Wednesday, June 5, 2024

Reduce, reuse, and reuse some more

 

 

picture taken from https://wise.uwaterloo.ca/.api2/api/v1/communities/2774924/previews/thumbnails/4f72ebc2-88cd-4fb4-b7f8-a4c256683a68?width=680&height=680&crop=False

Environmentalists often use the term “reduce, reuse, recycle” to describe ways that individuals can shrink their footprint on the planet.  But the phrase applies on industrial scales as well, and a recent report suggests that there is a way for the renewable energy industry to reuse something in order to substantially reduce its environmental impact with a similarly large savings in costs.  A couple of weeks ago, the journal Cell Reports Physical Science published an article titled “Taking Second-Life Batteries from Exhausted to empowered using experiments, data analysis, and health estimation” by a team from Stanford University and Relyion Energy in California led by Xiaofan Cui.  The paper talks about the potential for using retired car batteries as storage in the electrical grid.  The basic premise is that a typical retired car battery still maintains 70 to 80% of its energy storage potential, and that 40% of the projected need for energy storage in the grid by 2030 can be supplied by these retired batteries.  The primary logistical issue for using these batteries is that they will need to be repurposed, so this study set out to test whether this issue is a barrier or merely a small obstacle.

The authors tested eight cells from retired Nissan Leaf battery packs for their ability to continue supplying electricity once repurposed.  The results show that the reduced-voltage state that comes with supplying grid power instead of moving a vehicle can substantially extend the usable lifetime of the battery.  While the sample size was tiny and these results do depend significantly on the health of the battery when it is retired, the authors did establish proof of concept.  And if these results can be replicated on a bigger scale, the technology has game-changing potential.  I’ve discussed in a previous post that the cost of battery storage, while declining, remains high enough to slow down the adoption of renewable energy.  But if much of the needed storage can come from batteries that are otherwise headed for the scrap heap, that would reduce the overhead enormously while simultaneously enhancing sustainability.  It is worth paying attention to see how this story develops.

Friday, February 9, 2024

Where We Are in 2024, part 1: Clean Energy

 

The Edwards & Sanborn Solar and Energy Storage Project in Kern County, California became the largest solar farm in the country when it went online last month.

2023 has come and gone, and while some progress has been made in reducing greenhouse gas emissions, this past year was the warmest globally on record by a wide margin.  And it was just announced that we started this year with the warmest January globally on record.  So what are world leaders doing to make it possible to reduce the temperature trend sooner rather than later?   Well, December saw the 28th Conference of Parties (COP28) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.  It was held in Dubai, the most populous city in the oil-rich United Arab Emirates and chaired by Sultan Al Jaber, head of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company.  This made climate activists suspicious that the UN had essentially put a fox in charge of the henhouse, and these suspicions were strengthened by a report early in the conference that Al Jaber intended to strike oil and gas deals during the conference.

Having said all that, COP28 did produce a noteworthy agreement to transition “away from fossil fuels in energy systems, in a just, orderly and equitable manner.”  The optimistic view is that the world’s nations have agreed that moving on from fossil fuels is necessary to stabilize the Earth’s climate.  The pessimist would point out that representatives of Pacific Island nations, who are more vulnerable to the effects of rising seas than anybody else and were not in the room when the agreement was made, feel that the agreement lacks a level of urgency commensurate with their situation.  The pessimist would also point out that this need to move on from fossil fuels was sufficiently clear at the time of COP1 back in 1995, if not a decade or two sooner.  The science made this acknowledgement inevitable, but it took this long for it to happen.  

In practical terms, what does a phaseout mean?  Many processes emit greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, but how quickly can these processes be altered to suit to what the climate needs?  It’s worth taking a look at the different processes, and where we stand in each case.  For this post we will start with power generation, which contributes 34% of global greenhouse gas emissions according to the most recent IPCC report and 25% of United States emissions, according to a recent report from the EPA.

Power generation remains a major source of greenhouse gas emissions, but the good news is that it doesn’t have to stay that way for very long if people don’t want it to.  The primary obstacle right now is no longer cost.  As I mentioned in my previous post, utility-scale solar and onshore wind are cheaper than the alternatives in many locations, and are now at least cost-competitive where battery storage is necessary.  The primary logistical hurdle at this point is the availability of land.  To that end, the Bureau of Land Management just updated its roadmap for solar energy, significantly expanding the area of public land available for development.  

Where cost does matter right now, quite a bit in fact, is with offshore wind.  Several offshore wind deals have fallen through recently, with the primary obstacle being that an inadequate supply chain in this country is keeping the cost of development sky high.  Offshore wind has a logistical advantage over other renewable power sources in that it doesn’t compete for dry land with other industrial and residential demands, but that won’t help it if it remains so expensive.  And while the supply chain will likely catch up with demand eventually, onshore renewable power continues to expand in the meantime.  Offshore wind companies like Oersted may have a hard time re-convincing people that the need justifies the cost, especially if they have to start from scratch.

As for the role of carbon removal in power generation, the most recent Lazard report shows that even “dirty” coal is not cheap enough at this point to compete with other power sources.  So unless gas prices drop quite a bit compared to renewables in the future and a major cost-reducing innovation in carbon removal happens, it will remain quite a bit cheaper to generate the electricity without emissions in the first place.  In other words, where power is concerned, “net zero” means “zero.”

So the bottom line is that the biggest present barriers to creating an energy sector reliant solely on non-emitting sources are political ones.  I’ve written in the past that creating a fully clean grid by 2035 in this county would  strand assets in the hundreds of billions, but this administration has already approved bigger spending packages over shorter periods of time.  And while stopping and hopefully reversing climate change will require a global effort, we’re the United States.  We still have the world’s largest economy and most prosperous democracy.  The developing world will look up to us and follow our example, one way or the other.