1 / 14

Managing GHG Emissions

Managing GHG Emissions. Technologies and Policies Sustainable Energy Institute “Next Steps Post-Kyoto” Series Russell Senate Office Building, Room 385 Washington, DC. John Carberry DuPont CR&D Wilmington, DE February 24, 2005. GHG MANAGMENT GOALS.

Télécharger la présentation

Managing GHG Emissions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Managing GHG Emissions Technologies and Policies Sustainable Energy Institute “Next Steps Post-Kyoto” Series Russell Senate Office Building, Room 385 Washington, DC John Carberry DuPont CR&D Wilmington, DE February 24, 2005

  2. GHG MANAGMENT GOALS Reduce GHG emissions 65% (CO2 equivalents basis) by 2010 vs. base year of 1990 Already achieved >70% reduction by 2003. We are recasting a new goal following a major restructuring. Hold energy use flat, 1990 through 2010 Supply 10% total DuPont energy needs from renewable resources at a cost competitive with best available fossil derived alternatives

  3. GHG EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS • Research and Development Needs • Continuing improvement in the inventory of all GHG sources with an emphasis on the “basket of six gasses” and in the understanding of the GHG potential of all gasses. • Continuing improvement in our understanding of the sources and sinks for gasses with GHG potential • Continuing improvement in our understanding of the near term impacts of global warming (regional storms, disease vectors, etc.) • Continuing improvement in the capture and use of “stranded methane”.

  4. GHG EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS • Policy Needs –First, US policy should include constructive contributions from developing economies and be part of an integrated global response that includes: • Market driven solutions through broad trading mechanisms • Mechanisms that insure all sectors of national economies participate equitably. • Credit for early action and baseline protection • Recognition of the full “basket of gasses” with GHG potential

  5. GHG MANAGMENT GOALS Reduce GHG emissions 65% (CO2 equivalents basis) by 2010 vs. base year of 1990 Hold energy use flat, 1990 through 2010 Presently down 5-10% below 1990 Supply 10% total DuPont energy needs from renewable resources at a cost competitive with best available fossil derived alternatives

  6. Energy Efficiency (The reward for holding energy consumption flat) Cumulative Savings @ $20/bbl of oil = $1.5 Billion 150 15 MM bbls of oil Index production $300 MM or 30 cents per share Baseline = 1/4 Quad 100 energy 1990 2000 Year J.B.Carberry

  7. ENERGY EFFICIENCY By 2002 the annual savings had risen to over $360KK/yr. @ $23/Bbl (or $4/KKBtu for natural gas) and the total savings had risen to about $2B. Imagine what that is now with oil in the range of $48/Bbl and natural gas well above $8/KKBtu

  8. ENERGY EFFICIENCY • Research and Development Needs • Continuing advances in low cost, distributed process energy instrumentation that can be installed without a shut-down. Concurrent advances in control room energy monitoring supervised by expert systems. • Continuing development to improve the reliability and efficiency and decrease the capital cost of; Insulation and steam traps, Topping cycles, Recovery of waste heat, Back pressure generators, Modern motors • Long term development of separations that are an alternative to distillation

  9. ENERGY EFFICIENCY • Policy Needs • Government led consumer purchasing programs that drive market mechanisms and promote technology advances • Rational energy efficiency standards in all sectors of the economy • Natural gas strategies that promote price stability through reduced demand and enhanced supply • Careful consideration of the conditions under which an energy project (particularly CHP) can trigger a New Source Review.

  10. GHG MANAGMENT GOALS Reduce GHG emissions 65% (CO2 equivalents basis) by 2010 vs. base year of 1990 Hold energy use flat, 1990 through 2010 Supply 10% total DuPont energy needs from renewable resources at a cost competitive with best available fossil derived alternatives About half way there. Thus far, it appears that the rest will be very expensive.

  11. 10% RENEWABLE ENERGY • Implementation Plan • SHORT TERM • Pipeline “crude” LFG & MDG for near-by sites • Opportunistic wind or solar • Co-feed unused, underused, or waste biomass materials • INTERMEDIATE TERM • Farm chaff & forest slash (co-feed < gasified < CHP) • Civic driven animal waste & trash fired (RDF) projects • Opportunistic LFG & MDG to electricity • LONG TERM • Farms (products, liquid & NG fuels, chaff to CHP) delivering maximum carbon with minimum inputs • Environmentally sound, pipeline grade LFG & MDG • Co-gen fuel cells using bio-fuels • Break-through solar based concepts

  12. RENEWABLE ENERGY • Research and Development Needs • Decrease the capital cost for renewable energy equipment with particular attention to solar and large stationary CHP fuel cells • Significantly reduce the purity required for any fuel used in a fuel cell. • Solve the electrical energy storage problems (enviro-footprint, durability and cost) • Improve the efficiency and reliability and reduce the cost for the transmission of electricity • Decrease the environmental impact of storage and production of all forms of biomass • Improve the collection efficiency of sunlight (useable Btu/acre)

  13. RENEWABLE ENERGY • Policy Needs • Facilitate and incentivize use of renewable energy, broadly, without selecting a technology, or a source, in advance • Enable the energy markets to select the lowest cost options, facilitated by broad trading of credits • Concentrate on simple, predictable and evolutionary programs consistent with a clear strategic plan

  14. Thank you for your time !!! J.B.Carberry

More Related