Monday, February 11, 2008

Two energy futures (2008-2100)

Jeroen van der Veer

BY 2100 the world's energy system will be radically different from today's. Renewable energy will make up a large share of the energy mix and nuclear energy will have a place. Humans will have found ways of dealing with air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. New technologies will have reduced the amount of energy needed to power buildings and vehicles.
The distant future looks bright but much depends on how we get there. There are two possible routes. Let's call the first scenario Scramble. Like an off-road rally through a mountainous desert, it promises excitement and fierce competition. However, the unintended consequence of "more haste" will often be "less speed" and many will crash along the way.
The alternative scenario can be called Blueprints, which resembles a cautious ride, with some false starts, on a road that is still under construction. Whether we arrive safely at our destination depends on the discipline of the drivers and the ingenuity of all those involved in the construction effort.
Regardless of which route we choose, the world's current predicament limits our room to manoeuvre. We are experiencing a step-change in the growth rate of energy demand due to rising population and economic development. After 2015, easily accessible supplies of oil and gas will probably no longer keep up with demand.
As a result, we will have no choice but to add other sources of energy -- renewables, yes, but also more nuclear power and unconventional fossil fuels such as oil sands. Using more energy inevitably means emitting more CO2 at a time when climate change has become a critical global issue.
In the Scramble scenario, nations rush to secure energy resources for themselves, fearing that energy security is a zero-sum game, with clear winners and losers. The use of local coal and home-grown biofuels increases fast. Taking the path of least resistance, policy makers pay little attention to curbing energy consumption -- until supplies run short. Likewise, despite much rhetoric, greenhouse gas emissions are not seriously addressed until major shocks trigger political reactions. Since these responses are overdue, they are severe and lead to energy price spikes and volatility.
The Blueprints scenario is less painful, even if the start is more disorderly. Numerous coalitions emerge to take on the challenges of economic development, energy security, and environmental pollution through cross-border co-operation. Much innovation occurs at the local level, as major cities develop links with industry to reduce local emissions. National governments introduce efficiency standards, taxes, and other policy instruments to improve the environmental performance of buildings, vehicles, and transport fuels.
Moreover, as calls for harmonisation increase, policies converge across the globe. Cap-and-trade mechanisms that put a price on industrial CO2 emissions gain acceptance. Rising CO2 prices in turn accelerate innovation, spawning breakthroughs. A growing number of cars are powered by electricity and hydrogen, while industrial facilities are fitted with technology to capture CO2 and store it underground.
Against the backdrop of these two equally plausible scenarios, we will know only in a few years whether December's Bali declaration on climate change was just rhetoric or the start of a global effort to counter it. Much will depend on how attitudes evolve in China, the European Union, India and the US.
Shell traditionally uses its scenarios to prepare for the future without expressing a preference for one over another. But faced with the need to manage climate risk for our investors and our descendants, we believe the Blueprints outcomes provide the best balance between economy, energy and environment. For a second opinion, we appealed to climate change calculations made at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. These calculations indicate that a Blueprints world with CO2 capture and storage results in the least amount of climate change, provided emissions of other major manmade greenhouse gases are similarly reduced.
But the Blueprints scenario will be realised only if policy makers agree on a global approach to emissions trading and actively promote energy efficiency and new technology in four sectors: heat and power generation, industry, transport and buildings.
This will require hard work, and time is short. For example, Blueprints assumes CO2 is captured at 90 per cent of all coal and gas fired power plants in developed countries by 2050, plus at least 50 per cent of those in non-OECD countries. Today, none captures CO2. Because CO2 capture and storage adds costs and yields no revenues, government support is needed to make it happen quickly on a scale large enough to affect global emissions. At the least, companies should earn carbon credits for the CO2 they capture and store.
Blueprints will not be easy. But it offers the world the best chance of reaching a sustainable energy future unscathed, so we should explore this route with the same ingenuity and persistence that put humans on the moon and created the digital age.
The world faces a long voyage before it reaches a low-carbon energy system. Companies can suggest possible routes to get there, but governments will determine whether we should prepare for bitter competition or a true team effort.

