Taye Zewdu
Lecturer
School of Chemical & Bio Engineering
Addis Ababa Institute of Technology
ChEg 5193 Sustainable Energy Technology
CHAPTER TWO- ENERGY, ENVIRONMENT & the ECONOMY
15-Oct-2015 Taye Z
Addis Ababa University
Energy and the Environment
Lecture 02-1
08-Oct-2015 Taye Z
Contents
Energy per capita
Environmental Impacts of Energy
Control initiatives
381
08-Oct-2015 Taye Z
• Energy is the key “to the advance of civilization”.
• For tens of thousands of years, people relied solely on the
• Most of the family structures, societal groupings, and political and
economic institutions created over thousands of years focused
primarily on the extraction, processing, exchange, and marketing of
food, as well as of "fossil and organic energy sources (wood, peat,
coal) ... used ... for heating, cooking, lighting, or for firing the kilns
and furnaces used in smelting ores
• Before the modern era, people relied for power on their own
muscles, on the muscles of domesticated animals, such as horses
and oxen, and on water and wind
Introduction
chemical (caloric) energy gained from food that produced the
mechanical (kinetic) energy of working muscles.
• Increase of CO2 – global warming, climate changes
Introduction
08-Oct-2015 Taye Z
• The amount of energy consumed per capita – standard of
living. Demand for energy increases accordingly
• Most of our energy is currently produced from fossil fuels –
increase of CO2 production
• The alternatives are expensive at present – little economic
incentive to reduce consumption of fossil fuels
• Current reserves of fossil fuels: Oil - 40 years, Gas - 60
years, Coal - 120 years
08-Oct-2015 Taye Z
http://ourworldindata.org/data/resources-energy/energy-production-and-changing-energy-sources
World energy consumption per capita by source, 1800-2000 – Max Roser
08-Oct-2015 Taye Z
World energy consumption by source, 1800-2000 – Max Roser
Assignment 2.1:
Prepare a graph showing the primary energy consumption in Ethiopia
(2000-2014)
(3 pts)
, the main greenhouse gas, both
because burning fuel-wood produces CO2, and because
deforestation destroys an important CO2 sink.
Environmental Impacts
08-Oct-2015 Taye Z
• Production and consumption of almost any type of energy
have environmental impacts.
• Harvesting of fuel-wood, in particular, contributes to
deforestation, soil erosion, and desertification.
• Use of fuel-wood as an energy source can also contribute to
the accumulation of CO2
• Use of biomass in traditional stoves exposes the users,
mainly women and children, to high levels of indoor air
pollution.
• The environmental consequences of energy production and use
also adds on to waste management.
CO2 Release due to Fossil Fuel Consumption
• Global combustion of fossil fuels and other materials places almost 7
billion tons of carbon, in the form of carbon dioxide into
the atmosphere each year.
• On average, Earth's oceans, trees, plants and soils absorb about
one-half of this carbon. The balance remains in the air and is
responsible for the annual increase.
08-Oct-2015 Taye Z
Environmental Impact of Energy Production
• Ozone Layer Depletion
• Global Warming
• Loss of Biodiversity
• Air and water pollution
• Land Degradation
Reading assignment!
08-Oct-2015 Taye Z
EI-1) Ozone Layer Depletion
The chemistry of Ozone
depletion Reading: the Chapman Cycle!
08-Oct-2015 Taye Z
Ozone Depleting Substances And Their Ozone-Depletion Potential
Source: Clean Air Act, June 2010
• The ozone layer comprises the greater part of the stratosphere
between altitudes of 10 and 50 km. The highest concentration of
ozone is reached between 15 and 30 km.
• The concentration of ozone molecules is 10 parts ozone per 1 million
parts air. Ozone, which is a form of oxygen, forms naturally from the
dissociation (splitting) of oxygen molecules by ultraviolet radiation.
• The average thickness of the ozone layer is about 50 km but if
compressed by sea-level pressures, it would be only a few
centimeters thick.
