Reading Reflection
27
“Harnessing Wind, Solar, and Geothermal Energy” from World on the Edge (2011)
Lester Brown
Editors’ Introduction
Rethinking energy consumption and sources is a cornerstone of sustainable urbanism. The first (and most cost-effective) priority is usually to conserve energy and improve the efficiency with which we use it. But beyond that, a variety of renewable energy sources are coming into their own to help power the twenty-first- century metropolis.
In this selection, Lester Brown surveys renewable energy technologies and options worldwide. Brown is the founder of two influential nonprofit research organizations: the Worldwatch Institute and Earth Policy Institute. Since the 1970s he has taken a uniquely global approach to analyzing development trends through many publications. Recently he has focused on preparing a set of “Plan B” policy options for a sustainable global society. His books include Full Planet, Empty Plates: The New Geopolitics of Food Scarcity (New York: Norton, 2012), Plan B 4.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization (New York: Norton, 2009), and the book from which this selection is taken, World on the Edge: How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse (New York: Norton, 2011).
As fossil fuel prices rise, as oil insecurity deepens,
and as concerns about climate change cast a shadow
over the future of coal, a new world energy economy
is emerging. The old energy economy, fueled by
oil, coal, and natural gas, is being replaced with an
economy powered by wind, solar, and geothermal
energy. Despite the global economic crisis, this
energy transition is moving at a pace and on a scale
that we could not have imagined even two years ago.
The transition is well under way in the United
States, where both oil and coal consumption have
recently peaked. Oil consumption fell 8 percent
between 2007 and 2010 and will likely continue fall-
ing over the longer term. During the same period,
coal use also dropped 8 percent as a powerful
grassroots anti-coal movement brought the licens-
ing of new coal plants to a near standstill and began
to work on closing existing ones.
While U.S. coal use was falling, some 300-wind
farms with a generating capacity of 21,000 mega-
watts came online. Geothermal generating capacity,
which had been stagnant for 20 years, came alive.
In mid-2010, the U.S.-based Geothermal Energy
Association announced that 152 new geothermal
power plants were being developed, enough to
triple U.S. geothermal generating capacity. On the
solar front, solar cell installations are doubling every
two years. The dozens of U.S. solar thermal power
plants in the works could collectively add some
9,900 megawatts of generating capacity.
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L E S T E R B R O W N206
This chapter lays out the worldwide Plan B goals
for developing renewable sources of energy by 2020.
The goal of cutting carbon emissions 80 percent
by 2020 is based on what we think is needed to
avoid civilization-threatening climate change. This
is not Plan A, business as usual. This is Plan B – a
wartime mobilization, an all-out effort to restructure
the world energy economy. To reach the Plan B
goal, we replace all coal- and oil-fired electricity
generation with that from renewable sources.
Whereas the twentieth century was marked by the
globalization of the world energy economy as coun-
tries everywhere turned to oil, much of it coming
from the Middle East, this century will see the
localization of energy production as the world turns
to wind, solar, and geothermal energy.
The Plan B energy economy, which will be
powered largely by electricity, does not rely on
a buildup in nuclear power. If we used full-cost
pricing – insisting that utilities pay for disposing of
nuclear waste, decommissioning worn-out plants,
and insuring reactors against possible accidents
and terrorist attacks – no one would build a nuclear
plant. They are simply not economical. Plan B also
excludes the oft-discussed option of capturing and
sequestering carbon dioxide (CO2) from coal-fired
power plants. Given the costs and the lack of inves-
tor interest within the coal community itself, this
technology is not likely to be economically viable
by 2020, if ever. Instead, wind is the centerpiece
of the Plan B energy economy. It is abundant, low
cost, and widely distributed; it scales up easily and
can be developed quickly. A 2009 survey of world
wind resources published by the U.S. National
Academy of Sciences reports a wind-generating
potential on land that is 40 times the current world
consumption of electricity from all sources.
For many years, a small handful of countries
dominated growth in wind power, but this is
changing as the industry goes global, with more
than 70 countries now developing wind resources.
Between 2000 and 2010, world wind electric gener-
ating capacity increased at a frenetic pace from
17,000 megawatts to nearly 200,000 megawatts.
