Last week there was quite a stir as a big report came out in Energy
& Environmental Science titled: 100% clean and renewable wind, water, and
sunlight (WWS) all-sector energy roadmaps for the 50 United States
(100% WWS USA hereafter). The report was picked up by all the normal sources
and given a lot of play in the press. It being 2015, the paper even has an
interactive website at http://thesolutionsproject.org/.
Now as regular readers of my blog know, I did an analysis of what it would take
to get British
Columbia to a 100 % Fossil-fuel free state and the results were not pretty.
I calculated that it would require the energy produced from the equivalent of approximately
12 Site C Dams to get us there and that did not seem terribly promising.
Needless to say the idea the United States could achieve a 100% fossil fuel
free status was very appealing to me but I was skeptical. Many of the tweets I
read made it out to sound relatively simple but one of the bloggers I have come
to trust (David Roberts at Vox.com) suggested
that it might not be quite that easy. He likened it to a World War II–scale
mobilization which sounded about right. That being said, I decided to dig a bit
deeper into the numbers to see for myself.
The first thing I noticed about the paper was that the names
of the first two (lead?) authors (Jacobson and Delucchi) were very familiar to
me. For those unfamiliar with these two, Jacobson and Delucchi prepared a
similarly-themed pair of papers titled “Providing
all global energy with wind, water, and solar power”, Part I
and Part
II (called 100% WWS World Part I and 100% WWS World Part II hereafter). I had always meant to dig more deeply into
those papers and apparently I will be getting a chance to do that now because the
100% WWS USA paper relies heavily on those two papers for many of its
assumptions and raw data.
One of the most interesting features of the 100% WWS USA paper
is that it categorically shuts off the option of nuclear fission as part of the
energy mix. The basis for this dismissal is an interesting one and almost
entirely free of any legitimate concerns about nuclear energy itself. Sadly for
the casual reader, the basis for this dismissal is pretty hard to track down. The
100% WWS USA report very briefly discusses why nuclear energy has been
summarily dismissed and does so by referring the readers back to two documents.
One is the 100% WWS World Part I paper (above) and the second is a
paper prepared by a similar batch of authors lead by Jacobson and Delucchi (Examining
the feasibility of converting New York State’s all-purpose energy
infrastructure to one using wind, water, and sunlight hereafter 100% WWS
NYS). The inclusion of the second reference is a questionable one as the 100%
WWS NYS paper doesn’t actually provide any original analyses about nuclear power. The
sole useful reference to nuclear power simply states “Jacobson and Delucchi (2011) explain why nuclear power and coal with carbon
capture are also excluded.” Now you can probably guess what I a going to
tell you. Yes, Jacobson and Delucchi (2011) is indeed “100% WWS World Part I”. So in
the 100% WWS USA paper they cite two sources to explain why nuclear power is
not appropriate for use in the United States. Both sources represent the author’s
own work and one is simply a circular reference driving back to the other. As an
outsider it looks a lot like they are padding the impact factor of their
earlier works while making the average reader believe that their claim is
supported by multiple independent lines of research. Going back to the source (100%
WWS World Part I) we discover that the basis of the exclusion of nuclear from
the mix is discussed but its primary technical basis is derived from a single
report prepared by, yes you guessed it, Marc Jacobson and titled “Review
of solutions to global warming, air pollution, and energy security”(hereafter
Jacobson 2009).
Jacobson 2009 is worthy of an entire blog series of its own
because the best I can say is that it is an interesting paper to read. In the paper
Jacobson creates a unique scale to define which technologies would make the cut
in a future energy mix. I won’t go into detail about all the assumptions that inform
the table that I find questionable but for the interested reader I direct you
to read the paper and see for yourself. For instance Jacobson indicates that
wind energy (a truly dispersed energy source) would have the lowest physical footprint
of all potential energy sources because he calculated the footprint of a wind
power station to include only “the tower area touching the ground”. Under this
approach the Buffalo
Ridge Wind Farm in Minnesota which covers 42,800 acres, and has a direct
physical project footprint of 77 acres, would occupy less "physical space" than a small
city block. Even more amusing is the fact that he classifies wind as having the
highest “normal operating reliability” while nuclear is in the middle of the
pack. Having written a lot about wind in the last year I can state quite
comfortably that the only thing reliable about wind power is that it is
reliably absent for a large percentage of the generating year. It may be
possible to smooth out reliability by putting enough plants in enough areas to
allow for cross-connections but even that has a limited capacity to deal with
low wind scenarios (see this ref for a breakdown for
Europe). In the same section Jacobson downgrades nuclear energy’s reliability because
nuclear plants can have “unscheduled outages during heat waves”. This ignores
the realities that heat waves typically involve an absence of wind so while the
nuclear plant may have issues relating to over-demand at the same time the wind
is sitting idle completely unable to provide supply. Jacobson goes on to point
out the actual reliability statistics that indicate that nuclear is a very
reliable energy source but discounts those statistics for his subsequent data aggregation.
