energy efficiency: a capital offense comments to mit nescaum symposium thomas r. casten, chairman...

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Energy Efficiency: A Capital Offense Comments to MIT NESCAUM Symposium Thomas R. Casten, Chairman Recycled Energy Development, LLC August 12, 2009 RED | the new green www.recycled-energy.com

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Energy Efficiency:A Capital Offense

Comments to MIT NESCAUM Symposium

Thomas R. Casten,Chairman

Recycled Energy Development, LLC

August 12, 2009

RED | the new greenwww.recycled-energy.com

Presentation Summary

• To reduce CO2 emissions, look at the main sources – generation of electricity and thermal energy

• Generation efficiency could be doubled, but deploying such efficiency is a capital offense under the Clean Air Act, causing loss of permit to operate

• The failure to focus on the main sources of CO2 emissions results in costly, inefficient regulations that force citizens to pay more to heat the planet

• The single most important action is to modernize rules to eliminate barriers to efficiency and allow waste energy recycling to capture most of the value it creates.

RED | the new green

The Energy/Carbon StoryThe Energy/Carbon Story

The Generation StoryThe Generation Story

ConclusionsConclusions

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The history of accessto energy services

• Our standard of living depends on access to energy services:

• Heat, power, mechanical energy

• Until recently, homo sapiens depended only on metabolic energy:

100,000 years ago: Fire tamed

10,000 years ago: Animals domesticated

5,000 years ago: Power from wind

2,000 years ago: Power from water

• Recent use of ‘Ancient Sunlight’ – fossil fuel:

1760: First significant use of coal

1859: Oil discovered

1885: Natural gas first used

• Access to energy services allowed population to explode

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World population hasgrown dramatically

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1999

1987

1975

1925

1810

1957

3 millionca. 1760:Watt’s steam engineallows coal to be used for power

A.D.B.C.

Source: various authors cited by the U.S. Bureau of Census

Source: Arulf Grubler (1998), BP Statistical Review of World Energy (2008), US Bureau of Census (2008)

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Increases in world population andenergy consumption 1850-2007

100%

80%

60%

40%

20%

0%

100%

80%

60%

40%

20%

0%

100%

80%

60%

40%

20%

0%

Populationup 430%

Consumption per Capitaup 760%

Total Consumptionup 4600%

1850 1900 1950 2000 1850 1900 1950 2000 1850 1900 1950 2000

Nuclear

Natural Gas

Oil

Coal

Hydro

Wood

0 bn

1 bn

2 bn

1750 1800 1850 1900 1950 2000

Natural Gas

Oil

Coal

Ninety percent of human greenhouse gas emissions during the past century

100%

50%

0%

1979

Emissions of Greenhouse Gasesfrom Fossil Fuels(cumulative, in MT CO2e)

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Source: RED calculations based on data from BP Statistical Review andJ. David Hughes, Geological Survey of Canada (ret.)

90% GHG emissions since 1909

The Generation StoryThe Generation Story

ConclusionsConclusions

The Energy/Carbon StoryThe Energy/Carbon Story

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Looking for CO2 in all the wrong places

• Analysts slice the world into transportation, residential, commercial, and industrial and then look for ways to reduce CO2

• For example, latest McKinsey study of options uses this framework

• Others put faith in technology, calling for more R&D, without asking why generation efficiency has been stagnant for 50 years

• Others demand a specific path – inducing renewable energy – and thus emasculate market forces ability to optimize clean energy generation

• Electricity generation is the elephant in the room

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Generation efficiency –the elephant in the room

“I’m right there in the roomand no one even acknowledges me”

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Electricity generation is thelargest source of CO2 emissions

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Source: RED calculations based on data from Emissions of Greenhouse Gases in the United States 2007; State Energy Data Report; and Annual Energy Review.