The United States, with 35,000 megawatts of
wind generating capacity, leads the world in
harnessing wind, followed by China and Germany
with 26,000 megawatts each. Texas, long the lead-
ing U.S. oil-producing state, is now also the nation’s
leading generator of electricity from wind. It has
9,700 megawatts of wind generating capacity
online, 370 megawatts more under construction,
and a huge amount under development. If all of
the wind farms projected for 2025 are completed,
Texas will have 38,000 megawatts of wind generat-
ing capacity – the equivalent of 38 coal-fired power
plants. This would satisfy roughly 90 percent of the
current residential electricity needs of the state’s
25 million people.
In July 2010, ground was broken for the Alta
Wind Energy Center (AWEC) in the Tehachapi Pass,
some 75 miles north of Los Angeles, California. At
1,550 megawatts, it will be the largest U.S. wind
farm. The AWEC is part of what will eventually be
4,500 megawatts of renewable power generation,
enough to supply electricity to some 3 million
homes.
Since wind turbines occupy only 1 percent
of the land covered by a wind farm, farmers and
ranchers can continue to grow grain and graze
cattle on land devoted to wind farms. In effect,
they double-crop their land, simultaneously harvest-
ing electricity and wheat, corn, or cattle. With no
investment on their part, farmers and ranchers
typically receive $3,000–10,000 a year in royalties
for each wind turbine on their land. For thousands
of ranchers in the U.S. Great Plains, wind royalties
will dwarf their net earnings from cattle sales. In
considering the energy productivity of land, wind
turbines are in a class by themselves. For example,
an acre of land in northern Iowa planted in corn
can yield $1,000 worth of ethanol per year. That
same acre used to site a wind turbine can produce
$300,000 worth of electricity per year. This helps
explain why investors find wind farms so attractive.
Impressive though U.S. wind energy growth is,
the expansion now under way in China is even
more so. China has enough onshore harnessable
wind energy to raise its current electricity consump-
tion 16-fold. Today, most of China’s 26,000 megawatts
of wind generating capacity come from 50- to
100-megawatt wind farms. Beyond the many other
wind farms of that size that are on the way, China’s
new Wind Base program is creating seven wind
mega-complexes of 10 to 38 gigawatts each in
six provinces (1 gigawatt equals 1,000 megawatts).
When completed, these complexes will have a
generating capacity of more than 130 gigawatts.
This is equivalent to building one new coal plant
per week for two and a half years. Of these 130
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gigawatts, 7 gigawatts will be in the coastal waters
of Jiangsu Province, one of China’s most highly
industrialized provinces. China is planning a total
of 23 gigawatts of offshore wind generating capa-
city. The country’s first major offshore project, the
102-megawatt Donghai Bridge Wind Farm near
Shanghai, is already in operation.
In Europe, which now has 2,400 megawatts of
offshore wind online, wind developers are planning
140 gigawatts of offshore wind generating capacity,
mostly in the North Sea. There is enough harness-
able wind energy in offshore Europe to satisfy the
continent’s needs seven times over.
In September 2010, the Scottish government
announced that it was replacing its goal of 50 per-
cent renewable electricity by 2020 with a new goal
of 80 percent. By 2025, Scotland expects renew-
ables to meet all of its electricity needs. Much of
the new capacity will be provided by offshore wind.
Measured by share of electricity supplied by wind,
Denmark is the national leader at 21 percent. Three
north German states now get 40 percent or more
of their electricity from wind. For Germany as a
whole, the figure is 8 percent and climbing. And
in the state of Iowa, enough wind turbines came
online in the last few years to produce up to 20
percent of that state’s electricity.
Denmark is looking to push the wind share of
its electricity to 50 percent by 2025, with most
of the additional power coming from offshore. In
contemplating this prospect, Danish planners have
turned conventional energy policy upside down.
They plan to use wind as the mainstay of their
electrical generating system and to use fossil-fuel-
generated power to fill in when the wind dies down.
Spain, which has 19,000 megawatts of wind-
generating capacity for its 45 million people, got
14 percent of its electricity from wind in 2009. On
November 8th of that year, strong winds across
Spain enabled wind turbines to supply 53 percent
of the country’s electricity over a five-hour stretch.
London Times reporter Graham Keeley wrote from
Barcelona that “the towering white wind turbines
which loom over Castilla-La Mancha – home of
Cervantes’s hero, Don Quixote – and which domi-
nate other parts of Spain, set a new record in wind
energy production.”
