1 / 19

Renewable vs. Non-renewable energy

Renewable vs. Non-renewable energy. Prepered by A. Gritsevskyi, International Atomic Energy Agency. Do we have any problem?. In most cases …

emilie
Download Presentation

Renewable vs. Non-renewable energy

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. Renewable vs. Non-renewable energy Prepered by A. Gritsevskyi, International Atomic Energy Agency

  2. Do we have any problem? • In most cases … there is no problem for energy statistics to identify is that specific energy formbelongs to renewable or non-renewable – not necessarily true for other domain (geology, environment, business)‏ • Problems start when we talk about energytechnology or dealing with some “greyareas” • Lack of clear definition and partial disagreement on interpretation terms

  3. What is in Series F Manuals? 29E, 44 and 56E • No real definition • Defined by “listing”:

  4. Fuel split in 29E

  5. Extra note in 56E • “Fuelwood” should be considered as “renewable” only if rate of planting it faster or equal to rate at which it is cut • Should something like that applied for large scale of hydropower as currently there is tendency not to name such technology as strictly renewable?

  6. Multiple ways to give a definition • Postulating - listing what it is and what it is not‏ • Giving criteria and checking if particular source of energy meets it • Combination of both

  7. Example 1 • Energy obtained from sources that are essentially inexhaustible (unlike, for example the fossil fuels, of which there is a finite supply). Renewable sources of energy include wood, waste, geothermal, wind, photovoltaic and solar thermal energy • NOT OK as all energy sources we know within defined system (Earth) are finite and fusion power, technically non-renewable, could be considered practically inexhaustible

  8. Example 2 • energy generated from resources that are unlimited, rapidlyreplenished or naturally renewable such as wind, water, sun, wave and refuse, and not from the combustion of fossil fuels • Better, but “rapidly” is rather subjective term, so what about “peat”? (see attached paper)‏

  9. Example 3 and 4 • energy flows which occur naturally and repeatedly in the environment, such as wind and solar • new and renewable energy sources are energy sources including solar energy, geothermal energy, wind power, hydropower, ocean energy (thermal gradient, wave power and tidal power), biomass, draught animal power, fuelwood, peat, oil shale and tar sands, UN Glossary of Environment Statistics F-67E

  10. From “Renewable Energy in Europe” • Renewable Energy Sources – All natural energy flows that are inexhaustible (i.e., renewable) from an anthropogenic point of view: solar radiation; hydropower; wind; geothermal; wave, and tidal energy; and biomass

  11. From “Renewable Energy in the United States” • Renewable Energy – Resources that are naturally replenishing but flow limited. They are virtually inexhaustible in duration but limited in the amount of energy that is available per unit of time.

  12. “Grey areas” • Municipal Waste or any waste from potentially unsustainable use of biomass and/or unclear mixed use of fossil fuel and renewable • Origin of the problem – derived fuel with potentially multiple sources • No clear solution provided in the available literature – treated differently from case-to-case and region-by-region • Should be addressed jointly with environmental statistics experts

  13. Fuel type Age of fuel (in years) Reed, straw 0,5 - 3 Willow coppice 1 – 5 (Living) wood 5 – 100 (- 5000) Peat 100 –120,000 (-10 million) Lignite 0,1 - 50 million Coal 20 - 325 million Oil shale 65 - 500 million Age of different types of fuelwithin parentheses is maximum age Source: Hans Joosten “Renewability revisited: on folly and swindle in peat energy politics”

  14. Energy flux(flow) and energy storefrom M. Hoexter's “What is Renewable Energy Anyway?” • Energy flux • Energy store

  15. “Non-renewable energy sources are energy stores with zero or a minute rate of replenishment relative to its depletion by human beings. Most non-renewable energy sources are converted to usable energy by thermal or nuclear reactions. Non-renewable energy sources have stored the natural energy flux of Earth’s biological and geological past or of the formation of elements in the early history of the Universe”

  16. “Renewable energy sources are types of natural energy flux useful for human ends regularly occurring on or near Earth’s surface and, additionally, useful natural energy stores that are replenished by natural flux within the time frame of conceivable human use. All known renewable energy sources originate in, or are close derivatives of, electromagnetic radiation of our Sun, the Earth’s and Moon’s gravitational fields and heat radiating from earth’s interior. Renewable energy sources are practically inexhaustible though some sources such as geothermal and ocean thermal energy conversion may become locally depleted by human use at a rate that exceeds replenishment by natural flux.”

  17. Global energy balance and flows without anthropogenic interference Source: Energy Primer, Climate Change 1995. Impacts, Adaptations and Mitigation of Climate Change: Scientific Analyses, IPCC

  18. Three questions to the London Group Do you agree • that the definition of renewable/non-renewable should focus on renewability only and should be independent of the purpose behind – otherwise it will be never accepted generally • that any fuel or energy form should be strictly defined as renewable/non renewable without any exception • that the timeframe of conceivable human use and close derivatives of electromagnetic radiation of our sun has to be defined exactly and the final consequence • Renewable technologies than are not necessarily environmentally sound, sustainable or safe

  19. Thank you for your attention www.statistik.at

More Related