180 likes | 193 Views
Explore the global challenges and opportunities in achieving sustainable energy. Learn about the need for renewable and flexible energy sources, as well as the importance of reducing impact on the environment and making energy economically viable.
E N D
Sustainable energy: Challenge and Opportunities E. Michael Campbell Senior Vice-President, Energy Group, General Atomics 50th Anniversary Celebration of Fusion at GA
Energy is vital to human well-being Electricity use is closely tied to economic development
Global energy demands will continue to grow- but not without consequences! CO2 emission Wars War
Energy supply is needed in multiple forms ‘End-game’ energy forms: Electricity as well as Process Heat and Transportation Fuel (Hydrogen). We tend to think just about electricity.
It’s not just electricity: Transportation fuel needs are also projected to significantly increase in the future
Oil Refinery in Kuwait Refinery in Kuwait “Middle East” by Philip Steele (Getty/Stgone)
Tar Sands, northeastern Alberta, Canada Tar sands, northeastern Alberta, Canada
Tar Sands, northeastern Alberta, Canada Tar sands, northeastern Alberta, Canada
Sustainable Energy: • What will we ultimately need? • ~25-50 TWs • Adequate fuel supplies • Renewable • Abundant supply • Flexible • Electricity • Transportation • Other needs (i.e. water, process heat) • Acceptable impact on the environment • Economical
There is not “one” solution to the global energy challenge • Sustainable Global power production of 25-50 TW will require: • Increased efficiency • Conservation • Distributed energy sources • Improved distribution • Improved storage • Central (concentrated ) energy sources • Coal • nuclear
A simple way to look at energy sustainability Useful Energy (power) Fuel Waste Example: 1000 gigawatts of electricity or ~200 million tonnes of hydrogen (per year)
1000 GWe - 2700 GWth 540 Mt/yr ash 180 Mt/yr SO2 4,980 t/yr Hg 5,900 t/yr U 14,500 t/yr Th Pulverized Coal – 51% of today’s electricity 1000-GWe scenario: 436% increase in current 230 GWe coal production rate. Fuel shipping: 1,240 “100x100” coal trains/day 4.530,000,000ton/yr coal Coal Plants 7.59 Gt/yr CO2 37% efficient power conversion Current US Recoverable Coal Reserves: 18,122 M tons
Meeting energy demands must change Coal strip mine in China
The present LWR nuclear fleet will be retired by mid-century-will they be replaced?
2054: ~2x below BAU 2104: ~10x below BAU 50% 90% The Climate Change Challenge has Near-Term and Long-Term Elements “… the needed prompt and sharp departures from the ‘business-as-usual’ trajectory must lead to an early leveling off of those emissions at a figure not much larger than today’s, followed by a decline to approximately one-quarter to one-third of today’s emissions by the end of the century.” – U.N. Foundation Scientific Expert Group on Climate Change and Sustainable Development Rob Socolow
The world needs large scale deployment of fusion by mid-century! • 1950-2010 • The Physics of Plasmas • 2010-2030 • The Physics of Fusion • The “Fermi Demonstration” - Fusion-heated and sustained • Q = (Ef / Einput )~10 • 2020-2050 • The Engineering and Materials Science of Fusion-Demo! • 2050 • Large scale deployment!
Nuclear energy Must be significantly expanded over the next century • Large scale deployment of fusion is needed by mid-century but significant challenges remain • Physics and engineering maturation • Confidence in the private sector • Economics require both capital investment and O&M (Utilities will look to >90% capacity factors) • Advanced Fission can be the bridge • Improved reactors are required and do exist! • Better fuel utilization and reduced waste generation • An integrated transition path from Fission to Fusion needs to be developed • Fusion must learn from fission experience and synergy needs to be developed • Materials • End use applications • The long term nuclear options are limited • Generation IV thermal and breeder reactors • fusion