The decarbonization story and why a carbon price beats technology breakthroughs

carbon.jpgThe decarbonization data makes clear that if you want to beat 450 ppm and avoid catastrophic climate impacts, a significant price for carbon (plus aggressive technology deployment) is much more important than technology breakthroughs.

That is a central point of this post. That is what I learned in the mid-1990s when I helped to run the billion-dollar office at DOE in charge of federal clean energy technology breakthroughs and deployment — and had the chance to work with the top scientists and technology modelers at the national labs to figure out how we can cut emissions most quickly and cost-effectively.

The pursuit of the Holy Grail of multiple technology breakthroughs is in fact a side show — and for many, like Bush/Luntz/Gingrich/Lomborg, that pursuit is meant as a complete rhetorical distraction to the public so we can continue to avoid action, as I have repeatedly blogged (see here or here, for instance). It was specifically designed by conservative strategist Frank Luntz as a core delaying strategy (see here).

As for the authors of the recent Nature article, “Dangerous Assumptions” (available here) and the founders of the Breakthrough Institute, Shellenberger and Nordhaus, they are not delayers — they say they genuinely want to address the climate issue. But I do know that by pushing some of the same rhetoric as Bush and Luntz, they are unintentionally reinforcing the core delay message. [I do take exception to how they have occasionally defined “breakthrough” (as I explained here) and their specific notion that solar PV or solar thermal require government-funded breathroughs (as I explained here).]

More importantly, it really doesn’t matter why they keep pushing analysis and conclusions that are wrong. It merely matters that they are wrong. Significantly, Roger Pielke, Jr., keeps using the wrong definition of decarbonization — and by wrong I mean, not the one the IPCC uses in the very pages that Pielke references in the Nature paper.

I can’t imagine that any of my readers want to use “decarbonization” differently from how the IPCC (and most of the literature) uses it. But again, as we will see, much more important than semantics, the historical decarbonization data strongly suggests that the two major conclusions of the Nature article are wrong:

  1. The IPCC scenarios are not filled with “Dangerous Assumptions,” as the title of the Nature article asserts.
  2. The recent carbonization data does not support the central conclusion of the article “Enormous advances in energy technology will be needed to stabilize atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations at acceptable levels.” In fact, if anything, it supports the reverse conclusion, the one stated in the first line of this post.

Pielke believes the issue is over. He just wrote a post titled, “Case Closed.” But he completely misunderstood the purpose of my earlier post — I was not agreeing with his approach to the subject, I was just trying to point out that even using his (incorrect) approach, he had made a basic analytical mistake (see here). He did. It is one of many he has made recently (see, for instance, this new RealClimate post and this old Scienceblogs post).

UNDERSTANDING DECARBONIZATION

Decarbonization is one of the two core technology strategies (along with energy efficiency) needed to avert catastrophic global warming. So it must be understood completely by anyone who cares about the climate. Probably the best way to do that is to read the IPCCs’s own “Special Report on Emissions Scenarios” (which is cited in the Nature article) that has a whole section titled “Carbon Intensity and Decarbonization.” It is a very short section that has some terrific charts and that undermines the entire Nature article. Let’s look at the first chart.

decarb.gif

Figure 2-11: Global decarbonization of primary energy - historical development and future scenarios, shown as an index (1990 = 1).

Here is what the IPCC believes is the most accurate way to describe what has happened (note — the carbon intensity of primary energy is carbon emissions divided by total energy):

Decarbonization denotes the declining average carbon intensity of primary energy over time (see Kanoh, 1992). Although the decarbonization of the world’s energy system shown in Figure 2-11 is comparatively slow, at the rate of 0.3% per year, the trend has persisted throughout the past two centuries (Nakicenovic, 1996). The overall tendency toward lower carbon intensities results from the continuous replacement of fuels with high carbon content by those with low carbon content.

Pielke doesn’t use this definition of decarbonization, even though pretty much everyone else does. Why? Who knows. It isn’t just semantics, though — and it is not, as Pielke claims, “dissembling and misdirection” on my part to explain all this, as we will see.

[Semantic aside: The Nature article says, “Decarbonization of the global energy system depends mainly on reductions in energy intensity and carbon intensity.” That is quite a confusing sentence, for if we used the standard definition of decarbonization, it would translate into, “The declining average carbon intensity of primary energy over time depends mainly on reductions in energy intensity and carbon intensity.”]

