Top Banner
HO W MUCH ENERGY IS USED ANNUALLY? 1 Q UAD ~ 100 B ILLIO N KW H ~ 200 M ILLIO N BARRELS O F O IL USA ANNUALLY USES ~ 80 Q UADS SO URCE: Q UADS USA TOTAL RESO URCE COAL: ~15 >6000 NATURAL G A S : ~20 400 O IL: ~40 400 N U C LEA R : ~5 BREEDER REACTO R > 600,000 NON-BREEDER 1000 H Y D R O ELEC TR IC : ~3 RENEW ABLE GEOTHERMAL: ~0.1 RENEW ABLE SO LAR (TO O SM ALL TO MEASURE O N THIS SCALE)
43

RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

Jan 13, 2016

Download

Documents

Claire Howard
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

HOW MUCH ENERGY IS USED ANNUALLY?

1 QUAD ~ 100 BILLION KWH ~ 200 MILLION BARRELS OF OIL

USA ANNUALLY USES ~ 80 QUADS

SOURCE: QUADS USA TOTAL RESOURCE

COAL: ~15 >6000

NATURAL GAS: ~20 400

OIL: ~40 400

NUCLEAR: ~5 BREEDER REACTOR > 600,000 NON-BREEDER 1000

HYDROELECTRIC: ~3 RENEWABLE

GEOTHERMAL: ~0.1 RENEWABLE

SOLAR (TOO SMALL TO MEASURE ON THIS SCALE)

Page 2: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

ENERGY RESOURCES

DEPLETABLE RESOURCES:

FOSSIL FUELS: NUCLEAR:

NATURAL GAS FISSIONOIL NON-BREEDER

COAL REACTORS

RENEWABLE OR NON-DEPLETABLE:

FISSION(BREEDER) NUCLEAR

FUSION (DEUTERIUM)

WIND SOLAR OTEC

DIRECT

GEOTHERMAL

HYDROELECTRIC

Page 3: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

NON-RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES

HYDROCARBONS: NATURAL GAS, OIL

PROBLEMS: COMBUSTION PRODUCES CO2 ACID RAIN (FROM SULFUR CONTENT)MOST LIMITED QUANTITY OF FUELTRANSPORT FROM "TROUBLED AREAS"

POTENTIAL: EXTENSIVE RESERVESRELATIVE LOW POLLUTINGMOST CONVENIENT OF FUELS

WHY ARE HYDROCARBONS USED:FUEL OF CHOICE DUE TO HIGH ENERGYCONTENT IN CONVENIENT FORM

TRANSPORTATION AND UTILIZATION ISFULLY MATURE WITHIN OUR ECONOMY...

Page 4: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.
Page 5: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

RESOURCE USEAGEPROFILES OVER TIME

Page 6: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.
Page 7: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands ~ 100 billion barrelsRussia has unknown additional quantities, Caspian, Siberia, KamchatkaWestern USA Oil Shale resource >> Saudi Oil resource.

Page 8: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

A piece of Oil Shale

The USA has at least3 Trillion barrels of OilEquivalent of this resource.

Page 9: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

Coal

• Carbon, water, impurities

• C + O2 CO2

• HALF IS CLINKER

Page 10: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

: COAL

Page 11: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

US Coal Consumption

• Coal 22 QBtu (23%)

• 80% used by electric utilities

Page 12: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

Major Coal-Producing States

Page 13: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

Coal

• Anthracite• 22 – 28 million Btu per ton• Not plentiful

• Bituminous • 19 – 30 million Btu per ton• Most plentiful

• Subbituminous• 16 – 24 million Btu per ton• Low sulfur content

• Lignite (Brown Coal)• 9 – 17 million Btu per ton• Local value only

Page 14: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

Coal Resources and Consumption

• Global Recoverable• 1,000 billion tons

• Global Consumption• 5.2 billion tons/year

• US Recoverable• 274 billion tons

• US Consumption• 1.1 billion tons/year

Page 15: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

Global Coal Resources

• United States 25%

• Russia 16%

• China 12%

• India 9%

• Australia 8%

• Germany 7%

• South Africa 5%

Page 16: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.
Page 17: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

RENEWABLE OR NON-DEPLETABLE:

FISSION(BREEDER) NUCLEAR

FUSION (DEUTERIUM)

WIND SOLAR OTEC

DIRECT

GEOTHERMAL

HYDROELECTRIC

Page 18: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.
Page 19: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.
Page 20: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

A major drawback of fission energy: Diversion to bombs

Page 21: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

CHERNOBYL REGION RADIOACTIVITY

Potential for accidental or intentional containment failure.

