Starting later this month, the world’s nations will convene in traumatized Paris to hammer out commitments to slow down global climate change.
Any long-term solution will require “decarbonizing” the world energy
economy – that is, shifting to power sources that use little or no
fossil fuel.
How fast can this happen, and what could we do to accelerate this shift?
A look at the history of other infrastructures offers some clues.
Energy infrastructures
Decarbonization is an infrastructure problem, the largest one
humanity has ever faced. It involves not only energy production, but
also transportation, lighting, heating, cooling, cooking and other basic
systems and services. The global fossil fuel infrastructure includes
not only oil and gas wells, coal mines, giant oil tankers, pipelines and
refineries, but also millions of automobiles, gas stations, tank
trucks, storage depots, electric power plants, coal trains, heating
systems, stoves and ovens.
The total value of all this infrastructure is on the order of US$10 trillion,
or nearly two-thirds of US gross domestic product. Nothing that huge
and expensive will be replaced in a year, or even a few years. It will
take decades. Yet there is good news, of a sort, in the fact that all infrastructure eventually wears out. A 2010 study asked: what if the current energy infrastructure were simply allowed to live out its useful life, without being replaced?
The surprising answer: if every worn-out coal-fired power plant were
exchanged for solar, wind or hydro, and every dead gas-powered car
replaced with an electric one, and so on, we might just stay within our planetary boundaries. According to the study, using the existing infrastructure until it
falls apart would not push us past the 2 degrees Celsius global warming
that many scientists see as the upper limit of acceptable climate
change. The problem, of course, is that we aren’t doing this yet. Instead,
we’re replacing worn-out systems with more of the same, while drilling,
mining and building even more. But that could change.
Take-off to build-out: a 30-100-year timeline
Historians of infrastructure
like myself observe a typical pattern. A slower innovation phase is
followed by a “take-off” phase, during which new technical systems are
rapidly built and adopted across an entire region, until the
infrastructure stabilizes at “build-out.” This temporal pattern is surprisingly similar across all kinds of
infrastructure. In the United States, the take-off phase of canals,
railroads, telegraph, oil pipelines and paved roadways lasted 30-100 years. The take-off phases of radio, telephone, television and the internet each lasted 30-50 years.
The history of infrastructure suggests that “take-off” in renewable
electricity production has already begun and will move very quickly now,
especially when and where governments support that goal.
Solar and wind power installations are currently emerging faster than
any other electric power source, growing at worldwide annual rates of 50% and 18% respectively from 2009-2014.
These sources can piggyback on existing infrastructure, pumping
electricity into power grids (though their intermittent power production
requires managers to adjust their load-balancing techniques).
But wind and solar can also provide power “off-grid” to individual
homes, farms and remote locations, giving these sources a unique
flexibility.
A 32 MW solar farm in Long Island, New York, one step in moving to low-carbon energy infrastructure. brookhavenlab/flickr, CC BY-NC
Some countries, notably Germany and China, have made major commitments to renewables. Germany now gets over 25% of its electric power from renewables, helping to reduce its total carbon output by over 25%
relative to 1990. China already produces more solar electricity than
any other country, with an installed base of over 30 gigawatts and plans
to reach 43 gigawatts by the end of this year. In Australia between 2010 and 2015, solar photovoltaic capacity grew from 130 megawatts to 4.7 gigawatts – an annual growth rate of 96%.
Combined with complementary technologies such as electric cars,
efficient LED lighting, and geothermal heating and cooling, this
transition could move us closer to carbon neutrality. Could the 30-100-year timeline for infrastructure development be
accelerated? Some indicators suggest that the answer may be “yes.” First, in the case of electricity, only the power sources need
replacement; power grids – the poles, wires and other gear that
transport electricity – must be managed differently, but not rebuilt
from scratch. Second, less developed countries may take advantage of
renewable technologies to “leapfrog” almost entirely over older
infrastructures.
Similar things have happened in the recent past. Since 2000, for
example, cellular telephone networks have reached most of the developing
world – and simultaneously avoided the slow, costly laying of
vulnerable landlines, which many such places will now never build
outside major cities. The parallel in energy is powering buildings, farms, informal
settlements and other points of need with portable solar panels and
small windmills, which can be installed almost anywhere with no need for
long-distance power lines. This, too, is already happening all over the
developing world.
In the developed world, however, the transition to renewables will likely take considerably longer. In those regions, not only equipment, but also expertise, education,
finance, law, lifestyles and other sociocultural systems both support
and rely on fossil-fuel-based energy infrastructure. These, too, must
adapt to change. Some – especially the huge coal, oil, and natural gas industries –
stand to lose a lot in such a transition. These historical commitments
produce determined political resistance, as we see in the United States
today.
