net energy next energy by ron swenson

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Net Energy Next Energy by Ron Swenson www.HubbertPeak.com/ASPO-USA

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Page 1: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Net Energy Next Energy

by Ron Swenson

www.HubbertPeak.com/ASPO-USA

Page 2: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Swenson Curve To avoid

deprivation, humanity must match depletion with conservation and enduring substitution.

www.HubbertPeak.com/Swenson

Page 3: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

120

100

80

60

40

20

0 0 10 20 30 40

Time

Consequences of Delayed Energy Investment

begin investment before decline

Net Energy Production

Begin investment during decline

www.HubbertPeak.com/BeyondOil

Page 4: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

A flurry of books: What’s going down…

www.HubbertPeak.com/Library

Page 5: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Okay, we know what’s going down …

But what’s coming up?

Page 6: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Thomas Edison “I'd put my

money on the sun and solar energy. What a source of power! I hope we don't have to wait 'til oil and coal run out before we tackle that.”

(1847-1931) www.ThomasEdison.com

Page 7: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

The Party's Over

“Photovoltaic electricity is still expensive.”

Richard Heinberg

www.HubbertPeak.com/apollo2

Page 8: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Beyond Oil

“Solar electrical generation is not yet competitive for large-scale facilities...”

Kenneth S. Deffeyes

www.HubbertPeak.com/apollo2

Page 9: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

I thought we were talking about Energy!?

So how did Economics (an instrument of policy) get into the picture?

Page 10: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Oil, Jihad & Destiny

“Solar power technology, however, is still in the stone age.”

Ronald R. Cooke

www.HubbertPeak.com/Youngquist

Page 11: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

The Long Emergency “… solar

power ... works, though not nearly as well as fossil fuel …

James Howard Kunstler

www.HubbertPeak.com/apollo2

Page 12: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

“But all of them combined -- sun, wind, and water -- could never produce enough energy to replace the astronomical amounts of fossil fuel the West is consuming...”

Pierre Chomat

Oil Addiction: The World in Peril

www.hubbertPeak.com/debate/oilcalcs.htm

Page 13: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Global Solar Energy BalanceSolar Energy Input (TeraWatts)

178,000

Reflected to Space Immediately 53,000

Absorbed and Then Reflected as Heat 82,000

Used to Evaporate Water (Weather) 40,000

Captured by Plant Photosynthesis 100

Total Energy Used by Human Society 13

Total Energy Used by US Society 2.5

Total Human Food Energy 0.6

www.hubbertPeak.com/debate/oilcalcs.htm

Page 14: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Energy State and Quality (Grade)“In contrast to its vast quantity, the quality of solar energy is low relative to fossil fuels.

[] “The EROI for fossil fuels tends to be large while that for solar tends to be low.

“Higher energy densities also contribute to the higher EROI for fossil fuels relative to many renewable fuels.”

Cutler Cleveland

Tell that to a street vendor in Mexico City.

… and what is the premise of converting solar field energy into fuel in the first place?

… unless you consider depletion, ecological footprint of extraction, or the implications of ephemeral technology.

Energy States: Solid, Liquid, G a s, Field

Page 15: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Thermodynamics of Coal

Plus…• Greenhouse gases • Ravaged land• Water contamination• People displaced• Extraction uses oil

EROI = 927 ~ electric quality

1 BOE

Page 16: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Thermodynamics of Oil

It depends …• Pennsylvania?• Saudi Arabia?• Off-shore?

Plus …• Ravaged land/oceans• Greenhouse gases• Water contamination

EROI = 10±

Page 17: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

EROI = 4 12 ~ electric

Thermodynamics of Nuclear

Plus …

• Depletion

• Low grade ores → Greenhouse gases to process

• Waste guard for 10,000+ years

… How do we value a 1,000+ year wasteland?

Page 18: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Thermodynamics of Tar Sands

Plus…• Greenhouse gases• Ravaged land• Water contamination• Extraction uses

natural gas

EROI = 3Why bother?!

Page 19: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Thermodynamics of Hydrogen

Am I missing something?!

EROI = -½

Page 20: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Thermodynamics of PV

• EROI: 5 years

• Life: 50 years

• Plus it can be bootstrapped

EROI = 1030 ~ electric

Page 21: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Thermodynamics of Thin Film PV

• EROI: 6 months

• Life: 20 years

EROI = 40120 ~electric

Page 22: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Thermodynamics of Wind

• EROI: 3 months

• Life: 20 years

EROI = 80240 ~ electric

Page 23: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Back to State & Quality (grade) …How does ERoEI analysis embrace these factors?• Time / sustainability

• oil depletion: Inevitable degradation of quality.• solar endurance: “Low” quality starts to make sense.