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

CO2 Emissions by theU.S. Electric Power Sector

% o

f U

S C

O2 E

mis

sio

ns

Inefficient heat and poweremits two-thirds of CO2

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12%

14%

27%

42%

0% 25% 50%

Other Transport

Cars

Thermal

Electricity• Heat & power account for

69% of fossil fuel emissions

• Efficiency has been flatfor 50 years

Emissions of U.S. CO2 from Fossil Fuels

Source: RED calculations based on data from the U.S. Energy Information Agencyand the U.S. Department of Transport

0%

50%

100%

1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000

US electricity generation is inefficient

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Source: U.S. Energy Information Agency

Inefficientgeneration

U.S. Delivered Electric Efficiency

• Wastes energy

• Inflates costs

• Increases pollution

Homer Simpson’s power plant Springfield, ?

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Two-thirds ofthe energy generated is released

into the atmosphere

Electricity generation plant Craig, CO

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PollutionFuel

100%

Generation Consumption

Conventional electricity generation1960 (& 2009)

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WasteHeat

65%

Transmission

UsefulPower

33%

WasteHeat 2%

Fuel

PollutionFuel

100%

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WasteHeat

33%

Combined Heat and Power Plant

UsefulPower

33%

Fuel

Decentralized generation, combined heat and power

UsefulThermalEnergy

33%

RecycleWaste

Heat

66%Efficient

No LineLosses

ElectricitySteam

Hot Water

End User Site

Energy Recycling Plant

Electricity

Process Fuel

Finished Goods

Waste Energy

SavedEnergyInput

Recycling industrial waste energy: Cost effective clean energy

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Produces as much clean

energy each year as all

grid-connected photo-voltaic

solar generation produced in

2004

Recycling industrial waste energyCokenergy Mittal Steel, Northern Indiana

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* Includes T&D, line losses, backup generation and subsidies

Waste energy recyclingis cost-effective

All-in Cost ofClean Energy Generation*US$ per delivered MWh

Average 2008 Retail Cost

Use Energy Twice

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Cost of reducing CO2 vs. old CoalUS$ per ton

Only waste energy recycling lowers the cost of avoiding CO2 emissions

Use Energy Twice

The potential to use energy twice is enormous

• EPA study identifies 64,000 MW potential to recycle waste energy in 16 industries

• DOE study identifies 135,000 MW potential for fueled CHP that replaces thermal generation with waste heat from new electricity generation

• World Alliance for Decentralized Energy (WADE) study found potential to reduce U.S. CO2 by 20% and save $80 to $100 billion per year

• By contrast, deploying new renewable electricity generation will strongly raise electric costs.

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Policy observations

• All currently profitable low-carbon options involve recycling waste energy to increase efficiency

• But; the Clean Air Act, as administered, treats investments in generation efficiency as a ‘Major Modification’ and allows EPA to void the operating permit.

• Most existing electrical and thermal generation plants cannot economically meet current BACT to obtain a new permit

• Capital punishment may or may not deter crime, but it certainly deters investments in generation efficiency.

• Penalizing all carbon emissions won’t spur new and more efficient thermal and electric generation

• Old inefficient plants with free allowances are cheaper to operate than new efficient plants that must buy allowances

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0%

50%

100%

1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000

U.S. Delivered Electric Efficiency

Steam Pressure Recovery190 Projects

Combined Heat & Power56 Projects

Industrial Waste Heat Recovery 14 Projects

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We have proven this thesis with 200 projects ($2.0 billion)with double

conventional efficiency

The Energy/Carbon StoryThe Energy/Carbon Story

The Generation StoryThe Generation Story

ConclusionsConclusions

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Conclusions

• Using energy twice could cut CO2 by 20% while saving $80 to $100 billion per year, but:

• Current policies largely ignore options that use energy twice

• Changes to existing thermal or electric generating plant are a capital offense, potentially costing the operator the right to operate

• Laws, new an old, need to pay attention to encouraging efficiency – using energy twice.

• Willie Sutton robbed banks because that was where the money was. To profitably lower CO2 emissions, we must change the way the world generates electric and thermal energy.

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Thank you

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