HR: 0800h
AN: U21E-03 [Abstracts]
TI: A Comprehensive Plan for Global Energy Revolution
AU: * Blees, T
EM: nonf@pacbell.net
AF: Science Council for Global Initiatives, 606 Adams Street, Number 7, Davis, CA 95616,
United States
AB:
There is no dearth of information regarding the grave crises faced by humanity in the 21st century. There is
also growing consensus that the wholesale burning of fossil fuels must come to an end, either because of
climate change or other still-salient reasons such as air pollution or major conflicts over dwindling reserves of
cheaply recoverable oil and gas resources. At the same time, global demographics predict with disquieting
certainty a world with up to 9 or 10 billion souls by mid-century. The vast expansion of energy consumption that
this population represents, along with further increases in already-unacceptable levels of atmospheric carbon
dioxide from fossil fuel burning, demands that we quickly develop almost limitless sources of clean,
economical power.
What is sorely lacking in the public debate are realistic solutions. Expanding wind and solar generating
capacity is an important near-term goal, but neither of these technologies represents a viable solution for
generating base load power at the vast scales that will be required. Energy efficiency measures are likewise
well-directed, but the combination of rising population along with increasingly energy-intensive economic
activity by the large fraction of Earth's current population residing in developing nations suggests that absolute
energy demand will continue to rise even with radically improved energy efficiency. Fortunately we have the
technologies available to provide virtually unlimited clean energy, and to utilize and recycle our resources so
that everyone can improve their standard of living.
The Integral Fast Reactor (IFR), developed at the Argonne National Laboratory in the 80's and 90's and
currently championed by General Electric, is a technology that fills the bill on every count, and then some. IFRs
are safe, environmentally clean, economical, and free of conflict over fuel supply. IFRs can safely consume as
fuel the nuclear waste from the current installed base of light-water reactors, as well as utilize the world's
prodigious stockpiles of depleted uranium to supply all of humanity's energy needs for hundreds of years. Not
only will IFR operations produce no greenhouse gas emissions, but even their construction will create several
times less emissions per megawatt than wind and solar projects. Commercial development of zero-emission
energy carriers for vehicle transport (such as hydrogen or boron) can assure that we efficiently translate IFR-
generated power to our transportation infrastructure while eliminating the choking pollution of the world's ever-
expanding vehicle fleet.
If we make the decisions that must be made to deploy these new technologies, we stand at the threshhold of a
post-scarcity era even as the starkness of our population dilemma would seem to indicate the opposite. Here
is the blueprint for that new era, a comprehensive plan to provide limitless clean energy that can be
implemented at less expense than taking a business-as-usual approach.
DE: 6620 Science policy (0485)
SC: Union [U]
MN: 2009 Joint Assembly