Tag: fossil fuel

  • Reports of Fossil Fuels Demise Premature? – Renewables Remain Marginalized?

    Reports of Fossil Fuels Demise Premature? – Renewables Remain Marginalized?

    Who would have thought that in the summer with temperatures over 100 degrees Fahrenheit the wind would stop blowing.

    According to NOAA, “The main cause of wind is a little surprising.  It’s actually temperature.  More specifically, it’s differences in temperature between different areas.”  With a major Atmospheric High Pressure parked over a large geographic area, no wonder the wind does not blow.

    Texas Heat

    July 11, 2022 was a true scorcher across the state of Texas.  According to the Dallas Morning News, “Wind speeds have fallen to extremely low levels, and that means the state’s fleet of turbines is at just 8% of their potential output.”  This resulted in this and other Texans receiving an email from the local electricity provider asking for help cut back on power use.

    Texas is major producer of wind energy with over 150 wind farms–total capability of 30,000 MW (2020).  This amounts to approximately, 33% of the state’s power–more electricity produced than any other state.  So in the midst of a major heat wave, less than 25% of the state’s (potential) power generation was effectively available.

    This Level of Unreliability is Unacceptable.

    Previously, we addressed this issue after the Texas Freeze of 2021.  It does not seem like this problem is going away.  Guessing, that like the freeze, lack of energy availability will continue to be mitigated by fossil fuel power production!

    German Cold

    According to the University of Illinois Chicago, “Patients who died because of cold temperatures were responsible for 94% of temperature-related deaths.”

    It gets cold in Germany in the winter.   While the temperature range may vary slightly, Germans need heat every winter.  Despite climate (warming) change, this is not likely to change this coming season.

    The news has reported that Germany has depended on Russian gas for some time.  With the hostilities in Ukraine, that energy source is in jeopardy.  This has caused the country to look to other, reliable sources.  Coal.  Framed as “painful but necessary,” the country had to restart coal based power production.

    Perhaps not desirable for some politicians and prognosticators, Germany has no choice.  Many will be happy with this decision on Christmas Eve.  Near term survival vs. long-term possibilities.

    Clean Fossil

    One day in the 1980s this writer left his hotel in Los Angeles for a morning run.  A few minutes later, I stopped and returned to my room.  The air was so thick with pollution I felt my heath would be better served by doing nothing as opposed to running outside.

    Flash forward to November 1987 when this writer was in Beijing, China for almost a month.  The air was so extreme that frankly my nose contained coal particles simply by breathing.  Moreover, Houston, Texas at the time had similar issues whereby the air actually ‘smelled’ in the industrial area.

    Today, the United States does not have these issues at least at this level (not true with other nations).  The US has ‘cleaned’ its act up so to speak.  Its rivers no longer catch on fire, as they once did.  All of this is the result of better stewardship of carbon based fuels.

    According to the US National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL), “Coal-fired electricity generation is cleaner than ever.  NETL’s research shows that a new coal plant with pollution controls reduces nitrogen oxides by 83 percent, sulfur dioxide by 98 percent, and particulate matter by 99.8 percent compared to plants without controls.”

    It is possible to responsibly use carbon effectively, efficiently and cleanly.  This is missed by both sides of the climate debate.

    Demise–NOT!

    The humorist Mark Twain is credited with saying, “The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated.”  One can make the same case about fossil fuels.

    According to one source, today there are 1.446 billion motor vehicles on the planet.  Reportedly, just under 284 million are registered in the United States.  Our ‘share’ represents less than 20 % of the global fossil fueled propelled transportation.  Note that this does not include aerospace and the multitude of critical uses of carbon based feedstocks.

    According to the US Energy Information Administration, only 12% of energy was provided by renewables in 2021.  Fossil fuels in aggregate provided 79% of the basket of energy sources.  According to another credible data provider, “The share of wind and solar is rising constantly (+1 point in 2021), reaching 10.7% of the global power mix.”

