[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

dam-l NY times article energy



Subject: NYTimes Energy article/LS


>          October 31, 1999
>
>          Global Economy Slowly Cuts Use of High-Carbon
>          Energy

>          By WILLIAM K. STEVENS
>
>          Even as the world's expanding population
>              and economy increase atmospheric
>          concentrations of carbon dioxide that
>          scientists say are warming the earth, the
>          global energy system is moving steadily away
>          from the carbon-rich fuels whose combustion
>          produces the gas.
>
>          Experts say atmospheric levels of carbon
>          dioxide may be double that of the
>          pre-industrial era by the end of the next
>          century. But they also say the levels would
>          be much higher except for a trend toward
>          lower-carbon fuels that has been going on for
>          more than 100 years, but has been largely
>          unnoticed except by a small band of energy
>          specialists.
>
>          The question now, they say, is whether the
>          trend can be accelerated enough to stave off
>          or lessen what many scientists believe is a
>          potentially disruptive global warming.
>
>          For nearly a century and a half, fuels with
>          high amounts of carbon have progressively
>          been replaced by those containing less. First
>          wood, which is high in carbon, was eclipsed
>          in the late 19th century by coal, which
>          contains less.
>
>          Then oil, with a lower carbon content still,
>          dethroned King Coal in the 1960's.
>
>          Now analysts say that natural gas, lighter
>          still in carbon, may be entering its heyday,
>          and that the day of hydrogen -- providing a
>          fuel with no carbon at all, by definition --
>          may at last be about to dawn.
>
>          As a result, the experts estimate, the
>          world's economy today burns less than
>          two-thirds as much carbon per unit of energy
>          produced as it did in 1860. In the United
>          States, they estimate, the trend toward
>          lower-carbon fuels combined with greater
>          energy efficiency has, since 1950, reduced by
>          about half the amount of carbon spewed out
>          for each unit of economic production.
>
>          But because economic growth and population
>          growth have been so rapid over the decades,
>          overall atmospheric concentrations of carbon
>          dioxide have steadily risen, to the point
>          that the concentrations may well have doubled
>          by the year 2100.
>
>          Mainstream scientists say that this much
>          carbon dioxide could warm the earth, on
>          average, by 3 to 5 degrees Fahrenheit. By
>          comparison, that is about half as much as it
>          has warmed since the depths of the last ice
>          age 18,000 to 20,000 years ago.
>
>          A change of this magnitude would likely have
>          widespread consequences for the world's
>          climate, weather and human life.
>
>          Now, as representatives of 150 governments
>          meet in Bonn in the latest round of global
>          talks on measures to further reduce
>          carbon-dioxide emissions, analysts both in
>          and out of industry say that the next
>          quarter-century is shaping up as a period of
>          technological and economic ferment offering a
>          chance to accelerate the trend toward a
>          low-carbon economy and, eventually, a
>          no-carbon one.
>
>          In Bonn, the delegates are trying to work out
>          the details of an agreement forged two years
>          ago in Kyoto, Japan, that could speed up the
>          trend. Their work is not expected to be
>          finished for at least a year, and the Kyoto
>          agreement still must be ratified by a
>          sufficient number of countries after that.
>
>          However that may turn out, "the
>          decarbonization of the energy system is the
>          single most important fact to emerge from the
>          last 20 years of analysis" of the system,
>          said Dr. Jesse H. Ausubel, an expert on
>          energy and climate at Rockefeller University
>          in New York City. Dr. Ausubel predicts that
>          this evolution will produce a carbon-free
>          energy system by the end of the 21st century.
>
>          Among some recent signs of the trend are
>          these:
>
>        * The Federal Energy Information Administration
>          reported last week that emissions of carbon
>          dioxide by the United States had increased by
>          an average of 1.37 percent a year in the
>          1990's -- only about half the 2.6-percent
>          rate of growth in economic production.
>          Analysts say the discrepancy is evidence that
>          the economy is being decoupled from carbon.
>
>        * The agency reported this month that the same
>          is generally true in China, the biggest
>          consumer and producer of coal in the world,
>          where coal production has been reported to be
>          dropping lately. "China has dispelled a
>          commonly held notion that economic growth and