In 2007, when Turkey issued a request for pro-
posals to build wind farms, it received bids to build
a staggering 78,000 megawatts of wind generating
capacity, far beyond its 41,000 megawatts of
total electrical generating capacity. Having selected
7,000 megawatts of the most promising proposals,
the government is issuing construction permits.
In wind-rich Canada, Ontario, Quebec, and
Alberta are the leaders in installed capacity. Ontario,
Canada’s most populous province, has received
applications for offshore wind development rights
on its side of the Great Lakes that could result in
some 21,000 megawatts of generating capacity. The
provincial goal is to back out all coal-fired power
by 2014. On the U.S. side of Lake Ontario, New
York State is also requesting proposals. Several of
the seven other states that border the Great Lakes
are planning to harness lake winds.
At the heart of Plan B is a crash program to
develop 4,000 gigawatts (4 million megawatts) of
wind generating capacity by 2020, enough to cover
over half of world electricity consumption in the
Plan B economy. This will require a near doubling
of capacity every two years, up from a doubling
every three years over the last decade. This climate-
stabilizing initiative would mean the installation of
2 million wind turbines of 2 megawatts each.
Manufacturing 2 million wind turbines over the next
10 years sounds intimidating – until it is compared
with the 70 million automobiles the world produces
each year. At $3 million per installed turbine, the
2 million turbines would mean spending $600 billion
per year worldwide between now and 2020. This
compares with world oil and gas capital expendi-
tures that are projected to double from $800 billion
in 2010 to $1.6 trillion in 2015.
The second key component of the Plan B energy
economy is solar energy, which is even more ubi-
quitous than wind energy. It can be harnessed with
both solar photovoltaics (PV) and solar thermal
collectors. Solar PV – both silicon-based and thin
film – converts sunlight directly into electricity. A
large-scale solar thermal technology, often referred
to as concentrating solar power (CSP), uses reflec-
tors to concentrate sunlight on a liquid, producing
steam to drive a turbine and generate electricity.
On a smaller scale, solar thermal collectors can
capture the sun’s radiant energy to warm water, as
in rooftop solar water heaters.
The growth in solar cell production can only be
described as explosive. It climbed from an annual
expansion of 38 percent in 2006 to an off-the-chart
89 percent in 2008, before settling back to 51 percent
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L E S T E R B R O W N208
in 2009. At the end of 2009, there were 23,000
megawatts of PV installations worldwide, which
when operating at peak power could match the
output of 23 nuclear power plants.
On the manufacturing front, the early leaders –
the United States, Japan, and Germany – have
been overtaken by China, which produces more
than twice as many solar cells annually as Japan.
Number three, Taiwan, is moving fast and may
overtake Japan in 2010. World PV production has
roughly doubled every two years since 2001 and
will likely approach 20,000 megawatts in 2010.
Germany, with an installed PV power generating
capacity of almost 10,000 megawatts, is far and
away the world leader in installations. Spain is
second with 3,400 megawatts, followed by Japan,
the United States, and Italy. Ironically, China, the
world’s largest manufacturer of solar cells, has an
installed capacity of only 305 megawatts, but this
is likely to change quickly as PV costs fall.
Historically, photovoltaic installations were
small-scale – mostly residential rooftop installations.
Now that is changing as utility-scale PV projects
are being launched in several countries. The United
States, for example, has under construction and
development some 77 utility-scale projects, adding
up to 13,200 megawatts of generating capacity.
Morocco is now planning five large solar generat-
ing projects, either photovoltaic or solar thermal
or both, each ranging from 100 to 500 megawatts
in size.
More and more countries, states, and provinces
are setting solar installation goals. Italy’s solar
industry group is projecting 15,000 megawatts of
installed capacity by 2020. Japan is planning 28,000
megawatts by 2020. The state of California has set
a goal of 3,000 megawatts by 2017. Solar-rich Saudi
Arabia recently announced that it plans to shift
from oil to solar energy to power new desalination
plants that supply the country’s residential water.
It currently uses 1.5 million barrels of oil per day
to operate some 30 desalting plants.
