dimanche 27 janvier 2008

Biodiesel in Europe

In 2003, the EU set an ambitious goal of replacing 10% of transportation fuel with nonfossil fuels by 2020. To achieve this goal, the bloc agreed that its governments would phase in tax breaks and rules to encourage their production and use.

But the bloc currently uses nonfossil fuels for less than 2% of transportation fuel consumed and now has a glut of biodiesel. By last year, Europe's annual capacity to make the fuel had climbed to 10 million metric tons from two million tons in 2003. The world consumed only nine million tons of biodiesel last year. Europe's producers found buyers for just five million tons.

The industry is in trouble, under pressure from soaring costs, disappearing tax breaks, less-costly imports and waning public support. However, scientists say it's likely to be at least 2010 before any breakthroughs are made on costs, or on producing a biodiesel than can run in regular diesel engines effectively at a much higher blend than the current standard of 5% per gallon of diesel sold at the pump.

U.S. ethanol producers are facing some similar problems. Buoyed by $7 billion a year in subsidies and a tariff on foreign imports, U.S, farmers planted a quarter more corn this year, most of it going toward making ethanol. But supply of ethanol is outstripping demand, mainly because of the difficulty and cost of transporting ethanol, which needs special pipelines, unlike biodiesel which can be mixed with regular diesel fuel and, when blended, doesn't need any special pumps or engine design changes. Some U.S. ethanol producers are idling production and a debate has begun over whether the pressure that ethanol production puts on agricultural land is worth the modest cuts in carbon-dioxide emissions it yields.

Source: WSJ, 27/12/07

mardi 8 janvier 2008

Kyoto treaty

The Kyoto treaty sets emissions limits for industrialized countries and for the EU, which decided itself how to divide the burden among member countries. It requires the countries that ratified it to reduce their overall emissions by 5% from 1990 levels. The caps, which expire in 2012, won't go into effect until 2008.

It is up to each participating nation to determine which companies to slap restrictions on. After a government sets an emissions limit for a company, it gives that company just enough permits to cover it. Companies that reduce emissions below their caps can sell excess credits to companies that don't have enough. Each company must decide how much to cut emissions and how many permits to buy from others.

Developing nations face no caps. Diplomats decided it wasn't fair to burden their economies right away with pollution controls, given that the industrialized world had faced no restrictions during decades of growth. However, the treaty includes a unique mechanism for involving the developing world in the process. Carbon reduction projects in developing nations generate emissions permits, or credits, which can be sold to companies in industrialized nations facing emissions caps. In effect, these companies can fulfil some of their emission-reduction obligations by financing pollution-control projects in the developing world.

The Kyoto Protocol was supposed to harness market forces to solve global warming. But industry has proved adept at fulfilling its obligations without cutting down much on fossil fuels such as oil, coal and natural gas. It is doing this largely by funding projects in the developing world that destroy potent but uncommon greenhouse gases.

Under the treaty, projects targeting more potent gases generate more credits than projects targeting carbon dioxide. The treaty covers six kinds of greenhouse gases. At one end of the spectrum is carbon dioxide. It accounts for 77% of all man-made greenhouse-gas emissions the U.N. says, but it is also the weakest gas. At the other end is HFC-23, a by-product of the manufacture of a common refrigerant. Every ton of it is 11,700 times as damaging to the atmosphere as a ton of carbon dioxide the U.N. says. But despite its high potency, the gas accounts for less than 1% of the effect of man-made greenhouse-gas emissions, the U.N. says. Under the Kyoto trading system, each credit represents one carbon dioxide-equivalent ton of avoided emissions, so a project that eliminates one ton of carbon-dioxide emissions generates one sellable credit. A project that gets rid of one ton of HFC-23 emissions generates 11,700.

Installing machinery on refrigerant plant to incinerate HFC-23 is inexpensive. According to the World Bank, generating one carbon credit through an HFC-23 project typically costs less than $1. Generating a credit from a renewable-energy project erecting a wind turbine or a solar panel-can cost $5 to $10, the World Bank says. Such credits currently sell for as much as €12 or about $25. So the economic incentives to undertake HFC-23 Projects have far exceeded those for fossil-fuel reduction projects.

Between 2002, when credits generated in developing countries began trading, and the end of 2006, HFC-23 Projects accounted for 46% of all developing-world credits traded-by far the biggest chunk of that market, according to the World Bank. AII told, at least 70% of developing-world credits traded during that market's first five years came from projects targeting gases other than carbon dioxide, the World Bank says. At present, most eligible plants that emit HFC-23 have been signed up for carbon-credit projects. As a result, projects targeting less-potent gases are getting more funding. Programs to reduce the burning of fossil fuels - a far bigger environmental problem - accounted for less than one-third of the developing-world credits traded between 2002 and last year the World Bank says. But they have begun getting more attention.

Some investors in the carbon market cite another reason for the scarcity of clean-energy projects: a panel of U.N.-sanctioned officials who meet periodically in Bonn, Germany, and decide which proposed carbon-reduction projects will get to sell credits. The panel approves only environmental projects it determines wouldn't happen without the sale of the credits. Clearing that bar can be difficult for clean-energy projects. Those related to potent gases such as HFC-23 and methane have an easier time, because they rarely make economic sense without the carbon-credit revenue. U.N. officials say that to keep the system honest, it is important not to subsidize projects that would happen anyway.