Pielke likes to focus on carbon/GDP (see here), which isn’t anywhere near as analytically useful as decarbonization, as we’ll see. And, of course, carbon/GDP doesn’t have a hundred or two hundred year trend, a trend that undermines part of his case against the IPCC. In any case, if you use the common definition, the IPCC one, then you end up with data that suggests the IPCC isn’t making dangerous assumptions, but is making reasonable ones and a useful distinction:

The carbon intensities of the scenarios are shown in Figure 2-11 as an index spliced in the base year 1990 to the historical development. The median of all the scenarios indicates a continuation of the historical trend, with a decarbonization rate of about 0.4% per year….

The scenarios that are most intensive in the use of fossil fuels lead to practically no reduction in carbon intensity. The highest rates of decarbonization (up to 3.3% per year) are from scenarios that envision a complete transition to non-fossil sources of energy.

That doesn’t seem like such a dangerous assumption, does it? Seems kind of reasonable, actually, to use a lot of possible scenarios of the future, with the median decarbonization roughly equal to the historical rate for a century. Yes, this is a 2000 report, and when the IPCC stopped taking new input for the Fourth Assessment, around 2005, there were a few years of data that the decarbonization had at least temporarily reversed. Hardly a reason to throw out three dozen scenarios derived from the literature and based on a century of data.

Okay, I know what you’re thinking: Please, please let this be the last post on decarbonization But, Joe, wasn’t the real point of the Nature article that the most dangerous assumption by the IPCC in their scenarios was that most of the future decarbonization occurs “automatically” and “in the absence of climate policies”? Since those “spontaneous advances” aren’t happening, we need “Enormous advances in energy technology” just like they said. In fact, as we’ll see, that doesn’t really describe what’s going on in the scenarios — but that is a separate discussion, which I will defer until Part 2.

BREAKTHROUGHS DON’T GET YOU ACCELERATED DECARBONIZATION

Now what is really fascinating to me is that the 20th century was certainly the greatest century for technology breakthroughs in the history of the world by far, including some major energy-related breakthroughs like nuclear power and combined cycle turbines and photovoltaics and the jet engine and the transistor. We also had two World Wars and two huge energy shocks in the 1970s. But the decarbonization trend hardly budges for the century.

What I draw from this is that the decarbonization trend was essentially independent of breakthroughs.

But the decarbonization trend reversed in 2000. Was it lack of improvements in technology or lack of investment in breakthroughs? No, that hasn’t slowed down. Indeed, it has accelerated, especially in the energy arena. We have dropped the price of wind and PV by about a factor of ten in a quarter century. We have hybrid cars. The world has been spending $1+ billion/year on hydrogen.

What changed, then? Two things, mainly. First, the price of the fossil fuel that has the least amount of carbon and which can be burned most efficiently — natural gas — went through the roof. So coal became much more economically attractive. A combined cycle natural gas plant has well under half the emissions of a typical coal plant. I would also add that nuclear, which saw steady growth in electricity delivered for the past few decades, also turned out to be expensive and risky and hard to develop rapidly — so growth slowed. At the same time, absent a price for CO2 reflecting its harm to society, renewables have not been able to capitalize on the high cost of natural gas and nuclear as quickly as they could have (except in Europe where renewables have much higher government subsidies and mandates and a price for carbon — but the same exact technology, of course, that we have here in America or that the Chinese have).

CONCLUSION ONE: The best way to get back on the decarbonization trend is not through technology breakthroughs, but through the accelerated deployment of low-carbon technologies, which is best achieved in three ways: a price for carbon, government mandates (such as renewable standards), and government subsidies (such as tax credits or feed-in tariffs [I am not endorsing the latter]).

Indeed, it would seem pretty clear that absent a serious price for carbon (or major subsidies/mandates), it would be hard to make the case that any other strategy would do better than return us to the historical trend, 0.3% per year — a trend far too slow to get us to 450 ppm.

