Filed Under: Guest Column • Headline
How Dense Can They Get?
Good fuels need no subsidies.
When it comes to power, density is the key. Energy density. The reason that solar power, wind power, and ethanol are so expensive is that they are derived from very diffuse energy sources. It takes a lot of energy collectors such as solar cells, wind turbines, or corn stalks covering many square miles to produce the same amount of power that traditional coal, natural gas, or nuclear plants can on just a few acres.
Each of these alternative energy sources is based on mature technology. Agriculture and fermentation have their roots in prehistory; windmills date back at least to 65 B.C.; the photovoltaic effect was discovered in 1839. Yet in nowhere in the world are these technologies serving as primary energy sources without significant government subsidies. While incremental improvements can be expected, what is needed for them to become viable is an order-of-magnitude increase in productivity. As old and as well-researched as the technologies are, such improvements are possible but unlikely. As significant future energy sources, these technologies are dead ends, which is why the government, and not the private sector, is funding them.
Industry is more than willing to risk research dollars on technologies that show real promise, but it is not willing to flush shareholder money down a rat hole. Politicians, however, operate from different incentives. When a crisis, real or imagined, makes headlines, they want voters to see them doing “something” about it, and they must move quickly because election cycles and constituent attention spans are short. Funding long-term research in promising technologies is not sufficient to meet politicians’ needs. Solar panels, wind turbines, and ethanol refineries are all current technology and can be erected quickly with fanfare and photo-ops. By the time these alternative power sources prove to be financial and, possibly, environmental busts, the politicians will have been reelected and voters’ attention will have shifted to the next crisis.
Another benefit of subsidizing “shovel ready” solutions is that existing technologies have existing supporters who can provide campaign funds. Such supporters, however, constitute a well-financed “status quo” that will make government funding, once started, difficult to end. For example, even though corn-based ethanol has driven up food and fuel prices, increased auto emissions, raised atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations (by causing additional acreage to be tilled), and possibly resulted in net energy losses, the government is still subsidizing the industry and still requiring that the fuel be added to gasoline.
Wind energy, for its part, has been “just a few years away” from being economically competitive with conventional power for at least the last 25 years, and this will not change any time soon. The Energy Information Agency predicts that in 2016 wind power will still be 49 percent to 77 percent more expensive than electricity from either coal or natural gas. Furthermore, because wind turbines work only when the wind blows, wind farms cannot replace conventional plants. Backup power from conventional sources, usually gas turbines, must be ready to come on line the moment the wind fails. Despite these fundamental problems, subsidies continue to flow thanks to an entrenched lobby.
By contrast, consider the significant oil-industry investments in researching biofuels made from algae. Unlike ethanol, biofuels are chemically similar to fuel made from petroleum and, like petroleum-based fuels, have a significantly higher energy content than does ethanol. Biofuels can also be handled by current fuel distribution systems and can be burned in today’s vehicles.
Algae can be grown in brackish water on desert land and, with today’s technology, can produce over 2,000 gallons of fuel per acre each year. This compares favorably with the approximately 250 gallons of ethanol that can be produced from an acre of corn – a ratio of 8 to 1. Accounting for the differences in BTU content, the ratio jumps to over 12 to 1. It may even be possible to boost productivity to 100,000 gallons per acre per year, raising algae’s potential to over 600 times that of corn-based ethanol!
|
Source |
Gallons of fuel |
per gallon |
Million BTUs |
| Algae |
2,000 |
128,520 |
257 |
| Corn |
250 |
84,262 |
21 |
| Sugar Cane |
450 |
84,262 |
38 |
Biofuels are carbon-neutral because the carbon dioxide released when they are burned is first extracted from the atmosphere by the algae. Unlike burning petroleum-based fuels, then, burning biofuels will not result in a net increase in atmospheric CO2 levels.
With algae’s vast potential, it is easy to understand why private industry is interested and why no government subsidies are needed to encourage investment. Moreover, if algae-based fuels do not prove viable, the companies now researching them will have no “status quo” problems with ending their investments and shifting scarce resources to more promising technologies – where “promise” is measured in density.
Editor’s Note: The author has corrected this article, removing erroneous information about bird kills from wind turbines.








Comment by Todd Wynn on 12 November 2009:
Great article! You certainly hit on the important issues with ‘renewable’ generation.
I also support a free market approach to these technologies. If Americans really want renewable energy as some advocate then this sector of the economy should be entirely funded by voluntary citizen purchases.
You can read more about my solution here: http://www.cascadepolicy.org/pdf/env/2008_49.pdf
Comment by Sheldon Richman on 14 November 2009:
Mr. Fulmer has asked that the article be corrected with respect to bird kills from wind turbines.
Comment by Richard W. Fulmer on 14 November 2009:
Stan,
Good point; I withdraw my conjecture. Wind turbines currently kill an estimated 10,000 to 40,000 birds in the U.S. per year, and wind penetration estimates range from 1.3 to 1.9% of total U.S. electricity generation. Taking the worst case scenario, if we meet the goal of 20% penetration by 2030, the annual kill will be 20*40,000/1.3 or over 615,000. That’s a huge number, but (as you demonstrate) far fewer than are currently killed by other means. Thanks!
Comment by Karl Lembke on 14 November 2009:
A quick back-of-the-envelope calculation shows that if algae can be made to produce at the 100,000 gallons per acre per year rate, the world’s energy needs can be met from an algae farm 145 miles on a side.
Comment by Kimberley Witchey on 22 November 2009:
I got to wondering if these alternatives included depolymerization. I read some years ago that through this process, turkey guts and other waste might yield about 600 million barrels of Texas light crude each year. Here’s the website: http://www.mindfully.org/Energy/2003/Anything-Into-Oil1may03.htm
The name of the company is Changing World Technologies.
I haven’t heard anything more on this plant or the technology, but I’m wondering if this could by used as an adjunct to bio fuels and other sources of energy.
Comment by Rob on 22 November 2009:
I think that we are tackling this issue from the wrong end!
On the domestic front, consider how much energy can be saved by using more efficient Appliances. The use of flat-screen TV’s vs the old CRT is a good representation. Same utility. Less power usage.
If we focus more on applying this to all energy using products, the gap between renewable energy producing technology and demand will be met far sooner.
Wind Turbines are one of the dumbest ideas ever thought. Besides the variable nature of the wind itself, we also have something that is overly mechanical in nature, and therefore more likely to break down or be put out of commission by the elements.
Solar panels have no moving parts, and could be engineered to last for a long time, as well as be made very cheaply. Hopefully, one day they will be able to put out enough juice to power the average home. Panels that can also work at night, working off heat radiation are also in the works.
The Algae idea is also good, but requires infrastructure. Infrastructure = control and profit. Imagine being totally free of utility and oil companies!
Soon, someone will make a battery that is lightweight and efficient enough to be able to run a car properly.
Comment by ChrisfromTN on 25 November 2009:
What about the “Cape Wind” project? Isn’t that a private group that is trying to build a wind farm off of Nantucket Sound? It is politics that get in the way of private companies that try to make reasonable contributions at their own expense based on forecasted profits. If density is the key, and we can admit that Nantucket Sound has a fairly unique and plentiful wind resource, then doesn’t it follow that sometimes wind turbines make sense?
Comment by Kimberley Witchey on 25 November 2009:
The Cape Wind project off Nantucket has its opposers; the rich folk who live there and don’t want their view spoiled by windmills.
Another example of “Not in my back yard”. Oh well.