Jeroen van der Veer, chief executive of Royal Dutch Shell, is energy community leader of the World Economic Forum energy industry partnership in 2007-08 and this year's chairman of the energy summit in Davos. He also chairs the energy and climate change working group of the European Round Table of Industrialists. - courtesy Daily Times Islamabad
This story was written by my son, without any help just in one sitting when he was 12 years old and a student of class 7. It was published without editing in his school magazine in the month of April 2000.

The Lost Paradise

A boy named John Robertson was a very naughty boy. He would throw dirty things on the ground. He would never throw them in a garbage can.
One day he went to the city dump. That's because he was bored. He saw a shiny piece of metal, which was bright. So he went closer. It was a red car; it looked kind of old. So he sat inside to try out this car. Inside the car it smelled terrible. He took out his pocket knife and said to himself ''Let's see if this car works.''
He put the knife in the ignition key and turned it. The car started to vibrate.
''Cool, now I can have this car''. He said to himself. It started to move slowly. But by surprise the car moved so fast that everything turned out to a blur.
Slowly the colour came back again. But things were different. The air smelled really bad. There were lot's of bad smoke in the air. John saw a few trees. He looked around and just saw broken houses and garbage.
''Where am I?''
Then he heard footsteps. He turned around and screamed. There was a huge monster. It was all green with huge drops of salivia coming out from its mouth. It was five foot taller than him.
Then John saw a man holding a gun. He thought the man was going to shoot him. Then he heard a shot. For a second John thought he was the one who was shot.
''Come on'' the man said. He grabbed John's hand and then started to run. Suddenly the man stopped. He shook a branch and door slid open. They stepped inside and John saw a room.
''Who is this kid?'' a man said with blond hair. ''Shut up!'' another man said who had brown hair. ''What is your name kid?'' said the third one.
''M.M...My name is John Robertson.'' ''Hi, my name is Tony'' said the man holding John's hand.
''And this is Josh'' the guy with blond hair. ''This one who has brown hair is Max and the last one is Steve.'' ''We havc have another one who has gone somewhere else to get supplies.''
''What is this place?'' John said
''CAN'T YOU SEE THAT THIS PLACE IS THE LOST PARADISE! ITS ALL BECAUSE OF THE PEOPLE FROM THE PAST!''
''Keep your jets off, Josh'' said Tony. ''I am from the past'' said John. ''What!'' Josh screamed.
''Hey keep cool'' Max said. ''Did you use the car?'' Tony said. ''Okay kid here's what happened'' Tony said.
''This is the 48 century''.''Scientists discovered a new atomic bomb.'' They used it for wars.''
''Accidentally it felt on a factory, and soon there were gases that created monsters and everyone died except us because we had proper shelter.''
''Hey! There is an asteroid!'' Max Said. ''What!'' Tony said. ''That means it's the end of us'' Josh said. ''No it's not!'' John said. ''We need to build a rocket'' ''Yeah maybe he is right'' Tony said. So they began to build a rocket. Soon it was completed. They blasted it. The Asteroid exploded into pieces. ''YES'' Tony said. John found the car. And they went back to the past to get the stuff to make the future a paradise again.
NOTE: MAKE THE WORLD A PARADISE AGAIN

Quotable Quotes

1. The measure of success is not whether you have a tough problem to deal with, but whether it is the same problem you had last year – John Foster Dulles

2. You can’t build a reputation on what you are going to do – Henry Ford

3. As I grow older I pay less attention to what men say, I just watch what they do – Andrew Carnegie

4. If you want to make God laugh, tell Him your future plans – Woody Allen

5. If you want to make President Bush laugh, tell him about the plans for protecting the fragile and decaying ecosystem(s) of the planet.