But there was another big post-2000 change. The fastest-developing country in the world, China, walked away from two decades of an aggressive energy-efficiency deployment program in the late 1990s (see my post here and the video of a terrific talk by Dr. Mark Levine, co-founder of the Beijing Energy Efficiency Center here). That meant the only way to grow was to build power plants as fast as possible — and since they have a lot of coal (and no price for carbon to reflect its harm), and most everything else was relatively expensive, they went on the biggest binge of coal-plant building in the world’s history (see here).

CONCLUSION TWO: Aggressively deploying energy-efficient technologies is a very good strategy for reducing or eliminating the need to build new power plants. And if the energy efficiency happens to be in a country whose power grid is very carbon-intensive and whose cheapest energy option (absent the costing of environmental impacts) happens to be the most carbon intensive — then that efficiency will contribute to decarbonization or at least to not reversing other decarbonization trends.

In short — I am arguing that the reason the more than century-old decarbonization trend of the global energy system reversed course in 2000, the reason that carbon dioxide emissions growth has been “anomalously” high since 2000, was a confluence of two main factors — the relatively higher price of low-carbon power vs. coal and China’s abandonment of energy efficiency. [In general, efficiency has no direct impact on decarbonization — this was an unusual case, but then, the recent recarbonization was historically unusual.]

And so I am concluding that the best way to reverse the recent “carbonization” trend is a price for carbon dioxide, aggressive deployment of low-carbon technologies through mandates and subsidies and other government deployment programs (where needed before the CO2 price really kicks in), and a return to aggressive energy-efficiency deployment in China.

If we don’t do those things, I honestly can’t see what all the breakthroughs in the world would get us, even if breakthroughs were easy to get, which they are not (see here). Indeed, even if you got your breakthroughs, you would now have a bunch of low-volume, high-initial-cost disruptive technologies that would themselves need a price for CO2 and aggressive deployment programs to have any chance whatsoever against the market incumbents - just like we have tody. We don’t just instantly invent an energy source that has half the price of coal. You MUST have cost reduction from the manufacturing learning curve and production volume economies of scale, anyway.

BOTTOM LINE: I would have thought it obvious that the single most important thing needed to remove carbon from our energy system much faster than the historical rate is a price for carbon. Otherwise, what is the economic incentive over the long term? Sure, there is always hope we might find something new and exciting with a big breakthough. But in fact it is applying the new smarts in small ways to old technology, like solar thermal electric, that holds the only genuine hope for changing the planet’s energy system fast enough to avoid climate catastrophe.

Stay tuned for Part 2.

21 Responses to “The decarbonization story and why a carbon price beats technology breakthroughs”

  1. Paul K Says:

    All this breakthrough talked has me confused. Is there any mechanism besides cap & trade on CO2 emissions that can properly price carbon?

  2. Joe Says:

    A tax, which, in this country, is politically a non-starter. We’re gonna have a cap & trade, though, so a tax is moot.

  3. David B. Benson Says:

    Torrified wood can compete with coal in South Carolina. In countries with lower labor costs, it would be less expensive than coal. The delivered cost is highly dependent upon tansportation costs, somewhat more so than coal.

    There are various woody and other agricultural wastes which can be directly co-fired with coal. For transporting some densification is desirable, but this is probably less expensive than torrification. This is being done in the mid-west and also just starting in a west Africian country.

    I conclude that the price of coal is now sufficiently high that these biomass alternatives can now begin to successfully compete.

  4. Paul K Says:

    Joe,
    Thank you. Cap & Trade is the only mechanism necessary.

    David B. Benson,
    By happy happenstance, the market is so desirous of an opportunity to purchase alternatives that it raises on its own the price of fossil.

  5. Robert Says:

    Joe,

    Have you considered what happens to the money raised from a carbon tax? It enters the public sector (obviously). There is no finacial pressure on the public sector to cut carbon because the tax recycles back into the public purse.

    You just have to look at our local council offices (lights and computers left on all night, snow melts instantly from roof due to no insulation…) to see how this works.

  6. Robert Says:

    Oh yes, and a cap and trade has exactly the same problem as a straight carbon tax vis a vis the public sector.

  7. David B. Benson Says:

    Paul K — I’ll say that the recent, dramatic run-up in the world spot price for coal is almost entirely driven by events in China. In the United States, the run-up in the spot prices of delivered coal appear to be controlled by the price of diesel fuel.

