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RAISING ENERGY PRODUCTIVITY
Chapter 9. Cutting Carbon Emissions in Half
Lester R. Brown, Plan B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a
Civilization in Trouble (W.W. Norton & Co., NY: 2003).
The enormous potential for raising energy productivity becomes clear
in comparisons among countries. Some countries in Europe have essentially
the same living standard as the United States yet use scarcely half
as much energy per person. But even the countries that use energy
most efficiently are not close to realizing the full potential for
doing so.7
In April 2001, the Bush administration released a new energy plan
and called for construction of 1,300 new power plants by 2020. Bill
Prindle of the Washington-based Alliance to Save Energy responded
by pointing out how the country could eliminate the need for those
plants and save money in the process. He ticked off several steps
that would reduce the demand for electricity: Improving efficiency
standards for household appliances would eliminate the need for
127 power plants. More stringent residential air conditioner efficiency
standards would eliminate 43 power plants. Raising commercial air
conditioner standards would eliminate the need for 50 plants. Using
tax credits and energy codes to improve the efficiency of new buildings
would save another 170 plants. Similar steps to raise the energy
efficiency of existing buildings would save 210 plants. These five
measures alone from the list suggested by Prindle would not only
eliminate the need for 600 power plants, they would save money too.8
Of course, each country will have to fashion its own plan for raising
energy productivity. Nevertheless, there are a number of common
components. Some are quite simple but highly effective, such as
banning the use of nonrefillable beverage containers, eliminating
the use of incandescent light bulbs, doubling the fuel efficiency
of automobiles, and redesigning urban transport systems to raise
efficiency and increase mobility.
We know that it is possible to ban the use of nonrefillable beverage
containers because Canada's Prince Edward Island has already done
so. And Finland has a stiff tax on nonrefillables that has lead
to 98-percent container reuse for soft drinks. These actions reduce
energy use, water use, and garbage generation. A refillable glass
bottle used over and over again requires about 10 percent as much
energy per use as an aluminum can, even if the can is recycled.
Cleaning, sterilizing, and relabeling a used bottle requires little
energy, but recycling aluminum, which has a melting point of 660
degrees Celsius (1220 degrees Fahrenheit), is an energy-intensive
process. Banning nonrefillables is a win-win policy initiative because
it cuts both energy use and the flow of garbage.9
Another simple step is to replace all incandescent light bulbs with
compact fluorescent bulbs (CFLs), which use only one third as much
electricity and last 10 times as long. In the United States, where
20 percent of all electricity is used for lighting, if each household
replaced commonly used incandescents with compact fluorescents,
electricity for lighting would be cut in half. The combination of
lasting longer and using less electricity greatly outweighs the
higher costs of the CFLs, yielding a risk-free return of some 25-40
percent a year. Worldwide, replacing incandescent light bulbs with
CFLs would save enough electricity to close hundreds of coal-fired
power plants, and it could be accomplished easily within three years
if we decided to do it.10
A third obvious area for raising energy efficiency is automobiles.
In the United States, for example, if all motorists were to shift
from their current vehicles with internal combustion engines to
cars with hybrid engines, like the Toyota Prius or the Honda Insight,
gasoline use could be cut in half. Sales of hybrid cars, introduced
into the U.S. market in 1999, reached an estimated 46,000 in 2003.
(See Table 9-1.) Higher gasoline prices and a tax deduction of up
to $2,000 for purchasing a low-emission vehicle are boosting sales.
With U.S. auto manufacturers coming onto the market on a major scale
soon, hybrid vehicle sales are projected to reach 1 million in 2007.11
A somewhat more complex way to raise energy productivity is to redesign
urban transport systems. Most systems, now automobile-centered,
are highly inefficient, with the majority of cars carrying only
the driver. Replacing this with a more diverse system that would
include a well-developed light-rail system complemented with buses
as needed and that was bicycle- and pedestrian-friendly could increase
mobility, reduce air pollution, and provide exercise. This is a
win-win-win situation. Mobility would be greater, the air would
be cleaner, and it would be easier to exercise. Fewer automobiles
would mean that parking lots could be converted into parks, creating
more civilized cities.
In order to begin shifting the mix away from automobiles, some cities
now charge cars entering the city. Pioneered by Singapore many years
ago, this approachis now being used in Oslo and Melbourne. And in
February 2003, London introduced a similar system to combat congestion
as well as pollution, charging $8 for any vehicle entering the central
city during the working day. This immediately reduced traffic congestion
by 24 percent.12
| Table 9-1. Sales of Hybrid Cars in the
United States, 1999-2003 |
| Year |
Sales
|
|
(number)
|
| 1999 |
17
|
| 2000 |
9,350
|
| 2001 |
20,282
|
| 2002 |
35,835
|
| 2003 (est.) |
46,000
|
|
| Source: See endnote 11. |
ENDNOTES
7. Per capita energy consumption in U.S. Department of Energy (DOE),
Energy Information Administration (EIA), EIA Country Analysis Briefs,
at www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs, updated May 2003.
8. Bill Prindle, "How Energy Efficiency Can Turn 1300 New Power
Plants Into 170," fact sheet (Washington, DC: Alliance to Save Energy,
2 May 2001).
9. Brenda Platt and Doug Rowe, Reduce, Reuse, Refill! (Washington,
DC: Institute for Local Self-Reliance, April 2002); energy in David
Saphire, Case Reopened: Reassessing Refillable Bottles (New York:
INFORM, Inc., 1994).
10. Howard Geller, "Compact Fluorescent Lighting," American Council
for an Energy-Efficient Economy Technology Brief, at www.aceee.org,
viewed 1 May 2003.
11. Gasoline savings based on Malcolm A. Weiss et al., Comparative
Assessment of Fuel Cell Cars (Cambridge, MA: Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, February 2003); hybrid vehicle tax credit from National
Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), "Tax Deduction: Hybrid Electric
Vehicles," fact sheet, from www.ott.doe.gov/hev/hev.html, January
2003; sales projections for 2007 based on Drew Winter and Kevin
Kelly, "Hybrid Heartburn," Ward's Auto World, March 2003, pp. 44-51,
and on Matt Nauman, "Hybrid Car Sales, Demand Picking Up," St. Paul
Pioneer Press, 11 January 2003. Table 9-1 based on estimates by
automakers and Automotive News, cited in "Hybrid Car Sales, Demand
Picking Up," Contra Costa Times, 4 January 2003, with projections
for 2003 in "Hybrid Demand High," Financial Times Information Limited,
29 March 2003.
12. John Whitlegg, editorial, World Transport Policy and Practice,
vol. 8, no. 4 (2002), p. 5; Randy Kennedy, "The Day the Traffic
Disappeared," New York Times Magazine, 20 April 2003, pp. 42-45.
Copyright
© 2003 Earth Policy Institute
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