>          energy consumption are necessarily coupled,"
>          the report said.
>
>        * In December, Honda will introduce in the
>          United States a high-efficiency,
>          low-emissions automobile powered partly by
>          gasoline and partly by self-generated
>          electricity. It is said to run at 60 miles
>          per gallon of gasoline in town, and 71 on the
>          highway, and to travel 600 to 700 miles on a
>          tank of gas.
>
>          Toyota has introduced a similar "hybrid"
>          automobile in Japan, and these cars are
>          "literally kick-the-tires examples of the
>          decarbonized economy," said Hal Harvey,
>          president of the Energy Foundation, a
>          partnership of foundations that promotes
>          energy efficiency and renewable energy.
>
>          Other auto makers are also planning hybrids,
>          which are being viewed as a transition,
>          ultimately, to vehicles powered by hydrogen
>          fuel cells that emit no carbon.
>
>          In its planning, the General Motors
>          Corporation has "embraced fuel cells as the
>          technology of choice," but with hybrids
>          coming first, said John Williams, the leader
>          of the company's internal team on global
>          climate issues.
>
>          And while auto companies are looking down
>          that track, some of the world's biggest
>          energy companies are looking to provide the
>          appropriate fuels.
>
>          Hydrogen, in particular, has attracted fresh
>          interest.
>
>          Until recently, "the hydrogen option was seen
>          as rather distant," said Ged R. Davis, an
>          executive of Shell International in London
>          who analyzes such questions for Royal
>          Dutch/Shell, one of the world's largest
>          energy companies. "Now it is looking closer,
>          perhaps over the next decade or two," Davis
>          added. "Most of the energy and car companies
>          are looking at this rather seriously." Shell
>          itself has established a hydrogen subsidiary.
>
>          In the nearer term, hydrogen would be used in
>          fuel cells for cars, trucks and industrial
>          plants, just as it already provides power for
>          orbiting spacecraft. But ultimately, hydrogen
>          could also provide a general carbon-free
>          fuel.
>
>          The world energy system will not change
>          overnight, of course, if it changes at all.
>          And new products must ultimately stand the
>          test of the marketplace. But some analysts
>          say that the next two decades or so will be a
>          time of unusual pressure for change, both for
>          environmental and economic reasons, in which
>          companies will be driven to compete for
>          survival and dominance in some sort of
>          emerging new energy system.
>
>          Whether companies are seriously pursuing new
>          options or merely preserving them for the
>          future, experts say there seems little doubt
>          that the long-term trend toward
>          decarbonization is real, and that it will
>          most likely continue even in the absence of
>          any shift to hydrogen or renewable energy
>          sources like wind and solar power.
>
>          "The future decarbonization rate is likely to
>          be at least as high as the historical one" of
>          about three-tenths of a percent a year, said
>          Dr. Nebojsa Nakicenovic, an expert on energy
>          and the environment with the International
>          Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, a
>          research group in Laxenburg, Austria. The
>          institute was one of the first groups to
>          study the question.
>
>          Oil accounts for the biggest share of global
>          energy consumption today, followed by coal
>          and, closely, by natural gas. In most of the
>          world except the United States and China,
>          said Dr. Ausubel of Rockefeller University,
>          coal is either defunct or on the way out, and
>          natural gas will increasingly displace it.
>
>          According to several recent analyses, Dr.
>          Nakicenovic said, recoverable natural gas now
>          appears far more abundant than had been
>          previously thought. The burning of gas
>          produces, on average, only about a third of
>          the carbon dioxide per unit of energy of
>          coal, and about two-thirds that of oil.
>
>          Gas not only can fuel fixed facilities like
>          industrial plants and furnaces, it can also
>          be processed to produce hydrogen for use in
>          carbon-free fuel cells to power automobiles
>          and generate electricity. In those cells,
>          there is no combustion; instead, hydrogen
>          reacts chemically with oxygen to produce
>          electricity. But when hydrogen is extracted
>          from gas, the residual carbon must somehow be
>          disposed of, possibly by pumping it back into
>          depleted oil and gas wells.
>
>          Dr. Ausubel predicts that natural gas will
>          become the dominant fuel of the next 40 to 50
>          years. If so, that alone would be enough to
>          continue the long-term decarbonization trend.