With installations of solar PV climbing, with costs
continuing to fall, and with concerns about climate
change escalating, cumulative PV installations could
reach 1.5 million megawatts (1,500 gigawatts) in
2020. Although this estimate may seem overly
ambitious, it could in fact be conservative, because
if most of the 1.5 billion people who lack electricity
today get it by 2020, it will likely be because they
have installed home solar systems. In many cases,
it is cheaper to install solar cells for individual
homes than it is to build a grid and a central power
plant.
The second, very promising way to harness
solar energy on a massive scale is CSP, which first
came on the scene with the construction of a
350-megawatt solar thermal power plant complex
in California. Completed in 1991, it was the world’s
only utility-scale solar thermal generating facility
until the completion of a 64-megawatt power plant
in Nevada in 2007.
Two years later, in July 2009, a group of 11
leading European firms and one Algerian firm, led
by Munich Re and including Deutsche Bank,
Siemens, and ABB, announced that they were going
to craft a strategy and funding proposal to develop
solar thermal generating capacity in North Africa
and the Middle East. Their proposal would meet
the needs of the producer countries and supply
part of Europe’s electricity via undersea cable. This
initiative, known as the Desertec Industrial Initiative,
could develop 300,000 megawatts of solar thermal
generating capacity – huge by any standard. It is
driven by concerns about disruptive climate change
and by depletion of oil and gas reserves. Caio
Koch-Weser, vice chair of Deutsche Bank, noted
that “the Initiative shows in what dimensions and
on what scale we must think if we are to master
the challenges from climate change.”
Even before this proposal, Algeria – for decades
an oil exporter – was planning to build 6,000 mega-
watts of solar thermal generating capacity for
export to Europe via undersea cable. The Algerians
note that they have enough harnessable solar
energy in their vast desert to power the entire world
economy. This is not a mathematical error. A
similar point often appears in the solar literature
when it is noted that the sunlight striking the earth
in one hour could power the world economy for
one year. The German government was quick to
respond to the Algerian initiative. The plan is to
build a 1,900-mile high-voltage transmission line
from Adrar deep in the Algerian desert to Aachen,
a town on Germany’s border with the Netherlands.
Although solar thermal power has been slow to
get under way, utility-scale plants are being built
rapidly now. The two leaders in this field are the
United States and Spain. The United States has
more than 40 solar thermal power plants operating,
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under construction, and under development that
range from 10 to 1,200 megawatts each. Spain has
60 power plants in these same stages of develop-
ment, most of which are 50 megawatts each.
One country ideally suited for CSP plants is
India. The Great Indian Desert in its northwest
offers a huge opportunity for building solar thermal
power plants. Hundreds of large plants in the
desert could meet most of India’s electricity needs.
And because it is such a compact country, the
distance for building transmission lines to major
population centers is relatively short.
One of the attractions of utility-scale CSP plants
is that heat during the day can be stored in molten
salt at temperatures above 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
The heat can then be used to keep the turbines
running for eight or more hours after sunset. The
American Solar Energy Society notes that solar
thermal resources in the U.S. Southwest can satisfy
current U.S. electricity needs nearly four times over.
At the global level, Greenpeace, the European
Solar Thermal Electricity Association, and the
International Energy Agency’s SolarPACES program
have outlined a plan to develop 1.5 million mega-
watts of solar thermal power plant capacity by
2050. For Plan B we suggest a more immediate
world goal of 200,000 megawatts by 2020, a goal
that may well be exceeded as the economic poten-
tial becomes clearer.
The pace of solar energy development is
accelerating as the installation of rooftop solar
water heaters – the other use of solar collectors –
takes off. China, for example, now has an estimated
1.9 billion square feet of rooftop solar thermal
collectors installed, enough to supply 120 million
Chinese households with hot water. With some
5,000 Chinese companies manufacturing these
devices, this relatively simple low-cost technology
has leapfrogged into villages that do not yet have
electricity. For as little as $200, villagers can install
a rooftop solar collector and take their first hot
shower. This technology is sweeping China like
wildfire, already approaching market saturation in
some communities. Beijing’s goal is to add another
billion square feet to its rooftop solar water heating
capacity by 2020, a goal it is likely to exceed.
Other developing countries such as India and
Brazil may also soon see millions of households
turning to this inexpensive water heating tech-
nology. Once the initial installment cost of rooftop
solar water heaters is paid back, the hot water is
essentially free.
