bacaan ringan di awal pekan.
contoh kasus nya USA, tetapi baik juga disimak.

fbs

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324432404579052900100464562.html?ru=yahoo?mod=yahoo_itp


        * JOURNAL REPORTS
        * September 22, 2013, 5:17 p.m. ET
Six Myths About Renewable Energy
The impact on jobs and other assumptions that don't hold up anymore

By 
        * KEITH JOHNSON
Old ideas die hard.
The country has been debating renewable energy for decades—how much we should 
support it, what place it should have in our energy policy, how big an impact 
it actually has.

Yet many of the things we think we know about renewable energy go back to the 
earliest arguments. Many of the debating points we hear today are based on 
outdated facts and assumptions that don't hold up anymore.
So, we set out to look at a few persistent myths or beliefs held by both 
supporters and critics of renewable energy. We've focused largely on wind and 
solar power, in part because they've shown explosive growth in recent years but 
also because they are at the center of political debates over energy.
MYTH NO. 1: Renewables Are an Insignificant Source of Power
One of the most persistent criticisms of renewables is that they account for a 
fraction of the U.S. electricity system—despite years of federal subsidies and 
breakneck growth.
When looking at "newer" renewable energies such as wind and solar power, that's 
largely true. Wind accounts for about 5% of generation capacity and a little 
over 4% of U.S. electricity production, or roughly one-tenth what coal provides.
But the criticism overlooks one important point: Conventional hydroelectric 
power, such as the Hoover Dam, is also renewable energy. Taken together, 
hydroelectric and other sources—biomass, geothermal, solar and wind—combined to 
account for 12% of U.S. electricity production last year, and close to 14% so 
far this year. The entire nuclear fleet provides about 19%.
It's also important to remember the scale of the country's renewable efforts. 
The U.S. has the second-biggest electricity system in the world, accounting for 
about 20% of the entire world's generation capacity. Wind power's 5% of that 
pie is a big slice. The 60-odd gigawatts of wind power installed in the U.S. 
amounts to more electricity-generation capacity than in the entire country of 
Australia or Saudi Arabia, and as much as all of Mexico. It's about half as 
much power as in France or Brazil.
To be sure, the wind doesn't always blow. Wind farms produce only about 
one-third of their listed capacity, while a nuclear plant produces almost 100%. 
But even that discounted amount of electricity generated by U.S. wind farms is 
huge in global terms—54% of all the juice generated by Mexico, 26% of France 
and Brazil, 62% of Australia, 64% of Turkey and more than twice that of 
Switzerland.
The seemingly small share of power produced by renewable energy at the national 
level also reflects the fact that some states have a lot of green power and 
some have practically none. Texas has the biggest electricity system in the 
country, and gets 11% of its juice from renewables, nearly all from wind. New 
York and Georgia both have large power sectors, but get relatively small 
amounts from renewables.
MYTH NO. 2: Renewables Can Replace All Fossil Fuels
The flip side of critiques of renewable energy is boosterism. A handful of 
proponents describe a future where 100% of energy needs can be met affordably 
and reliably by renewables.
Focusing on electricity, researchers at the National Renewable Energy 
Laboratory tackled this question. They found that, technically, by 2050 the 
U.S. could get 80% of its electricity from renewable energy and keep the lights 
on every hour, every day, in every corner of the country. (Their study didn't 
consider a 100%-renewable scenario.)
Perhaps. But getting there would be a long, tough slog. The study found that 
the U.S. would need to install about 20,000 megawatts of renewable generating 
capacity every year for a couple of decades, gradually ramping up to about 
40,000 megawatts every year. The study found no reason to doubt the global 
renewable-energy industry's ability to eventually meet that level of 
production. What might be trickier, the study found, is finding a place to put 
all those wind farms, solar arrays and hydroelectric facilities.
Managing the big upfront capital costs of wind and solar power would be another 
obstacle. And down the road there could be another challenge: Areas with lots 
of variable power could see wholesale power prices close to zero at times. That 
would complicate the economic case for fresh investments in generation capacity 
year after year.
The U.S. would also need to virtually duplicate the entire existing network of 
transmission lines by 2050 to handle 80% renewable energy. The study notes that 
the trick would be figuring out where the lines would go, who would pay for 
them, and which state and local governments would be in charge.
In other words, there's no technical reason renewable energy can't provide 80% 
of the power in the U.S. by midcentury. But there are a host of challenges that 
would have to be met first.
MYTH NO. 3: Renewables Are Too Expensive
Forget about problems down the road. Another criticsm of renewables in the here 
and now: They're expensive ways to generate electricity.
One new, comprehensive comparison of wholesale electricity prices, in the 
Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences, concludes that coal-generated 
power costs 3 cents a kilowatt-hour; new gas plants would produce juice at 6.2 
cents; wind power costs 8 cents; and solar photovoltaic, 13.3 cents.
But there are two big issues to bear in mind. First, costs are falling 
fast—thanks largely to technological advances such as larger wind turbines and 
cheaper components for solar-power arrays—so in some places, solar and wind 
power can cost even less.
The latest price data for wind-energy power-purchase agreements, released by 
the Department of Energy last month, showed that nationwide, the price of 
wind-generated electricity fell to just over 4 cents per kilowatt-hour 
nationwide, not counting the 2.2-cent federal tax subsidy. In some regions, 
well-sited wind farms produce electricity for closer to 2 cents.
Likewise, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory just released its latest report 
on the costs of installing solar power. Costs for small-scale solar residential 
arrays fell by about 13% in the past year, driven largely by cheaper solar 
components due to a global supply glut. Utility-scale prices also fell.
There's also the question of hidden costs. Coal-fired electricity, for 
instance, has nasty side effects, including air pollution, health impacts and 
carbon-dioxide emissions that contribute to global warming (all of which 
factored into the Obama administration's proposal Friday for new limits on coal 
emissions)—and those don't show up in coal's price tag. If coal and other 
fossil fuels had to tally the total costs their use imposed on society, coal 
wouldn't be the cheapest source of electricity, and clean-burning renewables 
wouldn't look nearly so pricey.
Add all the hidden costs together, and the total cost of different power 
sources looks quite different, according to that recently published study. At 
an existing coal-fired plant, the cost goes up by 6 cents per kilowatt-hour, 
making its true cost 9 cents; at a new coal plant, it would go up by about 4 
cents to 13.2 cents. New natural-gas-fired electricity would go up by 1.3 
cents, bringing its total to 7.5 cents. But wind and solar and nuclear energy 
don't go up—because they don't cause asthma, and they don't emit carbon dioxide.
A few cautions when comparing the cost of different power sources. Gas plants 
are often used to meet peaking power demand, when they can fetch higher prices. 
Solar power also produces during hours of high demand, and its power is more 
valuable. But wind power produces more at night and less in the daytime, so its 
electricity is less valuable to the system.
Furthermore, different energy sources have additional costs that muddy direct 
comparisons. Nuclear plants have decommissioning costs, waste storage and 
liabilities that aren't always fully priced in. Variable sources such as wind 
and solar power need extra transmission lines and special efforts to integrate 
their power into the grid, which isn't included in the cost.
MYTH NO. 3: Variability Dooms Renewable Energy
The sun doesn't always shine, and the wind doesn't always blow, so wind farms 
and solar arrays generally punch below their weight. A 100-megawatt wind farm 
will generate on average the equivalent of 34 megawatts of power that's 
available full time.
Granted, there are forms of renewable energy that almost always generate power: 
geothermal plants and hydroelectric facilities, for example. But since the bulk 
of growth in renewables in the U.S. comes from wind and solar power, their 
variability is a flashpoint for critics and a technical challenge for grid 
operators. Variability costs money to deal with, requires some level of backup 
power to offset and can even lead to renewable-energy generation being wasted, 
note researchers at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. When power-grid 
operators either don't want or can't handle wind power, for instance, they just 
dump it—a process called curtailment.

