http://ens-news.com/ens/oct2000/2000L-10-25-01.html

Fossil Fuels to Renewables Transition Gathers Momentum

By Bill Eggertson

HALIFAX, Nova Scotia, Canada, October 25, 2000 (ENS) - The world is 
starting to see the panic that will inevitably result during the 
transition from fossil fuels to renewable energies, says the senior 
staff scientist on renewable energy with the Washington, DC based 
Union of Concerned Scientists.

Panic sets in whenever people just think of a shortage of oil or 
conventional fuels, Don Aitken told the annual Solar Energy Society 
of Canada conference in Halifax on Monday. Panic sets in whenever 
society realizes that a transition is inevitable as a result of the 
end of an era, although he says the current panic over oil is earlier 
than expected.

The use of fossil fuels has peaked and the world has started the 
transition to renewable energy, he says, but decision makers has 
failed to understand that fossil fuels must be used to help that 
transition. Even if another major oil discovery is made, that would 
only extend the global dependence on fossils by another five or ten 
years.

The last time panic was demonstrated was during the OPEC crisis of 
the 1970s, when the United States was forced to adopt emergency laws 
to prevent car owners from filling up prematurely and causing long 
lines at gasoline service stations, he explained.


Windsor, Ontario apartment building is heated by solar energy. 
Cladding solar panels by SOLARWALL¨ collect solar heated air at the 
top of the panels and duct it to the rooftop fan that supplies air to 
the building. The system is designed by Canada based Conserval 
Engineering. (Photo courtesy Conserval Engineering)
There is an astonishing lack of understanding by people about climate 
change, adds Aitken, who is also an officer of the International 
Solar Energy Society and a past president of the American Solar 
Energy Society. Critics who say that global emissions of carbon are 
relatively trace amounts, ignore that the human body contains trace 
amounts of many minerals which cannot get out of balance without 
forcing a response by the body.

The increase in global emissions will demand that the Earth respond, 
but there is no history to predict what the response will be.

An average car emits its own weight in carbon every year, and he says 
every measurement indicates that the atmosphere is being impacted by 
the use of fossil fuels. The energy that comes down to earth must 
remain stable with the energy going out, or Earth will become either 
a Venus or a Mars.

A doubling of carbon emissions is inevitable, and Aitken says the 
Kyoto Protocol was designed to avoid a trebling of emissions in the 
near future. The Kyoto agreement is part of the United Nations 
process to oblige 39 developed countries to reduce their emissions of 
greenhouse gases below 1990 levels. In Canada, emissions must drop by 
200 megatons a year by the end of this decade.

Canada's solar industry "is on the verge of a big jump," Bob Douglas 
of Bay Consulting told conference delegates. But it must increase its 
commitment to work with its solar association and supportive 
government, and follow the lead set by other nations in setting goals 
such as the target of solar roofs.

Most solar companies in Canada have developed their business plans 
"by accident," says Douglas, who released the initial results of his 
study to the Halifax conference. Despite 30 years of business, he 
classified the domestic industry as in an "introductory phase" with 
poorly defined markets, high overhead and low profits, low customer 
service, and too much reliance on "early adopters."

The study identified promising applications for technologies which 
use solar energy to heat water and air in the industrial, commercial 
and institutional market. Despite significant improvements and lower 
costs, it found that the industry would not have survived against 
conventional energy sources without the support of government 
subsidies.


Solar Canada Solar Marine Light is built to withstand harsh marine 
environments. (Photo courtesy Solar Canada)
A number of solar thermal systems that were installed following the 
OPEC crisis are not working properly, and Douglas recommended that 
they should be either fixed or removed to restore the image of the 
solar industry in Canada.

Support for renewable energy will not grow until there is a 
fundamental shift in how the economy is measured, declared keynote 
speaker Ron Coleman, a former Saint Mary's University political 
science professor who developed the Genuine Progress Index.

Coleman based his classroom project to measure the real worth of 
human activity on a concept articulated in a 1995 story in "The 
Atlantic Monthly" magazine, titled "If the Economy is Up, Why Is 
America Down?" In it, authors Clifford Cobb, Tad Halstead and 
Jonathan Rowe propose a different measure than the standard Gross 
Domestic Product (GDP), a blunt instrument that identifies the total 
quantity of goods and services produced by a society. They suggested 
a Genuine Progress Indicator.