In Europe, where energy costs are relatively
high, rooftop solar water heaters are also spreading
fast. In Austria, 15 percent of all households now
rely on them for hot water. As in China, in some
Austrian villages nearly all homes have rooftop
collectors. Germany is also forging ahead. Some
2 million Germans are now living in homes where
water and space are both heated by rooftop solar
systems.
The U.S. rooftop solar water heating industry
has historically concentrated on a niche market –
selling and marketing 100 million square feet of
solar water heaters for swimming pools between
1995 and 2005. Given this base, the industry was
poised to mass-market residential solar water and
space heating systems when federal tax credits were
introduced in 2006. Led by Hawaii, California, and
Florida, annual U.S. installation of these systems has
more than tripled since 2005. The boldest initiative
in the United States is California’s goal of installing
200,000 solar water heaters by 2017. Not far behind
is one launched in 2010 in New York State, which
aims to have 170,000 residential solar water systems
in operation by 2020.
Solar water and space heaters in Europe and
China have a strong economic appeal, often paying
for themselves from electricity savings in less than
10 years. With the cost of rooftop heating systems
declining, many other countries will likely join Israel,
Spain, and Portugal in mandating that all new build-
ings incorporate rooftop solar water heaters. The
state of Hawaii requires that all new single-family
homes have rooftop solar water heaters. Worldwide,
Plan B calls for a total of 1,100 thermal gigawatts
of rooftop solar water and space heating capacity
by 2020.
The third principal component in the Plan B
energy economy is geothermal energy. The heat
in the upper six miles of the earth’s crust contains
50,000 times as much energy as found in all of the
world’s oil and gas reserves combined – a startling
statistic. Despite this abundance, as of mid-2010
only 10,700 megawatts of geothermal generating
capacity have been harnessed worldwide, enough
for some 10 million homes.
Roughly half the world’s installed geothermal
generating capacity is concentrated in the United
States and the Philippines. Most of the remainder
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L E S T E R B R O W N210
is generated in Mexico, Indonesia, Italy, and Japan.
Altogether some 24 countries now convert geothermal
energy into electricity. El Salvador, Iceland, and the
Philippines respectively get 26, 25, and 18 percent
of their electricity from geothermal power plants.
The geothermal potential to provide electricity,
to heat homes, and to supply process heat for
industry is vast. Among the geothermally rich coun-
tries are those bordering the Pacific in the so-called
Ring of Fire, including Chile, Peru, Colombia, Mexico,
the United States, Canada, Russia, China, Japan,
the Philippines, Indonesia, and Australia. Other well-
endowed countries include those along the Great
Rift Valley of Africa, including Ethiopia, Kenya,
Tanzania, and Uganda, and those around the Eastern
Mediterranean. As of 2010, there are some 70 countries
with projects under development or active consider-
ation, up from 46 in 2007.
Beyond geothermal electrical generation, up
to 100,000 thermal megawatts of geothermal
energy are used directly – without conversion into
electricity – to heat homes and greenhouses and
to provide process heat to industry. For example,
90 percent of the homes in Iceland are heated with
geothermal energy.
An interdisciplinary team of 13 scientists and
engineers assembled by the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology in 2006 assessed U.S. geothermal
electrical generating potential. Drawing on the
latest technologies, including those used by oil and
gas companies in drilling and in enhanced oil
recovery, the team estimated that enhanced geo-
thermal systems could help the United States meet
its energy needs 2,000 times over.
Even before this exciting new technology is
widely deployed, investors are moving ahead with
existing technologies. For many years, U.S. geother-
mal energy was confined largely to the Geysers
project north of San Francisco, easily the world’s
largest geothermal generating complex, with 850
megawatts of generating capacity. Now the United
States has more than 3,000 megawatts of existing
geothermal electrical capacity and projects under
development in 13 states. With California, Nevada,
Oregon, Idaho, and Utah leading the way, and with
many new companies in the field, the stage is set
for a geothermal renaissance.
In mid-2008, Indonesia – a country with 128
active volcanoes and therefore rich in geothermal
energy – announced that it would develop 6,900
megawatts of geothermal generating capacity;
Pertamina, the state oil company, is responsible
for developing the lion’s share. Indonesia’s oil pro-
duction has been declining for the last decade, and
in each of the last five years it has been an oil
importer. As Pertamina shifts resources from oil to
the development of geothermal energy, it could
become the first oil company – state-owned or
independent – to make the transition from oil to
renewable energy.
