|  Let’s assume 
            that we will eventually live in a world without fossil fuels, that 
            is, without petroleum, coal, or natural gas. Will we all starve to 
            death or devolve into roving bands of barbarians? If business as 
            usual continues indefinitely, those outcomes are definitely 
            possible, but let us further assume that reason will prevail and we 
            all agree to restructure society so that it could get along without 
            fossil fuels. What would we need to do?
 The first task would be to finish the electrification of 
            society that was temporarily postponed by the discovery of large 
            amounts of petroleum within the crust of our planet. Since most 
            electricity is currently generated from fossil fuel-based utility 
            plants, that means that we will need some other way to generate 
            electricity. But we also need to address the last question before we 
            get on with the job of total electrification: why not use some other 
            source of fuel for our energy needs, such as biofuels? Wikipedia defines a fuel as “any material that is capable of 
            releasing energy when its chemical or physical structure is altered. 
            Fuel releases its energy either through chemical means, such as 
            combustion, or nuclear means, such as nuclear fission or nuclear 
            fusion”. Webster’s definition is a little more succinct, “a material 
            used to produce heat or power by burning”, or “a material from which 
            atomic energy can be liberated especially in a reactor”. Leaving 
            aside nuclear fuel, then, we need something that can be burned. Wood 
            was the main fuel before coal, to be followed by petroleum and 
            natural gas. People blithely assume that some new technology will pop up 
            from somewhere to save us from the disappearance of fossil fuels, 
            because “we’ve always invented something new”. No we haven’t. 
            Particularly in America, the entire suburban structure of the 
            country is based on a nineteenth century anachronism. 
 Burn, baby, burn Burning is the main way in which a fuel yields useful energy. But 
            here lies a big problem. First of all, burning things is bad for the 
            air, the water, and the soil. All kinds of harmful pollutants are 
            released, especially in the case of coal; and then there are the 
            carbon dioxide emissions.
 Second, and less well-understood, burning can result in huge 
            losses of energy; in other words, burning is an inefficient process. 
            When the first coal-burning plants were used by Thomas Edison to 
            produce electricity, he was able to use only about 4% of the energy 
            from the coal, but much of the rest of the energy was captured as 
            heat, and since the power plants were in New York City, much of the 
            waste heat was used. The consolidation of utilities led to much more 
            efficient generation of electricity by coal-fired plants, up to 30%, 
            but the use of the waste heat virtually disappeared, because the 
            plants were now located outside the cities. Now, fully 67% of the 
            energy from coal plants is wasted, because burning things generates 
            more energy in the form of heat than in the form that we want.[1]  
 Third, and following from the first two, burning fuel in 
            transportation equipment like cars, planes, and trains is incredibly 
            inefficient because most of the energy escapes—again, in the waste 
            of heat[2]—and the ensuing pollution 
            significantly increases the hidden cost of such burning. At least in 
            the case of cars and trucks, this burning is the result of relying 
            on something called the internal combustion engine.  Only 
            specialists in technological history would know what an internal 
            combustion engine is if it were not for petroleum. The only reason 
            such an incredibly inefficient device could be used on such a wide 
            scale is because it is uniquely adapted, like some superspecialized 
            organism in some freaky part of an isolated ecosystem, to the 
            extraordinary energy potential of oil. The internal combustion 
            engine is the brother of the external combustion engine, or as it is 
            better known, the steam engine. The steam engine is long gone, and 
            so, too, should have been the internal combustion engine. The 
            diesel-electric and electric train and the jet are much newer 
            technologies—the airplane is a newer technology. The internal 
            combustion engine was invented before the electricity-generating 
            electric turbine. It is a very old technology, completely unsuited 
            to a post-fossil-fuel world.
