Energy Transition Needs a Transition
Jeff Immelt
Venture Partner, New Enterprise Associates (NEA); Chairman & CEO, GE, 2001 - 2017
Climate change is real and is caused by man. We are not making enough progress, certainly not in a meaningful and coordinated way to lessen its impact. This is a crisis, and it is about to get worse. Electricity and fuel are getting more expensive and less available.?
The global climate summit in Glasgow is critical but will be taking place during a moment of inflation, shortage, economic disruption, and political discord. Impractical solutions will be met with skepticism.?
Environmental leaders aren’t generating enough followers. States and countries long thought to be “best practices” on the environment can’t demonstrate success and, as a result, there is no call for “followership.” California leads in rooftop solar but has high electricity costs and regular outages. Diesel generators are used as backup, increasing pollution. Its grid is old and inflexible. An environmentalist in Ohio would never want California’s energy policy!?
And Europe, an environmental leader for a generation, is severely challenged. In Germany, disconnected renewable incentives and an abrupt nuclear shutdown have made developers rich at the expense of small business. The UK is simply out of fuel. Europe will depend on Russia to heat its homes this winter. Australia is an environmentally focused, resource-rich country that experiences on-going power shortages. Lacking a model of environmentally led economic growth that benefits all, what is there to follow for the emerging world?
Climate change is a global problem that must be solved locally. It requires extreme coordination on policy, technology, financing, politics from every government and industry. It requires a long-term commitment but needs to start right away. It can’t be mandated, in that everyone must participate in developing unique solutions.?
Countries have a different frame of reference. Europe matters a lot, but it lacks resources of its own. Asia and Africa still value energy availability as much as cleanliness. And resource-rich countries will need decades to diversify their economies. Solutions must be different around the world. The important thing is progress in the near term.?
Here are a few ideas:
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First…value speed over perfection. This means that natural gas needs to be part of the mix, and a recognition that renewables alone won’t solve the problem. Most experts know this but are afraid to say it (I know this violates dogma). Renewables have made immense progress and should continue to grow substantially. But they have limits. Driving a strategy that links gas and renewables (with storage) will reduce pollution in the short term while growing the economy. A willingness to adopt a better solution quickly…swapping dirtier fuels for cleaner ones…instead of a mythical solution slowly…100% renewables…is the first key to driving change.
Second…invest in infrastructure…particularly grid solutions. There is a simple fact…if the President’s infrastructure plan were implemented quickly and well, it would have a huge impact. Our grid cannot accommodate renewables and base load power…i.e., the minimum electric power needed to be supplied to the grid at any time.??In addition, a substantial investment should be made for electric vehicle infrastructure. Every year, millions are left without power due to severe weather or obsolete infrastructure. In every case the backup power is much dirtier. And one third of the world still lack access to electricity. We need massive investments in resiliency and flexibility. All solutions run through infrastructure.?
Third…we need to focus on a few fundamental technologies for long-term progress. Sustaining progress on batteries really matters. We need to improve performance, while insuring supply for critical materials. The electric vehicle market is poised for substantial growth, helping both transportation and electricity storage. Carbon sequestration (CCS) is necessary to dramatically clean legacy industries….by the way, which account for 90% of the installed base. We have massively underinvested in this technology and costs are high. But CCS can be a real economic growth driver; CCS clusters in local regions can help industrialized areas become green. What we do with carbon can provide a blueprint for transforming other legacy industries, such as plastics. We need to rejuvenate fusion/fission with an eye on developing a clean, baseload technology. Big investments are required to commercialize this technology by the 2030s. And hydrogen will be an important option for clean fuel. Fundamental technology is where government can help and should focus.??
Fourth…we need new sources of capital. There is infinite financing for proven technology. There is focused venture financing for innovation. What we lack is the capital required to scale invention. Historically, this has been the role of government. China will likely fund this type of innovation. But where will other markets get the capital? We need patient and smart money such as pension funds, sovereigns and strategics (big energy companies). Tax subsidies have propelled renewable projects, and that is fine. The ironic fact about clean tech investing is that financial firms earn substantially higher returns than technical and operational innovators. This is unsustainable. We need new investments that can drive real change. In this generation, ESG must finance batteries, hydrogen, sequestration, or fusion…for decades.?