Japan, which has 16 geothermal power plants
with a total of 535 megawatts of generating cap-
acity, was an early leader in this field. After nearly
two decades of inactivity, this geothermally rich
country – long known for its thousands of hot
baths – is again building geothermal power plants.
Among the Great Rift countries in Africa, Kenya
is the early geothermal leader. It now has 167 mega-
watts of generating capacity and is planning 1,200
more megawatts by 2015, enough to nearly double
its current electrical generating capacity from all
sources. It is aiming for 4,000 geothermal mega-
watts by 2030.
Beyond power plants, geothermal (ground
source) heat pumps are now being widely used for
both heating and cooling. These take advantage of
the remarkable stability of the earth’s temperature
near the surface and then use that as a source of
heat in the winter when the air temperature is
low and a source of cooling in the summer when
the air temperature is high. The great attraction of
this technology is that it can provide both heating
and cooling and do so with 25–50 percent less
electricity than would be needed with conventional
systems. In Germany, 178,000 ground-source heat
pumps are now operating in residential or com-
mercial buildings. At least 25,000 new pumps are
installed each year.
Geothermal heat is ideal for greenhouses in
northern countries. Russia, Hungary, Iceland, and
the United States are among the many countries
that use it to produce fresh vegetables in winter.
With rising oil prices boosting fresh produce trans-
port costs, this practice will likely become far more
common. If the four most populous countries
located on the Pacific Ring of Fire – the United
States, Japan, China, and Indonesia – were to
seriously invest in developing their geothermal
resources, it is easy to envisage a world with thou-
sands of geothermal power plants generating some
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211“ H A R N E S S I N G W I N D , S O L A R , A N D G E O T H E R M A L E N E R G Y ”
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200,000 megawatts of electricity, the Plan B goal,
by 2020.
As oil and natural gas reserves are being depleted,
the world’s attention is also turning to plant-based
energy sources, including energy crops, forest
industry byproducts, sugar industry byproducts,
urban waste, livestock waste, plantations of fast-
growing trees, crop residues, and urban tree and
yard wastes – all of which can be used for electri-
cal generation, heating, or the production of auto-
motive fuels.
The potential use of energy crops is limited
because even corn – the most efficient of the grain
crops – can convert only 0.5 percent of solar energy
into a usable form. In contrast, solar PV or solar
thermal power plants convert roughly 15 percent
of sunlight into electricity. And the value of elec-
tricity produced on an acre of land occupied by
a wind turbine is over 300 times that of the corn-
based ethanol produced on an acre. In this land-
scarce world, energy crops cannot compete with
solar-generated electricity, much less with wind
power.
Yet another source of renewable energy is
hydropower. The term has traditionally referred to
dams that harnessed the energy in river flows, but
today it also includes harnessing the energy in tides
and waves as well as using smaller “in-stream”
turbines to capture the energy in rivers and tides
without building dams. Roughly 16 percent of the
world’s electricity comes from hydropower, most
of it from large dams. Some countries, such as
Brazil, Norway, and the Democratic Republic of
the Congo, get the bulk of their electricity from
river power.
Tidal power holds a certain fascination because
of its sheer potential scale. The first large tidal
generating facility – La Rance Tidal Barrage, with a
maximum generating capacity of 240 megawatts –
was built 40 years ago in France and is still
operating today. Within the last few years interest
in tidal power has spread rapidly. South Korea, for
example, is building a 254-megawatt project on its
west coast that would provide all the electricity for
the half-million people living in the nearby city of
Ansan. At another site to the north, engineers are
planning a 1,320-megawatt tidal facility in Incheon
Bay, near Seoul. And New Zealand is planning a
200-megawatt project in the Kaipara Harbour on
that country’s northwest coast.
Wave power, though a few years behind tidal
power, is also now attracting the attention of both
engineers and investors. Scottish firms Aquamarine
Power and SSE Renewables are teaming up to build
1,000 megawatts of wave and tidal power off the
coast of Ireland and the United Kingdom. Ireland
is planning 500 megawatts of wave generating
capacity by 2020, enough to supply 8 percent of
its electricity. Worldwide, the harnessing of wave
power could generate a staggering 10,000 gigawatts
of electricity, more than double current world elec-
tricity capacity from all sources.