    This slow growth is over approximately 20 years.

    When the wind does not blow, sun does not shine or solar panels are covered with snow, power comes from dependable fossil fuels.  Moreover, according to experts, none of this linear climate change political response will most likely make a difference anyway.

    Energy Transformation is an uninvestable amount with uncertain returns.  In other words, high and undocumented risk.  So what are we doing?

    How is Your Organization Managing the Risk associated with the Energy Transformation?

    For More Information

    Please note, RRI does not endorse or advocate the links to any third-party materials herein.  They are provided for education and entertainment only.

    The author’s credentials in this field are available on his LinkedIn page.

    “People fail to get along because they fear each other; they fear each other because they don’t know each other; they don’t know each other because they have not communicated with each other.” (Martin Luther King speech at Cornell College, 1962).  For more information on Cross Cultural Engagement, check out our Cross Cultural Serious Game.  You can contact this author as well.

    For more information regarding climate change models, check out Bjorn Lomborg ands his latest book, False Alarm: How Climate Change Panic Costs Us Trillions, Hurts the Poor, and Fails to Fix the Planet.

    For those start-up firms addressing energy challenges, the author is a member of Global Energy Mentors which provide no-cost mentoring services from energy experts.  If interested, check it out and give us a shout.

  • A Windy Position

    A Windy Position

    In a recent online discussion, this pundit put forth the thought that fiberglass wind turbine blades can pose an environmental problem when decommissioned.  This position was quickly challenged with the rebuttal that burning coal ‘kills’ kids so it did not matter if discarded blades litter the countryside as it is worth it.

    According to research quoted by the European Wind Energy Association, “With wind turbine blades likely to account for some 50,000 tons of waste annually by 2020, growing 4 times by 2034 the landfill is not a viable long-term solution.”  Moreover, “Findings from the University of Strathclyde indicate a global increase of wind turbine blade waste from around 400,000 tons per annum in 2030 to around two million tons by 2050.”

    My rebuttal to the kills kids argument–what will this do to global population health?  Keep in mind, this is only one source of industrial (and consumer, i.e., EV automobiles) decommissioned assets.

    Disposal/Recycling

    “Glass-reinforced polymer composites (GRP), used in wind turbine blades around the world, is recognized as a hard-to-break-down source of pollution.”  Research is underway to address this problem and mostly likely progress will continue going forward.

    “Currently only a few recycling techniques are available to treat such an enormous quantity.  So most have been landfilled and many continue to be buried today.”  Other current options include:

    • Grinding–turning fiberglass into powder.  A labor intensive process that provides filler for other purposes
    • Incineration–the ash is usually disposed of in a landfill
    • Pyrolysis–decomposes into three recoverable substances: pyro-gas, pyro-oil, and solid byproduct— all of which can be recycled

    “While the overall life of the wind turbine does cause less pollution than coal-fired power plants do, the initial solution of just burying the fiberglass doesn’t seem in line with the goal to cause less pollution.” (Ibid)

    Really?  How is this saving the planet?

    Clearly, these alternative disposal processes have a financial cost greater than simply burying the blades.  If not, they would be used more frequently.

    Future generations will have to address this issue much like the current one continues to deal with asbestos from the past.  The KIDS will end up dealing with and paying for the folly of their parents and grandparents.

    A Contrarian Posture

    As noted, there is a romanticism about renewable energy sources, most commonly wind and solar.  However, we believe in the ‘no free lunch’ model.  There are risks and cost associated with every form of energy.

    In two recent editions, Heavy Metal Rocks and Going Green? Or NOT! we took an initial look at the financial cost over the renewable lifecycle as well the environmental impact that will need to be addressed.  The edition is a continuation of the premise that, “Technology Romance must be met with Fiscal Realities.”

    Society will eventually recognize the environmental damage done by solar and wind energy systems can be very high.  By then, the harm may have been done.