 People should keep this in mind when they blithely assume that 
            some new technology will pop up from somewhere to save us from the 
            disappearance of fossil fuels, because “we’ve always invented 
            something new”. No we haven’t. Particularly in America, the entire 
            suburban structure of the country is based on a nineteenth century 
            anachronism. Oh biofuels, how do I hate thee? Let me count the ways.The emerging elite consensus is that biofuels can be used as a 
            replacement fuel for peroleum. There are many reasons this will not 
            work in the long run. The best article I have found is called “Peak 
            Soil”.[3] There are two additional 
            reasons, besides the problem that there isn’t enough land:  
              the energy returned to energy invested is too low, 
              ethanol is corrosive, and a few others. First, the reason fossil fuels have so much energy is not 
            because they have trapped solar energy. The energy from fossil 
            fuels comes from the Earth’s energy, that is, geological forces that 
            cooked the plant life under great pressure for millions of years, 
            and so biofuels can’t possibly get anywhere near the same energy 
            potential as fossil fuels The energy coming from the Earth’s crust 
            and mantle are inherited from the Earth’s formation billions of 
            years ago, and as important as the Sun is, the Earth can proudly 
            claim ownership of its own energy sources. Fossil fuels are not 
            really plant-derived fuels, they are Earth-derived fuels, and people 
            should not think that there is any link between the two. Plants use solar energy to suck the carbon out of the atmosphere, 
            the hydrogen out of the water, and put them together to form a 
            hydrocarbon. If anything, plants make the situation worse, 
            energy-wise, because they proceed to attach the hydrocarbons to 
            other structures in the plant, thus making the hydrogen more 
            difficult to use. Hydrogen and oxygen are the main actors of the 
            combustion process; the carbon is a convenient place to attach 
            hydrogen. That is why oil is better than coal, because it is 
            basically composed only of carbon and hydrogen; oil is derived from 
            algae, which don’t process the hydrocarbons as much as the more 
            developed plants that make up coal. In effect, the Earth’s 
            geological forces undid the “damage” that the plants did 
            using solar energy, by purifying the plant matter back into carbon 
            and hydrogen. 
              The result of all this is that the energy returned on energy 
              invested, or eroei, for biofuels is either bad or awful, and 
              basically can’t sustain anything as inefficient as an internal 
              combustion engine, on a national or global scale.   Another way 
            to look at it is this: it takes plant-eating animals 16 hours a day 
            of munching on plants to extract enough energy to survive, while 
            large carnivores like lions only need meat once a day, at most. 
            That’s why humans evolved to eat meat; if they had to eat only 
            plants, like our relatives the gorillas, we’d be munching all the 
            time, with no time left over for making things. Plants are a poor 
            source of energy.
 Out, out, damn fuels!Second, and a point that others have made, biofuel production 
            threatens the biosphere of the planet. There is a mass extinction 
            looming, being driven by the destruction of ecosystems, in 
            particular forests and grasslands and water systems. The issue of 
            mass extinction is starting to coalesce among scientists,[4] but the general problem of 
            habitat destruction, or more ominously ecosystem destruction, could 
            be even worse. To simplify the problem as much as possible: even 
            without global warming, at the rate we are going we are heading 
            toward a Desert Earth, because most of the soil and water that can 
            grow plants is being destroyed.  Now 
            let’s look at corn ethanol production, which is the most egregious 
            example of biofuels. One consequence has been that as soybeans are 
            taken out of production in the U.S. to grow more corn for ethanol, 
            the soybeans are instead produced in Brazil, which then cuts down 
            more rain forest to grow the soybeans. So even when a tropical 
            country is not accelerating deforestation to grow biofuels—by 
            increasing biofuel production—somewhere the forests (or grasslands) 
            are being cut down somewhere else to make up for the shortfall 
            created by the biofuel production. In a final bit of irony (or 
            tragedy), by cutting down rainforests in Indonesia to grow palm 
            plants for palm oil, Indonesia has become the biggest emitter of 
            carbon after China and the U.S. because of the fires and rotting 
            from the deforestation.
 Historically, deforestation occurred in order to make room for 
             
              
                
                  agriculture, 
                  to use wood as a material, and 
                  to use it as a fuel.  The demise of British forests led to the greater use of coal, 
            thus helping lead to the Industrial Revolution. Today, forests are 
            still being destroyed for the same three reasons, but with more 
            people around, the destruction is proceeding apace. While the 
            destruction based on energy use has been restricted to poor people, 
            mostly for cooking, the hysteria that may arise in the developed 
            world from dwindling oil supplies could lead to redoubled efforts to 
            exploit every available nook and cranny on the planet.  Even if the developed world was so colossally inhumane as to let 
            most of the planet eat cake while everyone’s farmland was being used 
            to fuel automobiles, the internal combustion engine would still 
            eventually be tossed into the dustbin of history. All plants depend 
            on soil, and the soils of the world have been mined of their value 
            and not been allowed to recover. Without fossil fuels to create 
            fertilizers and pesticides, the return on biofuel plants would 
            decline even further, and if the soils run out, then by definition, 
            we have a desert, and no biofuels either.