• The Dobson Unit (DU) is a scale for measuring the total amount of
ozone occupying a column of air. One DU is defined as
0.01 mm thickness at zero degrees Celsius and one atmosphere.
• If the ozone layer over the US were subjected to 0°C and 1
atmosphere it would end up being 3 mm thick or 300 DU.
More About Ozone Layer
08-Oct-2015 Taye Z
Impacts of Ozone layer depletion
• Effect on Human and animal health:
– Increase incidences of eye diseases, skin cancer and infectious
diseases.
• Effect on Terrestrial Plants:
– Physiological and development process of plants affected
• Effect on Aquatic Eco systems:
– Reduced survival rates of Phytoplankton communities (which
form the foundation of aquatic web) and damage to early
development of aquatic species.
• Effect on Bio-geo-chemical Cycles:
– Affect terrestrial and aquatic bio chemical cycles thus altering
both sources and sinks of GHG. These changes will contribute
to the likely built up of these gases.
• Effect on Air quality
– Higher photo dissociation rates of key trace gases and faster
degradation of polymeric material ( plastics) .
08-Oct-2015 Taye Z
EI-2) Global Warming and Climate Change
• Global warming and climate change refer to an increase in
average global temperatures
• Natural events and human activities are believed to be
contributing to an increase in average global temperatures
• This is caused primarily by increases in “greenhouse” gases such
as Carbon Dioxide (CO2)
Greenhouse Effect
• Energy from the sun drives the earth’s weather and climate, and
heats the earth’s surface. In turn, the earth radiates energy back into
space
• Some atmospheric gases (water vapor, carbon dioxide, and other
gases) trap some of the outgoing energy, retaining heat
somewhat like the glass panels of a greenhouse; These gases are
therefore known as greenhouse gases.
• The greenhouse effect is the rise in temperature on Earth as
certain gases in the atmosphere trap energy.
14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
• Six main greenhouse gases are:
– carbon dioxide (CO2)
– methane (CH4) (which is 20 times as potent a greenhouse gas as
carbon dioxide)
– nitrous oxide (N2O), plus
– three fluorinated industrial gases:
• hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs),
• perfluorocarbons (PFCs) and
• sulphur hexafluoride (SF6).
Greenhouse Gases
14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
• Many of these greenhouse gases are actually life-enabling, for
without them, heat would escape back into space and the Earth’s
average temperature would be a lot colder.
• However, if the greenhouse effect becomes stronger, then more heat
gets trapped than needed, and the Earth might become less
habitable for humans, plants and animals.
• Carbon dioxide, though not the most potent of greenhouse gases, is
the most significant one. Human activity has caused an imbalance in
the natural cycle of the greenhouse effect and related processes
More about Emissions and the Greenhouse Effect
14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
More about Emissions and the Greenhouse Effect
• In terms of historical emissions, industrialized countries account for
roughly 80% of the carbon dioxide buildup in the atmosphere to
date.
• Since 1950, the U.S. has emitted a cumulative total of roughly
50.7 billion tons of carbon, while China (4.6 times more populous)
and India (3.5 times more populous) have emitted only 15.7 and
4.2 billion tons respectively (although their numbers will rise).
• Annually, more than 60 percent of global industrial carbon
dioxide emissions originate in industrialized countries, where only
about 20 percent of the world’s population resides.
14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
More about Emissions and the Greenhouse Effect
• Much of the growth in emissions in developing countries results from
the provision of basic human needs for growing
populations, while emissions in industrialized countries contribute to
growth in a standard of living that is already far above that of the
average person worldwide
• The United States is the World’s Largest Emitter of Greenhouse
Gases Per Capita
• Around 2007, China surpassed the US as the world’s largest emitter
of greenhouse gases in terms of total output. Per person (“per
capita”), however, China’s emissions are much smaller.