• Land use / ecological footprint• Uranium tailings: Most dense becomes the most diffuse. • Open pit coal mines: Density depends on measuring stick.• It’s even an issue with Solar: PV on roofs ≠ PV in deserts.

•Security / Energy drain on future generations• Nuclear Power M.A.D.: ERoEI goes astronomically negative.• Oil Wars: How much energy does it take to protect energy?• Solar: Power satellites are weapons, not energy technology.

Energy States: Solid, Liquid, G a s, Field

Page 24: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Next Energywww.HubbertPeak.com/ASPO-USA

Page 25: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Since oil is big in the transportation sector…

… a short history lesson.

How did transportation transform? • from solid fuels (hay and then coal) to• liquid fuels (oil)

And where do we go from here?

Page 26: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Lest we forget …They did bring coal to Newcastle.

Page 27: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

...not to mention the numerous farmers now employed in growing hay for horses.

Van Buren 18328th President 1837-1841

If canal boats are supplanted by railroads, serious unemployment will result …

Page 28: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

No joke!

The original buggy whip protest

Page 29: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

The Horseless Carriage

Page 30: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

From GridLock to Gas Lines

Page 31: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Corn Cars & Bean Buses?

Page 32: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Back to solid fuels?

Page 33: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

The All-New DonCar!

www.HubbertPeak.com/Transport

Page 34: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Electricity. Not exactly a new idea…

Touch?

… and it is ephemeral, like solar power.

See?

A match made in heaven.

Lift?

Page 35: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

The Electric Rail

Page 36: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Personal Rapid Transit (PRT)

www.ecotopia.com/ST

Page 37: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Energy Revolution (Terawatt Challenge)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

OilCoa

lGas

Fission

Biomas

s

Hydro

electr

ic

Solar,

wind, g

eoth

ermal

0.5%

Source: BP & IEA

2004

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

OilCoa

lGas

Fusio

n / F

issio

n

Biomas

s

Hydro

electr

ic

Solar,

wind

, geo

therm

al

2050

14.5 Terawatts220 M BOE/day

30 -- 60 Terawatts450 – 900 MBOE/day

The Basis of Prosperity 20st Century = Oil 21st Century = [Renewables]

www.HubbertPeak.com/Smalley

Page 38: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

PV: The Growth Industry

OilOil

PVPV

Oil declines at 4%/yr

PV increases at 50%/yr

Page 39: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Can Solar Energy Substitute for Oil?

Yes!

“Think TeraWatts”

www.HubbertPeak.com/ASPO-USA

Page 40: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Taking it one step further …

• You may think I’m pushing solar?

• Yes and no. The main point is …

• Prevailing sentiments cannot blind us from seeing the solutions with the best ERoEI…

• And we cannot be fixated on direct substitution of oil with liquid fuels, especially given the historic role of oil and the myriad advantages of electric transport.

Page 41: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

ERoEI(field) >> ERoEI(solid, liquid, gas)

Page 42: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Fuels (solid/liquid/gas) will still have a place…

www.ecotopia.com/ST

• ERoEI of biofuels may be too low for urban transport…

(not to mention smog, congestion, hazard)

• Fuels will remain essential for:

• Airplanes

• Ships at sea -- with wind power augmentation (KiteTugs)

• Agriculture

Page 43: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Colin Campbell

“Photovoltaics … will be economic … when there is serious production.”

1996

www.HubbertPeak.com/Campbell

Page 44: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Solar Industry Response?

www.HubbertPeak.com/Apollo2

Goals• 50% US electricity by 2025 ≠• 200 gW by 2030 = 10%

How to get there? • Federal government procurement

$100 m/year• R&D investment $250 m/year by

2010• “Enact, modify, establish, boost,

support, increase, strengthen, grow…”

Inadequate

InadequateInconsistent

Inconsistent

Inconsistent

Inconsistent

Page 45: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Global Warming over the Past Millennium

Very rapidly we have entered uncharted territory… Over the 20th century, … energy consumption increased sixteenfold. Global warming from the fossil fuel greenhouse became a major, and increasingly dominant, factor in climate change.

Slide from Marty Hoffert NYU (see Smalley)

Page 46: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

The conclusions are simple:

• We are not doing enough fast enough. • To spend our depleting energy capital

resources effectively, we must first understand the Thermodynamics (ERoEI) of the alternatives.

• Then we must act quickly with resolve.

Economics or Thermodynamics: Which will it be?

Page 47: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

Next Energywww.HubbertPeak.com/ASPO-USA

Page 48: Net Energy  Next Energy by Ron Swenson

If canal boats are supplanted by railroads, serious unemployment will result. Captains, cooks, drivers, repairment, and lock tenders will be left without means of livelihood, not to mention the numerous farmers now employed in growing hay for horses.

Boat builders would suffer and towline, whip, and harness makers would be left destitute.

Martin van Buren, Governor of New York, April 1832.