This is part three of climate action denial.
Part one...Introduction
Part two....Denial of the science of climate change.
Is there a technological solution to decarbonise energy use?
This is an important worthwhile question to ask but there
are different ways this question is used as a form of denial of the need to
tackle the problems of greenhouse gas emissions. One way is to deny that there
are effective technologies that exist that can replace fossil fuels for energy
and another is that we should wait until some new technology appears. Of course
both have the same intention...... And that is to prevent action being taken.
Of course there are technologies that exist that could
replace fossil fuels and have been shown to be effective but the important
questions are how quickly can we do this, how much energy (rate) can we achieve
and how can we deal with problems of intermittency if we rely on wind and solar
energy? (I will briefly consider some of these issues on intermittency in this
post below).
If the alternatives can’t
replace fossil fuels then the logical conclusion is that human civilisation can’t
be maintained and the contrarians who express this are expressing not just
considerably more alarm but also hopelessness than those who they often
derogatively call alarmists. We know ultimately that human civilisation will
need to decouple energy usage from net carbon emissions either because of the
climate impact or because of the finite nature of fossil fuels which ever we
come to realize first. Most climate scientists, and lately supported by the governor
of the bank of England (at a world bank seminar), believe that most of the
known world reserves are deemed unburnable if we are to stay within the 2C
limits agreed at the climate Paris conference 2015.
It is not known whether or not we can achieve this
decoupling at a fast enough rate to avoid serious climatic impacts by staying
within the 2C limits agreed at the Paris COP 21 talks by political world
leaders at the end of 2015. With this uncertainty it is logical that we should
take the path to urgently decarbonise as is technologically feasible. The
longer we procrastinate the more difficult it will be to decarbonise as world
growth and hence world energy use grows. Ultimately this inaction would lead to
a time whereby creating the necessary infrastructure (with its energy demands) to
maintain human civilisation would become impossible.
It is fair to say that fossil fuels have been a major
contributor to the growth in both prosperity and world population. Our
understanding on these resources has also, for some considerable time, included
the facts that not only are these resources finite but they have serious
environmental impacts. Used sensibly with adequate planning and foresight these
resources could be (or better still could have been) used as a stepping
platform to a sustainable future. Not doing so is a reckless gamble. The gamble
becomes more reckless and more difficult to solve the longer we leave it.
Intermittency problems with renewables.
This is a topic that deserves a separate detailed discussion
but a very brief overview of how this issue has been used to promote action
denial is worth describing. One way is to confuse predictability with the
intermittency issue and the other way is to argue that the intermittency issue
is unsolvable, or that the intermittency issue will become more problematic
when we rely fully on alternatives.
The intermittency issue can be reduced considerably and
eventually eliminated by a combination of strategies used in parallel:-
a) Have a combination of different resources depending on
location such as on shore wind, off shore wind, solar, geothermal, wave, tidal,
geothermal, hydro and biomass.
b) Share energy over larger regions using high voltage
direct current transmission lines which considerably reduce transmission costs
when transmitting over large distances.
c) Make the grid “smarter” by matching demand with supply
where possible.
d). Develop different storage techniques that can then
deliver the stored energy almost immediately. Examples here could be pumped
hydroelectric, battery storage or synthetic fuels.
As an aside an example here could be useful, although how
new innovative use of technology will eventually pan out often leads in
unexpected directions. Further an example can illustrate how relying fully on
alternatives in the future can actually help reduce some of the variability
problems of supply and demand. Imagine parked cars around the world with many
of them connected to the grid. The owners merely state (electronically) the
time they might next need to drive the car and the battery is used at the
convenience of the grid to store or charge with the owner being paid or charged
accordingly. This smart use of storage alone may in many locations solve the
intermittency problem. Even without
smart technology cars will generally be charging at times when other demand is
low but the supply of wind overnight or peak sunshine during midday is high.
The idea that wind and solar are necessarily more
unpredictable than say a large conventional power station is a myth.
Unpredictability of energy can be due to weather or plant failure. The
unpredictably due to weather will not likely affect the conventional power
plant but plant failure is of much greater concern. If a conventional power
plant fails then that will represent a much higher proportion of the supply
than the failure of a wind turbine say. It can be seen that predicting exactly
where rain will fall or clouds cover the sky can be problematic but when we
look at average sunshine or wind patterns over an entire region then we see
that these are very predictable over many hours with enough time to plan
accordingly.
An over reliance on a technological fix.
Finally it is important to address another viewpoint on
technological solutions that can prevent enough action being taken that I will
come back to on a future post regarding our attitudes to growth. This is the
view that there must be a technological fix no matter what energy demands we
make globally. Before dealing with this in later posts I will discuss (in the
next post) denial of political ways to allow efficient action on climate change
by political extremism or ideology.
Next:-
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