dream power
source of cheap, renewable energy, it suffers from massive variability
in supply. The energy that it produces is tidal, and the tides are, of
course, linked to the orbit of the Moon, with there being about two
tides every day. This sinusoidal tidal pattern produces four slack
periods during each day when the tide is turning, either at high tide
or at low tide, and during these slack periods the tidal power system
will not generate any electricity at all. Unfortunately, the energy
that is produced is therefore delivered at set periods of the day which
are connected to the orbit of the Moon, rather than our daily lives,
and so the electricity produced is in no way synchronised with the
electrical demand cycle. If these slack periods coincide with the 7-am
and 7-pm peak demands for electricity, as they will several times a
month, then the whole generating system is next to useless.
Since the energy produced earlier in the day cannot be stored, as
will be explained later, extra generating capacity will have to be
brought on-line to cover the deficiency. This means that for every
tidal system installed, a conventional power station will have to be
either built or retained to ensure continuity of energy supply. But
this power station will have to be up and running all the time, what is
known in the industry as ’spinning-reserve’, as it takes up to 12 hours
to bring a power station on-line from a cold start-up. Thus if we are
to maintain continuity of supply, this wonderful ‘free-energy’ tidal
source actually results in twice the cost and saves very little in the
way of hydrocarbon fuels. So, unless we are prepared to accept rolling
power cuts across the country, which would result in the same chaos as
the Northeast blackout, it is unlikely that we could ever successfully
integrate large tidal power systems into the National Grid.
While tidal power may be predictably intermittent, wind power is
even more problematical. Recent EU directives have stipulated that some
40% of electricity should be powered from renewable resources by 2020.
If this were to be predominantly produced from wind turbines, as is
likely, then we would need some 30 gigawatts (gw) of wind generating
capacity. To put that figure in perspective, the UK currently has about
0.5 gw of wind capacity. However, that is not the full story, for UK
wind turbines are only currently delivering about 25% of installed
capacity, due to wind fluctuations and maintenance issues. That means
we actually need some 120 gw of installed wind generation capacity to
cover just 40% of total UK electrical demand. If the turbines being
constructed average 2 mw rated capacity, then we shall need some 60,000
wind turbines to be installed over the next twelve years. And where
shall we erect all those? – Certainly Not In My Back Yard.
But building thousands of wind turbines still does not resolve the
fundamental problem, for the real problem here is the enormous scale of
wind variability. I saw a wind-power spokesman the other week on the
flagship BBC Hardtalk series, who claimed that the number of days
without wind power in the UK were as rare as hen’s teeth – a comment
that went totally unchallenged. Well all I can say, is that the hens in
the UK must look like a Tyrannosaurus Rex.
The truth of the matter is that there are numerous days without
significant winds across the UK, and when those conditions occur it
doesn’t matter how much installed generating capacity we have, for it
all goes off-line. A report from Denmark 2 indicates that the Danish
‘wind carpet’, which is the largest array of wind turbines in Europe,
generated less than 1% of installed power on 54 days during 2002. That
is more than one day every week of the year without electrical power.
However, if we broaden the definition of ‘without power’ slightly, the
same Danish ‘wind carpet’ generated less than 10% of installed capacity
for some 16 weeks during 2003. Yet Denmark has the same kind of
northerly, maritime weather systems as does the UK. Thus the
wind-generation industry is lying to us, once more, for a ‘wind carpet’
that generates less than 10% of installed capacity it next to useless,
for the national electrical grid will never cope with such a massive
reduction in power supply. In fact, wind generation is so useless, that
Denmark, Europe’s largest wind generating nation by far, has never used
any of its wind-generated electricity – because it is too variable. It
is almost impossible to integrate wind power into a normal generating
grid, and so Denmark has merely exported its variable wind supplies to
Norway and Sweden. 3 These nations can cope with these electrical
fluctuations because of their abundance of hydro-electric power, which
can be turned on and off quite rapidly, unlike most other generating
systems.
