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Do We Know what "Renewable Energy" means? 67

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zdas04

Mechanical
Jun 25, 2002
10,274
Much is made these days about "renewable energy" almost always talking about (in declining order of importance to the narrative) wind, solar, hydro-electric, geothermal, solid biofuels, and liquid biofuels. What I cannot find is a definition that limits how renewable something has be be to be called "renewable".

For example, I have deployed thousands of PV solar panels on remote wellsites over the years. When I'm doing project economics I expect to replace 1/3 of the panels every year and 1/2 of the batteries every year. This is because birds and reptiles are incontinent and their waste on the warm surface tends to short out the electronics. Further, covering a panel with dust or sand reduces its effectiveness towards zero and the first sand storm sandblasts the surface to the point that the electronics can't tell night from day (and cleaning the panels shorts them out about as often as it doesn't). No matter what metric you use, Solar PV does not ever generate as much energy as went into the mining, raw material transport, fabrication, and finished product transport. The industrial units I've deployed return under 5% of the energy required to make them appear on site. Project economics reflect that and the economics often favor Solar PV over bringing in grid power, but the only part that is "renewable" is that fuel cost for operation is zero. The popular literature uses a 25-30 year life for solar panels. Fires and sand blasting experience at large solar arrays seem to make this number laughable if you actually take the panels out of the box.

Forbes Magazine had an article a while back that claimed that grid-scale wind power units get about 83% government grants, subsidies, and tax credits (i.e., a company desiring to install a $500,000 wind turbine would have $415,000 covered by federal programs, state programs would further reduce the cost in most states). Then the federal government has mandated a price that the utility must pay for any power generated beyond the company's need (which is retail price, not the wholesale price that they pay for other power). Expected actual power generation from a unit that size would be worth (both in sell back and in avoided power purchase) about $30k/year which is not enough to service the debt on a $500 k loan. In this case Forbes is using dollars as a surrogate for energy input and energy output, but that is usually a reasonable surrogate--bottom line is that without the government involvement wind energy would not pay for itself. Most "information" available on this topic is like Science Daily that uses nameplate hp, 24-hour/day, 366 days/year operation at 100% capacity and subsidized sales prices to say that the turbines pay for themselves in 5-8 months. This analysis assumes energy storage that has no energy cost (and that it exists, it doesn't). When you factor in back-up power supplies for calm days, and fuel needed for standby plants the 5-8 months becomes laughable, but that is the number that "researchers" in this field continue to use.

Geothermal (where is is a viable option) is likely significantly "renewable" in that you get more energy out of it then you put into it. New research is linking industrial-scale geothermal energy to significantly increased seismic activity (both frequency and severity), but it is renewable.

Hydro-electric represents a love-hate relationship with the environmental movements. The narrative around evil fossil-fuel shows hydro as a huge win (it represents about 6.8% of the U.S. electricity usage), but the land that is taken out of service, the changes to the eco system by changing fast moving rivers to slow moving lakes, and the absence of flooding in river bottoms is depleting soil. Dams silt up and require maintenance/repair. Still, hydro is renewable in that it provides many times the power required to deploy the technology.

Solid biofuels like wood chips and vegetable debris have serious delivery problems (and ash-removal problems and particulate matter pollution problems) that caused the Province of Ontario to have to derate their coal fired plants by half when they were converted to solid biofuels.

Liquid biofuels to date have primarily been oxygenators like ethanol. Adding 10% ethanol to gasoline (petrol) will reduce total fuel efficiency by about 13%. This means that a trip that would have taken 100 gallons of fuel will take about 113 gallons of fuel--101.7 gallons of gasoline and 11.3 gallons of ethanol. In other words it is significantly energy negative. Bio-diesel has about 77% of the specific energy of diesel and tends to gel, absorb water, and requires higher compression ratios. In general without government intervention, this is an idea who's time will never come.

That brings me to gaseous biofuels. Methane comes from anaerobic biological activity on organic waste. In a recent article I computed that contemporary methane sources are on the order of 5 TSCF/day (the world uses about 0.3 TSCF/day). The organisms on this planet generate so much organic waste that we don't even have to get a lot more effective at re-processing organic waste to supply the world's power needs forever--truly renewable and sustainable. The only hurdle is that the contemporary narrative has methane listed in the "evil fossil fuel" category and not in the "renewable" category. That is it. A small shift in the narrative and the world will turn the engineering community lose on this problem and very shortly we will have unlimited power for an unlimited number of future generations. There are already hundreds of small and medium sized dairy farms, chicken farms, pig farms, and feed lots that are harvesting the animal waste to generate heat and methane for power generation (you get methane from anaerobic digestion which requires a small power input and generates horrible smells, taking the last step in the process into an aerobic digester, which is exothermic, provides heat for the anaerobic process, and gets rid of the worst of the smells). Everyone with knowledge of this process knows that there are a number of things that could be done to improve yields and recover more of the biological energy, but with an EPA focused on "eliminating methane emissions", there is no incentive to commit the engineering effort required.

