May 27, 2010

Renewable energy can meet all the world’s needs!

Representatives of all the major renewable energy sources met at World Bioenergy in Jönköping. Together they can supply all the energy the world needs

Representatives of all the major renewable energy sources met at World Bioenergy in Jönköping. Together they can supply all the energy the world needs



All the scenarios have the same result: a hundred percent renewable energy. The only difference is the time frame. That was the conclusion of Horst Rütel of the International Geothermal Association at the final session of the World Bioenergy conference.

The international conference was held in Jönköping, Sweden for three days at the end of May. A trade fair with the same name was held simultaneously and featured technology and methods for biofuel production and use.
One conclusion of the conference is that bioenergy has great potential but is not the sole solution to how the world can replace fossil fuels.
“It’s important that neither bioenergy nor other energy sources claim they can offer the whole solution,” said Tomas Kåberger, the Director General of the Swedish Energy Agency and conference moderator. “This conference has proven that the solution lies in cooperation. But together we can provide 100 percent of the world’s energy needs.”

On-the-spot collaboration
The conference was attended by representatives of the international industry organisations for all established renewable energy sources: water, wind, solar, geothermal and bioenergy. They all collaborate via the International Renewable Energy Alliance.
Each participant had the opportunity to present the potential of his or her form of energy. In theory, several of these can supply all the energy the world needs. But in practice this would lead to suboptimisation and extremely high marginal costs – hence the comments by Tomas Kåberger.
One type of energy that doesn’t have a high profile is geothermal, but it does offer huge unexploited resources.
“Ninety-nine percent of the Earth is more than 1,000 degrees Celsius in temperature, and 99 percent of the rest is over 100 degrees,” said Horst Rütel of the International Geothermal Association.

Consideration important
But geothermal energy only works in some parts of the world where the source is close to the surface. In other regions the best source is wind power, bioenergy, water power or solar energy. Plus something that a number of speakers emphasised: more efficient energy usage.
In general, renewable energy sources use up a lot of space, which means they compete with other interests. For this reason work has begun on ethical guidelines within the framework of the International Renewable Energy Alliance. The responsibility lies with the World Bioenergy Association. Kent Nyström gave an account of how the work is progressing and said that showing consideration for others and revenues are linked.
“If we behave ourselves, we will gain access to greater resources and a bigger market,” he stressed.

Dark suits
Another important issue is how to finance such investments. Tomas Kåberger noted that the colour of the suits people are wearing has become darker at every renewable energy conference he has participated in. In other words, banks and other financiers have begun to open their eyes to alternative energy sources.
“The problem is that the calculations are different for a windpower plant and an oil-fired one,” said Stefan Gsänger of the World Wind Energy Association. “It costs more to build the former but then the fuel is free, and that doesn’t fit into the cost calculations.”
His organisation has had a positive response to their suggestion of setting up a global investment fund for renewable energy production.
The conclusion of the conference at World Bioenergy in Jönköping was very hopeful: by working together, the renewable energy sources – combined with more efficient usage – can deliver all the energy the world needs.

Read more: www.elmia.se/en/worldbioenergy

Europe’s sugar beets produce twice as much ethanol in the tropics

Sugar beets from Europe can help solve the conflict between food and bioenergy in the developing world.
“Sugar beets have greater energy content than sugar cane but require rotation with other crops,” explained Jan Öhrvall at the World Bioenergy conference in Jönköping, Sweden.

Öhrvall is working on a tropical sugar beet project being run by two companies: Anditec and Chematur Engineering. The beets originate in Europe but are being planted in Colombia to be a raw material in large-scale ethanol production.
Trials have shown that the sugar beets are superior to sugar cane in a tropical climate. The former grow faster and are ready for harvest after six to eight months. In contrast, sugar cane needs 12 to 14 months.
“Sugar beets can be planted and harvested year round, making it possible to produce ethanol without any interruption,” Öhrvall said.

No competition
The other main advantage is that sugar beets require crop rotation. In Colombia people need to grow wheat and other grains as food. The result is that farmers can get both a sugar beet harvest and a grain harvest per year from the same field, thereby reducing the conflict between food and bioenergy.
Tropical sugar beets bind the sun’s energy more efficiently than sugar cane. The end result is 16,000 litres of ethanol produced per hectare of sugar beet, which is almost twice as much as from sugar cane. In comparison, in the United States corn (maize) gives about 3,000 litres of ethanol per hectare.
“It makes sense to grow energy crops under the tropical sun,” Öhrvall concluded.

Needs half as much water
Another huge advantage is that sugar beet cultivation only requires half as much water as sugar cane cultivation does. This makes it possible to grow an energy crop on considerably larger tracts of land than is possible with other crops. The end result can be jobs and income in poor parts of Africa, South America, and other regions of the world with lots of sunshine.
Anditec and Chematur are working on similar projects in other parts of the world, including Europe, but in their experience energy should be produced where there is the most sun, and they believe sugar beets are the crop that does the best job.

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