Wind and wave energies are not renewable after all

   - 30 March 2011 by *Mark
Buchanan*<http://www.newscientist.com/search?rbauthors=Mark+Buchanan>
   - Magazine issue 2806 <http://www.newscientist.com/issue/2806>. *Subscribe
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   - For similar stories, visit the *Energy and
Fuels*<http://www.newscientist.com/topic/energy-fuels>
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*Editorial: *"The sun is our only truly renewable energy
source<http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21028062.500-the-sun-is-our-only-truly-renewable-energy-source.html>
"

*Build enough wind farms to replace fossil fuels and we could do as much
damage to the climate as greenhouse global warming*

WITNESS a howling gale or an ocean storm, and it's hard to believe that
humans could make a dent in the awesome natural forces that created them.
Yet that is the provocative suggestion of one physicist who has done the
sums.

He concludes that it is a mistake to assume that energy sources like wind
and waves are truly renewable. Build enough wind farms to replace fossil
fuels, he says, and we could seriously deplete the energy available in the
atmosphere, with consequences as dire as severe climate change.

Axel Kleidon of the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry in Jena,
Germany, says that efforts to satisfy a large proportion of our energy needs
from the wind and waves will sap a significant proportion of the usable
energy available from the sun. In effect, he says, we will be depleting
green energy sources. His logic rests on the laws of thermodynamics, which
point inescapably to the fact that only a fraction of the solar energy
reaching Earth can be exploited to generate energy we can use.

When energy from the sun reaches our atmosphere, some of it drives the winds
and ocean currents, and evaporates water from the ground, raising it high
into the air. Much of the rest is dissipated as heat, which we cannot
harness.

At present, humans use only about 1 part in 10,000 of the total energy that
comes to Earth from the sun. But this ratio is misleading, Kleidon says.
Instead, we should be looking at how much useful energy - called "free"
energy in the parlance of thermodynamics - is available from the global
system, and our impact on that.

Humans currently use energy at the rate of 47 terawatts (TW) or trillions of
watts, mostly by burning fossil fuels and harvesting farmed plants, Kleidon
calculates in a paper to be published in *Philosophical Transactions of the
Royal Society* <http://arxiv.org/abs/1103.2014>. This corresponds to roughly
5 to 10 per cent of the free energy generated by the global system.

"It's hard to put a precise number on the fraction," he says, "but we
certainly use more of the free energy than [is used by] all geological
processes." In other words, we have a greater effect on Earth's energy
balance than all the earthquakes, volcanoes and tectonic plate movements put
together.

Radical as his thesis sounds, it is being taken seriously. "Kleidon is at
the forefront of a new wave of research, and the potential prize is huge,"
says Peter Cox, who studies climate system dynamics at the University of
Exeter, UK. "A theory of the thermodynamics of the Earth system could help
us understand the constraints on humankind's sustainable use of resources."
Indeed, Kleidon's calculations have profound implications for attempts to
transform our energy supply.

Of the 47 TW of energy that we use, about 17 TW comes from burning fossil
fuels. So to replace this, we would need to build enough sustainable energy
installations to generate at least 17 TW. And because no technology can ever
be perfectly efficient, some of the free energy harnessed by wind and wave
generators will be lost as heat. So by setting up wind and wave farms, we
convert part of the sun's useful energy into unusable heat.

"Large-scale exploitation of wind energy will inevitably leave an imprint in
the atmosphere," says Kleidon. "Because we use so much free energy, and more
every year, we'll deplete the reservoir of energy." He says this would
probably show up first in wind farms themselves, where the gains expected
from massive facilities just won't pan out as the energy of the Earth system
is depleted.

Using a model of global circulation, Kleidon found that the amount of energy
which we can expect to harness from the wind is reduced by a factor of 100
if you take into account the depletion of free energy by wind farms. It
remains theoretically possible to extract up to 70 TW globally, but doing so
would have serious consequences.

Although the winds will not die, sucking that much energy out of the
atmosphere in Kleidon's model changed precipitation, turbulence and the
amount of solar radiation reaching the Earth's surface. The magnitude of the
changes was comparable to the changes to the climate caused by doubling
atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide (*Earth System Dynamics*, DOI:
10.5194/esd-2-1-2011 <http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/esd-2-1-2011>).

"This is an intriguing point of view and potentially very important," says
meteorologist Maarten Ambaum of the University of Reading, UK. "Human
consumption of energy is substantial when compared to free energy production
in the Earth system. If we don't think in terms of free energy, we may be a
bit misled by the potential for using natural energy resources."

This by no means spells the end for renewable energy, however.
Photosynthesis also generates free energy, but without producing waste heat.
Increasing the fraction of the Earth covered by light-harvesting vegetation
- for example, through projects aimed at "greening the deserts" - would mean
more free energy would get stored. Photovoltaic solar cells can also
increase the amount of free energy gathered from incoming radiation, though
there are still major obstacles to doing this sustainably (see "Is solar
electricity the
answer?")<http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21028063.300-wind-and-wave-energies-are-not-renewable-after-all.html?full=true#bx280633B1>
.

In any event, says Kleidon, we are going to need to think about these
fundamental principles much more clearly than we have in the past. "We have
a hard time convincing engineers working on wind power that the ultimate
limitation isn't how efficient an engine or wind farm is, but how much
useful energy nature can generate." As Kleidon sees it, the idea that we can
harvest unlimited amounts of renewable energy from our environment is as
much of a fantasy as a perpetual motion machine.
Is solar electricity the answer?

A solar energy industry large enough to make a real impact will require
cheap and efficient solar cells. Unfortunately, many of the most efficient
of today's thin-film solar cells require rare elements such as indium and
tellurium, whose global supplies could be depleted within
decades<http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn16550-why-sustainable-power-is-unsustainable.html>
.

For photovoltaic technology to be sustainable, it will have to be based on
cheaper and more readily available materials such as zinc and copper, says
Kasturi Chopra of the Indian Institute of Technology, New Delhi.

Researchers at IBM showed last year that they could produce solar cells from
these 
elements<http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adma.200904155/abstract;jsessionid=A766B41341BD4059B74B2F28AE9B8A80.d03t03?systemMessage=Wiley+Online+Library+will+be+disrupted+2nd+Apr+from+10-12+BST+for+monthly+maintenance>
along
with tin, sulphur and the relatively rare element selenium. These
"kesterite" cells already have an efficiency comparable with commercially
competitive cells, and it may one day be possible to do without the
selenium.

Even if solar cells like this are eventually built and put to work, they
will still contribute to global warming. That is because they convert only a
small fraction of the light that hits them, and absorb most of the
rest, converting
it to heat that spills into the
environment<http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20026845.200-heat-we-emit-could-warm-the-earth.html>.
Sustainable solar energy may therefore require cells that reflect the light
they cannot use.

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