Monthly Archives: August 2007

Are not we happy too soon?

Pacific Gas and Electric Company announced lately that it has entered into a landmark renewable energy agreement with Solel-MSP-1 to purchase 553 megawatts of solar power. Definitely great news for Solel, for “advocates” of solar energy, and probably also for PG&E.

But are not we happy too soon?

Will Solel be able to deliver?

Will it be cost effective?

Isn’t it an “old” technology that does not have much room for improvements?

What energy storage solution will they use?

How are they going to finance this 2BnUSD project? 

The solar thermal parabolic trough technology – is definitely a proven technology. Nine solar power plants are operating successfully in the same Mojave desert, producing 354 MWe. Definitely Solel holds a leading technology and know-how in coatings and in producing the vacuum tubing; they have developed their patented UVAC 2008 solar thermal receivers.  They are providing key technology components for new solar thermal plants currently under construction in the U.S. and in Spain. But they have never built a power plant by themselves. The existing 354MWe was built by LUZ. Most of former LUZ key staff is not working with Solel. On the contrary: they have established two separate companies (Ener-t global also with trough technology and LUZII with solar towers), actually competing with Solel. We are not underestimating Solel’s management. We are certain that they are aware of all these difficulties and obstacles, and are trying to learn from LUZ’s mistakes. We are not judging their decision to pursue the parabolic trough technology. We are aware that when this plant will be operational, emissions of about 1Mton CO2 will be saved. 

From a short term point of view – this is definitely an advantage. From a commercial point of view – this might be a proper decision for Solel.

But is it the right decision for the US? For the world? For the long term? 

With the 2Bn USD that is required for financing this deal, it might be possible to invent ultimate technologies for clean energy with near zero emissions, that will power our homes and vehicles 24/7.  

p.s. With Solel and PG&E’s deal the ROI might be attractive for non-governmental investors; hence – governments should invest the 2BnUSD for creating the energy revolution, with the hope, that like president Ronald Reagan strategic defence initiative (known as Star Wars) caused the fall of the Soviet union and ceased the Cold war, so will the energy revolution establish the pathway to a clean energy future.    

 What do you think?   

Wake-up call

It’s time for starting a new era: The Energy Revolution. It’s time to limit the influence of radicals that are trying to change the status-quo of modern life. Oil is being used as a political weapon. The world is becoming more and more vulnerable to supply shortages and price hikes.  Almost 300 years ago The Industrial Revolution brought severe consequences to society. Now it’s about time for The Energy Revolution. It’s a MUST changing the way we power our homes, industry and vehicles. It’s not only a matter of quality of life and prosperity; it’s a matter of security! Without urgent ultimate solutions – major harm will be caused to the entire world – not only from global warming, but also from most of the state-run companies that control more and more of the oil and gas resources.    

  Mr. Al Gore: you are becoming an authority. Spelling out “15 ways we can address climate change” is essential; sponsoring all those worldwide events – is fantastic; lecturing (with your well known humor) on this “hot” issue – is wonderful. But still the most important link is missing: only technological breakthroughs will dramatically change this vulnerable situation. Unfortunately, current renewable energy technologies are viable only for niche markets.  Technology is vital for reducing the dependence on oil and gas. Albeit, the ultimate technologies were not invented yet!!!   

The question is why? 

 My answer is: We are missing the visionary leader, like President Roosevelt, that nominated Robert Oppenheimer in 1942 to establish the Manhattan Project  – who will lead the next big driver of innovation and releasing the world from addiction to oil?   

 Mr. Gore - Will you take charge and go all the way?

Is there someone else? – Nicolas Sarkozy?

Or will the Chinese President Hu Jintao show the world who calls and start a “clean energy Manhattan operation”?  

Who will leave his mark? 

—–

(*) The writer is the president of the AGS Group, Amnon Samid. amnon@ags-tech.com    

Reality Check

When it comes to the future of energy, the world needs a reality check.
The writer is the Royal Dutch Shell Plc CEO, Jeroen Van Der Veer

