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- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!decwrl!sdd.hp.com!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!swrinde!emory!kd4nc!ke4zv!gary
- From: gary@ke4zv.uucp (Gary Coffman)
- Subject: Re: Renewable energy from the sun
- Message-ID: <1992Nov14.181007.17295@ke4zv.uucp>
- Reply-To: gary@ke4zv.UUCP (Gary Coffman)
- Organization: Gannett Technologies Group
- References: <1992Nov6.171522.1259@access.usask.ca> <1992Nov10.164755.8051@ke4zv.uucp> <28116@castle.ed.ac.uk>
- Date: Sat, 14 Nov 1992 18:10:07 GMT
- Lines: 73
-
- In article <28116@castle.ed.ac.uk> cir@festival.ed.ac.uk (C Revie) writes:
- >
- [I wrote]
- >>Emphatically yes, we have an energy surplus. The solar energy striking
- >>the earth is about 7.8E18 kilowatt-hours per day. World energy consumption
- >>is about 7E12 kilowatt-hours. So solar alone, if totally converted to
- >
- >
- >>Then there are the non-solar sources of energy. We can tap the Moon's
- >>gravitational energy via tide power plants. We can tap the radioactive
- >>decay heat of the Earth via geothermal plants. We can tap nuclear power
- >>directly through fission power plants. And hopefully we will soon be
- >>able to tap fusion power directly in fusion power plants. The latter
- >>three sources can rival the Sun in the amount and duration of available
- >>energy they can supply. Note that all energy sources, including the
- >>Sun, are nuclear energy sources, with the exception of gravitational
- >>potential energy.
- >
- >
- >The problem with tapping the sun's energy as we now do through burning
- >fossil fuels, is that we are overloading the system. Not only is the
- >earth receiving energy from the sun, but energy from the past, in the
- >form of fossil fuels. Something that the biosphere is not designed to
- >cope with over a long period of time. By living off solar energy as we
- >get it, through wind power etc, or by using biofuels, we would not be
- >altering the amount of energy in the system.
-
- Our current energy consumption, from all sources, is 1/100,000th of
- the energy received by Earth from the Sun. That's 0.001%, the change
- in the Solar Constant during a 22 year solar cycle is more than an
- order of magnitude greater than that. Our energy use is an *insignificant*
- fraction of the natural *variation* in solar input to the Earth. We
- are *not* overloading the Earth's energy balance due to the heat liberated
- by burning fossil fuels.
-
- >Admittedly these system are expensive, but this is due to the present
- >miserly levels of investment that they receive, compared with fossil
- >fuels.
-
- Your naive faith in the power of government directed R&D is touching,
- but there is *no* assurance that *any* amount of R&D funding can break
- fundamental Carnot limits on the low grade energy of diffuse sunlight.
-
- >The other advantage of solar systems is that you don't get any
- >problematic side effects, unlike fusion and fission. Yes burning
- >biofuels gives off CO2, however this is CO2 which was verily recently in
- >the air taken in by plants, it should not therfore alter the amount of
- >CO2 going round the system.
-
- Nor does burning fossil, on a longer timescale. We can't say *what* timescale
- is the proper one to measure this. The carbon cycle isn't understood to
- within several orders of magnitude. There is considerable evidence that
- some of the larger CO2 sinks are inorganic. Therefore it doesn't matter
- much whether the CO2 is generated by burning wood or coal. In fact, the
- deforestation from burning wood changes the albedo of the Earth a measurable
- amount and may cause more harm than burning coal. Use of fission has
- demonstrably less damaging effect on the environment than burning wood,
- or coal, or oil. Fusion should be even cleaner.
-
- >As the population grows, living within the capacity of the planets
- >systems will become more important, a move to solar tecnologies is thus
- >of prime importance.
-
- That hasn't been proven. Indeed it is just an article of faith in some
- quarters. It's certainly true that solar is a vast, but diffuse, energy
- resource. Whether it's efficient or wise to forsake other energy systems
- in favor of solar is still very much debatable. Our total energy use will
- have to increase a hundredfold to even equal the *variation* in solar
- energy striking the planet. We have a long way to go before our energy
- use from other sources has a significant effect on the Earth's energy
- balance.
-
- Gary
-