Page 22: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

Cleanup can be effected by biological and other means

Page 23: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

GEOTHERMAL RESOURCES

LIMITATIONS AND PROBLEMS:

AVAILABLE ONLY IN GEOLOGICALLY ACTIVEREGIONS

RELEASED VOLCANIC GASES CONTAIN ACIDS ANDOTHER POLLUTANTS

REQUIRES MANAGEMENT TO MAINTAIN RESOURCE

POTENTIAL:

STABLE SOURCE OF POWER, IF MANAGEDPROPERLY

EARTH CORE HEAT (IF WE CAN GET DOWN TO THE20 KM LEVELS REQUIRED) IS AN UNLIMITED POWERSOURCE, NOT FEASIBLE TODAY.

Page 24: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

ANY APPROACHWHICH REDUCESENERGY USE ISUSEFUL TO EXTEND OUR RESOURCES,

I.E.

CONSERVATION ISTHE FASTESTMETHOD TO GETNEW ENERGY

Page 25: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.
Page 26: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

SOLAR ENERGY

CHARACTERISTICS:

DIFFUSE SOURCE OF ENERGY(< 1KILOWATT/SQUARE METER)

FEASIBLE USE AT LOCAL SITES AS WELL ASLARGE PLANT SITES

DIURNALLY VARIABLE (12-ON_12-OFF), CLOUDS

NEED FOR STORAGE/EXCESS COLLECTIONSOLAR PONDS, PUMPED RESERVOIRS

LONG DISTANCE POWER TRANSMISSION?

COLLECTION IN SOUTHWEST IMPLIESTRANSMISSION TO AREAS WHERE USED...

RELATIVELY NON-POLLUTING

FABRICATION OF COLLECTORS REQUIRESMANUFACTURING TYPE POLLUTION, NOATMOSPHERIC OR WATER POLLUTION

Page 27: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

LAND AREA REQUIRED TO REPLACE PRESENTENERGY RESOURCE IS NOT INFEASIBLE

AREA TO BE USED INCLUDES ROOFTOPS, NON-ARABLE LAND; ECOLOGY, ESTHETICS IMPORTANT

SOLAR ENERGY NOW IN USE

SOLAR FURNACES: BARSTOW, CA. 100 MW STATION EQUIVALENT TOPOWERING 50,000 HOMES

PROBLEM: HIGH INSTALLATION COST (PROTOTYPE)ABOUT 10X COAL-FIRED PLANT

SIZE OF SOLAR RESOURCE: TO EQUAL ALLPRESENT POWER REQUIREMENTS FOR USA:

~1% OF WESTERN USA ASSUMING 10% EFFICIENCY

Page 28: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

WIND POWER:

PROBLEMS: WINDS ARE ERRATIC, STORAGE IS REQUIRED

WIND SPEEDS BETWEEN 10 AND 30 MPH ARENEEDED FOR EFFICIENT USE (E.G. MOUNTAINS ORTRADE WIND REGIONS)

LARGE AREA WINDMILLS ARE REQUIRED (SOURCEIS 250 WATTS/SQUARE METER OR LESS SO THAT FOOTBALL FIELD SIZE WINDMILL COLLECTS ONEMEGAWATT

WINDMILLS ARE NOISY, UNATTRACTIVE, INTRUSIVE,DISRUPT LOCAL TV RECEPTION, ETC.

POTENTIAL:

LOW TECHNOLOGY, RELIABLE, INEXPENSIVE

LOW POLLUTING EXCEPT FOR ABOVE

CAN BE A RESOURCE EQUALING 10% OF NEED

Page 29: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

ROOFTOP SOLAR ENERGY USE:

FACT: HEATING WATER IS ABOUT 30% OF OURENERGY REQUIREMENT...