14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
– More hurricanes or drought
– Longer spells of dry heat or intense rain
– Scientists have pointed out that Northern Europe could be severely
affected with colder weather if climate change continues, as the arctic
begins to melt and send fresher waters further south. It would
effectively cut off the Gulf Stream that brings warmth from the Gulf
of Mexico, keeping countries such as Britain warmer than expected
Impacts of Global Warming
• Ecosystem Impacts
• Rising sea levels
• Increasing ocean acidification
• Increase in pests and disease
• Failing agricultural output; Increase in World hunger
• Rapid changes in global temperature
• Extreme Weather Patterns
14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
Control Initiatives
• Montreal Protocol - International treaty to protect the ozone
layer by phasing out the production of numerous substances
believed to be responsible for ozone depletion. Came into force
from 1989
• It is believed that if the international agreement is adhered to,
the ozone layer is expected to recover by 2050
• Due to its widespread adoption and implementation it has been
hailed as an example of exceptional international co-operation
with Kofi Annan quoted as saying that "perhaps the single most
successful international agreement to date has been the
Montreal Protocol".
14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
Montreal Protocol
• Discovery of ozone hole – 1985.
• Complete phase out of CFCl3 (CFC-11), CF2Cl2 (CFC-12), C2F3Cl3
(CFC-113), C2F4Cl2(CFC-114), C2F5Cl (CFC-115) by 1996.
• There is a slower phase-out (to zero by 2010) of other substances
(halon 1211, 1301, 2402; CFCs 13, 111, 112, etc) and some chemicals
get individual attention (Carbon tetrachloride; 1,1,1-trichloroethane).
• The phasing-out of the less active HCFCs started only in 1996 and will
go on until a complete phasing-out is achieved in 2030.
• Since the Montreal Protocol came into effect, the atmospheric
concentrations of the most important chlorofluorocarbons and related
chlorinated hydrocarbons have either leveled off or decreased
14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
• A series of stepped limits on CFC use and production.
Implementation of Montreal Protocol
14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
• The Kyoto Protocol was the climate change treaty negotiated in
1997, setting targets for emissions of greenhouse gases.
• 1997, at the Conference of Parties III (COP3), Kyoto, Japan, the
Kyoto conference on climate change took place. There,
developed countries agreed to specific targets for cutting their
emissions of greenhouse gases
• In order to be binding under international law, the treaty would
need ratification from the countries responsible for around 55%
of the global greenhouse gas emissions of 1990.
• The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
agreed to a set of a common but differentiated responsibilities.
14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
• The objective is the "stabilization and reconstruction of
greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that
would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the
climate system
Kyoto Protocol
• Industrialized countries were committed to an overall reduction
of emissions of greenhouse gases to 5.2% below 1990 levels for
the period 2008 - 2012
• National limitations range from 8% reductions for the European
Union and some others to 7% for the United States, 6% for
Japan, and 0% for Russia. The treaty permitted GHG emission
increases of 8% for Australia and 10% for Iceland
• Came into force from 2005
• Some opponents of the Convention argue that the split between
Annex I and developing countries is unfair, and that both
developing countries and developed countries need to reduce
their emissions unilaterally.
• Some countries claim that their costs of following the Convention
requirements will stress their economy.
