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| Richard Heinberg. |
Richard Heinberg is an American journalist and educator and
has written extensively on energy, economic, and ecological issues, including
oil depletion.
He is the author of thirteen books and serves as the senior
fellow at the Post Carbon Institute.
Along with David Fridley and Post Carbon Institute staff has
written and just published “Our Renewable Future”.
He says”
The process was a pleasure: everyone involved (including the
twenty or so experts we interviewed or consulted) was delightful to work with,
and I personally learned an enormous amount along the way. But we also
encountered a prickly challenge in striking a tone that would inform but not
alienate the book’s potential audience.
As just about everyone knows, there are gaping chasms
separating the worldviews of fossil fuel promoters, nuclear power advocates,
and renewable energy supporters. But crucially, even among those who disdain
fossils and nukes, there is a seemingly unbridgeable gulf between those who say
that solar and wind power have unstoppable momentum and will eventually bring
with them lower energy prices and millions of jobs, and those who say these
intermittent energy sources are inherently incapable of sustaining modern
industrial societies and can make headway only with massive government
subsidies.
We didn’t set out to support or undermine either of the
latter two messages. Instead, we wanted to see for ourselves what renewable
energy sources are capable of doing, and how the transition toward them is
going. We did start with two assumptions of our own (based on prior research
and analysis), about which we are perfectly frank: one way or another fossil
fuels are on their way out, and nuclear power is not a realistic substitute.
That leaves renewable solar and wind, for better or worse, as society’s primary
future energy sources.
In our work on this project, we used only the best publicly
available data and we explored as much of the relevant peer-reviewed literature
as we could identify. But that required sorting and evaluation: Which data are
important? And which studies are more credible and useful? Some researchers
claim that solar PV electricity has an energy return on the energy invested in
producing it (EROEI) of about 20:1, roughly on par with electricity from some
fossil sources, while others peg that return figure at less than 3:1. This wide
divergence in results of course has enormous implications for the ultimate
economic viability of solar technology. Some studies say a full transition to
renewable energy will be cheap and easy, while others say it will be extremely
difficult or practically impossible. We tried to get at the assumptions that
give rise to these competing claims, assertions, and findings, and that lead
either to renewables euphoria or gloom. We wanted to judge for ourselves
whether those assumptions are realistic.
That’s not the same as simply seeking a middle ground
between optimism and pessimism. Renewable energy is a complicated subject, and
a fact-based, robust assessment of it should be honest and informative; its aim
should be to start new and deeper conversations, not merely to shout down either
criticism or boosterism.
‘Unfortunately, the debate
is already quite polarized and politicized. As a result, realism and nuance may
not have much of a constituency.’
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| Our Renewable Future - Richard Heinberg and David Fridley. |
This is especially the case because our ultimate conclusion
was that, while renewable energy can indeed power industrial societies, there
is probably no credible future scenario in which humanity will maintain current
levels of energy use (on either a per capita or total basis). Therefore current
levels of resource extraction, industrial production, and consumption are
unlikely to be sustained—much less can they perpetually grow. Further, getting
to an optimal all-renewable energy future will require hard work, investment,
adaptation, and innovation on a nearly unprecedented scale. We will be changing
more than our energy sources; we’ll be transforming both the ways we use energy
and the amounts we use. Our ultimate success will depend on our ability to dramatically
reduce energy demand in industrialized nations, shorten supply chains,
electrify as much usage as possible, and adapt to economic stasis at a lower
overall level of energy and materials throughput. Absent widespread informed
popular support, the political roadblocks to such a project will be
overwhelming.
That’s not what most people want to hear. And therefore,
frankly, we need some help getting this analysis out to the sorts of people who
might benefit from it. Post Carbon Institute’s communications and media
outreach capabilities are limited. Meanwhile the need for the energy transition
is urgent, and the longer it is delayed, the less desirable the outcome will
be. It is no exaggeration to say that the transition from climate-damaging and
depleting fossil fuels to renewable energy sources is the central cause of our
times. And it will demand action from each and every one of us.
Check out the new website - “Our Renewable Future.”


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