 King CONG is deadAgain, assuming that nuclear fuels have many of the same problems 
            as other fuels, then it is reasonable to argue that coal, oil, 
            nukes, and gas (King CONG, to use Harvey Wasserman’s phrase), and, 
            in fact, all fuels, are doomed. We need to create a 
            fuel-free society. As it so happens, much of 19th century science and much of 20th 
            century technological development was focused on the development of 
            a different source of energy: electricity. Electricity has a number 
            of advantages.  
              
                First, unlike fuel, it doesn’t burn. 
                Second, it has several uses: to move things, particularly 
                motors; for communications and information technology; for 
                heating and cooling; and for lighting. 
                Third, there are a large number of sustainable ways to 
                generate electricity, from using magnets as in wind or water 
                turbine electrical generation, or photovoltaic transfer, as in 
                solar panels, or using heat sources, as in geothermal sources. 
                 In short, everything fossil fuels do electricity can do 
            better. Actually, there is one thing that fuels are better constructed 
            for: storage. However, there are many creative solutions being 
            offered for this problem, the most straightforward being to pump 
            water to a higher elevation and use it as hydropower when needed.[5] And hydrogen can be used for 
            storage, although for any other reason one can think of, hydrogen 
            will not save fuels from extinction. Unfortunately, at the present time, not only is most electricity 
            generated from fossil fuels, but if we wanted to convert the biggest 
            user of petroleum, transportation equipment, from fuel use, the 
            demand for electricity would go up, as would occur if we replaced 
            the natural gas used for cooking, heating, and cooling. In a 
            following article, I will suggest  how fossil fuels could be 
            augmented with renewable technology. First, we need to understand 
            how electricity is currently used, so that we can understand how to 
            restructure society so that we can either use less electricity or 
            generate it sustainably. By the numbers
The first thing to know about electricity use is that the numbers 
            are staggering, and that it can be difficult to keep track of 
            magnitudes. Let’s start with one basic statistic: electricity use 
            for the United States for one year. This is usually stated in 
            kilowatt hours, or one thousand watts used in one hour. While one 
            thousand might sound like a lot, it is an infinitesimal amount 
            compared to total national usage. In order to talk about how much 
            electricity various sectors of the economy consume, it is necessary 
            to talk in units of a billion kilowatt hours. In fact, 
            currently the U.S. economy uses about 4,000 billion kilowatt 
            hours per year. We could instead just say that the U.S. uses 4 
            Petawatts. But then when we discussed other parts of the economy, we 
            would have to get into terawatts, gigawatts, and megawatts. So to 
            avoid the trouble of translating in your head, I will stick to 
            billion kilowatt hours as the basic unit of electricity use. Electricity use in the U.S. can be divided into three broad 
            sectors: Household, commercial, and industrial. Transportation will 
            eventually become a fourth, but it currently is 98% the province of 
            petroleum. Using 2002 data, manufacturing used 27.3% of electricity, 
            commercial buildings used 30.5%, and households 35%, out of a total 
            of 3,625 billion kilowatt hours used in 2002.[6]  IndustryIndustrial usage breaks down this way (all percentages are 
            relative to the entire electrical output):    Notice that machinery and electronics (including electrical 
            equipment) uses only 2.1% of electricity; even the construction of 
            transportation equipment uses only 1.4%, indicating that even if all 
            automobile and airplane construction was transformed to create 
            trains, the electrical output would not need to be significantly 
            increased. The industrial core of the U.S., what are called the 
            “engineering industries”, therefore consume only 3.5% of electrical 
            output. Even if we assume that a fully reindustrialized American 
            economy would require a doubling of engineering industries, this 
            would still only bring electrical use to about 7% of current 
use. Now let’s look at commercial buildings: Commercial buildings  Retail – including malls and the Walmarts of the world – uses 
            more electricity than all machinery construction. And this is just 
            electricity, not the fuel used to cart the goods all over the world. 