14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
Implementing Kyoto Protocol
• Emission trading - is an administrative approach used to
control pollution by providing economic incentives for achieving
reductions in the emissions of pollutants. It is sometimes called
cap and trade
• Clean Development Mechanism - is an arrangement under
the Kyoto Protocol allowing industrialized countries with a
greenhouse gas reduction commitment to invest in projects that
reduce emissions in developing countries as an alternative to
more expensive emission reductions in their own countries
14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
Flexible Mechanisms of Kyoto Protocol
Taye Zewdu
Lecturer
School of Chemical & Bio Engineering
Addis Ababa Institute of Technology
Addis Ababa University
ChEg 5193 Sustainable Energy Technology
CHAPTER TWO- ENERGY, ENVIRONMENT & ECONOMICS
Energy & the Economy
Lecture 02-2
08-Oct-2015 Taye Z

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Set lecture 02-1&2

  • 1. Taye Zewdu Lecturer School of Chemical & Bio Engineering Addis Ababa Institute of Technology ChEg 5193 Sustainable Energy Technology CHAPTER TWO- ENERGY, ENVIRONMENT & the ECONOMY 15-Oct-2015 Taye Z Addis Ababa University Energy and the Environment Lecture 02-1
  • 2. 08-Oct-2015 Taye Z Contents Energy per capita Environmental Impacts of Energy Control initiatives 381
  • 3. 08-Oct-2015 Taye Z • Energy is the key “to the advance of civilization”. • For tens of thousands of years, people relied solely on the • Most of the family structures, societal groupings, and political and economic institutions created over thousands of years focused primarily on the extraction, processing, exchange, and marketing of food, as well as of "fossil and organic energy sources (wood, peat, coal) ... used ... for heating, cooking, lighting, or for firing the kilns and furnaces used in smelting ores • Before the modern era, people relied for power on their own muscles, on the muscles of domesticated animals, such as horses and oxen, and on water and wind Introduction chemical (caloric) energy gained from food that produced the mechanical (kinetic) energy of working muscles.
  • 4. • Increase of CO2 – global warming, climate changes Introduction 08-Oct-2015 Taye Z • The amount of energy consumed per capita – standard of living. Demand for energy increases accordingly • Most of our energy is currently produced from fossil fuels – increase of CO2 production • The alternatives are expensive at present – little economic incentive to reduce consumption of fossil fuels • Current reserves of fossil fuels: Oil - 40 years, Gas - 60 years, Coal - 120 years
  • 6. 08-Oct-2015 Taye Z World energy consumption by source, 1800-2000 – Max Roser
  • 7. Assignment 2.1: Prepare a graph showing the primary energy consumption in Ethiopia (2000-2014) (3 pts)
  • 8. , the main greenhouse gas, both because burning fuel-wood produces CO2, and because deforestation destroys an important CO2 sink. Environmental Impacts 08-Oct-2015 Taye Z • Production and consumption of almost any type of energy have environmental impacts. • Harvesting of fuel-wood, in particular, contributes to deforestation, soil erosion, and desertification. • Use of fuel-wood as an energy source can also contribute to the accumulation of CO2 • Use of biomass in traditional stoves exposes the users, mainly women and children, to high levels of indoor air pollution. • The environmental consequences of energy production and use also adds on to waste management.
  • 9. CO2 Release due to Fossil Fuel Consumption • Global combustion of fossil fuels and other materials places almost 7 billion tons of carbon, in the form of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere each year. • On average, Earth's oceans, trees, plants and soils absorb about one-half of this carbon. The balance remains in the air and is responsible for the annual increase.
  • 10. 08-Oct-2015 Taye Z Environmental Impact of Energy Production • Ozone Layer Depletion • Global Warming • Loss of Biodiversity • Air and water pollution • Land Degradation Reading assignment!
  • 11. 08-Oct-2015 Taye Z EI-1) Ozone Layer Depletion The chemistry of Ozone depletion Reading: the Chapman Cycle!