We project that the 980 gigawatts (980,000
megawatts) of hydroelectric power in operation
worldwide in 2009 will expand to 1,350 gigawatts
by 2020. According to China’s official projections,
180 gigawatts should be added there, mostly from
large dams in the southwest. The remaining 190
gigawatts in our projected growth of hydropower
would come from a scattering of large dams still
being built in countries like Brazil and Turkey, dams
now in the planning stages in sub-Saharan Africa,
a large number of small hydro facilities, a fast-
growing number of tidal projects, and numerous
smaller wave power projects.
The efficiency gains . . . more than offset projected
growth in energy use to 2020. The next step in the
Plan B 80-percent reduction of carbon emissions
comes from replacing fossil fuels with renewable
sources of energy. In looking at the broad shifts from
the reference year of 2008 to the Plan B energy
economy of 2020, fossil-fuel-generated electricity
drops by 90 percent worldwide as the fivefold growth
in renewably generated electricity replaces all the
coal and oil and 70 percent of the natural gas now
used to generate electricity. Wind, solar photovol-
taic, solar thermal, and geothermal will dominate
the Plan B energy economy, but as noted earlier
wind will be the centerpiece – the principal source
of the electricity to heat, cool, and light buildings
and to run cars and trains.
The Plan B projected tripling of renewable
thermal heating generation by 2020, roughly half of
it to come from direct uses of geothermal energy,
will sharply reduce the use of both oil and gas to
heat buildings and water. And in the transportation
sector, energy use from fossil fuels drops by some
70 percent. This comes from shifting to all-electric
and highly efficient plug-in hybrid cars that will run
almost entirely on electricity, nearly all of it from
Wheeler, S. M., & Beatley, T. (Eds.). (2014). Sustainable urban development reader. ProQuest Ebook Central <a onclick=window.open('http://ebookcentral.proquest.com','_blank') href='http://ebookcentral.proquest.com' target='_blank' style='cursor: pointer;'>http://ebookcentral.proquest.com</a> Created from asulib-ebooks on 2020-08-19 19:18:14.
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L E S T E R B R O W N212
renewable sources. And it also comes from shifting
to electric trains, which are much more efficient
than diesel-powered ones.
Each country’s energy profile will be shaped by
its unique endowment of renewable sources of
energy. Some countries, such as the United States,
Turkey, and China, will likely rely on a broad base
of renewables – wind, solar, and geothermal power.
But wind, including both onshore and offshore, is
likely to emerge as the leading energy source in all
three cases.
Other countries, including Spain, Algeria, Egypt,
India, and Mexico, will turn primarily to solar thermal
power plants and solar PV arrays to power their
economies. For Iceland, Indonesia, Japan, and the
Philippines, geothermal energy will likely be the
mother lode. Still others will likely rely heavily on
hydro, including Norway, Brazil, and Nepal. And
some technologies, such as rooftop solar water
heaters, will be used virtually everywhere.
As the transition progresses, the system for
transporting energy from source to consumers will
change beyond recognition. In the old energy
economy, pipelines and tankers carried oil long
distances from oil fields to consumers, including a
huge fleet of tankers that moved oil from the
Persian Gulf to markets on every continent. In the
new energy economy, pipelines will be replaced by
transmission lines.
The proposed segments of what could eventu-
ally become a national U.S. grid are beginning to
fall into place. Texas is planning up to 2,900 miles
of new transmission lines to link the wind-rich
regions of west Texas and the Texas panhandle to
consumption centers such as Dallas–Fort Worth
and San Antonio. Two high-voltage direct current
(HVDC) lines will link the rich wind resources of
Wyoming and Montana to California’s huge market.
Other proposed lines will link wind in the northern
Great Plains with the industrial Midwest.
In late 2009 Tres Amigas, a transmission com-
pany, announced its plans to build a “SuperStation”
in Clovis, New Mexico, that would link the country’s
three major grids – the Western grid, the Eastern grid,
and the Texas grid – for the first time. This would
effectively create the country’s first national grid.
