If
I asked you to think of renewable energy what comes to mind? I imagine
it is skyscraper-sized wind turbines, solar panels on suburban roofs or
massive hydro-electric dams. You probably do not think of burning wood
or converting crops to liquid fuel to be used in cars.
Yet throughout
the world bio-energy remains the biggest source of renewable energy. In
fact its growth in the last decade has been greater than or similar to
that from wind and solar in most places, and those places include the
European Union and the United States of America.Biogas Production in Denmark
Europe: A Reversal Of History
The Industrial Revolution was fundamentally an energy transition from burning biomass, mostly wood, to burning coal.
Despite being called a revolution this was a rather protracted affair.
America did not get the majority of its energy from coal until the
1880s, while China and India remained predominantly biomass powered
until the 1950s and 1960s. And many countries, or regions within
countries, still remain highly dependent on energy from biomass.
This
transition from burning biomass to burning coal occurred first in
Europe. By the mid-eighteenth century England was getting most of its
energy from coal, and by the mid nineteenth century biomass was in long
term decline in Western Europe. However this decline did not start until
the mid-twentieth century in Eastern Europe.
(Data source: Fernandez et al. 2007)
This
long term trend however has been reversed, and biomass is now seeing
some form of renaissance in Europe. The reason for this is simple:
renewable energy targets, and subsidies. In 2007 the European
Union decided that it should get 20% of its final energy consumption
from renewables by 2020. However looking at the available options
countries quite clearly decided that wind and solar were not ready to be
scaled up to the desired level that quickly. They turned to the oldest form of energy available: biomass.
Despite
what many perceive, the renewable energy target has, so far, lead to a
far bigger expansion of bio-energy than wind and solar energy. In 2000
biomass was by a significant margin the biggest source of renewable
energy, and made up more than half of final energy consumption in the
EU. As the graph below shows this dominance of biomass was still very
much the case 11 years later.
The
inclusion of hydro-electricity in the graph above is merely an
obligation. Most EU countries have stopped building any hydro-electric
capacity, so its growth over this period was essetnially zero. The same
holds for geothermal energy. Growth of renewable energy since 2000
therefore only really came from three energy sources: wind, solar and
biomass.
In percentage terms the two energy sources that saw the
most rapid growth were wind and solar. This is unsurprising, given their
low starting point. However in absolute terms biomass is the clear
winner. Between 2000 and 2011 biomass grew by 49 million tonnes of oil
equivalent (toe). Wind and solar only grew by 13 and 6 million toe
respectively. In other words the absolute growth of biomass was 1.5
times greater than in wind and solar, and so far the majority of new
renewable energy since 2000 has come from biomass, not wind and solar.
Biomass
is also the biggest source of renewable energy, on a final energy
consumption basis, in all but two EU countries. The exceptions are
Cyprus and Ireland. Denmark may get 30% of its electricity from wind
farms, but it still gets more than twice as much of its final energy
consumption from biomass than from wind farms.
Biomass In Germany
The
supposedly rapid expansion of solar power in Germany gets a lot of
attention. The even more rapid expansion of biomass however has received
absolutely no attention. Final energy consumption from biomass grew by
16 million tonnes of oil equivalent between 2000 and 2011, while wind
and solar grew by 3.4 and 2.1 million toe respectively. Absolute growth
of biomass in Germany has therefore been three times higher than for
wind and solar combined.
The
increase in bio-energy in Germany has taken many forms. For example
wood-chip heating systems have grown massively since 2000. In a decade Germany went from burning almost no wood-chips for heating to burning 1.2 million tonnes each year.
Germany also now gets a significant portion of its electricity from bio-energy. In 2013 bio-energy was used for almost 7% of its electricity production,
higher than that from solar PV and just short of that from wind power.
Electricity generation from bio-energy receives approximately 4.5
billion Euros in subsidies each year, 30% more than is received by onshore wind in Germany.
The production of bio-energy is also now a significant form of land-use in Germany. According to official statistics a total of 2 million hectares is devoted to crop-based biofuels.
This is 17% of arable land and approximately 6% of total land in
Germany. Yet it only produces around 2% of Germany's total energy
consumption, a remarkably inefficient use of land
However wood, not crop-based biofuels, is the biggest source of bio-energy in Germany. A total of 53 million cubic metres of wood
is used each year for energy generation, which is 41% of the total
annual German wood harvest. This corresponds to approximately 4% of
Germany's total energy consumption, a figure that has more than doubled
in the last decade. This then is a rather different picture of the renewables revolution happening in Germany.
The United States: a similar theme
Here was the position in the United States
in 2000: almost all renewable energy came from hydro-electricity and
biomass. Biomass provided 49.2%, while hydro-electricity provided 46%.
Of that provided by biomass 76% was from wood, 17% was from waste and
only 7.8% was from liquid biofuels. Negligible quantities were derived
from geo-thermal, solar and wind energy.
However
the early 21st-century saw the mass-subsidisation of corn ethanol and
today almost half of bio-energy comes from liquid biofuels. The
conversion of food crop into fuel is nothing new. Rudolf Diesel ran some
of his earliest engines on crop-based fuels. However the scale of the
conversion of corn into fuel in the United States in the last decade and
a half is something new. In 1980 only 0.7% of US corn consumption was
used for producing fuel. By 2000 this percentage had reached 8%, but
last year it reached an astonishing 43%.