Does anyone have any ideas on how to change the narrative from "methane causes global warming" to "retail harvest of contemporary methane can be a big part of the solution"?

David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering

In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual. Galileo Galilei, Italian Physicist
 
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rconnor,
Dang, I must be one talented individual if I can wave my hands while I have my fingers in my ears. That sounds like an impressive trick.

Let me get this straight. The "science" says that
A positive feedback of a warming planet. This is a part of the AGW theory not an argument against it.
but you've said a dozen times in these threads that positive feedback is not a part of the AGW theory. How can it be part and not be part at the same time? It sounds like you are now saying that your "science" predicted the permafrost receding prior to the increases in CO2 from industrial activity, and that that release initiated the "forcing" that is purported to explain all? Wouldn't that argue that CO2 is lagging, not leading? My arms are getting tired from all this arm waving.

Venus is 0.73 AU from the Sun. If a change from 320 ppm to 400 ppm of CO2 in the earth's atmosphere can trigger and force catastrophic and irreversable changes in earth's climate is is just the least bit possible that the increased solar flux on Venus could have a bigger impact on the temperature there than the mix of gases? Not buying this one.

You keep claiming that I'm discussing sources and ignoring sinks. I see those as very different discussions. If sources and sinks are in balance, then adding additional CO2 or CH4 increases the atmospheric concentration. If they are not in balance (or if the uptake point for a sink is dependent on concentration) then adding a bunch of these gases won't increase the atmospheric concentrations.

moltenmetal,
I thought you were done with this discussion? If you weren't serious about the three times you've said that I wasn't worth talking to, can you tell me how many times do we need to approach an "irreversable tipping point" before people stop with that nonsense?

David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering

In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual. Galileo Galilei, Italian Physicist
 
It is night on Venus for ~ 116 days. As far as I can tell the diurnal variation for Venus is negligible. Therefore the dark side of Venus is hotter than the bright side of Mercury. If there is no greenhouse effect, can we then conclusively say that there is another sun in the solar system? Perhaps emitting infrared or ultraviolet light outside of the visible spectrum.
 
zdas04 said:
you've said a dozen times in these threads that positive feedback is not a part of the AGW theory.
Either you are making stuff up again or you don’t know what a positive feedback is (in a climatic sense). I think it’s a bit of both.

Positive feedbacks (ex. albedo, water vapour and off-gassing) play a central role in the AGW theory and past climate changes (hint: if you want to say “it’s changed before (by a significant amount)” (which it has) then you are implicitly saying that positive feedbacks are large, because the same feedbacks impacted past climate changes as today. A common own goal by “skeptics”.) I have never said otherwise.

However, I think I know where your confusion comes from. You don’t really know what a positive feedback is (in a climatic sense) and are confusing it with a runaway feedback. The two are not the same. Firstly, the planet has never had a runaway greenhouse effect during past changes (even you will likely accept this fact). However, that hasn’t stopped it from going from being covered by glaciers to interglacial and back again (or do you reject that bit of science as well?).

When a driver (whether it be orbital tilts, volcanic activity, bolide impact or anthropogenic activity) works to warm the planet, ice melts and more water vapour can be held in the atmosphere. The less ice, the lower the albedo, the more energy the planet absorbs. The more water vapour in the air, the stronger the greenhouse effect. Positive feedbacks. The opposite is also true for when the driver cools the planet. This is why past climate changes have lead to large scale changes in temperature and climate (glacial to interglacial).

However, when the driver (whether it be orbital tilts, volcanic activity, bolide impact or anthropogenic activity) stops or changes, then, slowly, the plank feedback (a negative feedback) begins to overtake the positive feedbacks and the temperature begins to settle (until the next driver starts). This is why past climate changes have NOT resulted in runaway feedback effects.

This isn’t new – I’ve explained it before:
rconnor @7 Jan 14 18:08 said:
Furthermore, climate scientists know that we are likely not to have a runaway temperature rise like Venus because of anthropogenic CO2… “runaway greenhouse effect – analogous to Venus – appears to have virtually no chance of being induced by anthropogenic activities” (IPCC) or “A runaway greenhouse could in theory be triggered by increased greenhouse forcing, but anthropogenic emissions are probably insufficient” (Goldblatt et al, 2012).

zdas04 said:
is [it] just the least bit possible that the increased solar flux on Venus could have a bigger impact on the temperature there than the mix of gases?
The temperature of the surface of Venus is ~737 K, while the temperature of the upper atmosphere is ~230.15 K. This is expected by the greenhouse gas theory but unexplainable by solar fluxes.

