As Democratic leaders in Congress prepare to put climate change
legislation on the agenda, some in the utility industry are arguing that
it will take decades of investments and innovation to get substantial
reductions in their emissions of greenhouse gases.
Electric power companies, which emit about one-third of America’s global
warming gases, could reduce their emissions to below the levels of 1990,
but that would take about 20 years, no matter how much the utilities
spend, according to a new industry study.
The report, prepared by the Electric Power Research Institute, a
nonprofit consortium, is portrayed as highly optimistic by its authors,
who will present the findings on Thursday at an energy conference in
Houston.
It assumes that “money grows on trees and all research is successful,”
said one of them, Bryan J. Hannegan. “This is as good as we think we can
get, right now.”
Before joining the research institute last year, Dr. Hannegan, a climate
scientist, worked as an environmental and economic adviser to the White
House and on the Republican staff of the Senate Energy Committee, where
he helped draft the 2005 energy bill.
His detailed new analysis comes as Democrats in Congress are promising
to draft tough new targets for emissions of greenhouse gases, possibly
including mandatory caps, which the Bush administration and industry
groups have opposed in the past.
The 1990 Kyoto Protocol on climate change, which the Bush administration
declined to support in 2001, calls for emissions from large industrial
nations to be below 1990 levels by about the year 2010.
In an interview, Dr. Hannegan said that cutting carbon dioxide that much
would mean pursuing every option, including energy efficiency,
zero-carbon wind and sun power; new nuclear reactors; coal plants that
capture and sequester their carbon; and even plug-in hybrid electric
cars, which would require making more electricity but would reduce
carbon dioxide and save gasoline.
At the Natural Resources Defense Council, David G. Hawkins, an energy
and climate expert, said that the industry group’s projections would not
provide the necessary savings soon enough.
“We think the efficiency, renewables and carbon dioxide capture wedges
can all be bigger,” Mr. Hawkins said. He added that whatever overall
reduction was achieved in carbon output, the electric sector would have
to exceed the average, because it had greater potential than industry or
transportation to reduce emissions.
But he said it was not clear that the country could build as many
nuclear reactors as the research institute’s outline called for, at
least not without solving problems with nuclear waste and fear of
proliferation.
The industry study calls for 64 gigawatts of additional nuclear power by
2030, an increase of about two-thirds from the current level. For the
first time in three decades, several companies have expressed interest
recently in ordering new reactors, but they will probably take nearly 10
years to build and experts expect no more than six or eight in the first
round.
The study’s figure implies a net increase of about 50 new reactors by
2030; the Energy Department is counting on about 10.
The study also calls for cutting the growth in demand for electricity,
which the Energy Department expects to increase at 1.5 percent a year.
The study assumes growth of just 1.1 percent a year, which implies a
steady decline in electricity use for each unit of economic production.
It also calls for vast growth in wind energy and some solar energy.
Renewable energy (leaving out hydroelectricity) now comes to only a
little over 2 percent of kilowatt-hours generated; by 2030, it would be
6.7 percent.
The biggest slice, though, is from coal plants that would capture their
carbon dioxide, compress it and pipe it underground for sequestration.
This is a technology that has been barely demonstrated at this point.
But in a little over 20 years, it would have to produce 14.6 percent of
electricity supplies.
The technologies required do exist, at least at laboratory scale. But
the study does not predict costs and stipulate what is economically
feasible.
Many of the changes forecast by the utility group depend on prices and
on consumer attitudes. For example, it projects that 10 percent of new
vehicle sales by 2017 will be plug-in hybrids, which would carry enough
batteries to run a car for the first 20 or 30 miles daily; on days when
a motorist went farther, the fuel would be gasoline.
There are no commercially available batteries for that task, however,
and hybrids sold today constitute a tiny fraction of the market.
The study counts on upgrading existing coal plants, to make them more
efficient. But refurbishing old plants might not be as effective as
replacing them, Mr. Hawkins said.
Older coal plants now in service are typically about 33 percent
efficient, meaning that two-thirds of the energy in the coal is lost in
the generating process. The study sets a target of 49 percent efficiency
by 2030.
Jeff Sterba, the chairman of the industry research group and the chief
executive of PNM, the parent company of Public Service of New Mexico, is
scheduled to present the study on Thursday morning at a conference
organized by the consulting firm Cambridge Energy Research Associates.
(Por Matthew B. Wald,
The N.Y. Times, 15/02/2007)