  • 12. 08-Oct-2015 Taye Z Ozone Depleting Substances And Their Ozone-Depletion Potential Source: Clean Air Act, June 2010
  • 13. • The ozone layer comprises the greater part of the stratosphere between altitudes of 10 and 50 km. The highest concentration of ozone is reached between 15 and 30 km. • The concentration of ozone molecules is 10 parts ozone per 1 million parts air. Ozone, which is a form of oxygen, forms naturally from the dissociation (splitting) of oxygen molecules by ultraviolet radiation. • The average thickness of the ozone layer is about 50 km but if compressed by sea-level pressures, it would be only a few centimeters thick. • The Dobson Unit (DU) is a scale for measuring the total amount of ozone occupying a column of air. One DU is defined as 0.01 mm thickness at zero degrees Celsius and one atmosphere. • If the ozone layer over the US were subjected to 0°C and 1 atmosphere it would end up being 3 mm thick or 300 DU. More About Ozone Layer 08-Oct-2015 Taye Z
  • 14. Impacts of Ozone layer depletion • Effect on Human and animal health: – Increase incidences of eye diseases, skin cancer and infectious diseases. • Effect on Terrestrial Plants: – Physiological and development process of plants affected • Effect on Aquatic Eco systems: – Reduced survival rates of Phytoplankton communities (which form the foundation of aquatic web) and damage to early development of aquatic species. • Effect on Bio-geo-chemical Cycles: – Affect terrestrial and aquatic bio chemical cycles thus altering both sources and sinks of GHG. These changes will contribute to the likely built up of these gases. • Effect on Air quality – Higher photo dissociation rates of key trace gases and faster degradation of polymeric material ( plastics) . 08-Oct-2015 Taye Z
  • 15. EI-2) Global Warming and Climate Change • Global warming and climate change refer to an increase in average global temperatures • Natural events and human activities are believed to be contributing to an increase in average global temperatures • This is caused primarily by increases in “greenhouse” gases such as Carbon Dioxide (CO2)
  • 16. Greenhouse Effect • Energy from the sun drives the earth’s weather and climate, and heats the earth’s surface. In turn, the earth radiates energy back into space • Some atmospheric gases (water vapor, carbon dioxide, and other gases) trap some of the outgoing energy, retaining heat somewhat like the glass panels of a greenhouse; These gases are therefore known as greenhouse gases. • The greenhouse effect is the rise in temperature on Earth as certain gases in the atmosphere trap energy. 14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
  • 17. • Six main greenhouse gases are: – carbon dioxide (CO2) – methane (CH4) (which is 20 times as potent a greenhouse gas as carbon dioxide) – nitrous oxide (N2O), plus – three fluorinated industrial gases: • hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), • perfluorocarbons (PFCs) and • sulphur hexafluoride (SF6). Greenhouse Gases 14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
  • 19. • Many of these greenhouse gases are actually life-enabling, for without them, heat would escape back into space and the Earth’s average temperature would be a lot colder. • However, if the greenhouse effect becomes stronger, then more heat gets trapped than needed, and the Earth might become less habitable for humans, plants and animals. • Carbon dioxide, though not the most potent of greenhouse gases, is the most significant one. Human activity has caused an imbalance in the natural cycle of the greenhouse effect and related processes More about Emissions and the Greenhouse Effect 14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
  • 20. More about Emissions and the Greenhouse Effect • In terms of historical emissions, industrialized countries account for roughly 80% of the carbon dioxide buildup in the atmosphere to date. • Since 1950, the U.S. has emitted a cumulative total of roughly 50.7 billion tons of carbon, while China (4.6 times more populous) and India (3.5 times more populous) have emitted only 15.7 and 4.2 billion tons respectively (although their numbers will rise). • Annually, more than 60 percent of global industrial carbon dioxide emissions originate in industrialized countries, where only about 20 percent of the world’s population resides. 14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
  • 21. More about Emissions and the Greenhouse Effect • Much of the growth in emissions in developing countries results from the provision of basic human needs for growing populations, while emissions in industrialized countries contribute to growth in a standard of living that is already far above that of the average person worldwide • The United States is the World’s Largest Emitter of Greenhouse Gases Per Capita • Around 2007, China surpassed the US as the world’s largest emitter of greenhouse gases in terms of total output. Per person (“per capita”), however, China’s emissions are much smaller. 14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
  • 22. – More hurricanes or drought – Longer spells of dry heat or intense rain – Scientists have pointed out that Northern Europe could be severely affected with colder weather if climate change continues, as the arctic begins to melt and send fresher waters further south. It would effectively cut off the Gulf Stream that brings warmth from the Gulf of Mexico, keeping countries such as Britain warmer than expected Impacts of Global Warming • Ecosystem Impacts • Rising sea levels • Increasing ocean acidification • Increase in pests and disease • Failing agricultural output; Increase in World hunger • Rapid changes in global temperature • Extreme Weather Patterns 14-Oct-2015 Taye Z
  • 24. • Montreal Protocol - International treaty to protect the ozone layer by phasing out the production of numerous substances believed to be responsible for ozone depletion. Came into force from 1989 • It is believed that if the international agreement is adhered to, the ozone layer is expected to recover by 2050 • Due to its widespread adoption and implementation it has been hailed as an example of exceptional international co-operation with Kofi Annan quoted as saying that "perhaps the single most successful international agreement to date has been the Montreal Protocol". 14-Oct-2015 Taye Z Montreal Protocol • Discovery of ozone hole – 1985.
