«  ||  »

Renewable Myths and Nuclear Heresies

Posted in Uncategorized at 8:00 pm by David Bradley

Bookmark and Share

Electricity pylon

Renewable does not mean green. That is the claim of Jesse Ausubel of the Rockefeller University in New York. He explains that building enough wind farms, tidal power stations, hydroelectric dams, and electric generators running on biomass to meet global energy demands will wreck the environment rather than save it.

Ausubel has analysed the amount of energy that each so-called renewable source can produce in terms of watts of power output per square metre and compared this with what might be possible using nuclear power instead. “Nuclear energy
is green
Nuclear energy is green,” he claims, “Considered in watts per square metre, nuclear has astronomical advantages over its competitors.”

While vast sums of money are being invested in alternative energy sources based on wind, water, and biomass, nuclear industry expertise is being squandered. “In order to grow, the nuclear industry must extend beyond its niche of electric power generation,” says Ausubel. He suggests that the nuclear industry could form an alliance with methane suppliers to produce green power in the form of hydrogen for powering electricity-generating fuel cells, not only in vehicles but in other areas inaccessible to the conventional electricity grid. Such technologies will succeed when economies of scale form part of their conditions of evolution, Ausubel explains. In contrast, there are, he suggests no economies of scale involved in simply erecting more and more wind turbines.

Underpinning Ausubel’s argument is the need for “decarbonisation”, by which he means our reliance on producing energy by converting carbon compounds, coal, oil, and gas, into carbon dioxide and water. Hydrogen, in contrast, is as innocent as an element can be, ending combustion as water, with no carbon dioxide greenhouse gas emission. The intrinsic problem in developing a hydrogen-based power economy as opposed to one that relies on carbon compounds, is that energy is required to produce hydrogen. Hydrogen production could
be the
future role of
the nuclear
power industry
Hydrogen production could be the future role of the nuclear power industry, Ausubel explains – the use of its entirely renewable and almost endless energy supply in the production of hydrogen.

Ausubel considers each so-called renewable in turn. He points out that hypothetically flooding the entire province of Ontario, Canada, about 900,000 square km, with its entire 680,000 billion litres of rainfall, and storing it behind a 60 metre dam would only generate 80% of the total power output of Canada’s 25 nuclear power stations. Put another way, each square kilometre of dammed land would provide the electricity for just 12 people.

Similarly, biomass, which produces less than a fifth of the USA’s renewable energy, is almost as energy inefficient. Most biomass comes from the liquor of paper pulp mills, which is burned to economise the heat and power of paper factories. But, in terms of decarbonisation, this biomass, which initially comes from farmed trees, represents a 10 to 1 ratio of carbon atoms per hydrogen atom, which is less than oil at 1 to 2.

Some people would argue that the use of biomass would be carbon neutral because trees absorb carbon dioxide to grow. However, in order to fulfil the energy requirements of a large proportion of a nation based on biomass, a large proportion of the land area would have to be planted to biomass forest. To obtain the same electricity from biomass as from a single nuclear power plant would require 2500 square kilometres of land working at optimal efficiency. Growth, harvesting and collection are not 100% efficient, relying as they do on high yields and powered equipment and vehicles.

Offshore wind turbines

Turning to the issue of wind, Ausubel points out that while wind farms are between three to ten times more compact than a biomass farm, a 770 square kilometre area is needed to produce as much energy as one 1000 Megawatt electric (MWe) nuclear plant. Moreover, wind farms can only be operated at two of the four wind speed ranges. Calm air means no power, of course, but gales faster than 25 metres per second (about 90 kilometres per hour) also means shutting down the turbines to prevent serious damage. To meet 2005 US electricity demand and assuming round-the-clock wind at the right speed, an area the size of Texas, approximately 780,000 square kilometres, would be needed.

Economies of scale stop with wind. One hundred windy square metres, a good size for a Manhattan apartment, could power an electric lamp or two, but not the laundry equipment, microwave oven, plasma TV, and computer. New York City would require every square metre of Connecticut to become a wind farm to fully power all its electrical equipment and gadgets.

Ausubel gives short thrift to solar powerAusubel gives short thrift to solar power too, which he points out still operates at less than 10% efficiency despite three decades of research. A 1000 MWe photovoltaic solar cell plant would require about 150 square kilometres plus land for storage and retrieval.

The energy density of nuclear fuel is between 10,000 and 100,000 times as great as the most “efficient” carbon fuel, methane. While the full footprint of uranium mining might add a few hundred square kilometres and there are considerations of waste storage, safety and security, the dense heart of the atom has much more to offer than so-called renewables in terms of powering the world, Ausubel believes.

Cooling towers

“My conviction is that our best energy doctrine is decarbonisation, and let us complete it within one hundred years or sooner,” he says, “this will happen only if we abandon wishful thoughts of a renewable Eden.

