Steve Koonin
Steve Koonin
Steve Koonin
14 January 2010 2
Outline
Global drivers
Energy Sustainability
sustainability
14 January 2010 3
Global drivers
Energy consumption has increased
with development
Energy demand and GDP per capita (1980-2004)
400
US
350
300
Primary Energy per capita (GJ)
Australia
250
Russia France
Japan
200 S. Korea UK
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Calories increase with GDP
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As does meat consumption
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Calories increase with time
World
Developing
Calories
countries
Industrialized
countries
Transition
countries
Year
Source: FAO report, “Diet, Nutrition and the Prevention of Chronic Diseases ,” 2003
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Population growth a second driver
10,000
9,000
8,000
7,000
6,000
millions
5,000
4,000
3,000
2,000
1,000
-
1950 1970 1990 2010 2030 2050
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US= 4% people and ~20% consumption
Percentage of US to World
Impacts both
global resources
and US position
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Thomas Malthus (1789)
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Energy Sustainability
Increase in global energy use
Non-OECD countries account for 82% of the
44% increase in global energy use to 2030
678
637
596
552
Quadrillion Btu
508 59%
472
49%
51% 41%
$thousand/person
Million Btu/person
Energy/person
GDP/person
36% 28%
Coal
23%
27%
Natural gas
5,000
Reserves & Resources (bnboe)
4,000 Unconventional
Unconventional
3,000
R/P Ratio
Proven 164 yrs.
Yet to Find
2,000 Yet to Find
1,000
Proven R/P Ratio R/P Ratio
Proven
41 yrs. 67 yrs.
0
Oil Gas Coal
Source: World Energy Assessment 2001, HIS, WoodMackenzie, BP Stat Review 2005, BP estimates
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Nuclear power increase
China and India account for 48% of the
world increase in nuclear power
North America OECD Europe
180 OECD Asia Non-OECD Europe/Eurasia
China India
Rest of World
132 132
127
121 121
120 115
Gigawatts
88
74 71
67
60 49 54
42
22 20 23
15
7 10 9
3
0
2006 2015 2030
14 November 2009 19
Wind and water power
Hydropower supplies 54% of the world
4.0
increase in renewable generation; wind 3.8
provides 33%
2.9
3.0 2.7
Other Renewables
Trillion Kilowatthours
2.2
1.0
Hydroelectric
0.0
2006 2015 2030 2006 2015 2030
OECD Non-OECD
Source: EIA International Energy Outlook 2009, Reference Case
14 November 2009 20
Global energy challenges result
from significant imbalances
Energy poverty
Imbalance in energy access
Energy security
Imbalance in geographic distribution of resources
Greenhouse gas emissions
Anthropogenic perturbation of the carbon cycle
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Distribution of crude reserves
Oil is a global market, OPEC is 40% of global supply,
and reserves are geographically concentrated
Middle East 746
Africa 117
Eurasia 99
Asia 34
Europe 14
33
31
29 64%
53%
47% 36%
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Water and Food
Sustainability
Water Sustainability
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Global water resources
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What is water used for?
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Runoff change to 2050
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Food Sustainability
Cereal
4.6% Pasture & Range
23.7%
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Animal protein production rising
World Animal Protein Production, 1961-2007
120
100
Pork
80
Poultry
Million Tons
Beef
60
40
Farmed Fish
20
Sheep and Goats
0
1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010
Source: FAO
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Food yield changes to 2050
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Energy/water/food nexus is
sensitive to climate
Water for power production Globally, more water is used for
food and electricity production than
Power to move water is used directly
Food and biofuels/biomass
Energy, water for agriculture
Agriculture and land use
(deforestation)
Climate change and
agriculture/water
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Water-food interactions
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Global resource Sustainability
There is (or can be) enough to meet demand
Economic, policy, social factors intertwine
Technology can help, but not sufficient
“Graceful” supply curves are a help
Conservation, new resources, substitution
Best policies are not always obvious
Systems effects, diverse interests
Informed and educated populace/decision makers
essential
Trends are slow to develop, long to fix
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Energy change is slow without deliberate
acceleration
US energy supply since 1850
100%
90%
80%
Renewables
70% Nuclear
60% Gas
50% Oil
40% Hydro
Coal
30%
Wood
20%
10%
0%
1850 1880 1910 1940 1970 2000
Source: EIA
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IT moves much faster than energy
100%
90%
80%
Renewables
70%
Nuclear
60% Gas
50% Oil
Hydro
40%
Coal
30% Wood
20%
10%
0%
Sales of Personal Audio/Video since 2000
1850 1880 1910 1940 1970 2000
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Because energy innovation is different
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High-leverage technologies that can
contribute to useful change
Average Indiana corn yield
Biology/biotech dramatically increased
Esp plant, microbial
Materials science
Simulation, synthesis,
characterization
Data & understanding
Physical, societal
Diagnosis, management,
prediction
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sustainability
The world’s GDP is unbalanced
Contributions from 4 selected areas
US
EU
China
India
Hungrier
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US manufacturing jobs
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Questions?/Comments?