  • 25. • Complete phase out of CFCl3 (CFC-11), CF2Cl2 (CFC-12), C2F3Cl3 (CFC-113), C2F4Cl2(CFC-114), C2F5Cl (CFC-115) by 1996. • There is a slower phase-out (to zero by 2010) of other substances (halon 1211, 1301, 2402; CFCs 13, 111, 112, etc) and some chemicals get individual attention (Carbon tetrachloride; 1,1,1-trichloroethane). • The phasing-out of the less active HCFCs started only in 1996 and will go on until a complete phasing-out is achieved in 2030. • Since the Montreal Protocol came into effect, the atmospheric concentrations of the most important chlorofluorocarbons and related chlorinated hydrocarbons have either leveled off or decreased 14-Oct-2015 Taye Z • A series of stepped limits on CFC use and production. Implementation of Montreal Protocol
  • 27. • The Kyoto Protocol was the climate change treaty negotiated in 1997, setting targets for emissions of greenhouse gases. • 1997, at the Conference of Parties III (COP3), Kyoto, Japan, the Kyoto conference on climate change took place. There, developed countries agreed to specific targets for cutting their emissions of greenhouse gases • In order to be binding under international law, the treaty would need ratification from the countries responsible for around 55% of the global greenhouse gas emissions of 1990. • The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change agreed to a set of a common but differentiated responsibilities. 14-Oct-2015 Taye Z • The objective is the "stabilization and reconstruction of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system Kyoto Protocol
  • 28. • Industrialized countries were committed to an overall reduction of emissions of greenhouse gases to 5.2% below 1990 levels for the period 2008 - 2012 • National limitations range from 8% reductions for the European Union and some others to 7% for the United States, 6% for Japan, and 0% for Russia. The treaty permitted GHG emission increases of 8% for Australia and 10% for Iceland • Came into force from 2005 • Some opponents of the Convention argue that the split between Annex I and developing countries is unfair, and that both developing countries and developed countries need to reduce their emissions unilaterally. • Some countries claim that their costs of following the Convention requirements will stress their economy. 14-Oct-2015 Taye Z Implementing Kyoto Protocol
  • 29. • Emission trading - is an administrative approach used to control pollution by providing economic incentives for achieving reductions in the emissions of pollutants. It is sometimes called cap and trade • Clean Development Mechanism - is an arrangement under the Kyoto Protocol allowing industrialized countries with a greenhouse gas reduction commitment to invest in projects that reduce emissions in developing countries as an alternative to more expensive emission reductions in their own countries 14-Oct-2015 Taye Z Flexible Mechanisms of Kyoto Protocol
  • 30. Taye Zewdu Lecturer School of Chemical & Bio Engineering Addis Ababa Institute of Technology Addis Ababa University ChEg 5193 Sustainable Energy Technology CHAPTER TWO- ENERGY, ENVIRONMENT & ECONOMICS Energy & the Economy Lecture 02-2