- Water: a new vulnerability in the energy system
- Through looking at the world from space we think we have an abundance of water
- less than 3% of water is fresh
- 2.5% of fresh water frozen in glaciers
- only .5% easily accessible in aquifers, lakes, rivers, or wetland
- Freshwater is unevenly allocated
- 60% of Earth's water controlled by
- Brazil, Russia, China, Canada, Indonesia, USA, India, Columbia, and the Democratic Republic of Congo
- Australia faces water scarcity
- Developing nations also pose an issue
- Potential inability to match water demands
- Water is consumed in industry for high income countries
- One billion lack access to fresh drinking water
- Linkage between water and energy
- energy is used to pump, move and treat water
- water is often used for energy, from water mills to hydro dams
- global population and economic growth continues, despite water shortage
- A more water-constrained future
- huge urbanization rates of Asia, Latin America, and Africa
- energy and water security national level problems
- Climate change due to global warming adds to water stress
- approach to preserve present level of comfort while improving energy efficiency in developed nations
- Water requirements in the energy sector
- freshwater required for many steps of energy generation
- extraction, production, refining, processing, transportation, storage and generation
- North america consumes 1/4 of world's energy
- Fuel Production
- water consumption varies with energy utilization
- developing nations often use biomass and solar in ways difficult to measure
- Crude Oil
- highest energy production rate
- 1.058 m3 water needed per Gigajoule of energy from oil
- oil accounts for 34% of current energy production
- hope to decrease to 22% by 2050
- Asia accounts for more than 40% of worlds water consumption due to oil
- Natural Gas
- gas production due to double over the next 40 years
- Water consumption due to gas is low
- 0.109 m3 of water needed per GigaJoule
- Horizontal drilling and other extraction techniques making gas more viable
- water used is recoverable but contains contaminants
- Coal
- Energy from coal below oil but likely to rise
- 0.164 m3 of water needed per GigaJoule
- Uranium
- Energy accounts for only 6% of energy production in world
- 0.086 m3 of water needed per GigaJoule
- Biomass
- considered "fuel for the poor"
- inefficient and highly polluting
- wood, agro, municipal by products
- Electricity Production
- Thermoelectric Plants
- all fuel types need cooling and process water
- differentiated between once-through and recirculating systems
- wet recirculating systems about 40% more expensive than once through
- dry cooling is 3-4 times more expensive than wet
- once-through loses 1%
- recirculation, less than 1% drawn from source, lose 70-90% lost through evaporation
- recirculating system consumes 10 times the amount of water
- Subcritical and Supercritical types of Pulverized Coal plants
- supercritical more efficient
- subcritical older and more commonly used
- Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle
- turns coal into synthetic gas then uses that gas to heat water
- Combined Cycle Gas Turbine
- gas turbine generates electricity, waste heat used to make steam to generate more electricity
- Natural Gas Combine cycle
- majority of water used for cooling, lowest in comparison with other fossil fuel techniques
- Nuclear Plants
- have higher cooling tower, water consumption high
- Carbon Capture and Storage
- development of carbon capture and storage technologies used to meet climate change standards
- reduces emissions by 80-85%
- requires more water
- Hydroelectric Power Plants
- largest generator of renewable energy
- water not really lost but reservoir creation can cause additional evaporation
- significant for smaller power plants
- Electricity from wind and solar
- minor amounts for both PV and Wind power mainly for cleaning and maintenance
- Water consumption to generate electricity may double in the next 40 years as we move to cleaner technologies
Friday, February 8, 2013
Energy Water Nexus
These are notes from Energy Water Nexus.
Labels:
Notes,
Smart Grid,
Sustainability
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