>
>          China, which some experts think will emerge
>          as the biggest carbon-dioxide emitter of the
>          21st century, has greatly reduced its energy
>          consumption per unit of economic output, has
>          closed several coal mines, is seeking to
>          modernize industrial and power plants and is
>          moving toward natural gas, many analysts say.
>
>          Not least, they say, the Chinese are worried
>          about the health effects of coal's air
>          pollution. Nevertheless, the Energy
>          Information Administration reported last
>          week, China's coal demand is expected to
>          double by 2020.
>
>          So while the trend toward a carbon-free
>          economy may continue, Dr. Ausubel says, it
>          might not move rapidly enough to assuage the
>          fears of those who are most concerned about
>          global warming. He says that if the trend
>          continues to evolve more or less naturally,
>          with business as usual, it will take another
>          century or so to decarbonize the energy
>          system fully.
>
>          By then, he predicts, atmospheric
>          concentrations of carbon dioxide will be
>          around 500 parts per million, nearly double
>          what they were before the industrial
>          revolution. Mainstream scientists say that
>          would be enough to change the earth's climate
>          substantially, make droughts, heat waves and
>          floods worse and raise the sea level to
>          heights that would threaten many low-lying
>          coastal areas and islands.
>
>          Some analysts say that 500 parts per million
>          is a best-case estimate, and that
>          business-as-usual could cause a tripling of
>          pre-industrial carbon-dioxide levels.
>
>          Other experts think that concentrations could
>          be held substantially below 500 parts per
>          million if the trend toward decarbonization
>          were to accelerate. Harvey of the Energy
>          Foundation says "prospects are excellent" for
>          an acceleration.
>
>          And Davis, the Shell executive, says his
>          company's analyses suggest that if the proper
>          incentives were in place, new energy
>          technologies could be adopted broadly enough
>          to bring about a peak in oil use and
>          carbon-dioxide emissions by about 2020.
>
>          After that, there would be a decline.
>
>          One sort of incentive might lie in the Kyoto
>          agreement, which calls for a group of 39
>          industrialized countries to reduce their
>          carbon dioxide emissions by an average of 5
>          percent below 1990 levels over the period
>          2008 to 2012.
>
>          One mechanism for doing this is a system
>          whereby a country that exceeds its reductions
>          target can earn money by selling that extra
>          reduction to another country that is having
>          trouble meeting its target. A similar system,
>          involving company-to-company trading, has
>          been proposed for the United States.
>
>          While negotiators struggle over the terms of
>          such arrangements and politicians wrangle
>          over putting the Kyoto accord into effect,
>          many energy analysts seem to agree on one
>          thing: The ultimate goal ought to be a
>          carbon-free economy based largely on
>          hydrogen. Dr. Ausubel, for one, predicts that
>          such an economy will materialize.
>
>          Many would agree with Williams of General
>          Motors: "I think I'm on pretty solid ground
>          in saying the long-term vision is hydrogen.
>          But there's a lot of work between here and
>          there."
>
>
>       -----------------------------------------------------------
>
>         Home | Site Index | Site Search | Forums | Archives |
>                              Marketplace
>
>       Quick News | Page One Plus | International | National/N.Y.
>         | Business | Technology | Science | Sports | Weather |
>            Editorial | Op-Ed | Arts | Automobiles | Books |
>            Diversions | Job Market | Real Estate | Travel
>
>        Help/Feedback | Classifieds | Services | New York Today
>
>               Copyright 1999 The New York Times Company
>
>=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*
>      Glenn Switkes, Director, Latin America Program,
>           International Rivers Network
>              1847 Berkeley Way, Berkeley, California 94703, USA
>                  Tel. (510) 848 1155   Fax (510) 848 1008
>                        http://www.irn.org
>
>          South America/América do Sul:
>                     Tel/Fax/Message/Recados: +55 65 791 1313
>                                 email: glen@cba.zaz.com.br
>=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*
>

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
      Lori Pottinger, Director, Southern Africa Program,
        and Editor, World Rivers Review
           International Rivers Network
              1847 Berkeley Way, Berkeley, California 94703, USA
                  Tel. (510) 848 1155   Fax (510) 848 1008
                        http://www.irn.org
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::