Renewable energy:  Scientists, governments, and significant elements of the business community now are in agreement that it is the basis around which we can build a low-carbon, sustainable, global energy economy. And yet, misinformation is being propagated by interests favoring the status quo.

A June 7 op-ed,  The Gas is Greener, by Robert Bryce in The New York Times is a sad example. Using rhetorical arguments and faulty calculations, Bryce argues that technologies such as wind and solar are somehow more environmentally destructive than natural gas and nuclear energy. This opinion is at odds with the findings of the several hundred analysts who developed the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Special Report on Renewable Energy Sources released last month. It is also at odds with the community of nations who reviewed and endorsed the report and its finding that 17 to 77 percent of global energy needs could come from renewable energy by 2050.

So, what is the truth? Can we build this new energy economy?

Consider the example of California, where detailed and extensively reviewed assessments have shown that with integration and coordination we can readily meet the mandate that one-third of the state’s electricity come from renewable sources by 2020. In projecting the impact of this mandate, Bryce makes several errors, each substantially increasing his estimate of its difficulty. He first ignores the 18 percent of California electricity that already comes from renewable sources, and then inexplicably bases his calculations on peak historic demand rather than the total annual consumption that is subject to this mandate.

This selective lens allows Bryce, like many nay-sayers, to overestimate new infrastructure requirements by over 400 percent. Moreover, both wind and solar are compatible with many other land uses and neither can be said to spoil the land they sit on in any way analogous to fossil fuel extraction or nuclear waste storage. The most important innovations?  Policy and market access.  The wind and solar industries face enormous market incentives to minimize their environmental impacts and both have impressive track records of ongoing innovation in this area.

Meeting a 33 percent renewable electricity mandate nationwide would require on the order of 800 square miles (2,072 square kilometers) of total area–much of which could be on the tops of buildings or in the case of wind, integrated into existing farmland (as is already the case in many wind farms). This is less than twice the size of Edwards Air force base, and less than one third of the area of forest estimated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to have already been destroyed by mountaintop removal coal mining.

Critics of the green energy economy often omit key information from consideration in making arguments about the material requirements of energy technologies as well. Bryce, for example compares the steel used for construction of wind and natural gas turbines, neglecting to mention that a gas turbine is only a very small part of a natural gas facility. More importantly, natural gas has substantial fuel production and waste stream infrastructure and impacts. Studies from the EPA indicate that “fugitive” greenhouse gas emissions  associated with natural gas extraction may be far greater than previously thought, diminishing the advantage it is presumed to have over coal,  the dirtiest fuel in widespread use. In contrast, an operating  wind turbine or solar panel requires no fuel inputs and creates no waste stream.

Those of us who have done the math and thus are convinced that a cleaner, safer, and more durable energy infrastructure is worth pursuing, and can be achieved, know that it will be built on a diverse platform of energy technologies. In all likelihood, this will include the natural gas and nuclear power that Bryce advocates, as well as solar, wind, and other renewable energy sources that he unconvincingly criticizes.

What we need most of all is an honest discussion with clear life-cycle, or ‘cradle to grave’ criteria to evaluate the benefits, drawbacks, and roles of each technology and the policy best suited to achieving our societal goals. The most basic lesson from our national innovation and industrial capacity is that we will achieve that which we plan.  Clean energy exists as an option, if we choose to invest in it and to implement systems solutions.

This post was written with guest bloggers Sam Borgeson, who studies low-carbon energy infrastructure, and Kevin Fingerman, who serves as vice-chair of the Roundtable on Sustainable Biofuels.  Both are doctoral students in the Energy and Resources Group at the University of California, Berkeley.

Comments

  1. brian andrew uren
    manilla austraila
    July 8, 2011, 10:26 pm

    hydro power ..all city,s and towns with main,s water running through them .in most city,s of the world have more people living in them then i have in my country the amount of water running in there water mains could spin a lot of turbines.like i said anny one can talk .. brian andrew uren

  2. Anton Allen
    Bellingham,WA
    July 9, 2011, 3:55 am

    Amazing how critics of renewable and alternative energy solutions adhere to two main lines of criticism:
    Cost of production/implementation vs. conventional/status quo power industries[ and thinly veiled arguments on behalf of "the lower wage earners affected='trickle-down'...O RLY?.] And,
    The lack of viable technologies here and now to remotely come close to match consumption needs.