August 6 2007, Nairobi, East African Standard

Contrary to public perception, renewable energy is not the silver bullet that will solve all our problems. Indeed, in the decades ahead, three hard truths will generate turbulence in the global energy system.
We all know that global demand for energy is growing, but the reality of how fast has not really sunk in. The first hard truth is that demand is accelerating. Energy use in 2050 may be twice as high as it is today or higher still. The main causes are population growth, from six to more than nine billion, and higher levels of prosperity.
China and India are entering the energy-intensive phase of their development. This is the point when people buy their first television set or car, board a plane for the first time and start to consume much more transport fuel and electricity.
And most people in
China and India have never boarded a plane! The pace of change is startling. Last year, China enlarged its electricity capacity by roughly the equivalent of Great Britain‘s entire stock of power stations.
The second hard truth is that the growth rate of supplies of ‘easy oil’, conventional oil and natural gas that are relatively easy to extract, will struggle to keep up with demand.
Just when energy demand is surging, many of the world’s conventional oilfields are going into decline. The problem is not the availability of resources as such. Overall, the International Energy Agency believes that there could be roughly 20 trillion barrels oil equivalent of oil and natural gas in place.
This includes conventional and unconventional resources, such as oil shale and sands. In theory, this is enough to keep us going for about 400 years at the current rate of consumption.
Carbon emissions unacceptable
In practice, though, less than half can be recovered with existing technology. The world now produces 135 million barrels oil equivalent a day of oil and natural gas. We could still raise that number with new technologies, but only gradually and certainly not indefinitely.
The third hard truth is that increased use of coal will cause higher carbon dioxide emissions possibly to levels we deem unacceptable. The IEA believes that coal use could grow by around 60 per cent in the next 20 years.
The main reason that countries turn to coal is energy security.
China and India will continue to exploit their domestic coal reserves to be less dependent on oil and gas imports. So will the US, which now generates more than half its electricity with coal.
But burning coal for electricity generates twice as much carbon dioxide as burning natural gas. Gasifying coal, instead of burning it, reduces emissions, but still this is not enough to solve the problem.
In our battle against greenhouse gas emissions, taking the carbon dioxide out of fossil fuels, especially coal, is crucial. It will be a huge challenge: To keep greenhouse gases in the atmosphere well below 550 parts a million, the upper most bound of where science tells us we should be.
Shell works with models that assume carbon capture and storage is installed at 90 per cent of all the coal and gas-fired power plants in the rich countries by the year 2050, and at 50 per cent in non-OECD countries.
Time is short: It will take a decade to test the technology in pilot projects before we can move to larger-scale projects. So what about renewables such as wind and solar energy?
The share of renewables in the global energy mix could go up from its low base of about one per cent to about 30 per cent by the middle of the century. The number of wind turbines, for instance, may grow from about 30,000 today to one million and their capacity will be significantly larger than the ones we have built.
This assumes that the hunt for technological breakthroughs to make renewables cheaper will be successful. But even then, fossil energy will still make up most of the remaining 70 per cent.
However, this is out of sync with what opinion polls show that most Americans and Europeans believe that renewable energy will have replaced most fossil energy by 2050. As the hard truths make clear, this simply is not going to happen.
That is why energy efficiency is important. More than half the energy we generate every day is wasted. In an average car, about 20 per cent of every unit of petrol goes into moving a car forward, the rest is lost as heat.
For an aircraft during take-off, the figure is eight per cent. Only 35 per cent of burnt coal in a power plant becomes electricity, the rest is lost as heat. What is the point of producing more energy if we continue to waste most of it?
Instead, we should aim to become twice as efficient in our use of energy by the middle of the century. That is entirely feasible, provided that the will is there.
The world’s energy system is entering a turbulent phase, and the only question is: How turbulent? A unified world could respond more effectively than a fragmented one.
The writer is the Royal Dutch Shell Plc CEO

Sahara sunshine?

After oil and gas, Sahara sunshine?

