The Byron Shire Echo – Issue 34.41 – March 18, 2020

Page 14

Articles

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Planet Watch: A hot topic – energy in the age of global warming Dr Willow Hallgren

I

t should be blatantly obvious to most people who are not impervious to scientific facts by now, that the continued burning of fossil fuels is sending us hurtling toward an apocalyptic future of extreme climate events. Hellish bushfire seasons which last for months, followed by extreme floods, and deadly heatwaves characterised by extreme temperatures which are at the limit of human

tolerances. Even Dorothy Mackellar would be shocked at the way we’re transforming our climate.

Just one degree Australians have now experienced some of the devastating impacts of what a global heating of just one degree looks like. Does anyone really want to see what climate and ecological catastrophes befall us and our kids as global average temperatures rise by three more degrees, within

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Waste not, want less: the Great Energy Transition Now that the Labor party has committed to reduce Australia’s carbon emissions to ‘net zero’ by 2050 – which is what scientists say is necessary, in order for the world to have a decent chance at keeping global heating to 1.5 degrees Celsius – we need to plan how to get there as painlessly as possible. In order to reduce our carbon footprint, we will have to reduce our energy consumption as much as possible, through both increased energy efficiency and energy conservation. This means using more energy efficient appliances and technology and adopting lower-energy lifestyles.

2020 A guide to the region’s alternative healing practitioners

2020 A guide to the region’s medical and allied health professionals

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the next 80 years? Because, if the world follows Australia’s current emissions policy trajectory, that’s where we’re headed! We must decarbonise our economy, and the earlier we do this, the less painful and costly it is going to be, and the greater the chance that we will be able to prevent ever more severe impacts of climate change from disrupting our civilisation in the decades to come.

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Turn, Turn, Turn,

TŚĞƌĞR SĞĂƐŽŶƐ͘

*TŝŵĞ ĐĂŶ *HĞĂů

4 ƐŽ *MANY

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14 The Byron Shire Echo lëſĈIJ Ǩǯǽ ǩǧǩǧ

Make it personal The decarbonising of our economy can start at a personal level – there are numerous carbon footprint calculators where you can calculate how many Earths it would take to provide the resources to sustain a world of people like you. If the current Earth’s population lived like most Australians, we’d need three or four ‘spare’ Earths to sustain us. The fact is, citizens of advanced industrialised nations like ours are outrageously spoilt when it comes to energy use. We use far more energy than all other societies on the planet currently, and in the past, and undoubtedly far more than is required to live a happy, fulfilled, and meaningful life. Our industrial civilisation has voraciously consumed huge amounts of energy in just a couple of hundred years that took millions of years to accumulate. We are literally living on a finite amount of borrowed energy, and many scientists would say we are also living on borrowed time that is fast running out– as our climate is rapidly destabilising.

Image: NASA We’d need three or four ‘spare’ Earths to sustain us at our current rates of consumption.

Baseload power and fossil fuels That renewable energy sources cannot provide ‘baseload power’ is a persistent and erroneous climate myth which is perpetrated by the fossil fuel industry and other climate change deniers. They claim this as a reason to keep the coal power plants fired up to provide a ‘back up’ to the intermittent nature of wind and solar power production. In fact, there are several ways in which renewable energy is being stored to provide baseload power around the world – some examples include Concentrated Solar Thermal (which collects and stores energy in some medium, like pressurized steam or molten salt), Pumped Hydro Energy Storage (PHES), which uses intermittent renewable energy to pump water uphill to be stored for later use as hydroelectricity; ‘off-river’ pumped hydro has an especially promising future for Australia), and Pumped Heat Energy Storage (involves pumping heat between tanks containing hot and cold insulated gravel). Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES) has been identified as a particularly promising technology for utility-scale bulk wind energy storage due to relatively low costs, environmental impacts, and high reliability. Australia’s first advanced CAES plant is scheduled to be in-service sometime this year (2020).

We can do it. We have the technology And then there are batteries, which are already proving their worth in providing grid reliability, a reduction in energy costs and the ability to integrate substantial renewable energy resources into the grid. Apart from smart grids (or renewable energy mini-grids) connecting distributed rooftop solar power, utility-scale batteries are an essential component of the transition

to 100 per cent renewable power. A well known example is the Hornsdale Power Reserve in South Australia. Built by Tesla and connected to the Hornsdale Wind Farm, it is the largest lithium-ion battery in the world. This technology can also be implemented quickly: Elon Musk famously promised to build it in 100 days or else provide it for free (it was delivered on time). Most of the house batteries on the market also use lithium-ion technology, but increasingly there are less environmentally polluting, 100 per cent recyclable alternatives – such as zincbromide flow batteries, which also have a longer lifespan, and are more thermally stable. As for renewables replacing fossil fuels in the transport sector, electric vehicle batteries (ideally charged with energy from renewable sources) and fuel cells are already powering our cars, buses and trucks. Electric cars are still more expensive than conventional cars, but prices are coming down rapidly as the market expands. Also, as plug-in hybrid and electric vehicles become more common, Spent Electric Vehicle (EV) Battery Storage will become another potentially vast form of power-grid storage (as they will still have considerable storage after their automotive lifespan). Hydrogen fuel cells also have enormous potential, especially since CSIRO scientists recently created a membrane that can filter out pure hydrogen gas from ammonia. It can then be dispensed into fuel cell cars, buses, and even trucks. The CSIRO have already successfully powered fuel cell electric vehicles using locally-produced ultra-high purity hydrogen, and are currently in the process of commercialising the technology for larger scale production. This hydrogen membrane technology has the potential to create a national renewable hydrogen export industry

‘to rival the LNG industry’ and serve a growing global market for clean hydrogen.

Australia – a renewable energy superpower Australia is already a world leader in the uptake and deployment of renewable energy. Australia has, with good reason, been described as the ‘Saudi Arabia’ of renewable energy – we have some of the best wind resources in the world, our solar power potential is among the highest in the world, and we produce world-class science and technology to harness renewable energy. Given the inexorable global uptake of renewable energy, perhaps only those with vested interests in the fossil fuel industries would argue that a transition to 100 per cent renewables could cause a net loss of jobs. Instead there is the potential for an enormous renewable energy industry, given appropriate retraining and/ or compensation for workers in affected industries. A reorientating of subsidies, away from the fossil fuel industry, would go a long way to implementing these measures: the International Monetary Fund recently calculated that fossil fuel subsidies in Australia amounted to $29 billion, or $1,198 per person, per year. We’ve wasted a generation getting bogged down in deliberate misinformation campaigns and childish denial of the scientific facts. The sooner we can make the transition to 100 per cent renewable energy, leaving the fossil fuels in the ground, the better off ALL Australians will be in the future, both environmentally and economically. Q This article was originally published on Echonetdaily: www.echo.net.au/planetwatch-energy-in-the-ageof-global-warming, and was made possible by the support of Byron Eco Park Holdings.

North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


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The Byron Shire Echo – Issue 34.41 – March 18, 2020 by Echo Publications - Issuu