Still, things are improving rapidly. Consider the situation with wind power. 
Curtailments have fallen steadily in recent years as system operators have 
gotten better at using forecasting and integrating wind power. Investment in 
new transmission lines has also picked up pace, enabling wind farms in isolated 
locations to offer power more readily to a wider area.
That is the key to overcoming the natural variability of renewables such as 
wind and solar power. Individual wind farms may be very volatile. But scores of 
wind farms over thousands of square miles show less volatility—the wind is 
always blowing somewhere. As grid operators have added more wind in more 
locations to their systems, as well as the lines to carry that wind, 
integrating wind power into the electricity system has become easier.
Take Texas. Four years ago, facing severe transmission constraints, the state 
was dumping 17% of all the wind power it produced. In 2012, after adding more 
wind farms and almost 2,600 miles of transmission lines, curtailments were 
below 4%, and wind power provided 10% of the electricity in the nation's 
biggest power market.
MYTH NO. 5: Cheap Natural Gas Is the Enemy of Renewable Energy
With the boom in U.S. natural-gas production, many concluded that renewable 
energies would be battered by a relatively clean, cheap fuel source. While 
natural gas has transformed the electricity sector, gas and renewables are 
actually complementary, not rivals.
A glance at national trends makes clear that the two energy sources can grow 
together. Natural-gas electricity generation rose 34% from 2009 to 2012. Wind 
generation rose 92% in the same period and solar generation almost fourfold, 
though the renewables grew from a much smaller base.
Granted, cheap natural gas makes it difficult for wind power to compete without 
federal subsidies. But researchers are finding that gas and wind complement 
each other as part of a balanced electricity-generation portfolio.
Look at it from a utility's perspective. Natural-gas plants have low upfront 
costs, don't rely on fickle federal subsidies, and their output can be 
dispatched to meet swings in power demand. Gas, therefore, gives reliable power 
now, with little worry in the short term about federal policies.
But over the longer term, volatile gas prices could be deadly—as could 
environmental rules from Washington. That makes the wind farms and other 
renewable-energy projects an appealing way to hedge. Almost all of their costs 
are up front—there's no fuel to buy, so no worries about volatile prices. 
Because renewable energy doesn't produce any harmful emissions, it doesn't face 
the specter of future federal rules—and indeed could benefit from state rules 
mandating green power.
MYTH NO. 6: Renewable Energy Means Millions of Green Jobs
During the 2008 campaign, Barack Obama touted the prospect that investing in 
clean energy could produce five million "green jobs." The idea of creating jobs 
helped underpin the $90 billion clean-energy stimulus in 2009 and later 
efforts, and remains a staple of administration rhetoric.
But renewable energy has not been the job creator that its boosters envisioned. 
While the amount of wind and solar power has more than doubled since President 
Obama took office, renewable-energy jobs have not.
The hardest part of sizing up green jobs is figuring out what a green job is. 
The Bureau of Labor Statistics came up with an expansive definition: goods or 
services that benefit the environment or make a company more environmentally 
friendly. According to the most recent data from the BLS, the U.S. had 3.4 
million green jobs in 2011. But the categories are generous, to say the least. 
Private-sector green jobs included petroleum and coal-products manufacturing 
(3,244 jobs); school and employee bus drivers (166,916); logging (8,837); paper 
mills (18,167); and iron and steel mills (33,812). The numbers get so fuzzy as 
to become all but meaningless as an indicator of employment potential from 
clean energy.
Direct-employment numbers from renewable energies are clearer. In 2012, the 
wind industry said it employed about 81,000, the solar industry employed about 
119,000, and geothermal energy may have employed about 20,000. The Hydropower 
Association estimates the sector employs between 200,000 and 300,000 people 
today.
Not only are those numbers quite modest, but in broad terms they haven't 
increased much since 2008, before the recent strong growth in renewables. In 
2008, the wind industry said it employed about 85,000 people. So while 
installed wind capacity more than doubled, wind employment shrank. Solar 
employment stood at about 93,000 in 2010. Two years—and a ninefold increase in 
solar power—later, solar employment had increased just 28%.
The contrast between the promise and the reality of green jobs becomes even 
clearer when compared with other energy sectors. Coal, for example, is 
shrinking as a share of the U.S. electricity mix. Nevertheless, total 
coal-sector employment of about 150,000 is the highest since the mid-1990s.
And, by far, the biggest jobs story in the energy patch has come from the oil 
and gas boom. According to a fresh study by energy consultancy IHS Cera, 
unconventional oil and gas production—hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, for 
natural gas and tight oil—accounted for about 360,000 direct jobs.
Mr. Johnson is a reporter in The Wall Street Journal's Washington bureau. 
Email:keith.john...@wsj.com.
A version of this article appeared September 23, 2013, on page R1 in the U.S. 
edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Six Myths About 
Renewable Energy.
----------------------------------------------------