Scheduled to start construction in 2012 and to be com-
pleted in 2014, the SuperStation will allow electricity,
much of it from renewable sources, to flow through
the country’s power transmission infrastructure.
Google made headlines when it announced in
mid-October 2010 that it was investing heavily in
a $5-billion offshore transmission project stretching
from New York to Virginia, called the Atlantic Wind
Connection. This will facilitate the development of
enough offshore wind farms to meet the electricity
needs of 5 million East Coast residents.
A strong, efficient national grid will reduce
generating capacity needs, lower consumer costs,
and cut carbon emissions. Since no two wind farms
have identical wind profiles, each one added to the
grid makes wind a more stable source of electric-
ity. With the prospect of thousands of wind farms
spread from coast to coast and a national grid,
wind becomes a stable source of energy, part of
baseload power.
Europe, too, is beginning to think seriously of
investing in a supergrid. In early 2010, a total of
10 European companies formed Friends of the
Supergrid, which is proposing to use HVDC under-
sea cables to build the European supergrid offshore,
an approach that would avoid the time-consuming
acquisition of land to build a continental land-based
system. This grid could then mesh with the pro-
posed Desertec initiative to integrate the offshore
wind resources of northern Europe and the solar
resources of North Africa into a single system that
would supply both regions. The Swedish ABB
Group, which in 2008 completed a 400-mile HVDC
undersea cable linking Norway and the Netherlands,
is well positioned to help build the necessary trans-
mission lines.
Governments are considering a variety of policy
instruments to help drive the transition from fossil
fuels to renewables. These include tax restructuring,
lowering the tax on income and raising the tax on
carbon emissions to include the indirect costs of
burning fossil fuels. If we can create an honest
energy market, the transition to renewables will
accelerate dramatically.
Another measure that will speed the energy
transition is eliminating fossil fuel subsidies. At
present, governments are spending some $500 billion
per year subsidizing the use of fossil fuels. This
compares with renewable energy subsidies of only
$46 billion per year. For restructuring the electricity
sector, feed-in tariffs, in which utilities are required
to pay set prices for electricity generated from
renewable sources, have been remarkably success-
ful. Germany’s impressive early success with this
Wheeler, S. M., & Beatley, T. (Eds.). (2014). Sustainable urban development reader. ProQuest Ebook Central <a onclick=window.open('http://ebookcentral.proquest.com','_blank') href='http://ebookcentral.proquest.com' target='_blank' style='cursor: pointer;'>http://ebookcentral.proquest.com</a> Created from asulib-ebooks on 2020-08-19 19:18:14.
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213“ H A R N E S S I N G W I N D , S O L A R , A N D G E O T H E R M A L E N E R G Y ”
T W O
measure has led to its adoption by some 50 other
countries, including most of those in the European
Union. In the United States, 29 states have adopted
renewable portfolio standards requiring utilities to
get up to 40 percent of their electricity from renew-
able sources. The United States has also used tax
credits for wind, geothermal, solar photovoltaics,
solar water and space heating, and ground-source
heat pumps.
To achieve some goals, governments are simply
using mandates, such as those requiring rooftop
solar water heaters on all new buildings. Governments
at all levels are adopting energy efficiency building
codes. Each government has to select the policy
instruments that work best in its particular economic
and cultural setting.
In the new energy economy, our cities will be
unlike any we have known during our lifetime. The
air will be clean and the streets will be quiet, with
only the scarcely audible hum of electric motors. Air
pollution alerts will be a thing of the past as coal-
fired power plants are dismantled and recycled and as
gasoline- and diesel-burning engines largely disappear.
This transition is now building its own momen-
tum, driven by an intense excitement from the
realization that we are tapping energy sources that
can last as long as the earth itself. Oil wells go dry
and coal seams run out, but for the first time since
the Industrial Revolution, we are investing in energy
sources that can last forever.
Data, endnotes, and additional resources can be
found on Earth Policy’s website, at www.earth-policy.org.
Wheeler, S. M., & Beatley, T. (Eds.). (2014). Sustainable urban development reader. ProQuest Ebook Central <a onclick=window.open('http://ebookcentral.proquest.com','_blank') href='http://ebookcentral.proquest.com' target='_blank' style='cursor: pointer;'>http://ebookcentral.proquest.com</a> Created from asulib-ebooks on 2020-08-19 19:18:14.
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