Jacobson compiles all his
data into a single table (Table 4) where he rates/ranks the relative energy sources in order to
demonstrate that the technologies he does not like are not viable for use. A
brief look at Table 4 shows that nuclear fails the grade due to the risk of
nuclear proliferation, some very interesting assumptions about future deaths
attributable to nuclear proliferation (threat of nuclear war), thermal pollution
from cooling tower return water (which he doesn’t really explain but assumes is
a terrible thing) and the potential for disruptions to power supply by
terrorists? Remember this paper is serving as the basis for a decision in all
his subsequent papers (including 100% WWS USA) to dismiss nuclear energy as an
alternative for future energy needs. So yes, you read that right, one of the
primary drivers for discounting the use of nuclear energy in the United Sates in
the 100% WWS USA paper includes the risk of nuclear proliferation associated
with the facilities. Apparently the USA is not a nuclear power and therefore we
run the risk of giving the Americans the bomb if we allow those scary folks in
Idaho to use nuclear power? The same goes for nuclear powers like the French, the English the Russians,
the Chinese, the Indians not to mention the entirety of the NATO alliance and
the dozens of countries that have safely used nuclear power for generations without building a bomb. Can
you imagine a more ridiculous basis for deciding to omit such a critical energy
source from the North American power grid? It is almost as if Jacobson and
Delucchi have something against the use of nuclear power and are simply looking
for an excuse to exclude it from the mix.
Admittedly, the 100% WWS World paper doesn’t rely entirely on
Jacobson’s 2009 paper to dismiss nuclear energy. It also relies on papers by
Benjamin Sovacool and Manfred Lenzen. Regular readers of my blog will remember
Benjamin Sovacool. I wrote about him in a couple posts Wind
Energy and Avian Mortality: Why Can't We get any Straight Numbers? and When
peer-review is not enough - On estimates of avian deaths attributable to coal
and nuclear facilities. He was the gent who derived an avian mortality rate
for nuclear plants across the US by extrapolating the results from four
sources where the biggest influence was actually a nearby fossil fuel plant. In
doing so he extrapolated an avian nuclear apocalypse essentially out of thin
air. I do not have time to deconstruct the Sovacool 2008 paper so I will leave that
to the folks at RationalWiki (ref) who
demonstrate that by triple counting a report by Jan Willem Storm van Leeuwen (ref) and ignoring a
number of other papers Benjamin Sovacool manages to turn nuclear energy into a
bulk emitter of carbon to be shunned. Suffice it to say that the 100% WWS World Part
I paper could have chosen any number of meta-analyses to establish the carbon
emissions of nuclear energy and the two they chose are arguably the most
egregious outliers from the peer reviewed literature.
I think I am done banging this drum. It is quite clear that
in the 100% WWS USA paper the authors did not want to include nuclear power in the
mix. Based on their previous output, that appears to have been a conscious
decision on their part. Please let me be clear here, it is not an inherently
bad decision. The authors of scientific papers often make specific decisions in order to
do interesting research. The problem, in this case, is that instead of saying
outright that they are excluding nuclear power to provide for an interesting research perspective they do
so in a manner that smears nuclear power. The same authors who
were willing to distinguish to the decimal point the percentage of energy you
would need to rely on from tidal turbines in California, were unwilling to distinguish
between the risk of nuclear proliferation based on the development of nuclear
power plants in North Sudan and those in North Dakota? Going down the list, virtually
all of the concerns from the Jacobson 2009 paper are made irrelevant in a US
context and yet they form the basis for excluding nuclear power in the 100% WWS
USA paper.
I see this blog post is getting a bit long. I had planned on
addressing the distressing way the 100% WWS USA paper deals with rare earth
metals in this post, as well, but I think that should be the topic for a future
blog post instead.
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