    As an example, many oil and gas assets are approaching end of life.  The decommission costs are very high and increasingly regulations are changing to hold asset owners accountable for these costs.  Generally, accountants refer to these as Reserves.

    Shouldn’t renewable asset holders be required to set aside reserves to cover the disposal of assets as well?

    Lifecycle Cost Structure

    For capital assets with significant planning, development, manufacture, deployment, operations & maintenance and finally decommissioning costs there is another dimension.  The Asset Maturity Model was developed to assist management understand how to best maximize asset performance over decades, in some cases.  This model is integrated into an economic value model which we be discussed herein.  There are also a number of tools and standards available to assist management, such as ISO 55001–Asset Management.

    In April 2022, Bloomberg published a piece, “Wind Power’s ‘Colossal Market Failure Threatens Climate Fight.”  The Global Wind Energy Council deemed the current wind energy situation a ‘Colossal Market Failure.’

    Blaming a mismatch (alignment) between governments policies and current markets, the risk is not only that net zero targets will not be met but the supply chain is contracting.  Moreover, one study suggests that for the US net-zero policies will cost more than 12% of our Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2050.  To put this in perspective, today Social Security cost 5% of GDP and Medicare/Medicaid 6.4 percent–11.4% combined.

    The ‘lack of alignment‘ is a major determent to successful organizations.  In our recent blog, ESG Explained we discussed the role organization and its ecosystem governance at length.  Building on our 2011  monograph, Asset/Equipment Integrity Governance: Operations–Enterprise Alignment; A Case for Board Oversight (AEIG) we developed the case for Operational Excellence as part of ESG.  Energy and supply chain management are key components of this enterprise approach.

    Total Cost of Ownership (TCO)

    TCO is a function of the acquisition cost, including all engineering, design, deployment, installation etc. as well as ALL costs associated with its lifecycle OPEX, including decommissioning, abandonment, and environment remediation.  It is all encompassing.  It is the long-standing metric that all projects must understand and model accordingly before a Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) is authorized.

    The following list are documented per citation links.  These are taken from a recent article challenging the Return on Investment (ROI) of current green initiatives.

    Readers will note that some are social costs, i.e., transition costs to new energy sources currently provide minuscule contributions to the Energy Basket.  These costs will grow dramatically going forward.

    •  “Making a transition from fossil fuels to green energy is costly.  Solar and wind can only deliver electricity, which accounts for less than a fifth of total energy consumption.
    • When the sun doesn’t shine or the wind doesn’t blow, prices rise quickly and we have to revert to fossil fuels for backup.
    • Batteries are inadequate and expensive, easily quadrupling solar electricity costs and failing to provide much power.
    • In 2021, Europe only had battery capacity to backup less than 1 ½ minutes of its average electricity usage.  By 2030, with 10 times the stock of batteries, and somewhat more usage needed, they’ll have enough for 12 minutes.
    • The Bank of America has found that achieving net-zero will cost $150 trillion over 30 years, almost twice the combined annual GDP of every country on Earth.
    • The annual cost of $5 trillion is more than all the world’s governments and households spend every year on education.
    • In a new study, McKinsey finds most of the poorest nations in Africa would have to pay more than 10 percent of their total national incomes every year toward climate policy.  This is more than these nations combined spend on education and health.
    • Reducing emissions just 80% will cost the United States more than $2.1 trillion every year from 2050, or more than $5,000 per person, per year.
    • The annual US cost of World War II is estimated at $1 trillion in today’s money.  Every year by 2050, climate policy could cost Americans more than twice what they paid during the Second World War.
    • Surveys show few people are willing to spend more than a few hundred dollars a year on climate policies.  Asking people to spend tens or hundreds times more is a recipe for failure.”

    These are significant tangible and intangible costs.  In this writer’s opinion, the business case has not been made for these and other total cost line items.  A more extensive study should be considered by readers who want to do a deep dive on these economics.

    Keep in mind, that these broader issues do not take into consideration regarding daily operations and maintenance.  These must be factored in as well.

