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posted by cmn32480 on Wednesday June 10 2015, @11:57AM   Printer-friendly
from the brains-unite! dept.

A group of scientists have called for a "moonshot" renewable energy research program called the "Global Apollo":

They say they have generated interest from major nations in their plan for an investment of 0.02% of their GDP [about $150 billion over 10 years, and about the cost of the Apollo program in 2015 dollars] into research, development and demonstration (RD&D) of clean electricity. Their report, launched at London's Royal Society, says on current projections the world will exceed the 2C danger threshold of climate change by 2035.

The academics are led by the UK's former chief scientist Professor Sir David King. He told BBC News: "We have already discovered enough fossil fuels to wreck the climate many times over. There's only one thing that's going to stop us burning it – and that's if renewables become cheaper than fossil fuels. "Under our plan, we are aiming to make that happen globally within a decade." Another of the authors, former Cabinet Secretary Lord O'Donnell, told BBC News: "People never believed we could put a man on the Moon - but we did. People don't believe we can solve climate change - but we have no choice."

It complains that renewable energy has been starved of investment to a shocking degree, with publicly funded RD&D on renewable energy only $6bn a year – under 2% of the total of publicly funded research and development. The authors say this compares poorly with the $101bn spent worldwide on production subsidies for renewables and the $550bn "counter-productive" subsidies for fossil fuel energy.

Solar is the most favoured renewable source as the group says it has greatest potential for technology breakthroughs, and most new energy demand will be in sunny countries. The cost of solar has been plummeting and is already approaching competitive prices in places as different as Germany, California and Chile. But the authors believe next-generation plastic photovoltaics can to keep prices tumbling. They believe battery technology is improving fast – but think batteries and other forms of storage need to be massively developed to store intermittent renewable energy. The authors say much smarter software is needed to enable electricity grids to cope with the new sources of power. Some experts believe that energy technology has developed so fast that it simply needs further price support to keep volumes rising and costs falling. Others will complain that the Apollo group has done little to tackle the immense problem of replacing fossil fuels in heating.


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  • (Score: 2) by VLM on Wednesday June 10 2015, @09:41PM

    by VLM (445) on Wednesday June 10 2015, @09:41PM (#194689)

    This doesn't really touch industrial which by far is the biggest energy(all forms) user.

    Not really. Solar panels can only replace electricity, at least easily. At great effort I guess you could make solar powered cement kilns ...

    http://www.eia.gov/beta/aeo/#/?id=2-AEO2015 [eia.gov]

    In quad BTU (which is a weird form to measure electrical energy, but whatever) residential this year is 4.8, commercial is 4.6, industrial is 3.3

    The amount of economic destruction over the past 20 years or so is amazing, you'd think we're in a war or something. Theres an EIA report somewhere that industrial use has dropped 20% in the last decade alone.

    WRT industrial users pouting, they can pay thru the nose for whatever hydro they can get, daydream of batteries that won't get made, or get used to the future...

    Basic micro doesn't matter if basic macro says the KWh aren't going to be there... You can solar or work in the dark.

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