Staff Contributors
Guest Contributors

Welcome NYT readers to the debate of the decade: Technology development vs. deployment

We've run out of time to wait for an unknown techno-fix to save us

Posted by Joseph Romm (Guest Contributor) at 10:37 AM on 08 Apr 2008

Andy Revkin wrote in The New York Times last weekend about what I believe is the climate debate of the decade.

This post will serve as an introduction to this crucial topic for readers new and old. I will devote many posts this week to laying out the "solution" to global warming, and a few to debunking the "technology breakthrough" crowd.

Why do I write so much about this topic of technology development vs. deployment, especially when it sometimes seems like I am arguing with people who mostly agree with me about the nature of the problem? Three reasons. First, I think we have run out of time to wait for some unknown techno-fix to save us. We either peak in global fossil fuel use by 2020 (or earlier) and then cut emissions sharply -- as our top climate scientists have been telling us with increasing urgency (see here and here) -- or our children and the next 50 generations face the inevitability of tens of feet of sea level rise, widespread desertification, loss of most species on the planet, and other miseries that cannot be adapted to any meaningful sense of the word (see this post).

Second, I helped run the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy at the U.S. Department of Energy in the 1990s. That little-known billion-dollar office is the lead federal agency for both the development and deployment of most of the technologies needed to sharply reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Solar power, wind power, geothermal, LED lighting, efficient heating and cooling, cogeneration, fuel cell cars, hybrids, advanced batteries, flywheels, ultracapacitors, industrial efficiency, cellulosic ethanol (and its feedstocks), biomass gasification, high-temperature superconductors -- you name it, we funded it. And the same for programs to accelerate the deployment of every one of those technologies into the market. (For two years before that, I worked for the Deputy Secretary of Energy, overseeing all energy programs, including nuclear, "clean" coal, and natural gas.) I helped lead the Clinton administration's effort to develop a climate technology strategy, encompassing both technology development and deployment.

One of the things I learned at DOE is that technology breakthroughs that dramatically change how we use energy are incredibly rare -- in my talks, I defy listeners to name a single one that has occurred in the last quarter-century. Nobody's ever done it. I have a long blog post on the "breakthrough myth" (plus a longer discussion in my book) and I will revisit this in a few days. I also learned just how energy inefficient most homes, offices, and factories are.

Third -- and this is a key point for me that Revkin missed in his NYT story -- there are actually three groups in this epic debate, not two.

  1. There are people like me and Princeton's Rob Socolow and the entire IPCC who believe we have now (or soon will have) the technologies needed to stabilize atmospheric carbon dioxide levels at acceptable levels (below 450 ppm) -- and that we must spend a lot more money on R&D into new technologies at the same time.
  2. There are people who seem to recognize the urgency of the problem, like Jeffrey Sachs and Roger Pielke, Jr. (both quoted in the NYT piece), but who think we need "a fundamentally new set of technologies" or "enormous advances in energy technology" to solve the problem.
  3. There are the people who don't really believe in the seriousness of the problem, but because doing nothing is a politically untenable position, offer the hope of new technology as the solution. For them, "new technology" is nothing more than a delaying tactic, and they don't even bother to back up their words with significant increases in funding for R&D. This is what I call the "technology trap."

The intellectual framework for the technology trap was laid out by GOP strategist Frank Luntz (see below). It then became the cornerstone of U.S. "climate policy," thanks to President Bush. (See the post "'Technology, technology, blah, blah, blah' -- Bush climate speech follows Luntz playbook." Other key "delayers" who have embraced this delaying tactic are Newt Gingrich and Bjorn Lomborg.)