PROBLEMS: RELATIVELY HIGH INITIAL COSTS, REQUIRES 5-10 YEARS TO RECOVER.

MAINTENANCE IS REQUIRED

POTENTIAL:LOW TECHNOLOGY, CAN REDUCE ENERGYREQUIREMENT FROM NON-RENEWABLEENERGY SOURCES BY 30%!

MORE "HOME SOLAR" OPTIONS

SPACE HEATING: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN TO USE WALLS, ETC. TOCOLLECT, DISTRIBUTE SOLAR HEAT

Page 30: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

SOLAR ENERGY STORAGE, INEXPENSIVELY

Page 31: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

HYDROELECTRIC RESOURCES

LIMITED RESOURCE: PRIMARILY IN NW PORTION OF USA, TOTALRESOURCE IS <10% OF REQUIREMENT

PROBLEMS: ECOLOGICALLY DISRUPTIVE DUE TO WATERIMPOUNDMENT, REDUCED WATER FLOW;LIMITEDLIFETIME DUE SILTATION, DOWN STREAM EFFECTS

EXAMPLES, ASWAN DAM, THREE GORGES DAM(UNDER CONSTRUCTION), HOOVER DAM

POTENTIAL: USEFUL AT LIMITED SITES, IN DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES

Page 32: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

OCEAN THERMAL-ELECTRIC CONVERSION

PROBLEMS:OPERATES A REFRIGERATOR IN REVERSE, CARNOTCYCLE ENGINE OF LOW EFFICIENCY

BIOFOULING IN OCEAN

VULNERABLE TO HURRICANES

LONG DISTANCE FOR POWER TRANSMISSION

POTENTIAL:VERY LARGE RESOURCE WITH CONSTANTAVAILABILITY (ENTIRE OCEAN IS ENERGYRESERVOIR)

RELIABLE SOURCE, ECONOMICAL, AVAILABLE

Page 33: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

PHOTOVOLTAICS

DIRECT CONVERSION OF SOLAR ENERGY TOELECTRICITY USING SEMI-CONDUCTORS

PROBLEMS:

INSTALLATION COST IS HIGH, BUT REPAID INABOUT THREE YEARS AT TODAY'S COST (WASTEN YEARS A DECADE AGO)

REQUIRES STORAGE MEANS OR CONNECTIONTO PUBLIC ELECTRICITY UTILITY FOR DARKPERIODS

REQUIRES MAINTENANCE, CLEANING

POTENTIAL:

SIZE OF SOLAR PHOTOVOLTAIC RESOURCE:

AT 10% EFFICIENCY: 60 QUADS OF ELECTRICITYWOULD REQUIRE A TOTAL COLLECTION AREA OF50,000 KM2 (500 X 100 KILOMETERS)

DESIRABILITY/EFFICIENCY/COST, ALL FAVORABLEOVER THE COMING DECADES

Page 34: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.
Page 35: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.
Page 36: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

Multi-junction Photovoltaics utilize much more of solar spectrum,MORE THAN 30% EFFICIENCY ALREADY ACHIEVED!

Page 37: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

Highly Efficient Energy Utilization

Page 38: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

Industrial scale Fuel Cells…

Page 39: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.
Page 40: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.
Page 41: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

EFFICIENCY OF FUEL CELLS:

CHEMICAL, NOT THERMAL PROCESS

DIRECTLY USES ELECTRICITY

WASTE HEAT MUCH LESS THAN OTTO CYCLE ENGINE

MAX. EFFICIENCY HEAT ENGINE ~ 25-30%

MAX. EFFICIENCY FUEL CELL ~75-80 %

WASTE PRODUCTS DEPEND UPON FUEL

WATER IN CASE OF HYDROGEN FUEL

INTERSTITIAL HYDROGEN IN METALS, EQUALS ENERGY DENSITY OF GASOLINE…

Page 42: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.
Page 43: RESOURCE USEAGE PROFILES OVER TIME Note: Arctic Reserve estimated at 10-20 billion barrels, plus ‘new’ areas Canadian Reserves with Tar Sands.

ENERGY RESOURCE AND USEAGE DIRECTLY AFFECTED BYPOPULATION AND STANDARD OF LIVING...