Fifth…there should be a long-term climate agreement between the U.S. and China. America should realize that a lot of the environmental future will be decided in China. They have a huge need, and the next Chinese generation won’t tolerate the pollution from the past. Chinese regulators can unify a huge market with technical innovation. For instance, China is much more responsible for global growth in solar than anyone in the U.S. They will likely lead in EV, next-gen nuclear, and maybe other markets.??They are more willing to finance power and infrastructure projects in poor countries. The world needs China and the U.S. to be partners in a clean energy future.?
There are a lot of government-led solutions that could be helpful. I’d love to see a carbon tax; but that requires political unity that we currently lack. A government-led “affordable care act for energy” may slow progress. Policy should set high standards, engage all solutions, promote real innovation, and include all countries and industries. Reversing climate change is still a game for the elites. We need a sense of urgency from all citizens. Leaders need to chart practical actions for the short and long term…and bring people with them.
Consulting and contract work for chemistry and process engineering
1 年My view: The only carbon capture that makes sense, is use of plants to do what they do. A gmo macro algae for tropical oceans can be a game changer. Energy efficiency is more important than source. Nuclear power is the only carbon free source that can economically support the world economy Coal usage in China and third world, is the main driver for carbon emissions. And can not be ignored if we are serious about carbon emissions. Conversation of coal plants into combined cycle gas will reduce emissions more than solar and wind.
CEO at Kiwaho Lab of Energy & Ecology Inc.
2 年The epoch of farming Liquid Air LA = Liquid nitrogen LN + Liquid Oxygen LO as major energy commodity is coming! Recently I'm focusing at two key clean technologies: 1.?biomass external combustion heat engine with consumable LN?heat sink; optional LO flame-booster 2.?heat engine directly powers air-liquefaction machine with Wei-Trump powertrain ?? Burning 0.5kg biomass or 0.25kg gasoline / heating oil, can produce 1kg marketable LN after deduction of LN consumption in situ, as heat sink of the heat engine, which powers liquefaction. With >80% veneer efficiency, future vehicle drivers need buy both fuel from gas station & LN from nearby farmers or any possible LN retailers for their fuel+LN hybrid vehicles, with 10L gas tank, 100L LN dewar, 100 MPG. The farmed LN could be as cheap as $0.05/L Production line in farmland: grow energy grass -> burn it in my proprietary heat engine, which consumes LN as heat sink -> shaft liquefaction machine -> produce LN -> feedback 70% LN production to the LN consuming heat engine for rolling-up production -> remaining LN for sale. Farming Liquid Nitrogen LN as major energy commodity, will trigger Cryogenic Heat Sink Revolution CHSR! boost heat engine' efficiency 10% -> 90% https://kiwaho.com/lg
CEO at Kiwaho Lab of Energy & Ecology Inc.
2 年Let's synergizingly cultivate a new business model ecology circle, which is going to innovate an unprecedented economic cycle of green energy, based on Liquid Nitrogen LN2 on-farm production and omnipresent hybrid power consumption all over the world. LN2-heat-sunk applications can be categorized to 4 models: Solo direct Cooling (SC), Solo Power generation (SP), Combined Cooling & Power (CCP), Combined Heating & Power (CHP). Burning 0.5kg biomass or 0.25kg gasoline / heating oil, can produce 1kg marketable LN after deduction of LN consumption in situ, as heat sink of the heat engine, which is powering the liquefaction machine. The future drivers need buy both fuel from gas station & LN from nearby farmers or any possible LN retailers for their fuel+LN hybrid vehicles, with 10L gas tank, 100L LN dewar, 100 MPG. Farmed LN price will be circa $0.05/L LN air condictioners need refill LN tank weekly, still cheaper. LN demand = at least 3x current petroleum market What a major new energy commodity! As this disruptive technology inventor, I define: New World Energy Order (NWEO), will proudly usher it. Article comment invitation Great Energy Reset begins with Farming liquid nitrogen as major energy commodity https://kiwaho.com/lg
Co-Founder and COO FlyNow Aviation GmbH
2 年Thank you Jeff Immelt for adressing this issues! We definitely have to join forces to limit the impact of our actions on the environment. But the current destruction of entire industrial systems without economic and business alternatives leads to a dystopia. In order to take into account the real problems of our planet in our time, it is necessary to decouple the quality of life and the standard of living from resource and energy consumption. This makes it possible to present a social, economic and also ecological sustainability, which dissolves the classic distribution struggle of the various "stakeholders".