            Retail and offices together use one-eighth of all electricity 
            consumption. If we look at the end-use of the electricity use in the 
            commercial sector, we can see what all that electricity is being 
            used for:   Residential BuildingsNow let’s look at household electricity use, and we will see 
            similar categories of end-use:   For all the talk about compact fluorescent lightbulbs, it looks 
            from the data that lighting in commercial establishments is 
            responsible for over twice as much electrical use as in the home! So 
            much for solving global warming by using better light bulbs. For 
            some reason, the plasma screen TV is often singled out as a 
            gluttonous expenditure of electricity, when in fact all home 
            electronics only account for 2.5% of electrical use, including home 
            computers and stereos. Office equipment used by commercial 
            establishments, at 5.5%, are twice as gluttonous as the home. If we add up all space heating, cooling, ventilation, and water 
            heating across commercial and residential buildings, we arrive at 
            the figure of 26%, without even considering natural gas, which is 
            heavily used for heating. This 26% is eminently reducible by 
            changing the building itself; one estimate is that at least 50% of 
            energy use for heating and cooling could be cut in this way.[7] In addition, home and 
            commercial refrigeration adds 8.6% of electrical use, when there are 
            probably many ways to make these much more efficient. Electrical sprawlIf you have ever read Walt Whitman’s “I sing the body electric”, 
            a part of his masterpiece “Leaves of grass”, you may be impressed 
            with his celebration of all of the various parts of the human body. 
            I wish I could say the same for the various uses of electricity in 
            the United States (and any other industrial country), but much of it 
            is not a pretty picture. There is much electrical output that could 
            be saved with recycling, outright elimination, retrofitted 
            buildings, and a general restructuring of the economy, but much of 
            electrical use would conceivably remain in any wealthy society.  In my forthcoming articles, I will analyze the use of natural gas 
            and estimate the electricity that would be needed to replace it, as 
            well as the huge problem of replacing our fuel-based transportation 
            system and agricultural system with electrical-based systems. 
            Finally, an attempt will be made to demonstrate that all of our 
            electrical needs in a truly sustainable economy can be met with 
            renewable energy of wind, solar, geothermal and hydropower. Jon Rynn can be reached at 
            
            
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   [2]  According to the 
            Wikipedia entry on the internal combustion engine, “Most internal 
            combustion engines waste about 36% of the energy in gasoline as heat 
            lost to the cooling system and another 38% through the exhaust. The 
            rest, about 6%, is lost to friction”, yielding about a 20% 
            mechanical efficiency. If you consider that the occupants of the 
            automobile take up a very small proportion of the total weight of 
            the automobile, then the efficiency moves toward 1%. [3]  Alice Friedman, “Peak 
            Soil: Why cellulosic ethanol, biofuels are unsustainable and a 
            threat to America”.  [4]  See, for instance, http://www.well.com/~davidu/extinction.html. [5]  Gar Lipow, “Modular 
            Pumped Storage”. [6]  The following data was 
            calculated in the following way: industrial usage was obtained from 
            Table 
            11.1 Electricity: Components of Net Demand, 2002, using net 
            demand for electricity, except for plastics. Purchased. For commercial buildings by activity: at Table 
            C13A. Total Electricity Consumption and Expenditures for All 
            Buildings, 2003, principal building activity, Site, Billion Kwh By end-use: Table 
            1. End-Use Consumption for Natural Gas, Electricity, and Fuel 
            Oil, 1999 (Preliminary Estimates), Electricity trillion btu”. I 
            used these figures to determine the percentages of commercial 
            buildings. For household use: Table 
            US-1. Electricity Consumption by End Use in U.S. Households, 
            2001  In order to syncronize these three tables, (and the end-use 
            commercial table), I used a nation-wide table, Table 
            7.2. Retail Sales and Direct Use of Electricity to Ultimate 
            Customers by Sector, by Provider, 1994 through 2005 
            (Megawatthours), for the year 2002. I added 100 billion kwh for 
            “Other” direct uses, because for some reason earlier years indicate 
            about 100 billion while later years have no estimates. The direct 
            uses table gives a total of 990 billion kwh, which is 26 billion kwh 
            more than the industrial table, above, so I counted the 26 billion 
            as other industrial use. The direct use total for commercial for 
            2002 was 6% larger than the commercial building data for 2003, 
            because of revisions, so I multiplied all commercial data by 6%. In 
            the same way, I added 11% to household numbers. Since the relative 
            percentages do not change very much from year to year, this gives an 
            approximation of relative sector use of electricity across the 
            entire economy. [7]  Don Fitz, “When building 
            green ain’t so green”.  |