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Published byEsther O’Connor’ Modified over 9 years ago
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Energy Future Is Coal King or Disappearing? Global Competition, Energy Sources, Economic Growth and Human Welfare
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World Energy Use by Fuel Source: Energy Information Administration
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Global 10-Year Growth Rates of Energy Sources Source: BP Statistical Review of World Energy, 2010
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Coal Has Much Less Price Volatility
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Rich Countries May Shy from Coal, But Not the Rest of the World: New Coal Plants Coming Online by 2015 U.S.8 GW Europe17 GW China83 GW South Asia97 GW Elsewhere44GW New plants will consume 790 million tons coal annually
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The U.S. No Longer Drives Energy Markets
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U.S. Coal Use a Shrinking Share of Global Consumption
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U.S. Manufacturing Decline (and Greater Efficiency) = Less Energy Use; Other Countries Make Up for It
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Economic Progress and Electricity (Energy from Coal) Are Highly Correlated
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Electricity: People Live Better and Longer Sources: CIA World Fact Book; UN Development Program: Human Development Report
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Billions Want What We Take for Granted
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2.5 Billion Burn Wood/Dung for Primary Energy: Bad for Health, Economy, and the Environment World Health Org.: 2.5 million women and children die prematurely annually from breathing fumes from biomass stoves. 3.6 billion people have no access or inadequate access to electricity.
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Latent Demand for Electricity in India: Red: No Electricity; Green: Cook with Wood or Dung; Blue: No Refrigeration
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International Energy Agency: Coal and Natural Gas Dominating New Electricity Generation
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kW Prices of Electricity 2007
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Electricity from Coal Dominates Much of Country; These Plants Cannot Easily Change Fuel
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Same Old Song; Pipe Dreams Are Not New
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Cleaner Coal Possible: 40 Year Record Source: EPA Electricity from coal up 182% Total Emissions down 42%
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Best Hope as of Today: Carbon Capture
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King Coal: U.S. Is Saudi Arabia
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We’re Number 1!!
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Coal Is “Nonrenewable”—So What?
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Worried about the Trade Imbalance? U.S. Coal Exports at Highest Level in 20 Years
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Why is coal unpopular? CO 2 Emissions
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Coal is big in Greenhouse gas emissions. Its emission is double that of natural gas per BTU generated.
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Main Alternative to Coal: Burn More Natural Gas (less CO 2 than coal); “proven” reserves—100 years and growing.
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Expanding Natural Gas Use Will Be Costly and Take Decades
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Alternative: What About Nuclear? Last plant to open in U.S. was in 1996. One new TVA plant may come online in 2013. DOE permit process takes 4 years; construction takes longer than that. Expensive compared to gas and coal. Political issues, to say the least.
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Alternative: Hydro; No CO 2 When operating. 6% of total U.S. electricity. 60% of “renewable” electricity. Problem—look at the river → Most greenies hate “big hydro” but think “small hydro” is good. But, small hydro is of little value.
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Alternative: Wind turbines “work” but no one wants to live near them; need new transmission lines to get power to market.
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Alternative: U.S. Has Lots of Sunshine— Transmission to Market Costly Solyndra aside, solar is likely to become more competitive in some areas as cost is slowly dropping.
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Unless we want to freeze (or sweat) in the dark, solar, wind & other “renewables” are irrelevant
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Electric Power Research Institute: Generation Technology Options Many trade-offs to consider: Nuclear has highest capital cost per kW (double wind), but life is assumed to be 40 years vs. 20 for wind farm. On-shore wind farm produces at 28-40% of stated capacity; nuclear produces at 90%. When all such factors considered, LCOE is $49-79/MWh for nuclear; $75-138/MWh for wind given today’s technology.
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EPRI - Given New Technology: Where do we expect to be in 2025? Coal with carbon capture$85-105/MWh Natural gas with carbon capture$68-109/MWh Nuclear$76-87/MWh Biomass Bubbling Fluidized Bed$80-136/MWh Wind on shore$73-134/MWh Wind off shore$122-147/MWh Concentrating Solar Thermal$116-173/MWh Solar PV$210-396/MWh * Ignoring transmission costs, site-acquisition costs, no subsidies assumed
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Conclusion: Traditional Energy Sources Are Here to Stay, Even if the U.S. and EU Do Not Like It Give the U.N. credit—their energy people know that massive energy change means we live in small villages eating our own crops, or live in high rises with minimal transportation—including rickshaws. They endorse that as necessary to stop GW.
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