By AIDAN LEWIS
Associated Press Writer

Aug. 11, 2007

 A gas station of Sidi Fredj, west of Algiers, is equipped with solar panels, July 10, 2007. Now Algeria, rich from sales of oil and gas and aware that its fossil fuels will one day run dry, is one country in the region mapping out a program to produce solar power on an industrial scale _ and even export it to Europe.“This is really a big change now because with all this talking about the limitations of conventional resources,” oil-producing countries “feel obliged to do something,” he said. Algeria seems an obvious source of solar power.Africa’s second largest country is more than four-fifths desert, with enough sunshine to meet Western Europe’s needs 60 times over, according to estimates cited by Algeria’s energy ministry.“The solar potential of Algeria is huge, enormous, because solar radiation is high and there is plenty of land for solar plants,” said Eduardo Zarza Moya, who works on solar power for Spain‘s public energy research center, CIEMAT. “The price of the land is low, it’s cheap, and there is also manpower.”Algeria already uses photovoltaic solar panels to electrify 18 scattered, off-grid villages in the Sahara, and 16 more are due to come on line by 2009. Two such projects are run by British-based company BP.The Hassi R’Mel site represents large-scale power generation. It is the first of four planned hybrid plants which will use Algeria‘s abundant natural gas to supplement sunshine and ensure power at night or in cloudy weather. The Hassi R’Mel plant, which will produce power for domestic consumption, will also house a research center to study how to reduce solar power costs.The hybrid plants will use a thermal technology called concentrating solar power, or CSP, in which sunlight heats fluids to drive an electricity-generating turbine.The system is widely regarded as being cheaper and having better storage potential for large-scale energy production than photovoltaic technology, which converts sunlight directly into electricity. CSP plants have operated in California since the 1980s, but when gas prices fell, new construction stopped.Spanish engineering firm Abener has a 66 percent share in the $425 million Hassi R’Mel project, having won an international tender to build the plant with Algeria’s NEAL.Algeria hopes to build three other hybrids generating 400 megawatts each by 2015, by which time Algeria aims to be producing 6 percent of its electricity from renewable sources.Experts warn that financing the cables may wipe out the profits from selling the power in Europe. They also say the domestic market will find it hard to compete with cheap Algerian oil and gas.

But they’re positive about the long-term outlook. The gas component in the hybrid plants will produce some greenhouse emissions. “But gas is much cleaner than oil and in time you will increase the share of solar,” said Richard Perez, a research professor specializing in solar power at the State University of New York. He spoke to The Associated Press by phone.

  

No vision No solution

Amnon Samid, President of the AGS Group, at The First International Conference on Sustainable Energy as a catalyst for regional development, Eilat June 5-7 2007:

Clean energy (world off-oil) – how far away?

* When do we expect Peal oil? (2010?) Peak gas and Peak coal (2025)?

* How far away are we from developing a sustainable technology for clean energy production with near zero emissions? And in which direction should we put most efforts?

It seems like the “64 million dollar questions”, but any serious policy maker MUST get ongoing – updated best possible answers to those questions. There is no straight answer here. It seems that the best way to do it is by integrating a spectrum of opinions, using methodologies of choice for a fair integration of diverse opinions and refer to the integrated answer as the “best estimate”. Such estimate should be repeated often to evaluate trends and to incorporate the emerging new data. Clean energy technologies is what we need most in our world, not only for reducing global warming effects and impact on earth eco-systems, but for sustainable development, poverty reduction and for “dismantling” world terror, by reducing dependence on fossil fuels. However, until we succeed in developing the ultimate technologies for 24/7 energy supply with no need for fossil fuel backup, we have to realize that coal, as well as natural gas, will be included in generation mix many years ahead. It is vital to establish a mix of crude and refined products, coal and its gasification products, as well as the alternative energy sources, which are starting to look affordable and practical, inorder to replace or at least to mitigate consumption of oil.

Other short term goals:

A. Building advanced coal technologies knowledge base, including engineering and information, educating engineers and operators, for enabling implementation of IGCC and hybrid coal-biomass technologies, as well as technologies for CO2 capture, inorder to achieve Near Zero Emissions.

B. A core effort should be invested in encouraging development and demonstration of novel high temperature solar processes for improved performance and cost effective electricity production, employing large centralized power plants, as well as applying miniature solar concentrating systems, for delivering electricity and heat for nearby consumers and surplus the grid (Distributed Generation).

C. Efforts should be put in increasing electricity generation efficiency (for example: increasing gas turbine inlet temperature in a cost effective way to achieve higher performance: develop materials for energy storage; cogeneration to provide high electric efficiency combined with high heat energy utilization).

……..We have the capability to become a world leader as a renewable energy technologies provider. It’s first of all a matter of a strategic decision, which has not been taken yet. We should develop synergetic business partnerships with global companies that wish penetrating into this huge challenge, while we provide the innovation, the creativity, design services and fabricating several unique components to be distributed world-wide. Our leadership should face the task of building a solid energy strategy based on scientifically sound predictions regarding the cost and time frame of implementing clean energy technologies. To reach commercial maturity of new technologies, they must be proven first in small scale, under real conditions for sufficient time period to meet expectations of performance and reliability and to make sure that costs and risks are understood. A first and blessed step towards this goal was started in Eilat-Eilot region, by taking the decision to establish a regional energy research and implementation center that will deal with a broad range of energy issues and will offer an ongoing coordination and assessment of different projects. This initiative could provide a competitive edge for Israel and the region by creating opportunities for new technologies, establishing a knowledge based center and enable industry involvement, which could lead to the goal of making Israel, a world leader in inventing sustainable clean energy technologies. amnon@CleanEnergy.co.il