This revelation, that wind power is totally unusable, brings us onto
the other great lie of renewable energy proponents – the lie that
renewable power can somehow be stored to cope with power outages. The
first of these miraculous energy storage facilities, that is said to
come to the aid of the thousands of wind-turbines that lie motionless
across the entire nation, is the pumped water storage system. However,
this claim is utter nonsense, and for the following reasons:
a. Our present pumped storage systems are already fully utilized in
overcoming variability in electrical DEMAND, and so they have
absolutely no extra capacity for overcoming variability in SUPPLY due
to the unreliable wind and tidal generation systems.
b. Pumped storage systems currently only supply a very small
percentage of the grid (about 5%) for just a few hours, while wind
generation systems can go off-line for days or weeks at a time, as the
Danish generation report clearly demonstrates. To put this argument
into figures, the Dinorwig power storage system, the largest in the UK,
can provide 5% of the UK’s power generation requirements (2.9 gw) for
up to 5 hours before it runs out of water. (Thus the total capacity of
Dinorwig is 14.5 gwh). If the UK was entirely dependent on wind power,
a wind outage lasting just two days would require 140 storage stations
with the same generating capacity as Dinorwig to maintain normal power
supplies (assuming average UK demand of 1,000 gwh/day). As the Danish
report confirms, power outages lasting a week or more are the norm,
rather than the exception, and so if the UK generated a significant
proportion of our electrical capacity from wind-turbines, as the EU has
argued, the lights and heating systems would be going out, the
computers going down and transport systems failing all over the country.
c. Pumped storage systems are not only hugely expensive to
construct, the topography of Britain ensures that very few sites are
available, and so we will never be able to store significant amounts of
our energy requirements. These storage systems also tend to be situated
in areas of outstanding natural beauty, and so – you have guessed it –
the Greens oppose the very storage system they are promoting.
The same kind of argument can be sustained for flywheel energy
storage, compressed air storage, battery storage and hydrogen storage –
for each and every one of these systems is highly complex, very
expensive, hugely inefficient and limited in capacity. The much hyped
‘Hydrogen Economy’ is one of these technological cul-de-sacs. It should
be stated from the outset that hydrogen is not an energy source, but an
energy storage system – a ‘battery’. The hydrogen has to be created
before it is used, and it merely stores the energy that is flowing
through the normal electrical grid. Unfortunately for the proponents of
this clean ‘energy system’, hydrogen powered vehicles and generators
are only about 5% efficient. A huge amount of energy is wasted in the
production, liquification and storage of the hydrogen, and so hydrogen
will not be propelling our cars, nor will it be storing energy for when
the wind stops blowing. In addition, hydrogen storage vessels are
highly flammable and potentially explosive, and I for one would rather
have a nuclear power station on my doorstep than a hydrogen facility.
However, the final unsayable truth about hydrogen powered vehicles (and
electric vehicles) is that we would have to double or treble the number
of power stations to cope with this electrical demand. The fact that
many cars would recharge overnight would be useful in evening out
electrical demand, but the number of power stations in the UK would at
least double. Now what would the Greens have to say about that?
In short, it would appear that some of the proponents of these
storage systems simply have no concept of the huge amounts of energy
that a nation like Britain uses within a normal week. There is no
energy system available that can remotely be expected to replace
renewable energy resources, while they lie dormant for weeks on end.
These and other delusions that are being being peddled by renewables
proponents are downright dangerous, as they give ignorant ministers in
government the impression that we can maintain this nation on renewable
energy supplies. But nothing could be further from the truth, and the
2003 blackouts demonstrate the seriousness of the consequences if we do
run out of electrical power.
Nuclear
But if the large-scale use of renewable energy systems is utterly
impractical, there has to be a solution to our energy supply problems;
because even in the short term our dependance on foreign oil and gas
places us at the mercy of oil and gas owning despots, who will seek to
gain every leverage possible over us. Look at the current situation in
the Middle East and Russia and multiply that by ten, and you have some
idea of our future political situation if we become solely dependent on
foreign energy supplies.
In addition to this – for every year we delay in getting reliable
and internally sourced energy supplies, millions of tonnes of a
valuable mineral resources are literally going up in smoke. Nearly
everything we need in our modern world needs oil as a raw material to
make it – no oil supplies not only means no energy, but also no raw
materials too. When the last barrel of oil comes out of the ground –
and if alternate energy provisions are not already in place – human
civilization as we know it will cease to exist. That is neither an
exaggeration nor a joke, for absolutely nothing in our modern world
will work without adequate energy supplies and petrochemical raw
materials to make the things we so often take for granted.