  8. Joe Says:

    That is a good question. Well, the public sector would still face the higher prices for carbon-based fuels. But at least for the federal government, you would want to mandate the reductions and take a teeny fraction of the money collected from the allowance auction to pay for clean tech deployment.

  9. Paul K Says:

    Robert,
    Yes, penalties for exceeding the cap can be incorrectly considered taxes. Taxes are imposed to punish behavior and raise revenue for the state. They are a bad idea. Cap & Trade, based on the creation of penalty avoidance coupons, exists to provide a market for emission reduction.

  10. Earl Killian Says:

    Decarbonization requires several things. A price on carbon is one of them. Regulations and incentives are another. It is very unlikely that California could have gotten its current energy efficiency solely by raising the price of electricity. Its regulations and incentives were critical.

    Let’s not get too hung up about how carbon gets a price. It could be cap-grandfather-trade, cap-auction-rebate, tax, etc. (Let’s retire the phrase “cap-and-trade” since it means different things to different people.) The purpose of the price is to reflect what economists call “externalities” so that the market can operate more efficiently.

  11. Robert Says:

    “The purpose of the price is to reflect what economists call “externalities” so that the market can operate more efficiently.”

    Totally agree. Unfortunately the money raised is not paid back to mother earth in order to recompense her for the damage (so to speak). Instead it just recycles round getting spent, invested, lent, borrowed and so on, just like any other money. There is a big question mark over whether all this frenetic financial jiggery-pokery would actually result in less coal, oil and gas being extracted and burned.

  12. Robert Says:

    Just to elaborate a bit further… Yes, in theory, putting a price on carbon should make people choose alternatives. The doubt in my mind is whether the obvious alternatives (PV panels, wind turbines etc) can actually exist and proliferate in a carbon vacuum. Carbon is deeply ingrained in all aspects of manufacture and deployment and a complex system of carbon pricing would likely mask the underlying continued carbon binge.

    I still think that the only way to reduce fossil fuel use is to extract less. If that means progressively reduced standards of living then tough.

  13. Paul K Says:

    While recent events indicate that prises may rise on their own to sufficient levels, we should get a little hung up on how carbon gets its price. Unlike other mechanisms, cap and trade does not have probable negative side effects. Taxes should not be considered. Regulation and incentives are likely more important than price. Cap & Trade is not nebulous. The Lieberman-Warner bill is a specific cap/trade structure.

  14. Earl Killian Says:

    Robert, I see no problem in using CSP energy to produce more CSP infrastructure. Why should this be a problem? Also, the transition from a high-carbon to low-carbon (and eventually to zero carbon) economy will not take place overnight. When I think about it, I see 30 years as being the minimum transition period. During the transition, the easiest substitutions will be made first. Most likely the world’s power grids will be revamped. In the U.S. today we have 49% coal and 20% natural gas. First the coal plants will be shut down and primarily replaced by efficiency (2005 coal power was 1956 TWh and 1.944 Gt CO2, and there were 1634 TWh of efficiency opportunities). Wind, solar, geothermal, etc. can provide the remaining 322 TWh that coal produces today, and also the extra TWh needed for population growth and the energy required to replace gasoline (about 900 TWh). Efficiency, population growth, and renewable energy substitution will happen concurrently over (my guess) about 30 years. After coal is gone, we’ll take on natural gas (which is about one third the CO2/kWh of coal). In parallel in the transportation sector we will be electrifying our passenger vehicles and our rail lines. We’ll eventually get to the point where 90% of passenger miles are powered by the grid, which by this time will be low-carbon. We’ll probably use agricultural waste to create biofuels that fuel non-electric transport (the 10%) and non-rail freight (e.g. class 8 trucks powered by algae biodiesel). Once we’ve done these things we’re not done, since we have to figure out how to get rid of the CO2 from concrete, steel, fertilizer, etc. production. And then once we’ve done that we need to turn on the systems that start removing CO2 from the atmosphere to return to safe levels (we are already over safe levels, so we need CO2 removal).

    The only question in my mind is whether starting today allows all this happen soon enough to prevent the worst. But nothing in this scenario seems undoable with today’s technology.

  15. Paul K Says:

    “Most likely the world’s power grids will be revamped”
    What are the nuts and bolts of that? There is no doubt the next ten years will see an explosion of solar in the desert southwest and wind on the Montana and Dakota plains.