It is the difference between the politics of resource efficiency and 
resource consumption that makes it difficult for many people to 
understand the need to shift from fossil fuels to renewable energies, 
Coleman explained.

"The more quickly we deplete our natural resources, the more rapidly 
our economy will grow," the said, noting that the Exxon Valdez 
accident contributed more to the economy by spilling oil in Alaska 
than it would by delivering the cargo.

"The faster we burn fossil fuels, it makes our economy grow," Coleman 
said. "We are all part of the conspiracy, it's not just the 
politicians. Society must measure value based on durability and 
lifecycle costs.

Global warming is potentially the most catastrophic challenge facing 
the world and there is no reason why solar energy should not be 
receiving huge investments, Coleman urged.


Nicaraguan carries a solar panel supplied by the Fallsbrook Centre. 
(Photo courtesy Fallsbrook Centre)
A project of the Fallsbrook Centre in Knowlesville, New Brunswick, is 
the empowerment of people in Nicaragua with solar energy, Jean Arnold 
told the conference delegates.

Fallsbrook staffers are training landmine victims from the 
Sandanista-Contra war and victims of landmine explosions in the 
fields and forests upended by Hurricane Mitch to become solar culture 
spreaders in the rural Northern areas of Nicaragua. They are making 
solar ovens, solar dryers and doing solar installations in community 
buildings.

"The Canadian government may wish to consider developing new 
strategies and approaches to accomplish its stated objectives for 
investments in renewable energy and energy efficiency," says a report 
from the Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development 
presented at the conference.

The federal Renewable Energy Strategy of 1996 says the government 
wants to increase investments in renewable energy, and the government 
has said for many years that it wants Canadians to use energy more 
efficiently, according to a report tabled in the House of Commons 
earlier this year.

"Overall, we found that with a few exceptions, federal government 
support today for energy investments, including support through the 
tax system, does not particularly favour the non-renewable sector 
over the renewable sector," Bob Pelland told conference delegates.

Pelland is a member of the team from the Office of the Auditor 
General that conducted the year long study. "Most of the federal 
spending and tax incentives have been for non-renewable resources, 
the predominant source of energy in Canada," he confirmed.

But a market study prepared for the federal government found a 
willingness to adopt solar technology if the price is right.

About 60 percent of the 1,600 respondents to the poll by KPMG 
Consulting said they would trade their present diesel generators for 
solar photovoltaic (PV) or PV-hybrid systems if they were available 
at a reasonable price.


On Black Lake in central Ontario, Canada, this cottage's lights, 
water pump, TV, radio, and small kitchen appliances are powered in 
summer by a small 180 watt PV system because the nearest electric 
utility power line is $30,000 away. (Photo courtesy Prometheus Energy)
KPMG estimates that there are 800,000 homes and cottages across 
Canada that are not connected to the utility grid. The study infers 
that 6,600 homes could convert to solar photovoltaic power generation 
within two years and another 5,400 homes in the three years after 
that.

In an analysis of telecommunication companies, more than half of the 
carriers already use PV systems in 38 installations, while another 61 
new systems are estimated for the next five years, plus another 100 
repeater sites will convert to PV during the same period.

Although only two PV systems are currently used by broadcasting 
companies in Canada, another ten systems are expected to be installed 
in the next five years.

Other key markets identified by KPMG are parks, where solar electric 
units can be used in emergency telephones and electric fences to 
deter bears, and the oil and gas industry for remote pipeline 
monitoring and cathodic protection.

The benefits most cited by the 1,600 respondents were that solar 
photovoltaic systems are reliable, technologically proven, 
environmentally friendly, reasonably priced, a cost effective fuel 
supply, and partly supported by government grants or tax breaks.

System cost is the most cited barrier to the adoption of solar 
systems, followed by lack of information regarding the technology.

"Establishing a strategy through which Natural Resources Canada can 
build user confidence and satisfaction with the product is essential 
for market penetration, the KPMG report advises.

© Environment News Service (ENS) 2000. All Rights Reserved.

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