Between 2000 and 2013,
total growth of renewable energy consumption from liquid biofuels was
almost identical to that from wind and solar combined. Liquid biofuels
grew by 1768 trillion Btu, from 233 to 2001 trillion Btu, while wind and
solar combined grew by, 1820 trillion Btu, from 95 to 1915 trillion
Btu.
In the 21st-century growth in US renewables was essentially
restricted to the three previously mentioned energy sources: liquid
biofuels, wind energy, and solar energy. As in Europe, there was
practically no new hydro-electricity capacity and very little new
geothermal capacity. This then is where the US was last year.
Biomass still provides almost half of renewable energy, but now provides
almost two times more than any other source of renewable energy.
As in Europe the land required to produce liquid biofuels is significant. Last year a total of 95 million acres was used to produce corn. This produced 14 billion bushels of corn, of which 5 billion were used for corn ethanol production. So
approximately 140,000 square kilometres of America is now used to
produce corn ethanol, which is 1.4% of American land. However based on official government statistics only 1.1% of US primary energy consumption comes from corn ethanol.
Future Prospects
Fundamental
physical realities mean that there is an upper limit to how much of our
energy consumption can come from biomass. This is made clear by
considerations of power density. Power density
is an energetic analogy with that of crop yield. But instead of tonnes
per hectare we work in watts per square metre. Typical biomass energy
sources provide us with less than 0.5 watts per square metre. In the case of corn ethanol it is around 0.2 watts per square metre.
These
power densities of energy production can then be compared with the
power density of energy consumption. In many densely populated affluent
economies, such as the UK, Germany and Japan, this is above 1 watt per
square metre. In other words powering these economies purely with
biomass will require more than two times more land than they have.
A
similar calculation can be made with corn ethanol in the US. Moving to
100% corn ethanol would require a land mass of roughly the size of the
US to be converted over to corn ethanol, a very unlikely prospect.
Physical
realities therefore mean that it is implausible that bio-energy can
provide anywhere close to the majority of the energy needs of affluent
economies. And whether the large-scale expansion of bio-energy is
desirable is increasingly questionable. The expansion of corn ethanol
and bio-diesel around the world has lead to a significant diversion of
cropland over to biofuel production. Some commentators have referred to
this a "crime against humanity," a perhaps justifiable claim given the potential impact this has had on global food prices.
Similarly
the environmental benefits of biomass are increasingly in doubt. The
expansion of cropland to accomodate liquid biofuels production has
almost certainly resulted in large amounts of de-forestation, and the
carbon released during this has quite probably offset whatever emissions
are supposed to be saved by the biofuels in the first place.
Liquid
biofuels also have very problematic energy returns on investment. If
you want to grow crops you will need to dump fertilizers on fields and
these fertilizers are produced using fossil fuels. For these and other
reasons the carbon dioxide used to produce corn ethanol may not be that
much different from the carbon dioxide emissions they apparently save.
Environmental groups are also increasingly opposed to the large-scale expansion of bio-energy. A recent report
from Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace suggested that getting
electricity from burning wood may be worse than getting it from coal.
And there is now an ongoing argument between many British environmental
groups and some renewables lobby groups over the issue. Subsidies and
mandates for liquid biofuels are also now routinely opposed by many
environmental NGOs.
"Advanced" biofuels however may solve some of these problems, or they may not. And a recent report
claims that cellulosic biofuels may become cost-competitive - there is
always a report saying a technology will become cost-competitive by a
particular date - by 2016. The recent IPCC WG3 report
on climate change mitigation also gave what could be called a
qualified thumbs-up to both large-scale bio-energy and bio-energy with
CCS.
These forms of enerby conversion therefore may become a vital
part of our attempts to combat climate change. However whether they
will, or whether we should even try, ought to be a matter of important
debate.
Notes
1. EU renewable energy statistics come from Eurostat.
2. US renewable energy statistics come from EIA.
3.
EU statistics are in terms of final energy consumption, whereas US
statistics are in terms of primary energy consumption. I explained the
difference between these in a recent article.
I use the units used by the official statistical bodies. In the US case
it is the British Thermal Unit, which Americans continue to use in an
ironic post-colonial fashion.
4. Estimates for European biofuel use from 1850-2000 are taken from Fernandez et al. 2007. These statistics are in tonnes of biomass, so are not directly comparable with the other measures.
5. US total energy consumption statistics are taken from EIA.
6. US corn acreage and corn use statistics are from USDA here and here respectively. Once again we have units that are scientifically indefensible, but things are what they are.
7. German electricity production statistics can be found here. It's in German, but the German for biomass is biomasse.
8. Vaclav Smil's primer on power density is an excellent introduction to the spatial requirements of energy generation.
9. The inability of bio-energy to power industrial civilizations is explained in depth in E.A Wrigley's excellent book "Energy and the English Industrial Revolution."
http://theenergycollective.com/robertwilson190/370286/biomass-worlds-biggest-provider-renewable-rnergy
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