What ever you may think about the technology, the ONLY reliable
answer to our energy supply and global warming problems for the
foreseeable future is going to be nuclear power (either fission or
fusion). Ok, so nuclear power has got a bad name through Chernobyl and
a few other incidents, but the Chernobyl plant in particular should
never have been allowed in the first place. The RBMK design was (and
still is) a rudimentary graphite moderated steam cooled plant with no
containment vessel – indeed, it was no better that the original
‘graphite pile’ in the Manhattan Project (circa 1943). Remember that
graphite and steam are an explosive combination if they get hot enough,
and that’s exactly what happened at Chernobyl (this was NOT a ‘nuclear’
explosion). This arrangement should never have been allowed at the
design stage, which is why the British AGRs (Advanced Gas Reactors)
used an inert gas coolant. In addition, both the AGR and the the USAs
PWRs (Pressurized Water Reactors) are naturally fission-stable, and
their very nature will resist and counter a runaway thermic event like
that which occurred at Chernobyl.
While the early designs of nuclear power stations have highlighted
the problems that poor design or construction can pose, our design and
technological capability has moved on in great strides. The Russian
RBMKs are the equivalent of a model T Ford, the British AGRs represent
Morris Minor technology from the ’60s, but we are now capable of
producing Bugattis and Ferraris – which provide a quantum leap in terms
of safety and efficiency. The point is that there are methods of
reducing nuclear risks if we put our minds to it, and the latest design
from Westinghouse – the AP1000 – will be able to deliver ten times the
efficiency of the reactors in current use. (Which makes it odd that the
UK government have just sold Westinghouse to Toshiba of Japan, just as
orders for new power stations are about to be signed.)
Therefore, we could supply Britain’s entire current and future
energy requirements with nuclear power, while only using the same
amount of nuclear material that is in circulation today (and which
produces just 20% of our needs). Remember also that nuclear power is
non-polluting in terms of greenhouse gasses, acid rain and other
noxious emissions, and thus all of the reductions that we aspire to
make in these pollutants could be achieved in a stroke if we turned to
nuclear power.
And when it comes to nuclear safety issues, let us not forget that
thousands of people in ships and submarines live in close proximity to
nuclear plants with no ill-effects. Also remember that while nuclear
power has acquired a bad name, courtesy of some sections of the media,
far more ecological damage has been done and many more people have died
though oil and coal extraction, over the past decades, than in nuclear
power incidents. Remember Piper Alpha, Aberfan, Torry Canyon, Exxon
Valdes, etc: etc:? The list is almost endless, especially if one
includes all the coal-pit disasters in Russia and China, from which
much of our energy, in terms of finished products, is now sourced. If a
nuclear power station had killed a whole school full of children the
environmentalists would never let us forget it, but because it was the
result of the coal industry they let the memory fade. If 6,000 workers
were killed every year in the nuclear industry Greenpeace would go
ballistic, but because these are coal mining deaths in China they are
ignored. Why do some people exhibit these double standards? What is it
about technical progress that they so despise? In some respects, some
of these anti-nuclear demonstrators appear to be portraying themselves
as the world’s very own technological Taliban, and in this guise they
must be vigorously opposed.
However, it should be borne in mind that fission power is only a
temporary stop-gap that will maintain our economy and civilisation over
the next century until something better comes along. Nuclear fusion may
well be that brighter future, but for all the reasons already given we
need a solution now, not in 30 year’s time. Nuclear fission will
provide a stop-gap for that vital century, but fission power on its own
is a non-renewable energy resource. The way forward has to be
fast-breeder fission, where the nuclear core creates its own fuel
supply, a technique that has already been demonstrated and perfected.
This energy source would provide the world with 1,000 years of energy,
a large enough stop-gap to allow all kinds of new exotic energy sources
to be discovered and exploited.
We have about 30 or so years before the shortage of oil becomes
acute and our economies and societies begin to falter, and that is not
very much time in which to alter our entire energy production industry.
It is like relying on the Victorians to plan ahead and ensure that we
still had a viable civilisation in the 1930s. And while the Victorians
were both successful and resourceful, history demonstrates that new
sources of raw materials were never actively planned until the old
sources were in desperately short supply or worked-out completely.
However, the introduction of a new, nationwide power generating system
is an extremely long-term investment, and if we are to make this change
without a dramatic interruption to our energy supplies (and our
society) we need foresight, vision and a quick decision. What we need
is a tough, educated, talented, rational leader to take a difficult but
responsible decision to dramatically increase our nuclear energy
production capability. However, what we have in the UK is Gordon Brown!
Ralph Ellis http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/05/25/renewable-energy-%E2%80%93-our-downfall/