A bit more on the origins of the technology trap. Conservative message maker Luntz realized that it could be politically dangerous to oppose any action on global warming, even if efforts to obfuscate the climate science were successful. Luntz lays out a clever solution to this conundrum in his 2002 "Straight Talk" memo (PDF) on climate change messaging (a must-read for all concerned citizens):

Technology and innovation are the key in arguments on both sides. Global warming alarmists use American superiority in technology and innovation quite effectively in responding to accusations that international agreements such as the Kyoto accord could cost the United States billions. Rather than condemning corporate America the way most environmentalists have done in the past, they attack us for lacking faith in our collective ability to meet any economic challenges presented by environmental changes we make. This should be our argument. We need to emphasize how voluntary innovation and experimentation are preferable to bureaucratic or international intervention and regulation.

That's why I call this the technology trap, because the promise of new technology is used to delay rather than foster action on climate change.

You can see why we must all be very wary of people who say the solution is new technology. Even very well-meaning people like Sachs (who I will blog on later this week) may not understand how he is playing into the hands of the delayers by saying "we need a fundamentally new set of technologies" to solve the climate problem without destroying the economy. Anyone should be worried when they sound like the president's science adviser, John H. Marburger III, who said in 2006:

It's important not to get distracted by chasing short-term reductions in greenhouse emissions. The real payoff is in long- term technological breakthroughs.

Or when you sound like then Bush Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham, who said in 2003:

Either dramatic greenhouse gas reductions will come at the expense of economic growth and improved living standards, or breakthrough energy technologies that change the game entirely will allow us to reduce emissions while, at the same time, we maintain economic growth and improve the world's standards of living.

Now, just because the climate destroyer delayers in the Bush administration all push breakthrough technologies as their primary solution to global warming does not mean it is inherently a misguided idea (what am I saying? Of course it does!). Well, it would be misguided even if they didn't, as I will explain see this week. We don't lack the technology to avert a climate catastrophe while sustaining global economic development. We merely lack the political will.

Stay tuned!

This post was created for ClimateProgress.org, a project of the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

Thought China had a good proposal...

...believe it or not, in Revkin's article:
the United States rejected a proposal from China that 0.5 percent of the gross domestic product of industrialized countries be used to disseminate nonpolluting energy technologies.
.  I believe that would be about $75 billion for the U.S., not so terrible.

However, Joe, you are the only one in his article who explicitly says that we can mitigate global warming with current technology, even the other "supporting" source, Adil Najam , said

"It is true that this will not be enough to lick the problem, but it will be a very significant and probably necessary difference."

So, I submit that any and all models that demonstrate the feasability of mitigating global warming with current technology should be front and center -- and new, more complex, deeper models should be constantly developed.  That's a good use of R&D money.

PDF link above is broken

luntzspeak.com is no more.

PDF versions of Luntz's memo are here and here (the latter is hosted on my server).

a sibilant intake of breath

Thanks sindark

Fixed the link.

grist.org
catagory 1a: Enough to start!

  We have enough stuff to begin reducing emissions. We don't currently have good enough tech to affordably go far enough (carbon neutral or negative). So we need to begin the journey, but aggressively look for better stuff to help out as we go. If we ignore the problem until we have really good stuff to deal with it, too much damage will already have been done. The problem of the Luntz approach is twofold, (1) do nothing until the magic tech arrives, and (2) cut research funding so the magic stuff is delayed.

Free Public Transit

there... 3 words that say what you are trying to say in 1500 words...

http://frepubtra.blogspot.com

.


Latest AWEA study

Check it out.  The American Wind Energy Asociation has a new study that says tripling wind power installation could provide 20% of our electric power by 2015, with no extra backup or storage. (pdf, takes a few seconds to load)

http://www.awea.org/pubs/documents/Outlook_2008.pdf

No breakthrough needed.  Capacity factors are averaging 40% with new installations, with offshore locations over 50% capacity factor.

They have also plotted green job growth and economic development from the roll out.

Along with conservation that could cut energy use in half (with plugin hybrids and geo heat exchange building heating/cooling), and roof mounted solar cogeneration (heat+electricity), and a distributed renewable smart grid backed up with biogas from farm waste; we have a total solution to fund ..yesterday!

