Archive for category Emissions

The road to low emissions

It is not hard to realize that the “road to low emissions” is riddled with detours, forks, false road signs and dead ends … or in Barak Obama’s words, “ … setbacks and false starts …”. However, it seems that it will take innovation and adoption on two fronts, engineering and policy, for us to succeed in our endeavour to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

In my readings, I find myself inundated with both incremental progress and major breakthroughs in clean energy designs and conservation. For example, the world’s largest working hydroelectric wave energy device called the Oyster has been officially launched in Scotland. The device, stationed at the European Marine Energy Center (EMEC) Billia Croo site near Stromness, was installed this year and is, at present, the world’s only hydroelectric wave energy device, which is producing power.


Fast Tube by Casper

Also, the company Stratkraft, in Norway, continues to test the principle of harnessing osmosis to produce energy anywhere that salt water and fresh water meet. The prototype osmotic power plant has two separate chambers, one with fresh water and the other with seawater, divided by an artificial membrane. The pressure created by the salt molecules pulling the fresh water through the membrane, is then utilized in a power-generating turbine.


Fast Tube by Casper

However, where I see less changes and innovation is in the “Policy and Public Perception” arena. It is interesting to note that in most countries the “unlimited GDP growth” mindset seems to dominate all policy decision-making, despite the financial crisis we have had that most economies are sluggishly climbing out of. Somehow we all seem oblivious to the fact that all clean energy technological advancement can become limiting again if population growth and consumerism are allowed to go back to the pre-financial crisis levels.

Will governments rise up to the challenge of innovating new policies that will move us towards stable communities, living simply (i.e. less to spend due to higher prices imposed on luxury goods), confronting population growth and targeting job stability (as a function of age, gender, disability, health care and security benefits). No doubt, there are new ideas that are in the pipeline, new legislation being drafted, introduced, and debated on a global scale, such as the emissions trading scheme. However, progress is slow.

It seems there has never been a challenging time for our national leaders in our time like right now. We also need to show our support in our readiness to embrace change. If we resist change, the politicians will fail and technological advancement will plateau at some point. Policy and public perception will need to evolve in tandem with technological advancement in clean energy, if we are to succeed in lowering emissions. It sure is a long road to low emissions!

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What a price to pay, learning from doing: emissions trading

One of the things I find hard to conceptualise about emissions control of greenhouse gases, in particular, carbon emissions, is how a carbon market will work to reduce emissions. By now lots of people have at least heard about the potential catastrophic events that may result from climate change or global warming, if we continue to emit carbon at our current rate. Somehow there has to be a cultural shift that would see emitting less carbon by using low energy efficient home appliances, driving electric or hybrid-electric vehicles with fewer emissions and so on.

I cannot understand why governments cannot just fix simple carbon tax systems that would hit businesses and homes almost immediately and instill a change in culture. I am sure the advocates of emissions trading, would have a thousand reasons as to why carbon tax systems would be an unfair i.e. difficult to apply fairly between different polluters. I would want to think though that none of the countries in the world have perfect taxation systems, which is why they are so complex, having been revised repeatedly by different governments attempting to achieve equity. Anyway, in trying to understand the workings of an emissions trading scheme and how it can be better than just a simple carbon tax, I did an extensive literature review which left me more confused than I was before.

Somehow, I am made to believe that with emissions trading, we are all learning from doing. Is that a good thing? How about a carbon tax in the interim, and learn about emissions trading by computer simulation, until such time when are confident to implement an emissions trading scheme that works. So rather than learning from doing, we minimise risk by learning from computer simulation, with carbon taxation as an interim measure. It might be that we may never move away from a carbon tax system, or we might have a mix of emissions trading and carbon taxation.

In fact look at this game, called Bulla Exchange®, (http://www.chameleonisland.co.nz/Household-Games/Bulla-Exchange/Carbon-Investments), that simulates emissions trading and is played over 7 days. On the website there is a calculator for options and futures contracts used by the players to assess their buying and selling potential for permits, driven by a carbon price that changes on a daily basis. The contracts can be written by the players in a mix that the players are comfortable with over a maturation period of anywhere between 1 – 7 days. There is a histogram of carbon prices on the Chameleon Island website that shows you the fortnightly fluctuations, with the daily updates. The game is initiated by issuance of permits through grandfathering, and a half hour card playing, between 2 players that gives the parties an opportunity to acquire better energy efficient technologies. After that its 7 days days wait whilst each player tries to either purchase/sell permits as their situation allows. The winner ends up with more money and enough permits to cover their pollution.

Maybe Chameleon Island should consider Bulla Exchange 2.0 with permit auctioning such that we can compare and see the difference it makes. Also more games on emissions trading would provide us with such an insight that may prevent us from committing to untested, and maybe seriously flawed systems that in the end would not achieve emissions reduction.

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