    Finally, while these are ‘opinions’ from reputable sources, why are they not considered the economic models used today?  Seems like Data Bias, doesn’t it.

    EVPM

    Beginning in 2004, recognizing many of the TCO components as well as the economic value potential from a CAPEX, we developed what came to be known as our Economic Value Proposition Matrix model (EVPM).  This model is now mature, robust as well as integrating a Risk Matrix.

    It is an excellent tool for assessing both Tangible and Intangible components of value and cost.  Additionally, a free version is available and it is fully supported with training as well as other materials (including a video).

    Importantly, EVPM “Translates technology into the Language of Business” which make it an excellent tool for preparing to meet with the Chief Financial Officer (CFO) and/or Budget Committee.  Management makes decisions as a function of the risk associated economic value brought to the organization.  While technology has a level of romance to it, financial issues are the major decision making driver.

    The Energy Basket

    It is useful to look past the hype to see what the US energy basket actually looks like.   Slightly over three percent comes from wind and only 1.3 % is solar.  Fossil fuels (petroleum natural gas and coal) represent 79% of our current energy consumption.  In the opinion of this writer these disparities have been basically the same for decades.

    China and India burn 14 million tons of coal per day!  By all accounts, coal will play a major role in power production in these economies for some time to come.  As a function of the global percentage of coal used; China over 50%, India over 11% and the United States at approximately 8.5%.  Moreover, an assessment of its use by 130 countries is available to interested readers.

    The debate about ‘Clean Coal‘ continues.  None-the-Less, most likely coal will continue to be used for decades.  Keep in mind that 2050 is less than 28 year away.

    While regulation plays a role in the energy mix, economics are the fundamental driver.  Until the economics of non fossil fuels change, the basket will most likely not.

    The Lone Ranger is Missing

    Listening to some, it seems that all we have to do is focus on the Energy Transformation and in only a few short years magic will happen.  Hate to tell everyone, there is no Silver Bullet.  Transformation will take decades and should be led by those driven by market forces.

    One example, on April 29, 2022 the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDot) announced the two year closure of a major highway artery in the Houston metropolitan area to replace a concrete ramp.  Point being, road construction is well understood and a major proven technology and process.  Still, it will take a significant amount of time to perform this upgrade.

    How can we assume a major Energy Transformation using new technologies will unfold as optimistic parties suggest?  History suggests this is not likely.

    Closing Points

    This long time energy careerist believes that various energy sources from the basket should be used as economically appropriate.  While we all have an interest in a low pollution environment, if the economics as shown in this piece are close to correct, the resulting economic damage may be greater than a somewhat warmer planet.

    The data presented herein are documented.  The sources and quality of the data can be challenged but it should not be ignored.

    Finally, this piece has focused primarily on wind energy.  A similar analysis needs to be taken for every energy source including fossil fuels of all kinds.

    The demand for energy will continue to grow and even exponentially.  Clean fossil fuels are available and without strong energy balanced policies the future is bleak for many and not just because of climate change by the significantly higher cost of living and loss of opportunities due to energy starvation.

    The energy challenges are complex and dynamic.  This blog is not a comprehensive review, but simply a focus on a narrow aspect.  For example, we did not delve into issues such as Carbon Capture & Sequestration.  A calm, rational, economics discussion is in order.

    What does Energy Transition mean to you and how will you help the Less Fortunate be better off?

    For More Information

    Please note, RRI does not endorse or advocate the links to any third-party materials.  They are provided for education and entertainment only.

    For more information on Cross Cultural Engagement, check out our Cross Cultural Serious Game.  You can contact this author as well.

  • Will Price Controls Work This Time?

    Will Price Controls Work This Time?

    Update: Just after we published this edition, Goldman Sachs released this comprehensive research piece; Stagflation Risk.

    Recently, one media outlet raised the suggestion of government price controls.  Generally, seen as a bad idea, none-the-less in this inflationary environment, some may perceive value from an action of this kind.

