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News from ICTP 116 - Features - Energy
ICTP Director explores ways in which the Centre can contribute to the global energy challenge.
Centre of Energy
Nearly everything that is worth
saying---and much that is not---has already been said about sources
of energy and the rising thirst for it. Yet, for all the clutter
of conversation, a few pragmatic points may be worth some consideration.
And, within ICTP, it is worth considering what contributions the
Centre can make to a more secure energy future for both the South
and North.
It is useful to keep in mind a time horizon; the end of the 21st
century may be a useful target. I would like to separate the century
into its two halves because we can be fairly certain about the
first 50 years---and what happens in the next 50 years will depend
on how we deal with the first 50.
The world's energy needs will be growing much more steeply in
this century than at any time since the beginning of the industrial
revolution. Two factors will contribute to this trend. The percentage
of people who use little energy today is likely to use more tomorrow.
At present, about 4.5 billion people use less than the world's
average and 1.6 billion of them don't have access to electricity.
If they all catch up to the present average, the new average use
of energy will rise by 60 percent. And if the world's population
increases---as it certainly will---by some 50 percent, say, by
2050, we will be using twice the energy we do now. Moreover, additional
energy needs are likely to emerge---for example, in seeking to
meet future water needs via, say, desalination.
Better energy conservation practices will no doubt play some role.
The improvement in energy efficiency achieved over the last 50
years is impressive, and it will be possible to push it further.
However, no one thinks that conservation will be the answer to
the world's increasing energy needs.
What then are the options?
Oil wells will dry up. The recent doubling of oil prices has already
damaged the economy of developing countries (and the economy of
industrialised countries too, but the fundamentals of their economies
are in better shape). Yet, it is only a harbinger of tougher times
to come---both economically and politically. The world economy
is so strongly conditioned on oil that it cannot switch rapidly
to anything else. As long as the last well remains in operation,
oil will be the preferred source of energy. Thus it will have
to remain in the mix of our energy portfolio in the foreseeable
future.
Complete reversion to coal (leaving aside the issue of its abundance)
will not be possible because of greenhouse effects. Carbon sequestration
may be a solution, but it is a long way on the horizon and its
consequences are unclear.
As for fusion, a commercial power plant is at least 50 years away,
even if everything with ITER, the international fusion project
headquartered in Cadarache, France, works according to plan and
additional up-scaling occurs as expected. ITER will take 20 or
so years to work fully and at least one intermediate generation
of fusion plants will be needed before commercial success becomes
a reality. Fusion will play no role in the next 50 years---though
it may play an important role in the subsequent 50. Thus fusion
research should be supported.
Some people think that hydrogen is the future, while others do
not. According to experts, there are basic problems with hydrogen
as an energy source at the thermodynamic, conceptual and practical
levels. One should not forget the principal point that hydrogen,
though an excellent carrier of energy, is not an energy source.
Hydrogen may play some role, but not the dominant one that fossil
fuels now do.
Nuclear fission today supplies about 16 percent of the world's
energy needs (but the distribution is geographically lopsided).
To bring it to 80 percent or so---roughly as in France now---one
will have to increase the number of reactors five-fold. Let's
forget for the moment about the lack of technological know-how
in many countries (despite valiant efforts by the International
Atomic Energy Agency, IAEA), the limited sources of uranium, and
difficult reprocessing and storage issues associated with spent
fuel. Just consider, instead, what it would be like to dot the
world's landscape with five times as many reactors as now. This
step will likely increase the risk of accidents, magnify security
issues many fold, and exacerbate the concern for proliferation
of nuclear weapons. Yet, nuclear fission will have to play a moderately
stronger role than now. Lately, its acceptability has increased
because of the absence of greenhouse effects.
In summary, looking towards the horizon for the first 50 years,
oil will become less available, the use of coal cannot increase
dramatically without doing interminable damage to the environment,
fusion will play no role, hydrogen will remain a marginal energy
source, and nuclear fission can be expected to increase slightly.
We have no choice but to add a significant fraction of renewable
energies to the mix of oil and nuclear. Perhaps a roughly equal
mix of the three is a viable scenario for the future.
But renewable energies face several formidable obstacles---the
principal technical one being that it is too much in the form
of a 'retail' commodity. Some energy consumption is indeed retail,
and there is no reason why, especially in much of Asia, Australia,
Africa, and the Mediterranean, some household energy cannot come
from the sun, or why wind energy cannot be harnessed more effectively
in countries like Morocco. Equally importantly, one needs to work,
with the same level of seriousness as with fusion, on large-scale
solar power plants. This is a high-tech and non-trivial challenge.
To repeat, it would seem that a reasonable goal for 2050 is a
three-way mix of fossil fuels, renewable energy and nuclear fission,
roughly in equal proportions, with others joining as minor partners.
By 2050, we will surely know more about such things as fusion,
hydrogen and the technology of renewable energy (in which category
solar energy will figure dominantly), and we will have to readapt
ourselves to a new equilibrium point for 2100.
Continual evaluation and adaptation are the keys to a more secure
energy future. If today's developing countries follow the same
technological path as industrialised countries followed during
their ascension, there will not be adequate resources to meet
the energy needs of the world. Developing countries, some of which
have the 'luxury' of taking a fresh look at the energy crunch,
should look for alternative approaches. This requires clear awareness
of the issues involved, deep understanding of potential technologies
and, as a precondition, much research and knowledge of science.
I cannot argue in favour of science any more strongly than by
stating that it is a matter of survival: an increasing number
of problems will depend on science for their solutions.
ICTP was created under the umbrella of IAEA and has been concerned
with energy from the very beginning. The Centre's first long-term
programme in 1964, in fact, focussed on fusion energy. Since then,
ICTP has had a sustained interest in renewable energies. In total,
the Centre has organised some 30 courses on this topic, many of
them in cooperation with IAEA. Some 2000 scientists worldwide
have taken part and are now involved directly in renewable energy
projects in their own countries. Furthermore, through our Training
and Research in Italian Laboratories (TRIL) programme, we have
supported some 400 postdoctoral scientists to come to Italy and
work on projects of renewable energy. This represents a substantial
investment on ICTP's part, and strongly indicates that we recognise
the seriousness of the scientific issues involved, and that we
are committed to addressing them.
The ITER programme soon to be set up in Cadarache, France, is
a one-of-its-kind effort, not to be replicated anytime soon anywhere
in the world. If our goal is to provide a viable source of fusion
energy to the world at large, it is important that people from
needy countries be involved in the enterprise from the beginning.
It is unrealistic to think that the fusion programme will be perfected
by a few chosen countries, while others stay away until the technology
is ready to be transferred, somehow, to those in need. Only a
few countries can be principal partners, but some minimal access
must be available, right from the start, to capable scientists
from developing countries. We have to start building appropriate
groups that can act, when needed, as the nuclei for fostering
this new technology.
There is no better institution than ICTP to lead this effort.
Because scientists from a large number of countries visit ICTP,
they can in principle make connections to ITER through ICTP.
As one measure, ICTP could run, in cooperation with ITER and IAEA,
courses on fusion-related issues in which scientists from developing
countries participate. As a second measure, ICTP could develop
a remote access and control facility for the ITER experiment,
through which scientists from developing countries could participate
in the enterprise without physically being at Cadarache. One can
similarly imagine developing, through ICTP, a network of scientists
to work on the analysis of data coming from ITER.
The world, I would think, would welcome such an initiative because
if we do not face our energy challenges together, the prospects
of meeting them successfully at all will dim considerably.
K.R. Sreenivasan
Director, ICTP