28 Jun 2011
The development of new renewable energy technologies and other expanding sources of energy such as shale gas will be limited by the availability of water in some regions of the world, according to research by a US thinktank.
The study shows the reliance on large amounts of water to create biofuels and run solar thermal energy and hydraulic fracturing - a technique for extracting gas from unconventional geological formations underground - means droughts could hamper their deployment.
"Water consumption is going up dramatically. We are introducing all kinds of technology to reduce the carbon impact of energy, without doing anything to reduce its impact on water," Michele Wucker, co-author of the report, told a seminar at the New America Foundation, a thinktank in Washington.
The study, estimating the water consumption of conventional and renewable energy, found even so-called clean energy solutions use vast amounts of water.
Hydroelectricity far outstrips other forms of energy in its use of water, requiring 4,500 gallons to produce a single megawatt hour of electricity - or about the amount needed to run a flat-screen TV for a year. Geothermal energy uses 1,400 gallons per MW/h.
Corn-based ethanol uses a lot of water to irrigate crops, as do nuclear plants which rely on water for cooling systems. Even some renewable energy sources - such as solar farms - are water hogs because they rely on water for cooling.
Solar thermal farms use five times as much water as nuclear power plants, energy consultant Diana Glassman told the seminar. In contrast, photovoltaic solar cells, which convert energy from the sun into electricity, use minimal amounts of water.
Meanwhile, the US drought is forcing energy companies to scale back plans for deploying new techniques in hydraulic fracturing ("fracking") for oil and gas extraction. Not long ago, energy companies were hoping to increase production in Texas by 50% over the next five years.
Unlike in Pennsylvania, where the chemicals used in natural gas drilling have contaminated drinking supplies, the problems in Texas are a matter of water quantity, not water quality.
"The drought and declining water tables are going to have an increasing impact on oil and gas production in Texas," Glassman said.
It takes up to 13 million gallons of water to open up a single well in the Eagle Ford shale region in south Texas, where water is in perennially short supply. Such demands are going to block development of areas in south and west Texas, which are suffering water shortages.
"As hydraulic fracking spreads into more arid environments, water availability will increasingly become a problem. Over time it's going to be a growth constraint on oil production in parts of West Texas," said Glassman.
This article first appeared at the Guardian
BusinessGreen is part of the Guardian Environment Network
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coalportal
coal statistics would suggest the commodity isn't going anywhere. Coal reports show if we have to live with it, we may as well reduce the impact of coal and CCS seems to be the best solution found to date. Cherry www.coalportal.comWhile for some an ideal world would see no reliance on coal industry to produce electricity,
Posted by coalportal, 21 Oct 2011
copy-pasting wrong information...
... seems to have become a practice in the media. As already stated incorrectly in the Guardian article, Concentrating Solar Power (CSP) is supposed to use five times the water a nuclear power plant uses. I would be interested to see the source of that: It will massively depend on the kind of technology you talk about. It is true that some CSP plants are cleaned very inefficiently in the USA and Spain. There are other types that require little or no water to clean, and the recuperation of the cleaning water will also make a difference! Actually, CSP plants are able to produce drinking water for the most arid regions in the world, as projects like the Mediterranean Solar Plan or DESERTEC want it: Through the cooling water cycle it is easy to desalinate sea water by using the remaining heat energy without significant energy losses. Combine that with water saving cleaning, and you have a very positive water balance - which benefits the poor people most as water is does not easily disappear on swiss bank accounts...
Posted by its easy being green, 28 Jun 2011