    S. Borgeson hit the nail on the head w/Cranios ’747′ comment; little does the average American know[state the obvious] that ALL major aviation[commercial and military] and power-generating heavy industry is wading chest deep w/investment into biodiesell from algae/waste biomass…a spectrum of source substrates that is practically unlimited.
    Originally, petroleum industry lobbyists and scientist argued algal diesel was woefully far off for perfection[15-20yrs]. Now EADS, Airbus, Boeing, DARPA, Virgin, Siemens, Rolls Royce & GE are forging deals to produce JP8 direct replacements on massiver scales–due to tremendous breakthoughs w/various algea cultures and ‘nuisance’ weed stocks in the past 4yrs . When the aviation industry focuses their long term efforts on an alternative energy source to petroleum[and planes are the biggest gas guzzlers], you know the stakes & potential rewards are massive. I’m addressing the strength and viability potential of organic derived biodiesels on massive consumption scales. I haven’t made mention of domestic municipal & road infrastructure applications; note: I didn’t use the easily abused/misused moniker “biofuels”
    ..cough..Petro/Agra/Pharma boondoggle->Ethanol…cough!]
    …and SPECIFICALLY haven’t mentioned palm oil/agricultural land vs. food sources–they are unnecessary here!

    Comments about regulation and bureaocracy burdens are the most troubling to good ‘ol boy hegemonist industries that are used to the gravy train. They care about costs being passed on the way fraternities and organized crime complain about anti-hazing laws and RICO statutes. They are NOT concerned with the little wage earners struggle to pay heating bills next winter–>they feed on it!
    Another technology concept that the biggest, corporations and dinosaur industries malign is solar, and importantly not photovoltaic[cells & panels] but SOLAR THERMAL. Odd, considering Tom C from Albq, N.M. doesn’t have perspective of the generating power year-round that is available in his state. America has a couple of piddly projects, CA w/PG&E in the desert for one[recently haggled w/Sierra Club over desert tortoise habitat]; Saudia Arabia, Dubai, France, Spain, Israel, Australia, Germany and China have multiple, large scale reflector/concentrator arrays under developement and partial operation. The multifold potential of heat sequestration in molten salt, among others; desalination- energy intensiveness for reverse osmosis, powering foundries and other mining processes, large scale sintering of silica sand[recently demonstrated by a grad student working in Egypt]…..list goes on. All powered by the blisteringly intense sunlight available year-round in desert regions.
    Most important aspect of the renewables I mention here, to counter the ‘cost/implementation/infrastructure’ and ‘lack of viable tech today’ arguments is SCALABILITY. You DON’T have to wait for the ‘gubbermint’ or deep-pockets consortiums to initiate these power producing methodologies–they can be scaled to regional, community and residential level production, without as many concerns for hazardous byproducts or $$$ plants/furnaces/mines, to counter any NIMBY wanks grumblings.

    We need to say goodbye to dinosaur mindests as well as the liquified dinosaurs we’ve become addicted to. The age of the ‘warm-blooded and bigger brained’ is here.

  3. JohnnyR
    MI
    July 10, 2011, 10:16 am

    The cornerstone of modern science is the scientific method. Alternative Energy and Climate Scientists first formulate hypotheses. Then they apply for government grants. Then they perform experiments to test their hypotheses. Then they alter the data or revise their hypotheses to fit the data by back-dating it. Then they publish and apply for more grants.

  4. Laura
    Ithaca NY
    July 10, 2011, 12:53 pm

    yes we can generate part of our electricity with renewables.
    But a lot of renewable believers think we can take care of all our ENERGY needs with renewables, saving us from having to drill for natural gas or have nuclear power plants.
    THat’s when renewables become very environmentally damaging – when they’re scaled up to that extent. Like, generating the United States’ energy with solar power would require a solar farm about the size of Arizona …

  5. John
    NC
    July 10, 2011, 3:31 pm

    It’s sad how this kind of thing happens hundreds of times every week from many different news organizations, yet you specifically publish something regarding this specific subject. Why don’t you go after Gore? How about you touch on the fact that drilling for oil actually helps sea life by preventing natural seepage, and man-made spills are far and few in between.

