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- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!wupost!darwin.sura.net!seismo!skadi!stead
- From: stead@skadi.CSS.GOV (Richard Stead)
- Newsgroups: sci.energy
- Subject: Re: Renewable Energy - solar
- Message-ID: <51522@seismo.CSS.GOV>
- Date: 20 Nov 92 15:15:45 GMT
- References: <Nov18.182720.65718@yuma.ACNS.ColoState.EDU> <51503@seismo.CSS.GOV> <Nov19.233943.21763@yuma.ACNS.ColoState.EDU>
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-
- In article <Nov19.233943.21763@yuma.ACNS.ColoState.EDU>, kk881595@longs.LANCE.ColoState.Edu (kevin knappmiller) writes:
- > No. I took issue with the statement that such a system was more
- > efficient than "direct" solar. It isn't, not even remotely.
- > Therefore if you have a certain amount of land that gets sunshine
- > and you want to get energy out of the sunshine on this land it
- > makes more sense to put solar collectors or cells on this land than
- > to plant it with crops, at least if the issue is energy production.
-
- If that's the argument, then we also need to consider the energy recovered
- and the useful energy expended in this recovery. For a biomass example,
- very little useful energy is expended - in some areas pumps may be required
- for irrigation and maybe some fertilizer would be required. In addition,
- there would be the fuel the tractors use to sow and harvest. This totals
- to a very small amount of useful energy. Solar, on the other hand, can require
- tremendous investment of useful energy - particularly if solar cells are used.
-
- > |> The coal that is dug out of the ground
- > |> did all the solar collection work for us already. Thus our only recovery
- > |> cost is digging the coal out of the ground.
- >
- > That short sighted view is why we are in potentially so much trouble.
- > We are using fossil fuels far faster than they are being produced.
- > There is a limited supply.
-
- Not short-sighted, I am very much against coal use, but for environmental
- reasons, not energy production. The point is that it is a readily accessible
- and very inexpensive (in terms of how much useful energy must be expended
- to recover it) to use. And we get a large amount of the energy it contains
- as useful energy. Supply is a pointless argument - if there is an energy
- source and we plan to use all of it at some point, why do we care if it
- is used first instead of a competing resource? Are you arguing that
- someone in the future wants to use it for energy? But who cares - if we
- have alternate sources now, they will have the same alternatives then.
- If our energy use can not be altered, then it does not matter which
- energy source we use to satisfy our needs now. Of course, I favor
- improvements in energy efficiency and conservation where appropriate, but
- there is a minimum amount of energy we require now, and it doesn't matter
- where it comes from.
-
- Or perhaps you are arguing that coal is valuable for other reasons. I
- cannot agree with that. Coal has no other use than to produce energy.
- Now, oil I can understand. It is vitally important to the chemical
- industry and we would not have a lot of our plastics, pharmecueticals,
- etc. without it. So I can say, no we shouldn't burn up all our oil.
- But burning the coal for energy is not removing it from some other use.
-
- So we're left with my argument against coal which is the environmental
- problems (coal is by far the worst environmental threat of any energy
- source). In that case, we shouldn't get any of our energy from coal,
- ever. But that argument is independent of efficiency.
-
- > |> No collectors to manufacture,
- > |> and we don't have to care how efficient the original collectors were.
- > |> Same thing with tapping hydro power. Sure the atmosphere and earth's
- > |> surface acted as the solar collector there, and probably weren't all that
- > |> efficient. But who cares?
- >
- > The issue was the claim that they were efficient. The hydro
- > system is renewable and the collector area is huge and free so
- > if we can use it, and we do, then great. But the "hydro power
- > solar collector" is not efficient.
-
- That still does not matter, the energy is just presented to us. The question
- is how easy is it to convert to useful forms, and in particular how much
- useful energy must we consume to do that, and how much do we get out.
- Efficiency provides a big clue towards the answer to that question.
-
- > If that is what Gary meant then he should have said so. But then
- > the "system" is not solar. If you talk about a solar energy system
- > and its efficiency you have to start at the sun and go to the final
- > state at which the energy is used.
-
- I took his comment on the ultimate source of the energy as just a side
- comment, not the focus of his argument.
-
- > The point was made that a dam's generators may
- > be 50% efficient and the extension was made that this means that
- > since solar energy originally evaporated the water then it
- > was solar energy and still 50% efficient. Well the evaporation
- > and mass transport are much less than 100% efficient.
- > When you have multiple components to a system you have to
- > multiply the component efficiencies to get the system
- > efficiency. He may not know this. He actually seems not to.
- > That is why I asked.
-
- Well, let's go back further then - the source of solar energy is nuclear
- fusion. And the earth is in a pretty bad position to make any reasonable
- attempt to efficiently recover all the energy the sun is releasing.
- Therefore, all discussed energy sources are all so terribly inefficient
- that the differences between them are pretty meaningless. It would
- also imply that the only sane power source on earth is direct nuclear fusion,
- since then we don't need to worry about all these efficiency losses
- from the collection of solar energy. Nuclear fission is also pointless
- and inefficient, since we're recovering so little of the energy that was
- available in the supernova that billions of years ago originally created
- all that uranium we use.
-
-
- --
- Richard Stead
- Center for Seismic Studies
- Arlington, VA
- stead@seismo.css.gov
-