I just spent two weeks on the Galapagos Islands. Their economies are
driven almost entirely by Eco-tourism. Like the rest of us, the people
of the Galapagos Islands are utterly dependent on affordable sources of
energy for their existence.
As a result of a fuel tanker grounding and attendant oil spill in
2001, a consortium of energy companies from the G7, calling themselves
e7 (created to bring renewable energy to developing nations), funded the
installation of three wind turbines on San Cristobal, an island in the
Galapagos archipelago, to minimize the amount of fuel that had to be
delivered to run the generators. They also created a trust fund for
maintenance and eventual removal of the turbines at the end of their
twenty year life spans.
My youngest daughter is studying in San Cristobal. Her class took a
field trip to the power station shortly after my arrival. I sent along a
list of questions.
Her class was told that there is no wind
for three or four months out of the year. They were also told that at
least one of the five diesel generators is always running. When my
daughter asked why the computer screen only had three icons for the
generators when there are five of them, she was told that two of the
three icons represent a pair of generators. Click here
to see the photo my daughter took of the computer screen in the control
room. The diesel generators were producing over half of the power
(162.5 + 222.5 =388 kW of power from the diesel generators, and 239 +
231+ 236 = 726 kW from the wind turbines).
The plant supervisor had explained to the class that the San
Cristobal electric power system is a diesel/wind hybrid. I was
impressed. Few people understand that virtually all wind turbine
installations require the consumption of fossil fuel because they are
part of a hybrid system that includes some form of fossil fueled peaking
power plant to take over when there isn’t enough wind. A wind turbine
without fossil fuel back-up is about as useful as a car without wheels.
The turbines are located on a hill about a mile away from another
hill that has the only fresh water pond on the island (in an old
volcanic caldera) which is frequented by frigate birds and the Galapagos
White-cheeked pin-tail duck, which is endangered. The original site
chosen for the turbines was abandoned when researchers discovered that
it was in the flight path used by the endangered Galapagos Petrol
returning to their nests in the night after fishing far out to sea.
While riding a bike on a dirt road leading away from the wind
turbines, I found an endangered Galapagos Rail and a common species of
Darwin’s Finch within a few miles of each other that had recently been
hit by cars. This gave me an epiphany.
To put the bird and bat killing potential of the three wind turbines
in terms of road kill, picture a 1/3 mile long oval race track in an
area known to harbor endangered bird species, with nine equally spaced
cars going around it at 180 mph, 24 hours a day (three turbines, each
with three 100 foot long blades spinning at 25 revolutions per minute,
5,280 feet/mile, 60 minutes/hour, circumference = 2pR).
There are also three wind turbines (from a different manufacturer)
located on the island of Baltra. Although it was always quite windy, I
never saw them spinning. All of these turbines are essentially an
experiment testing the viability of wind energy in the Galapagos
Islands. Will they eventually fall into disrepair and join the rest of
the abandoned structures on the islands?
I briefly discuss below a few other energy schemes that may also be effective at preventing oil spills.
Natural Gas
If Ecuador were really serious about protecting the “Mona Lisa” of
biodiversity from the next inevitable oil spill, everything in the
Galapagos would run on natural gas. Much of the taxi fleet in Buenos
Aires (a city of 13 million) runs on natural gas, as does Seattle’s
garbage and recycling trucks. The generators could also be run on
natural gas. Petroleum products are heavily subsidized by the Ecuadorian
government. Gasoline here costs $1.50 a gallon. This has, of course,
created a black market for Ecuadorian petroleum products in neighboring
countries.
Biomass
Roughly 90% of the biomass here is from invasive plant species. One
of the worst is the guava tree. A system might be developed to pay
farmers to haul biomass (roots and all) down the mountainsides with
their donkeys to a biomass fired steam turbine or a power-from-waste
combustion system with the intent of controlling or possibly eliminating
some invasive species.
Power from Waste and Plasma Gasification
Decades ago, environmental activists successfully shut down the worst
of the old technology incinerators in the United States that had little
or no pollution control. Attempts to build modern power-from-waste or plasma gasification
facilities (which bear no resemblance to the old trash incinerators)
will usually attract a crowd of aging activists waving signs with the
word “incinerator” somewhere in the text. All the same, most developed
nations are using the technology. From the Wikipedia article:
Waste combustion is particularly popular in countries such as Japan where land is a scarce resource. Denmark and Sweden have been leaders in using the energy generated from incineration for more than a century, in localized combined heat and power facilities supporting district heating schemes. In 2005, waste incineration produced 4.8% of the electricity consumption and 13.7% of the total domestic heat consumption in Denmark. A number of other European countries rely heavily on incineration for handling municipal waste, in particular Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Germany and France.
Although there is a recycling program, some of the Galapagos Islands
are, literally, awash with trash. Sea turtles and sea birds will
sometimes eat plastic debris and die as a result. I witnessed scrap
metal being hauled to a dock and loaded by hand onto small barges which
ferried it out to ships that had just unloaded cargo in the reverse
order.
Biofuel
An economically viable technology to convert cellulose into a liquid
fuel does not exist. It is still more efficient to burn woody biomass
for electricity or heat. Humanity is the cause of the sixth great
extinction event. Habitat loss is the main driver and agriculture is the
main driver of habitat loss and deforestation, which is also a
significant contributor to global warming. Because palm biodiesel or
cane or corn ethanol require the conversion of ecosystems elsewhere into
cropland, I would not consider them any better than oil when it comes
to overall environmental impact.
Dedicated Bicycle Lanes?
Santa Cruz is the most populous of all the islands. The tourist
district has dedicated bicycle lanes with a physical barrier separating
bikes and car traffic. Bicycles are already used extensively on all of
the islands because weather is rarely an impediment and because most
destinations are not very far apart. Unfortunately, thanks to the low
cost of motor fuel, there is less incentive to ride a bike than to drive
the ubiquitous crew-cab short-bed pickup truck.
The Future of the Galapagos Islands
The population of the Galapagos is growing rapidly because there are
so many young people who are just beginning to have a family or are not
old enough to do so yet, and all of their children will of course have
children of their own.
Thanks to ecotourism, the standard of living in the Galapagos Islands
is much higher than on the mainland of Ecuador, although still well
below most developed nations. It’s illegal to migrate there unless you
are married to a citizen of the islands, and it isn’t legal to marry
somebody just so you can.
Fresh water is very limited and on some islands you shower and wash
in salty water. Any kind of social upheaval that disrupts Eco-tourism or
the supply of fossil fuels would be disastrous for the people and the
wildlife of the Galapagos.
Unlike wildlife found at other Eco-tourism destinations like Costa
Rica, the indigenous wildlife of the Galapagos never developed a fear of
man. Nowhere else on the planet can you stand next to a sea lion at the
fish market, share your fork with a finch (Darwin’s), wait for the
occasional giant tortoise to cross the road …
http://www.energytrendsinsider.com/2013/11/26/energy-use-in-the-galapagos-archipelagos/
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