1 / 26

Innovating A Sustainable Energy Future- The Role of Universities

Innovating A Sustainable Energy Future- The Role of Universities. Satish V. Kulkarni Presented at First National Conference on Energy and Environment University of Pune February 20, 2014. This presentation will discuss:. World energy scene US perspective Role of universities

dewitt
Download Presentation

Innovating A Sustainable Energy Future- The Role of Universities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Innovating A Sustainable Energy Future-The Role of Universities Satish V. Kulkarni Presented at First National Conference on Energy and Environment University of Pune February 20, 2014

  2. This presentation will discuss: • World energy scene • US perspective • Role of universities • Partnerships and collaborations, energy education • Fracking and the Energy/Water tensions • Critical materials and energy • US-India Joint Clean Energy R&D Center • Summary

  3. Globally, sustainability* is our greatest challenge Per capita availability of resources is decreasing Per capita fossil fuel Carbon emissions (2007, in tons) are increasing (Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center, ORNL) *Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising those of future generations. (UN, 1987)

  4. U.S. energy flow-2009 Supply Transmission/Distribution/Storage Demand Efficiency Energy efficiency is the low hanging fruit

  5. US energy security goals • An ‘All-of-the-Above’ strategy that translates into: • continued use of coal (with carbon capture and storage) and natural gas • nuclear power for clean energy with a focus on lowering capital costs and proliferation risks • biofuels with the caveat of food security • wind and solar power with lower costs and without subsidies with adequate storage capacity • modernization of the energy transmission/distribution infrastructure • enhancing energy efficiency in the stationary, transportation and manufacturing sectors through appropriate policies and incentives • inculcating an energy conservation culture, and • educating the next generation energy workforce

  6. US energy security goals (cont.) • By 2020, make non-residential buildings 20% more energy efficient • By 2022, Renewable Fuel Standards (RFS) biofuels blending mandate to 36 billion gallons • By 2025, reduce oil imports by 1/3 • By 2025, Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFÉ)Standards @ 54.5 mpg • By 2035, 80% of electricity will come from clean energy sources • By 2050, reduce GHG emissions to 50% of 2000 emissions, i.e., to 12.8 Gt/yr

  7. 50 % Global Goal Requires ~40 Gigaton Reduction 2050 Reference Emissions 2050 Global Emissions at 50% of 2000 Emissions 2000 Emissions +97% (24.9 Gt/yr) 50.6 Gt/yr CO2 Emissions (Gt CO2/yr) -75% (-37.7 Gt/yr) 25.7 Gt/yr 12.8 Gt/yr In order meet G-8 leader goal to cut global CO2 emissions 50% by 2050, projected annual emissions must be cut by 40 gigatons 1 Includes fossil and other industrial CO2. Source: Climate Change Science Program. 2007.Scenarios of Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Atmospheric Concentrations (Estimates based on MINICAM model results and other data).

  8. Technology Actions that Provide One Gigaton CO2/ Year of Mitigation or Offsets Coal-Fired Power Plants Build 273 “zero-emission” 500 MW coal-fired power plants* Equivalent to about 7% of current global coal-fired capacity of 2 million MW Geologic Sequestration Install 1,000 sequestration sites like Norway’s Sleipner project (1 MtCO2/year) Only 3 sequestration projects of this scale exist today Nuclear Build 136 new nuclear 1 GW power plants instead of coal-fired without CCS Equivalent to about one third of existing worldwide nuclear capacity of 375 GW Efficiency Deploy 273 million new cars at 40 miles per gallon (mpg) instead of 20 mpg New “CAFÉ” rules would accomplish about half that Wind Energy Install about 270,000 1 MW wind turbines Roughly 3 times the global total installed wind capacity at end of 2007. Solar Photovoltaics Install about 750 GW of solar PV Roughly 125 times current global installed capacity of 6 GW* Biofuels Convert a barren area about 2 times the size of the UK (over 480,000 km2), using existing production technologies CO2Storage in New Forest Convert a barren area greater than the combined size of Germany and France (over 900,000 km2) How Big is One Gigaton of CO2? Gigatons = 109 Metric tons (1000 Kilograms) *Instead of coal-fired power plants Source: Climate Change Technology Program Strategic Plan, September 2006.

  9. Role of universities • Typically, a research university’s mission is knowledge creation, educating the next generation and dissemination of knowledge for the public good • Thus innovation, which is translating ideas for societal benefit, is the genetic code of the university • The energy enterprise is a complex one requiring the application of every conceivable discipline, and interdisciplinary research is essential for success • Universities can create the environment to foster interdisciplinary teams without unnecessary barriers and develop partnerships (including international) among research centers, national labs and industry, thus providing an intellectual and operational framework • Universities can provide a neutral ground for dialog among stakeholders with competing agendas

  10. Public and Land-Grant Universities in the US • In 2012, the US celebrated the 150th Anniversary of the Morrill Act establishing the Land-Grant University System under President Lincoln on July 3, 1862 • The three-fold mission of land grant universities remains: • education • research and • practical innovations to address societal problems • These universities are part of the Association of Public and Land-Grant Universities (APLU) • They have made remarkable progress in the dissemination of knowledge to practitioners for widespread adoption within the states they serve • The focus has been on agriculture production, farm and home safety and consumer issues • Today, emphasis has to be also placed on energy, sustainability and urban issues • APLU launched the Energy Initiative in 2012