The broader question is whether a cap-and-trade system targeting industry is enough to meaningfully curb greenhouse gases. Some favour the introduction of carbon-emission taxes, saying that would push consumers to trim their energy use. Others say blunter tools are needed, such as tougher government rules on the energy efficiency of cars and buildings. Industry has long resisted such steps.

Source: WSJ, 05/12/07

dimanche 6 janvier 2008

Concentrated solar-power plants

Hamilton Sundstrand and US Renewables Group announced on January 2, 2008 that they would commercialize concentrated solar-power plants that will use molten salt to store the sun’s heat so that it can be converted to electrical power even when the sun isn’t shining.

According to Hamilton Sundstrand, molten salt loses only about 1% of its heat during a day, making it possible to store energy for long periods of time. The salt is a mixture of sodium and potassium nitrate which has been heated to more than 565 degrees Celsius.

The company says plants using this method will be able to generate as much as 500 megawatts of peak power or run continuously at 50 megawatts. One megawatt is enough to power about 1,000 U.S. households.

Concentrated solar-power stations will likely represent only a small part of the world’s power generation needs. They are most suited for regions that have a combination of predominantly sunny climates and large open space. A typical plant comprises a 480-hectare field of mirrors, called heliostats that reflect the sun’s energy to a 180-meter tower. The tower houses the receiver that collects the sun’s energy.

Source: WSJ, 02/01/08

High oil prices and GHG emissions

Paradoxically, high oil prices in some ways hinder the quest to curb GHG emissions.

High oil prices make it economic to develop unconventional deposits such as Canada’s oil sands. Liter for liter, producing gasoline from oil sands emits far more carbon dioxide than refining it from conventional crude.

The price rise has a similar dirty effect at power plants. In the 1990’s, when natural gas was cheap, many countries pushed the use of that fuel, in place of coal, to make electricity. Doing so was good for the environment, because per unit of energy generated, natural gas emits about half as much CO2 as does coal. But natural gas prices roughly track oil prices, so they have been rising too. Their rise has prompted a resurgence in coal use, one reason GHG emissions are rising faster than many expected.

Source: WSJ, 03/01/08

samedi 5 janvier 2008

Coal in Asia

Asian energy consumers are attracted to coal because:

  • Asia has a third of the world’s proven coal reserves, according to BP PLC’s most recent statistical review of world energy. Most of Asia’s reserves are shared by three countries: China, India and Australia.
  • sharp increases in oil prices in recent years. Coal prices would have to rise nearly fivefold to match current oil prices on a unit-of-energy basis, according to Cambridge Energy Research Associates.

China and India, which account for 45% of world coal use, will account for more than 80% of the increase in global consumption over the next two decades, according to the IEA. In particular, Asian energy consumers are examining the feasibility of building coal-to-liquids plants to make gasoline and fuel. Creating such synthetic fuels from coal is attractive to China and India because of their dependency on crude imports, which run close to respectively 50% and 70% of their oil needs.

Most CTL plants need oil prices to stay consistently above $45 a barrel to justify the initial investment and turn a profit, industry insiders say. But more restrictive policies in many Asia countries in response to climate change and other environmental concerns could act as constraints on the nascent CTL industry.

Each ton of oil produced from liquefying coal requires five to 18 tons of water. Converting coal to oil also involves the release of carbon dioxide, usually at seven to 10 times the amount that is released in refining oil.

Source: WSJ, 04/01/08

mardi 1 janvier 2008

Nuclear power in China

China’s nuclear-power generation is set to surge during the next few years, with installed capacity reaching 40 gigawatt by 2020, or 4% or the country’s total power-generation capacity.

Behind that expansion lies a plan for China to become self-sufficient in advanced nuclear technology. To achieve this goal, China requires overseas companies vying for access to the country’s fast-growing energy sector to provide technology transfers.

On November 26 2007, Areva signed an €8 billion contract for two reactors. Crucial to the deal is the requirement for Areva to give China the blueprints for is European pressurized reactors, which are among the most advanced on the market.

In July 2007, China and Westinghouse signed a deal for the construction of four nuclear reactors using the company’s AP1000 technology, which also contained a technology-transfer clause.

Both deals are expected to help China build nuclear reactors in the medium-term.

Source: WSJ, 27/11/07

IEA forecast

Renewable energy isn’t about to replace fossil fuel. According to the International Energy Agency’s environmentally rosiest scenario, fossil fuels will provide 77% of global energy in 2030, compared with 80% in 2004. That projection assumes that governments will implement aggressive policies to promote energy efficiency and renewable energy.

By contrast, the energy most commonly considered renewable – wind, solar, geothermal, wave and tidal power – will account for only 2.4% of total energy consumption in 2030, compared with 0.5% in 2004.

One of the factors limiting the growth of renewable energy is scalability. The largest solar-panel array in the U.S. is under construction in Nevada's Mojave Desert. The project, at Nellis Air Force Base, will consist of 70,000 solar panels spread across 56 hectares. Together, they will produce about 15 megawatts of power. That is about 2% of the output of a modern coal-fired power plant.

Source: WSJ, 31/10/07