Tough problems, including competition from fossil fuels
Energy infrastructure, of course, isn’t the only challenge. Indeed,
decarbonization is fraught with enormous technical difficulties. Insulating older buildings, improving fuel economy, and installing more efficient electrical gear are by far the most cost-effective ways to reduce carbon footprints, but these fail to excite people and can’t be easily flaunted.
Currently and for the foreseeable future, no energy source can be
truly “zero carbon,” since fossil-fuel-powered devices are used to mine
raw materials and to transport finished products, including renewable
power systems such as solar panels or wind turbines. Electricity is a wonderfully flexible form of energy, but storing it remains a conundrum; today’s best battery technologies require lithium, a relatively rare element. And despite intensive research, batteries remain expensive, heavy, and slow to recharge.
Rare earths – extremely rare elements found in only a few places –
are currently critical to wind turbines and other renewable
technologies, creating legitimate worries about future supplies. Finally, in many circumstances, burning oil, coal and natural gas
will remain the easiest and least expensive means of providing power. For example, major transport modes such as transcontinental shipping,
air travel and long-distance trucking remain very difficult to convert
to renewable power sources. Biofuels offer one possibility for reducing
the carbon footprint of these transport systems, but many plants grown
as biofuel feedstocks compete with food crops and/or wild lands.
Still, the ultimate goal of providing all the world’s energy needs
from renewable sources does appear to be feasible in principle. A major recent study
found that those needs could readily be met with only wind, water and
solar power, at consumer prices no higher than current energy systems.
Infrastructures as social commitments
Where does all this leave us in the run-up to Paris? Accelerated decarbonization can’t be achieved by technical innovation
alone, because infrastructures aren’t just technological systems. They
represent complex webs of mutually reinforcing financial, social and
political commitments, each with long histories and entrenched
defenders. For this reason, major change will require substantial
cultural shifts and political struggle.
On the cultural side, one slogan that could inspire accelerated change may be “energy democracy”: the notion that people can and should produce their own energy, on small scales, at home and elsewhere too. New construction techniques and the low cost of solar panels have
brought “net-zero” homes (which produce as much energy as their
inhabitants consume) within the financial reach of ordinary people.
These are one component of Germany’s ambitious Energiewende, or the country’s energy transition away from fossil fuels.
The transition to renewable energy infrastructure will likley happen faster in developing countries that won't have to replace existing energy infrastructure. divatusaid/flickr, CC BY-NC
In infrastructure history, the take-off phase has often accelerated
when new technologies moved out of large corporate and government
settings for adoption by individuals and smaller businesses. Electric
power in the early 20th century and internet use in the 1990s are cases
in point. In Queensland, Australia, over 20% of homes now generate their own
electricity. This example suggests the possibility that a “tipping
point” toward a new social norm of rooftop solar has already been
reached in some places. In fact, a recent study found that the best indicator of whether a given homeowner adds solar panels to a house is whether a neighbor already had them.
Pieces of a puzzle
Many different policy approaches could help, both to reduce
consumption and to increase the share of renewables in the energy mix. Building codes could be gradually adjusted to require that every rooftop generate energy, and/or ratcheted up to LEED “green building” standards. A gradually increasing carbon tax or cap-and-trade system (already in place in some nations) would spur innovation while reducing fossil fuel consumption and promoting the use of renewables.
In the United States, at least, eliminating the many subsidies that currently flow to fossil fuels may prove politically easier than taxing carbon, yet send a similar price signal. The Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan to reduce carbon output from coal-fired power plants represents the right kind of policy change.
It kicks in gradually to give utility companies time to adjust and
still-nascent carbon capture and storage systems time to develop. The
EPA estimates that the plan will generate $20 billion in climate change
benefits, as well as health benefits of $14-$34 billion, while costing
much less.
Because greenhouse gases come from many sources, including
agriculture, animal husbandry, refrigerants and deforestation (to name
just a few), there’s a lot more to decarbonizing the global economy than
converting to renewable energy sources. This article has addressed only one piece of that very large puzzle,
but an infrastructure perspective may help us think about those problems
as well.
Infrastructure history tells us that decarbonization won’t happen
nearly as fast as we might like it to. But it also shows that there are
ways to accelerate the change, and that there are tipping-point moments
when a lot can happen very fast. We may be on the brink of such a moment. As the Paris climate
negotiations develop, look for inspiration in the many national
commitments to push this process forward.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/articles/2015/11/how-fast-can-we-transition-to-a-low-carbon-energy-system.html
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