    Additionally, in the current environment some politicians favor cancelling the gasoline tax at both the state and federal levels.  This might beg the question, if these taxes can be abated, why are they in place anyway?

    In 1971, President Nixon implemented price and wage controls.   Some saw this as an election ploy and if so, it worked as he was reelected.  In 2008, the free market Republican George W. Bush stated that sometimes you have to, “abandon free‐​market principles to save the free‐​market system.”  WHAT?

    Elected politicians often think they know more about running companies and economies than those who actually do.  Printing money and regulating commercial processes that they know nothing about, usually in the name of the people who may have put them in office.  Since most of these individuals do not have a working knowledge of the economy, is it any wonder that they bugger things up when they insert themselves?

    And Now!

    Self imposed, inflation is now higher than it has been since the 1970s.  Blamed on a third world country invading its neighbor, leadership states, I “can’t do much” about gasoline prices.  Need I say, malarkey!  The world is awash with ‘clean’ fossil fuels; societies just choose not to use them effectively.

    The concept of an Energy Basket is well defined and depending on geographical location, and need requirements any or all can be used as economically feasible.  Moreover, the concept of Energy Transition is not new.

    In  1993,  Theodore Modis published this diagram in his peer reviewed work, Technological Substitutions in the Computer Industry whereby he presented a technology substitution model that both energy and silicon mapped to very well.

    While renewables were not included in the model, readers will get the point that energy transition has always been an on going process.

    We further discussed this process in our 2015 book, Structural Dynamics: Foundation of Next Generation Management Science.  We defined, Structural Dynamics “the morphology or patterns of motion towards process equilibrium of interpersonal systems.”  In other words the nexus of structure and process whereby markets seek equilibrium if only for a time.

    Markets drive technology substitution.  Only when the economics of new energy sources are acceptable does the ‘take up’ move quickly.

    Volckerism

    Tough Love by the Fed kicked Stagflation in the gut and yes it hurt the US economy for years, but it saved the country from a worse fate.  From the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, “On Oct. 6, 1979, Fed Chairman Paul Volcker took dramatic steps to rein in the runaway inflation that had been sapping the strength of our economy since the mid-1960s.  Without his bold change in monetary policy and his determination to stick with it through several painful years, the U.S. economy would have continued its downward spiral.  By reversing the misguided policies of his predecessors, Volcker set the table for the long economic expansions of the 1980s and 1990s.”

    In 1965, the inflation rate was one percent.  By 1980, it had hit 14 percent.  Per Chairman Volcker’s statement, both Nixon and Carter implemented price controls with catastrophic effects on the nation.

    The Heavy Hand

    This  is not a piece on fiscal or monetary policy, rather it is meant as a wake up call from someone who lived through that period.  Distorted markets always correct, often rapidly and harshly.  The Great Depression comes to mind as well, as the Dotcom Bubble, Financial Crisis of  2008, etc.

    Those interested in the details and theory of human behavior in this period can follow up with the cited materials as well as a wealth of knowledge on  the subject of price controls.

    Bottom line, price controls did not work.  Markets became distorted.  Moreover, easy credit (very low interest rate) transformed to expensive credit (high interest rate) and eventually this painful process negatively transformed the marketplace in ways most contemporary readers have never known their whole life.

    Price controls are tempting.  It is easy to say, lets stop corporations from making obscene profits or gouging.  However, the downside negatively impacts those who need economic help the  most.

    One expects that in the coming months, especially as the election nears calls for price controls will become louder.  History has shown the results of such actions as economic suicide.

    How will your company prepare for mandated price freezes?

    For More Information

    Please note, RRI does not endorse or advocate the links to any third-party materials.  They are provided for education and entertainment only.

    For more information on Cross Cultural Engagement, check out our Cross Cultural Serious Game.  You can contact this author as well.

    References:

    Modis, Theodore. (1993). Technological Substitutions in the Computer Industry. Technological Forecasting and Social Change. 43. pp. 157-167.