Landmark
Energy Policy Study Points the Way to U.S.
Energy Future without Fossil Fuels or Nuclear
Power |
Protecting
Climate Will Require Essentially Complete Elimination of
U.S. Carbon Dioxide Emissions by 2050
At the G-8 summit in
Germany in June 2007, President Bush promised to
"consider seriously" the European Union goal of cutting
greenhouse gas emissions sufficiently to limit global
temperature rise to about 4 degrees Fahrenheit. A new
study concludes that the United States could eliminate
almost all of its carbon dioxide emissions by the year
2050. It also concludes that it is possible to do so
without the use of nuclear power. The landmark study,
Carbon-Free and Nuclear-Free: A Roadmap for U.S. Energy
Policy, was produced as
a joint project of the
Nuclear Policy Research Institute and the
Institute for Energy and Environmental Research.
"A technological revolution has been brewing in the last
few years, so it won't cost an arm and a leg to
eliminate both CO2 emissions and nuclear power," said
Dr. Arjun Makhijani, author of the study and president
of the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research.
"We can solve the problems of oil imports, nuclear
proliferation as it is linked to nuclear power, and
carbon dioxide emissions simultaneously if we are bold
enough."
The "Roadmap" concludes that the United States can
achieve a zero-CO2 economy without increasing the
fraction of Gross Domestic Product devoted to lighting,
heating, cooling, transportation, and all the other
things for which we use energy. The fraction was about 8
percent in 2005. Net U.S. oil imports can be eliminated
in about twenty-five years or less, the study estimated.
"The climate crisis has put the earth in the intensive
care unit," said Dr. Helen Caldicott, President of NPRI
and a physician who has long advocated elimination of
nuclear weapons and nuclear power. "We must respond to
this acute clinical crisis and act today to save the
planet, without resorting to nuclear power, which will
aggravate our problems. Dr. Makhijani's report is
essential reading for all who care about our future."
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has
estimated that a global reduction of 50 to 85 percent in
CO2 emissions is needed to limit the temperature rise to
less than about 4 degrees Fahrenheit. If emissions are
allocated equitably, in view of the greater historical
and present emissions of the United States and other
Western countries, the Roadmap estimates that the United
States will have to eliminate 88 to 96 percent of its
CO2 emissions. The United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change, a treaty that the United States has
ratified, places a greater responsibility on developed
countries to reduce their emissions in view of
historical and present inequities.
According to the Roadmap, North Dakota, Texas, Kansas,
South Dakota, Montana, and Nebraska
each have wind energy
potential greater than the electricity produced by all
103 U.S. commercial nuclear power plants. Solar energy
is even more abundant - solar cells installed on
rooftops and over parking lots can provide most of the
U.S. electricity supply. Recent advances in lithium-ion
batteries are likely to make plug-in hybrid cars
economical in the next few years.
"Plug-in hybrids should become the standard-issue car
for governments and corporations in the next five years.
That demand will make prices come down to the point that
it can become the standard car design in the next
decade," said S. David Freeman, President, Los Angeles
Board of Harbor Commissioners and former chairman of the
Tennessee Valley Authority. "The health benefits of
eliminating fossil fuels and greatly reducing urban air
pollution will be immense. Dr. Makhijani's study also
shines a light on how we can liberate our foreign policy
from oil imports."
Mr. Freeman was the Director of the Energy Policy
Project of the Ford Foundation at the time of the Arab
oil embargo in 1973. That project's report (A
Time to Choose: America's Energy Future),
which he, Dr. Makhijani, and others co-authored, became
the foundation of U.S. energy policy in the mid- to
late-1970s.
"What is really innovative about this Roadmap is that it
combines technologies to show how to create a reliable
electricity and energy system entirely from renewable
sources of energy," said Dr. Hisham Zerriffi, Ivan Head
South/North Chair at the University of British Columbia
and an expert on distributed electricity grids. "The
United States must take action now in order to lead and
this Roadmap lays out specific steps that it should
take. The study is also remarkable in that it provides
backup plans and recommends redundancies that are
important for avoiding major missteps on the road to an
economy without zero-CO2 emissions."
The study recommends an elimination of subsidies for
nuclear power and fossil fuels, and also for biofuels
like ethanol when they are made from food crops.
"Ethanol from corn is inefficient and, at best, has only
a marginal effect on reducing greenhouse gas emissions"
said Dr. Makhijani. "Even at current production levels
it is causing inflation in food prices in the United
States and hardship for the poor in Mexico and other
countries. Biofuels can be made much more efficiently,
for instance from microalgae, on land not useful for
food."
The study recommends a "hard cap" on CO2 emissions by
large fossil fuel users (more than 100 billion Btu per
year). The cap would be reduced each year until it
reaches zero in 30 to 50 years. There would be no free
emissions allowances, no international trade of
allowances, and no offsets that would allow corporations
to emit CO2 by investing in outside projects to reduce
emissions. The emissions of smaller users would be
reduced by efficiency standards for appliances, cars,
homes, and commercial buildings.
Copies of the 23-page executive summary of the report
are available at
www.ieer.org/carbonfree. The full study will be
available for download in August 2007. It will be
published as a book by RDR Books in the fall of 2007.
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