This is the same as we experience on Earth and what we expect from the greenhouse gas theory - the greenhouse effect will warm the surface above the estimated (black body) calculation (which it does) while the upper atmosphere cools (which it does).

Furthermore, as canwesteng points out, the diurnal temperature difference of Venus is ~0 K. This indicates the greenhouse effect swamps the impact of solar fluxes.

You're wrong zdas04. Take moltenmetal’s advice.
 
You guys are wasting your time with ZDas. He has his mind made up and facts will be found to support.
 
Either that, or it's actually GTTofAK in disguise

TTFN
I can do absolutely anything. I'm an expert!
faq731-376 forum1529
 
I've given up trying to convince zdas of anything in this topic long, long ago. But his emissions on this subject here need to be challenged, lest others lend them credibility that they don't deserve. It's just so damned tiresome, especially when he spews stuff that is just plain completely and demonstrably false.
 
I don't deny the existence of the greenhouse effect, but it seems like the Venus analogy is a bit misleading. Venus is surrounded by more than crystal clear CO2. It has dense 100% cloud cover 100% of the time. Very little IR radiation will make it through that regardless of what's underneath. We've all experienced overcast nights that stay miraculously warm. Is this the greenhouse effect? Maybe a little bit, but I believe the warmer air is trapped, much like the the mass flow restriction that zdas04 talks about in an actual greenhouse. Imagine if the entire earth experienced that every night. Additionally, extreme wind circulates the upper atmosphere so violently that it can circumvent the entire planet in just a few Earth days. That alone explains the diurnal temperature stagnation, considering one Venus day is nearly 250 Earth days.

Like I said, I have no beef with the idea that some gases absorb more IR radiation than others. I have no reason or background to doubt that. I just think it's important to provide some context. Venus surely experiences this effect, but it has other much more influential forces at work. I do not think the conditions on Venus prove, disprove or can even be reasonably referenced to support claims about the magnitude of the influence of the greenhouse effect in our own atmosphere.
 
FoxRox said:
but I believe the warmer air is trapped, much like the the mass flow restriction that zdas04 talks about in an actual greenhouse
I don't follow. No planet, regardless of atmosphere, cools by "losing" warm air (i.e. by mass flow...or by convection or conduction for that matter). They cool through radiation to space. The more outgoing radiation, the more cooling. The less outgoing radiation, the less cooling (and atmospheric warming). The thick, dense atmosphere of Venus allows very little outgoing radiation - a very strong (atmospheric) greenhouse effect.

Where the analogy fails is that Venus' greenhouse effect is much, much stronger than Earth's will ever be, but it's a similar process.
 
Well if the Church of AGW has moved its auto de fe on to another victim I think I'll just move on with my life. I think I'll just move on with my life, secure in the knowledge that when all else fails, this bankrupt religion will simply attack someone's integrity and character. You zealots will be proved to be very wrong, I can only hope that it happens before you have degraded the concept of "science" to a point that good people wouldn't touch it on a bet.

David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering

In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual. Galileo Galilei, Italian Physicist
 
Even with the way these threads go on this forum, Eng-Tips still has the most reasonable and respectable discussion regarding AGW/Climate Change when compared to any other open discussion I see on the internet.

I'm both gladdened and saddened by what I read here.
 
rconnor, I understand that mass flow is not how heat escapes our atmosphere. I was referring to a smaller scale effect that traps warm gas in the lower portions of the atmosphere, but maybe that is not the case. Perhaps the warm overcast night is primarily the result of trapped IR radiation. I do not know. Warm air trapped below the clouds has just always been my own reasoned out explanation. Warm air would otherwise be free to circulate via convection into the upper layers of the atmosphere and carried elsewhere. But the cause is beside the point. Whether mass flow or IR radiation are restricted, clouds are vastly more effective at preserving heat than any clear gas. I would hypothesize that any planet with persistent 100% cloud cover would have a hard time dissipating much heat, regardless of the atmospheric composition.
 
this discussion has devolved into an argument and then to contradiction

another day in paradise, or is paradise one day closer ?
 
As can be seen from the graphs below, the atmospheric temperature distribution on Earth is more complex than that, and that Venus' atmosphere is likewise complex.

829px-Comparison_US_standard_atmosphere_1962.svg.png

Venusatmosphere2.GIF


TTFN
I can do absolutely anything. I'm an expert!
faq731-376 forum1529
 
zdas04, their religion has already been proven wrong. Their predictions have been wildly inaccurate for the past 50 years. They can't even maintain a reliable and precise method of data acquisition, let alone processing.

"Formal education is a weapon, whose effect depends on who holds it in his hands and at whom it is aimed." ~ Joseph Stalin
 
The other day, I had a wet piece of dirt with some plant matter on it. I was also analyzing the gasses around the clump of dirt, water, and plant matter. I put it in the microwave for 3 minutes on the High setting. The composition of the ambient air became more populated with CO and water vapor.

