--> Abstract: Clean Fossil and Renewable Energy - the Future Is Closer than You Think, by D. Nummedal and D. Hiller; #90090 (2009).
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Clean Fossil and Previous HitRenewableNext Hit Previous HitEnergyNext Hit - the Future Is Closer than You Think

Nummedal, Dag 1; Hiller, David 2
1 Colorado Previous HitEnergyNext Hit Research Institute, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO.
2 Colorado Previous HitRenewableNext Hit Previous HitEnergyNext Hit Collaboratory, Denver, CO.

The world’s current Previous HitenergyNext Hit consumption is 15 terawatts. Models for global economic growth expect that to grow to 45 TW by 2050. This requires developing twice as much new Previous HitenergyNext Hit generation capacity over the next 40 years as exists today. This increase must be accommodated in a carbon-constrained world. Herein lies the greatest economic opportunity of our generation: the transformation from fossil fuel to one based on low-emission fossil Previous HitenergyNext Hit augmented by Previous HitrenewableNext Hit resources, including solar, wind, biomass, and geothermal. Previous transformations in primary Previous HitenergyNext Hit led to major economic booms: coal ignited the industrial revolution, the switch from coal to oil augured in the transportation revolution and cheap electricity enabled internet search engines. Why should the pending transformation be any different?

Among ‘earth’ Previous HitenergyNext Hit resources, by far the largest is geothermal, with EGS being the most promising. Among Previous HitrenewableNext Hit resources the Previous HitenergyNext Hit from the sun far outshines others. Among fossil Previous HitenergyNext Hit resources, the unconventional ones far outstrip the conventional - and they are pretty evenly distributed across the planet - yet cheap conventional oil has long delayed serious pursuit of the earth’s unconventional endowment. This too is changing.

Natural gas (with 2 to 3 times more Previous HitenergyNext Hit than coal per unit CO2 emitted) is replacing coal, solar and wind Previous HitenergyNext Hit (with much lower emissions yet, but not zero) are becoming competitive with natural gas. Hybrid gas, wind and solar systems are on the drawing board. Solar PV is moving from about 6-10% Previous HitenergyNext Hit conversion efficiency to 60%. Power plants with carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) are on the drawing board across the world. The transformation of our Previous HitenergyNext Hit technologies will also require a new generation of Previous HitenergyNext Hit technicians and executives who think “Previous HitenergyNext Hit” rather than, “oil”, “coal”, or “solar”. Like cars, our global Previous HitenergyNext Hit systems must evolve into hybrids. This requires universities to educate students in “Previous HitenergyNext Hit,” not just a specific Previous HitenergyNext Hit discipline. Colorado is moving in this direction fast. Formalized collaborative research structures between the three Colorado research universities and the National Previous HitRenewableNext Hit Previous HitEnergyTop Laboratory have already changed the state’s research culture, with very positive results.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90090©2009 AAPG Annual Convention and Exhibition, Denver, Colorado, June 7-10, 2009