Originally posted by Flubber
While that helps, do you think that say the manfacture and transporation and construction of a windmill causes zero emissions? Do you nthink there would currently be enough alternative energy sources to meet the needs of everyone?
I sincerely doubt it. So if someone pays for alternative energy it likely doesn't change the fact that for every unit of energy they use, a unit of energy is generated using hydrocarbons somewhere in the system.
While that helps, do you think that say the manfacture and transporation and construction of a windmill causes zero emissions? Do you nthink there would currently be enough alternative energy sources to meet the needs of everyone?
I sincerely doubt it. So if someone pays for alternative energy it likely doesn't change the fact that for every unit of energy they use, a unit of energy is generated using hydrocarbons somewhere in the system.
When you get to windmills and conventional generation technology, though, the total energy input to create the system is a pretty small percentage of the lifetime output. Coal fired power plants are the most "efficient" in that sense -
Total energy consumed from extraction to erection / net lifetime energy production
but wind turbines are significantly less than conventional aeroderivative combustion turbine peaking plants on that criteria. Although the wind farm has lots of small separate generators and generator windings, plus controls, the main parts of it are fairly energy efficient in production compared to their total lifetime.
The aeroderivative peaking plant not only has a lot of precision machined parts in the turbine, but a fairly high plant complexity in terms of pumps, air and gas compressors, piping, water treatment, etc. It's still a small percentage overall, but wind and biomass technologies are more efficient in that sense than the average portfolio of fossil generators. Solar is another issue, especially photovoltaics. There the big environmental negative is the toxicity of the photovoltaic materials themselves, rather than the energy budget for manufacture.
I don't necessarily think that Gore's energy usage is that bad BUT I do think that a preacher of a message should at least look at his usage and acknowledge that reductions in usage is the VERY best method to reduce emissions
Current commercially proven alternative energy technologies can probably penetrate as much as 30-35% of the generating portfolio other than nuke/hydro, (I'm excluding those because they're non greenhouse emitters, but have their own separate environmental and operational issues.), depending on relative costs of generation. Carbon trading/offsets/penalties is one way to level the cost playing field between fossil and non-fossil alternatives.
Comment