The temperature also went up.

Coincidence? I think NOT!!! The increase in CO and water vapor clearly is what caused the temp to increase. I quickly made sure to regulate all of the microbes in the clump of dirt and concentrate the allocation of power and resources to a few select microbes on the clump of earth.

The next time I put it in the microwave, the same thing happened. I clearly didn't concentrate authority well enough.

"Formal education is a weapon, whose effect depends on who holds it in his hands and at whom it is aimed." ~ Joseph Stalin
 
sorry, but the proof of the religion is despite their awry predictions the religion still has it's followers, and they get more devote every year. Mind you, the blasphemers are getting equally intransigent.

One thing's almost sure ... in fifty years time one or other camp will say "see, I told you", assuming there is a world, and people in it, in 50 years time.

another day in paradise, or is paradise one day closer ?
 
I can remember when this all started some 46 years ago. I Googled a bit and found this recap that pretty much expresses my skepticism. The article is much longer than the brief excerpts I've provided.

45 years of failed environmentalist predictions.


"It has been 45 years now since the first Earth Day. You would think that in this time frame, given the urgency with which we were told we had to confront the supposed threats to the environment—Harvard biologist George Wald told us, “Civilization will end within 15 or 30 years unless immediate action is taken.”"

1. Global cooling
"We were causing the ice age and bringing the glaciers down on our own heads. Deforestation was going to increase the reflectivity of the Earth’s surface, causing light from the sun to bounce back into space without heating the Earth. Meanwhile, emissions of “particulates,” i.e., smoke from industrial smokestacks, was going to block out the light before it even got here. No, really: Life Magazine in 1970 reported that “by 1985 air pollution will have reduced the amount of sunlight reaching earth by one half.”"

2. Overpopulation
"There were going to be an inconceivable seven billion people on Earth by the year 2000, and there was just no way we could support them all."

3. Mass starvation
For example, "Peter Gunter, a professor at North Texas State University, in a 1970 issue of The Living Wilderness.
Demographers agree almost unanimously on the following grim timetable: by 1975 widespread famines will begin in India; these will spread by 1990 to include all of India, Pakistan, China and the Near East, Africa. By the year 2000, or conceivably sooner, South and Central America will exist under famine conditions…. By the year 2000, thirty years from now, the entire world, with the exception of Western Europe, North America, and Australia, will be in famine.

4. Resource depletion
"Kenneth Watt again, with his present trends continuing: “By the year 2000, if present trends continue, we will be using up crude oil at such a rate…that there won’t be any more crude oil. You’ll drive up to the pump and say, ‘Fill ‘er up, buddy,’ and he’ll say, ‘I am very sorry, there isn’t any.'”"

5. Mass extinction
"At the first Earth Day, its political sponsor, Senator Gaylord Nelson, warned: “Dr. S. Dillon Ripley, secretary of the Smithsonian Institute, believes that in 25 years, somewhere between 75 and 80 percent of all the species of living animals will be extinct.”"

6. Renewable energy
"But all of the alternatives we were promised fall into two categories. There are those that are still too unreliable and expensive; Germany is about to be crushed by the massive cost of its renewable energy boondoggle. And then there are those which have gone from being the alternative championed by environmentalists to being the targets of the environmentalist anger. This is by far the most common trajectory."

7. Global warming
"If we go full circle, back to the failed prediction of global cooling, we can see the wider trend. After two or three decades of cooling temperatures, from the 1940s to 1970, environmentalists project a cooling trend—only to have the climate change on them. After a few decades of warmer temperatures, from the 1970s to the late 1990s, they all jumped onto the bandwagon of projecting a continued warming trend—and the darned climate changed again, staying roughly flat since about 1998."

"But by now you can get an idea for the major outlines of an environmental hysteria. The steps are: a) start with assumption that man is “ravaging the Earth,” b) latch onto an unproven scientific hypothesis that fits this preconception, c) extrapolate wildly from half-formed theories and short-term trends to predict a future apocalypse, d) pressure a bunch of people with “Ph.D.” after their names to endorse it so you can say it’s a consensus of experts, e) get the press to broadcast it with even less nuance and get a bunch of Hollywood celebrities who failed Freshman biology to adopt it as their pet cause, then finally f) quietly drop the whole thing when it doesn’t pan out—and move on with undiminished enthusiasm to the next environmental doomsday scenario."

ADDENDUM:
Every citizen ought to be chilled by this threat of abridgment of rights. Shades of 1984!


Skip,
[sub]
[glasses]Just traded in my OLD subtlety...
for a NUance![tongue][/sub]
 
I don't find it surprising that one can dig deep and find examples of failed predictions. But I don't really see what it proves. I think for some people the idea that we can damage our planet through normal activities is just too much for them to handle.
 
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