  11. Univ of California-National Labs* Partnership Model * Berkeley, Los Alamos and Livermore

  12. Two entities can coexist without loss of identity National Laboratories Universities

  13. Corporate, university and local govt. partnerships • Charlotte, North Carolina, aims to become the ‘energy capital’ of the US (WPost, Sep 11, 2011) • Since 2007, Charlotte has added ~5,600 new energy-related jobs, taking the total to roughly 27,000 at 250 energy-oriented firms • Duke Power and Cisco are teaming up to upgrade 12m sqft of office space with smart grid technology that will reduce energy use by 20% over 5 years • Univ of North Carolina at Charlotte has completed the $57 million, 200,000 sqft Energy Production and Infrastructure Center, which aims to pool academic and industry research in partnerships with companies such as Duke Energy and Areva • Austin, Texas, is defying conservative, fossil-fueled Texas to become the country’s clean-tech hub (Time, Feb 12, 2012) • Austin has long been a science-and-technology hub, with the presence of the University of Texas and Sematech; this has been leveraged effectively for clean-tech • ~15,000 Austin residents are employed in the broader green economy, and Austin Energy has pledged to get 35% of its electricity from renewable sources by 2020 • Pune can replicate this model!

  14. National Energy Technology Laboratory—Regional University Alliance (NETL-RUA) • NETL (Morgantown, W. Virginia and Pittsburgh, PA) is a Government Owned Government Operated (GOGO) DOE national lab with a focus on • Coal • Oil and Gas • The Marcellus shale formation covers the states of PA, WVA , VA, Ohio and NY • Non-fossil energy research • Energy analysis • The 5 partner universities are part of an Appalachian Alliance • They have also established the University Energy Partnership (UEP) and collaborated on several major energy initiatives A research collaboration that combines NETL's expertise in technology development and demonstration with the diverse capabilities of industry and university partners

  15. Energy education-Energy 101 • US DOE recently developed the curricular framework for Energy 101 in collaboration with APLU • First taught at University of Maryland Energy 101 Fundamentals and Concepts (Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, US DOE)

  16. Virginia Tech has also developed a broad, interdisciplinary energy education curriculum • Sustainable Energy Solutions for a Global Society • ESM/ME undergraduate/graduate course (Dave Dillard/Mike Ellis) • It has four parts: energy fundamentals, transitional energy sources, renewable energy sources, and energy consumption and conservation • Presented in the context of global political, economic and environmental impacts • Green Engineering Program and Minor • MSE undergraduate course (Sean McGinnis) • Environmental impacts of the design, manufacture and use of engineered products, processes and systems • Energy issues across the life cycle of products are a fundamental theme in the course “An exemplar of an institution with an unusually comprehensive approach to undergraduate education in sustainable engineering is Virginia Tech.” 2008 EPA Benchmarking Sustainable Engineering Education Report

  17. Shale’s growing thrust for water Financial Times, Feb 6, 2014

  18. The No 1 issue in fracking is the tension among the various uses of water • It takes 407 million gallons to irrigate 640 acres to grow about $200,000 worth of corn on an arid land* • The same amount of water can be used to frack enough wells to generate $2.5 billion worth of oil and create employment for thousands • The recent drought in the US has exacerbated the tension between food and energy (fracking as well as biofuels) • Several states are enacting laws to regulate unprecedented uses of enormous amount of water that has the potential for chaos and conflicts • This issue will be magnified in India *Wall Street Journal, Dec. 6, 2011

  19. In our quest for renewable energy, potential critical materials shortages* will have to be factored in • Market, economics and politics will play a role • Alternative materials/approaches will have to be developed • * A Path to Sustainable Energy, Jacobson and Delucci, Scientific American, Nov 2009

  20. Critical Materials Energy Innovation Hub-a partnership among universities, national labs and industry • The NETL-RUA Team, led by Virginia Tech, responded to this DOE call • Virginia Tech is now supporting Ames Laboratory in Iowa

  21. The US-India Joint Clean Energy R&D Center • In 2012, US and India launched the Center with the selection of three consortia with a total funding of $125M • These consortia are a partnership among universities, national labs and industry in both countries. They are: • Solar Energy – NREL and IISc • 2nd Generation Biofuels - Univ of Florida and IICT, Hyderabad • Energy Efficiency of Buildings - LBNL and CEPT Univ, Ahmedabad • US Energy Secy Moniz will be India In March to further expand the US-India partnership in clean energy

  22. Summary • Universities have a central role to play in the energy enterprise • The energy/water/climate change nexus coupled with education is uniquely a university grand challenge • Need better understanding of • Impact of natural events, policies and politics • Sustainability • Wells to wheels, front-end to back-end, cradle to grave • Education of the next generation and public is critical to energy security

  23. THANK YOU

More Related