Ausubel, who is Director of the Program for the Human Environment and Senior Research Associate at The Rockefeller University in New York City, provides details of his analysis in Int. J. Nuclear Governance, Economy and Ecology, 2007, 1, 229-243

Bookmark and Share

14 Responses to “Renewable Myths and Nuclear Heresies”

  1. David Bradley says:

    I’m glad this post is generating such an interesting discussion. It is certainly a controversial area, and yes, Prof Ausubel is not the first to make such a suggestion regarding whether or not renewables could ever be considered the “answer”.

    As to Watt-hours as opposed to Watts. I quote values Ausubel provided in his paper. I presume he discusses them in this way as an average of 24h almost continual demand.

    The issue of water vapor as a greenhouse gas has been addressed before. Yes, it is a potent greenhouse gas. Best place for a rationale discussion about water as opposed to CO2 can be found here. Fundamentally, the difference is in the “where” of apparent greenhouse gas production.

    As I mentioned at the end of the article, I have a follow-up post on the issue of nuclear security.

  2. Mike Oliver says:

    In 1995, Dr. John Hospers (professor emeritus of USC) and issued a book entitled “Environmentalism Gone Berserk”, that made exactly the same analysis. Though endorsed by Dr. Frederick Seitz (past president of the Rockefeller University), no publisher accepted it and it sold mostly on the Internet.

    Nice to see that this idea is finally catching on. But many lives were meanwhile lost due to the fact that we kept trying the renewables instead of nukes, while nearly our entire news media and Hollywood cheered this on. Yet the more we tried them the more we became chained to foreign oil thereby sending billions of our dollars to the worst terrorists the world has ever seen.

    Mike Oliver

  3. Jim Muckerheide says:

    It would be more informative to use watt-hours rather than watts. For “round numbers,” US wind operates at a rough average of 30% cap factor, and solar (in good sun locations) about 20% ca factor.

    Hydro power and biomass need to specify/assume the number of hours per year (or per day) that they are to operate. Are these to provide max watts? To use for peaking (optimized for high capacity to meet peak watts to meet peak demand), or to use for baseload power generation (max cap factor to effectively use all available water flow or biomass)?

  4. noumenalself says:

    I’m all for nuclear. But David Bradley wrote:

    “Hydrogen, in contrast, is as innocent as an element can be, ending combustion as water, with no carbon dioxide greenhouse gas emission.”

    Yeah, burning hydrogen doesn’t produce C02, but isn’t water vapor itself a greenhouse gas?:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenhouse_gas#The_role_of_water_vapor

    In fact, water vapor seems even more powerful of a greenhouse gas than C02:
    http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/env99/env297.htm

    Or are my sources incorrect? In that case, why would hydrogen cars be any better than petroleum-based ones?

    NS

  5. James Aach says:

    As an energy professional, I see the issue as twofold:

    The first are the technical aspects. What are the various options, and what are the outcomes of each, good and bad? Prof. Ausubel’s addresses some of these issues, including the drain on resources that massive conversion to renewables could mean. I’ve seen this expressed before and I’m sure there’s ways of looking at it that are more positive for wind and solar, etc.

    The second issue is in many ways the more critical: the educational aspects. Because most of the industrialized world lives under democracy or something close, decisions that effect the broad population can’t be made without the population’s consent. That consent is based on what the people understand of an issue and its solutions. Here in the US, at least, public understanding of energy issues is woefully inadequate at best. Prof. Ausubel touches on one point – just how much electric power is consumed. A general trend towards more wind turbines and solar panels will not replace the generation lost if fossil and nuclear plants are taken offline – but this is a common misconception that is rarely corrected by our media or esteemed politicians.

    As you know, David, my own particular specialty is nuclear power, though I’m not convinced it (or any other power source) is the solution to our problems. What I can see is that even if a member of the general public wanted to understand the world of electric power generation and nuclear power in particular, the options are few and far between. So I wrote my insider novel of nuclear power “Rad Decision”, available at my website, RadDecision.blogspot.com or in paperback.

    As an example of the current state of public debate on energy issues here in the US, the Los Angeles Times came out against nuclear power in an editorial yesterday, noting it was “extremely risky” – but providing no comparison to the risk of other options (CO2, coal particulate in the air, brownouts during summertime, etc.) Also mentioned was the “nearly limitless” potential of wind power, without regard to how it could be collected in mass quantities and the fact that electricity can’t be stored to any great degree. Fossil plant efficiency improvements were also noted, without mentioning that new, untried CO2 sequestration methods would need to be implemented on a massive scale to address that issue. As long as this level of analysis can pass as a thoughtful, considered opinion by a major newspaper, it’s unlikely the decisions made about the energy future in the US will be based on consideration of the actual pros and cons of power sources. (That’s not saying nuclear would win if that was done, as there are also issues such as proliferation and waste storage – which are mentioned in the LA Times piece – to be taken into account.)