10 cents per GHG-free kwh generated and GHG producing kwh saved, in subsidies diverted from big coal, oil, nukes, and agribizz corporate welfare, would do the job in a tax neutral (no new taxes) and hedge fund free (as opposed to cap and trade) fashion.  

That's green and very fashionable!

http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin

Deploying "Low Tech": Black revolution!

Gimme serious tech: gimme an old WWII wood gas car, so I can drive carbon negative!  But that is probably not high tech enough...

Encourage small farmers and permaculture plus biochar: natural carbon sequestration!  But that is probably not high tech enough...


DoE budget

Just a comment on DoE. I have know several of the top people at DoE and if I had the choice of DoE or the mafia to make decissions on the future of the planet I wouldn't choose DoE.
The annual budget is in the area of $20 billion. Of that $19 billion goes to nuclear weapons, nuclear waste and nuclear power. One year of that budget towards RE and we could quit having this discussion. It is not only feasible to shift to a renewable energy/energy efficient near zero carbon energy society but once we have done so we will wonder why we waited so long. Quit talking and get on with it.

What about a Carbon Lottery?

I would like to introduce your readers to a new idea floating around to start a Carbon Lottery.

A Carbon Lottery can raise the pools of money needed to fund climate change solutions and will supplement a Carbon Tax or Cap & Trade System.

See www.carbonlottery.info to read about this innovative idea and don't forget to take the poll.

Thanks,
Michael Gillis, founder
Carbon Lottery

Bring on the smart grid (and more)

There ARE useful technology developments that we can reliably anticipate and foresee, but they are not going to be on the fuels side. They will be on the side of how we deploy the fuels and energy resources we already have. Energy control technologies, energy conservation technologies, energy system design technologies. The Breakthrough actually occurred a couple of three decades ago with the microprocessor revolution: it has yet to be systematically and comprehensively deployed in the service of energy management and use. Vast amounts of computing power are being deployed in the service of screwing the last ounce of extra horsepower out of deeply inefficient locomotion systems. Time to make better use of all those zeros and ones.

The true meaning of life is to plant trees, under whose shade you do not expect to sit.
Wind smarts

What is nice about wind on the larger scale is that it doesn't need big smart grid roll out.  It can proceed as fast as possible, while smart grid and solar cogeneration and geo heat exchange with heat storage is installed building by building.

The smart grid stuff can be installed with these renewable/conservation mechanical utility core systems, on new buildings and retrofit onto exisiting buildings.

Distributed generation from farm biogas power plants to backup the smart grid, can have their own smart grid switching systems.  Excel has a smart grid system going up in Colorado.

But wind installation can be accelerated right now.  A bigger PTC than 2 cents per kwh would do that.  Make it 5 cents and watch the wind industry set sail, it's growth rate will leave coal in the dust.

http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin

You are not logged in. Thus, you cannot post a comment. If you have an account, log in. If you don't have an account, well, by all means go make one! Meet you back here in five.
sign in
Search Gristmill
Subscribe
  • subscribe via RSSStay updated with the Gristmill RSS feed.
  • Add to My Yahoo!
  • Subscribe with Bloglines
  • Subscribe in NewsGator Online
  • Subscribe in Netvibes
  • Subscribe in Google
Using Gristmill
  • What is Gristmill?
  • Posting rules
The comments of Gristmill users reflect the opinions of those individuals only, and do not necessarily reflect the viewpoints of Grist, its staff, its board members, their psychotherapists, or their aestheticians. Got it?

Gristmill is powered by Scoop.

ADVERTISING POLICY


About Grist | Support Grist | Job Board | Archives | Grist by Email | RSS | Podcast
Gristmill Blog | In the News | Ask Umbra® | Muckraker | Victual Reality | 'Tis the Season | The Grist List | The Bottom Line



Grist: Environmental News and Commentary
a beacon in the smog (tm) ©2008. Grist Magazine, Inc. All rights reserved. Gloom and doom with a sense of humor®.
Webmaster | Sitemap | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Trademarks