On Tuesday, June 25, in a speech before enthusiastic
students at Georgetown University, President Obama delivered a message
outlining his vision for what the United States ought to do, and what he
personally is going to do, about the moral issue of energy production. Now at first glance, you would think
that energy production is a technical issue that should be left to engineers
and economists. But it was clear
from the President’s speech that he thinks it is also a moral issue, as moral
as which side you should fight on in a war. His speech, in fact, was peppered with militant
terminology. He spoke of having
the “courage to act,” he talked of the “fight against climate change,” and expressed his desire for America to
“win the race for clean energy.”
Toward the end, he called for citizens “who will stand up, and speak up,
and compel us to do what this moment demands.” To that end, he announced that he was going to ask the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to issue regulations that, according to
Obama critic Charles Krauthammer, will “make it impossible to open any new coal plant and
will systematically shut down existing plants.”
If
the construction of new coal-fired power plants is going to come to an end,
maybe we can start building more Ivanpahs instead. Ivanpah is a Piute term meaning “good water,” and is the
name of a giant solar-energy project not too far from where Interstate 15
crosses the California-Nevada line on its way to Las Vegas. Built by a consortium of construction
and solar-energy firms, plus money from Google investors, Ivanpah consists of
three circular arrays of tracking mirrors that direct sunlight onto
four-hundred-foot tall “power towers.”
Atop each power tower is a cubical black boiler to make steam that turns
turbines that drive generators to make electricity. This is the kind of thing that President Obama sees as the
future of energy production: it is
solar-based, it adds nothing in operation to the nation’s carbon footprint, and
it is even respectful of the rights of the 150 or so desert tortoises on the
construction site who were carefully inventoried and transported to an equally
suitable habitat at a cost of about $50 million—or roughly $300,000 per
tortoise.
The
engineer in me applauds the Ivanpah project. It is an elegant yet simple solution to several of the
problems that plague direct photoelectric energy production using solar cells,
one of which is the fact that all days are not equally sunny. When clouds show up, energy production
from solar cells drops instantly, and this is not the sort of behavior that
power grids like.
The
Ivanpah plant mitigates the cloud problem in a couple of ways. First of all, unless there’s a solid
cloud cover (not too common in the desert), smaller cloud shadows won’t put the
five square miles of mirrors out of commission all at once. And even if insolation, as it’s called,
varies over a time period of minutes or even hours, the thermal inertia of the
large power-tower boilers means that the plant will still be producing energy
even when it is temporarily in the shade due to clouds. So without any extra effort, the
Ivanpah project has sidestepped one of the significant technical obstacles
faced by solar-cell arrays.
Still,
Ivanpah is expensive. According to
Wikipedia, the whole project, now nearing completion, will cost about $2
billion when finished. This is
roughly four times what a new coal-fired plant of equivalent peak output would
cost. And the coal plant will run
any time you want it to. True, you
have to buy coal over the life of the plant, but this can be factored into the
cost, and the economics of that calculation tells you why so much of our
electric energy is still supplied by coal.
If we stopped building new fossil-fuel power plants
tomorrow and allowed only nuclear, solar, and other renewable forms of new
plant construction henceforth, several things would happen. Electricity would become gradually more
expensive and possibly less reliable than it would be otherwise. And America’s contribution to the
world’s output of carbon in the atmosphere, which has already fallen to 1992
levels, would fall faster and be overwhelmed by the soaring use of coal and
other fossil fuels by China, India, and the rest of the world. The overall objective effect on global
warming would be minimal.
Everyone has a moral compass that helps prioritize
ethical decisions. For most
people, murder is a more significant moral issue than jaywalking. President Obama views the threat of
global warming as a moral equivalent of war, to judge by his Georgetown speech. He clearly wishes to unite the country
around a common set of sacrifices that will allow us to hold our heads up
before our grandchildren, whose world we should literally save from destruction
by the evil forces of climate change.
I will merely point out, as Krauthammer has, that
climate change comes in dead last in a poll of 21 matters of concern to
Americans. Jobs and the economy
are things that the average U. S. citizen is far more concerned about, but the
President’s moral compass seems to be insensitive to such concerns. Or perhaps, as a practical politician,
he realizes that in his lame-duck term he should spend his limited time on
matters where he can act unilaterally, as with his instructions to the EPA, and
not waste his energy on proposals he will not be able to get through
Congress. Leadership is a
mysterious thing, and some leaders who have received the laurels of historical
honor were excoriated and criticized at the time. The President obviously feels he is in this category, and
often refers to his unpopular proposals as being on the “right side of
history.”
But there sometimes is not much difference between
being ahead of the pack and simply being out in left field. If there was a truly united sense among
Americans that the nation was under an existential threat and climate change
was the culprit, President Obama’s rhetoric would fit the national mood and
history might go his way. But I
fear what we are witnessing is instead the desperate actions of a leader who
wants to force his vision of the future on a public that is unwilling to pay
the high price for a dubious honor that may not come for generations, if
ever.
Sources: I learned about Ivanpah from the print
edition of the June 24, 2013 issue of Time
Magazine. I used information
from the project website http://ivanpahsolar.com, President
Obama’s speech of June 25 as transcribed by the Wall Street Journal at http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2013/06/25/full-transcript-of-obamas-remarks-on-climate-change/,
Charles Krauthammer’s column for July 6, 2013 as presented in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette at http://www.post-gazette.com/stories/opinion/perspectives/charles-krauthammer-obama-will-risk-the-economy-for-no-impact-on-climate-change-694450/,
and the Wikipedia articles on “Ivanpah Solar Power Facility” and “Fossil fuel
power station.”
Blinded by ideology, lacking in common sense, admitted difficulty with 7th grade math. Shares a lack of technological knowledge with the SCOTUS. Perhaps the growing separation between the rising CO2 and not-rising average global temperature will be noticed.
ReplyDeleteMeanwhile the real cause of global warming to 2001 and the flat average global temperature trend since then has been discovered.
A simple equation at http://climatechange90.blogspot.com/2013/05/natural-climate-change-has-been.html calculates average global temperatures since they have been accurately measured world wide (about 1895) with an accuracy of 90%, irrespective of whether the influence of CO2 is included or not. The equation uses a single external forcing, a proxy which is the time-integral of sunspot numbers. A graph in that paper shows the calculated temperature anomaly trajectory overlaid on measurements.
‘The End of Global Warming’ at http://endofgw.blogspot.com/ expands recent (since 1996) temperature anomaly measurements by the five reporting agencies and includes a graph showing the growing separation between the rising CO2 and not-rising average global temperature.
A wise man (I think it was me) said that no one will elect you for solving a problem that no one else thinks is a problem. Who would have paid for improving flood prevention measures in New Orleans before Katrina?
ReplyDeleteNot to accuse Obama of opportunism, but this speech would not likely have been made during his first term; now he can say unpleasant things without fear of electoral repercussions.
I'm not saying Obama is wrong; I don't think this is as big a problem for the world as most opinionators like to pretend.
In the long term, mabye O will be right and such projects as described above will provide a doorway into a better environment. But we may have to wait 30 years to find out.
Wow so much science free political crap. This is a political hit piece NOT engineering.
ReplyDeleteYour political bias is showing.