Alternative Energy And Natural Gas
13 Jan, 2009 06:08 pm
At the end of the first full work week of the new year--a week I suspect I am not alone in having found a bit of a slog--a pair of articles in MIT's Technology Review got me thinking about the under-appreciated relationship between alternative energy and natural gas.
In the first, TR looks back at
the energy technology developments of 2008. After noting the volatility
of oil prices, they paint a picture of steady progress on many fronts.
Nothing stands out as a major breakthrough, though several items,
including concentrating solar cells and the scheme for storing solar power using catalyzed room-temperature electrolysis, hold
breakthrough potential, if they can be scaled up cheaply and
efficiently. With a typical lab-to-market time lag, either one might be
a major factor by the late 'teens--or not.
Their
emphasis on oil prices suggests that TR, like many others with a keen
interest in alternative energy, pays too much attention to the
influence of oil prices on alternative energy, and too little to
natural gas. Other than psychologically, the price of oil really only
matters when competing directly with its products, as biofuels do. If
you're generating power from wind, sun, or geothermal heat, it's the
price of power from the incremental electricity source that matters,
and for the immediate future, that's still the gas-fired turbine. Even
electric vehicles, which would certainly displace oil, will depend
partly for their attractiveness on the price of electricity, which in
many markets will be set by gas-fired power. (I know they're supposed
to recharge overnight on under-utilized wind power, but I can't help
wondering how many consumers will insist on recharging them as soon as
they get home.) The scarcely-noticed Big Surprise of the crude oil
spike of 2007-8 was the uncoupling of oil and gas prices. Oil's
collapse has restored the premium for its BTUs over those in gas to the
level of around 25% or so that prevailed from 2002-2006, after peaking
at 150% in August. In order for renewable electricity to thrive, it
needs high natural gas prices, not just high oil prices.
The other story in
TR that caught my eye also concerns gas, but more directly. It features
a company that has investigated bacteria that digest coal underground
and turn it into methane. They have figured out how to coax them to
produce more of it, faster. If this can be made to work commercially,
it could dramatically boost the output of coal-bed methane, which now accounts for 9% of US gas supplies.
Moreover, it could help solve the conundrum of how to capitalize on the
energy potential of the world's vast coal reserves without derailing
efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. This technology might prove
especially attractive, once the slowdown in gas drilling caused by the
financial crisis deflates the current "gas bubble"--the supply spike resulting
from the shale-gas bonanza of the last few years. The success of
coal-eating gas bugs, however, would not be good news for renewable
power.
Source: Energy Outlook
Source: Energy Outlook
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Thanks for pointing out these articles. With regard to the coal-bed methane story: This development looks like what people in the energy business would called enhanced recovery and so it would only be used after a well that has been productive becomes unprofitable.
Coal-bed methane is mined for its methane only because the coal is too inaccessible to obtain economically. It seems doubtful to me that these bacteria could add economic value to conventional coal reserves which are easy and cheap to rip from the Earth and burn. Certainly, we should be looking for ways to make coal less harmful or to discontinue its use altogether. I'm not sure this technique would help us much with conventional coal.
If I've missed something, please enlighten me.