Joint Convention Medan 2013 (JCM 2013)

The 38th HAGI and 42nd IAGI Annual Convention & Exhibition

Register Now! http://www.jcm2013.com/registration/

----------------------------------------------------

Visit IAGI Website: http://iagi.or.id

Hubungi Kami: http://www.iagi.or.id/contact

----------------------------------------------------

Iuran tahunan Rp.250.000,- (profesional) dan Rp.100.000,- (mahasiswa)

Pembayaran iuran anggota ditujukan ke:

Bank Mandiri Cab. Wisma Alia Jakarta

No. Rek: 123 0085005314

Atas nama: Ikatan Ahli Geologi Indonesia (IAGI)

Bank BCA KCP. Manara Mulia

No. Rekening: 255-1088580

A/n: Shinta Damayanti

----------------------------------------------------

Subscribe: iagi-net-subscr...@iagi.or.id

Unsubscribe: iagi-net-unsubscr...@iagi.or.id

----------------------------------------------------

DISCLAIMER: IAGI disclaims all warranties with regard to information 

posted on its mailing lists, whether posted by IAGI or others. 

In no event shall IAGI or its members be liable for any, including but not 
limited

to direct or indirect damages, or damages of any kind whatsoever, resulting 

from loss of use, data or profits, arising out of or in connection with the use 
of 

any information posted on IAGI mailing list.

----------------------------------------------------

Kirim email ke