  16. Robert Says:

    Earl, The problem is that the renewable energy would most likely be IN ADDITION to fossil fuel energy, besides being highly dependant on it for manufacture and deployment. I think that unless we find a way to tackle CO2 emissions head-on (i.e. globally decide to burn less, and eventually none, leaving much in the ground) we won’t be tackling the problem at all.

    The main reaction that high fossil fuel prices are having is to focus politicians attention on domestic energy security, controlling inflation and heading off all the attendant problems of crashing house prices etc. Very little talk this week about climate change, at least in the UK. US Crude broke $113 today for the first time.

  17. John Mashey Says:

    Consider:
    - going all-out on efficiency of buildings, infrastructure, and vehicles
    - investing fossil energy in building renewables as fast as we can
    - doing everything we can to stretch the use of oil&gas
    - building infrastructure that still makes sense with much higher oil+gas prices

    Do we really care whether we do such things
    - for economic reasons, i.e., to lessen the GDP-flattening seen in Bob Ayres’ pitch, page 46:
    http://www.bren.ucsb.edu/ news/ documents/ robert_ayres.PPT
    or what one finds in the Hirsch Report.

    I.e., to avoid driving the economy off a cliff

    - or for climate reasons

    To avoid driving the cliimate off a second cliff.

    The real difference comes with coal, where the first one would say “burn coal” and the second one says “phase it out as fast as possible”, i.e., Earl’s scenario. But really, I’d claim that a whole lot of actions are the same.

  18. David B. Benson Says:

    I request everybody use the word ‘fossil’ when referring to decarbonizatin, etc. Using biomass is using carbon and doind so the (very close to) carbon-neutral. Nothing wrong with that.

  19. Earl Killian Says:

    Robert said, “unless we find a way to tackle CO2 emissions head-on”: I think that is exactly what many of the people in the US are trying to do. Unfortunately our national government is AWOL (or worse), but I hope that can be reversed in 2009 (it depends primarily on how our Senate elections go, IMO, since it takes 60% to do anything there). Are not US state laws that mandate reduced CO2 emissions (e.g. 30% by 2020, 80% by 2050) not a head-on tackle attempt? Some 18 states have caps:
    http://www.pewclimate.org/ what_s_being_done/ in_the_states/ emissionstargets_map.cfm
    I am most familiar with California, but the nice thing about the above map is that Americans can click on their own state to see what is going on.

  20. Peter Wood Says:

    The question of what to do with the money raised from a carbon price (such as from auctioning permits in a cap-and-trade emissions trading scheme) is an important one.

    Like any consumption tax, a price on carbon will be regressive to a certain extent, so some of the money raised should be spent on compensating people with low incomes for increased prices in electricity, fuel, and greenhouse gas intensive commodities (such as beef and aluminium). This could be done by raising the threshold above which people pay income tax, or by increasing welfare payments, or both. Of course, the amount that someone is compensated should not depend on the amount of energy or carbon that they individually use, because that would defeat the purpose of a carbon price. If people on low incomes were not compensated, then it would be very difficult politically to make the deep reductions in emissions that are necessary.

    There are some areas where emissions are difficult to measure, making it difficult to incorporate these areas into an emissions trading scheme and maintain the integrity of the scheme. I’m thinking in particular of emissions in land use, land use change and forestry. This sector also has great potential for reducing emissions, and good policies that reduce emissions in this sector can have immense other environmental benefits. Therefore, some of the money raised from a carbon price should be spent on reducing emissions in this sector, through activities such as reforestation and avoided deforestation.

    Finally, there is also a good case for spending some of the money raised from auctioning permits on research, development, demonstration, and possibly deployment of low emissions technologies. As well as renewables, this could include better buildings, energy efficiency, and so on. Measures such as deployment of smart meters, which would address market failures that lead to less energy efficiency could also be included.

  21. Arthur Says:

    Joe, Wasn’t the point of Pielke’s article that the decarbonization is assumed by the IPCC, even though recarbonization has been seen as of late? I agree with you that deployment is essential. Pielke may draw the wrong conclusion about the IPCC underestimating the task of stabilizing carbon, but I think there is an indeed an arguement to be made for them underestimating it.

Leave a Reply