  6. Kevin Fingerman
    United States
    July 10, 2011, 6:34 pm

    @Laura – I agree that it’s important to recognize, at least in the short term, that renewables will only make up part of our energy mix. This piece does not argue for 100% renewable energy penetration – simply for an honest discussion/assessment of renewable options and the implementation of a policy environment designed to move us in the right direction.

    As to the scaling up of renewable energies – we have done the math on this. As you can see from this piece, production of 100% of US total electricity use (again, not something we’re advocating here) would require about 2,400 square miles – or about 2% of the size of Arizona – not the whole states’s area as you claim. This is approximately the amount of forest that is estimated to have been destroyed to date by mountaintop removal coal mining alone. Furthermore, this solar, and other renewables do not need to be installed in huge facilities alone, but could be integrated with existing land uses (e.g. rooftop solar installations).

  7. Penny Melko
    Tehachapi, California
    July 11, 2011, 1:39 am

    I live in the Tehachapi Pass where our pristine and endangered forests and desert is being stripped to install wind turbines and solar plants. Endangered and migrating birds and bats are either chopped up by the 186 foot blades or their habitats are gone. Neither is green. Wind is intermittent.

    If anyone read the NG article on March 2011 Enter the Anthropocene Age of Man, it’s not OK to keep ripping up our planet. Some of us think it’s already too late. Most fish isn’t even safe to eat anymore.

  8. Dan Kammen
    Washington, DC
    July 11, 2011, 2:33 pm

    Hi Laura,
    Glad to have Ithaca chiming in. I was there over the weekend, and say yard after yard with “No Fracking” signs on the lawn.

    In terms of meeting energy needs with renewable energy and energy efficiency, here is an assessment for the EU that is very carefully done (people will argue with many of the assumptions, but this is a thoughtful assessment):

    http://www.europeanclimate.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=72&Itemid=79

    In brief:

    The ECF has embarked on a project in support of the climate and energy goals set by the EU’s Heads of State and Government of reducing Europe’s GHG emissions by 80-95% by 2050.

    The Roadmap 2050 project sets out the crucial role of a zero-carbon power sector to Europe’s long-term climate commitments and shows different pathways that can make this a reality delivering economic and energy security goals. The Roadmap is based on extensive technical, economic and policy analyses conducted by five leading consultancies: Imperial College London, KEMA, McKinsey & Company, Oxford Economics, and the Office of Metropolitan Architecture, in addition to the involvement of utilities, transmission operators and NGOs.

    The Roadmap examines several decarbonization scenarios for the power sector and, based on a back-casting methodology, sets out the near-term implications of this long-term commitment. The analysis shows that in each of the scenarios the cost of zero carbon power remains in current ranges. It also shows that an inter-regional European transmission grid can provide the level of reliability that users expect in all scenarios.

    Action before 2015 is a prerequisite for decarbonization by 2050.

    Immediate policy development and implementation should therefore focus on:
    Energy Efficiency measures, creating cost savings and reducing demand.
    Investments in regional grid inter-connection, minimizing back-up supply and load-balancing requirements.
    Market reform to ensure an effective investment scenario.

    The Roadmap 2050 shows that the benefits of the low-carbon transition by far outweigh the challenges and that a commitment now to a systemic low-carbon transformation of the energy sector is ultimately the winning economic strategy for competitiveness, jobs and low-carbon prosperity. Achieving the 80% GHG reductions target in 2050 based on zero carbon power generation in Europe is technically feasible and makes compelling economic sense.

  9. Minimust
    WA State
    September 12, 2012, 4:42 am

    All tthese comments are NONSENSE!! well there ya go. Even my comment is nonsense. If we do not start to think seriously about reducing our use of energy of either kind (renewable AND fossil) we are going to one day find ourselves backed into a corner. Turn off or unplug anything you are not using.. replace anything you can with items that use power more efficiantly (as economics dictate). If we continue to use energy just because its there we WILL find ourselves forced to make do with whatever is available in the future, and that right now looks bleak. MONEY MONEY MONEY. Greed is the biggest killer of innovation (and people), even bigger then religion, old age AND just being born. Get with it, think about where to go from here. reduce, reuse, recycle. Don’t forget to stop ‘wasting’ energy.