[This post was originally written for the newsletter of the Enfield Society - which will print part of it.]
In
planning applications and fuel bills, on Welsh hillsides and in the North Sea,
we keep hearing about renewable energy. But why? What’s the fuss about?
Let’s
start at the beginning. Our economy is based on fossil fuels. Gas and oil heat
our houses. Petrol and diesel fuel our cars. Coal and gas generate most of our
electricity.
It has
to stop. The overwhelming majority of competent scientists agree that burning
fossil fuels has already increased global temperatures, raised sea levels, melted
much of the Arctic ice and made extreme weather events more likely. If this
continues island and coastal communities will lose their homes, arid regions
will dry out and global food production will fall.
And we
have to move fast. To avoid catastrophic climate change we need to reduce
global greenhouse gas emissions by 3% pa, starting now. The later we leave it
the faster we’ll have to cut emissions. Also, since the UK’s prosperity is
derived from our coal-fueled industrial revolution which has so polluted the
atmosphere it’s only fair that we should cut our emissions sooner and faster
than countries, like India and China, that are still industrialising.
Our
first thought should obviously be to use less energy (and thus save money!). We
can do this by improving building insulation, buying more efficient equipment,
replacing things less frequently and driving and flying less.
There a LOT of scope for this. Homes built to the highest standards (passivhaus) need 90% less heating energy than average homes. Unfortunately Enfield Council has refused to mandate this level of performance despite repeated representations from Enfield Green Party. There's also scope to provide the heating that is needed, especially in existing buildings, by using ground and air-source heat pumps rather than conventional boilers.
In addition the most energy efficient cars, computers and domestic appliance are much more efficient than average ones.
That
will not be enough. We must also stop burning fossil fuels and move to
low-carbon energy sources. Our existing nuclear power plants must play their
part but new nuclear plants simply cannot be built fast enough or cheaply
enough or run reliably enough to meet the need even if the waste disposal
problem was solved – which it isn’t. Renewables will have to carry most of the
load.
Fortunately
there are lots of renewable energy sources: hydropower, sunlight, wind, waves,
tides, hot underground rocks, spare heat from furnaces and sustainably produced
fuels. Each of these has its pros and cons. How can Enfield play its part in
the renewables revolution? How, in short, can we cut our greenhouse gas
emissions and create the green jobs our people need?
We can
exclude waves and tides (no sea) and hot rocks (wrong geology). Large
hydroelectric schemes are also out though I
believe that the Council plans a
small turbine in the River Lee. The
Council also plans a heat network to distribute spare heat from the Edmonton
incinerator. That’s low-carbon energy
provided that it’s our last resort for dealing with waste. Reuse and recycling
are clearly better options where available. It may also be possible to add
other sources of spare heat to the heat network or to support another heat
network.
Could
we use sustainably produced fuels in a heat network or even in cars? Perhaps.
In the UK today these fuels are mainly biodiesel from vegetable oil and some
sustainably produced wood. In practice the biodiesel isn’t always low carbon
due to the deforestation that precedes palm oil production. Further, the UK
already has a number of power stations that burn woodchips and other biofuels
with others planned but their appetite for fuel greatly exceeds the supply of
sustainably-produced fuel – even allowing for imports. The greenwash is
particularly thick in this sector!
With
appropriate regulation this may become an important sector as there are several
novel fuels under development. However, these are all possibilities for the
future not fuels we can use now.
So we
come to the big ones: sun and wind.
Wind
is actually a bit marginal in urban areas. Big turbines are impractical, small
turbines are inefficient and may damage any wall or roof they’re attached to.
Larger turbines might be installed in the north of the borough – though the
many restrictions would make it hard, perhaps impossible, to find suitable
sites. To me wind turbines are elegant
and stately. I like them. Some people object to them on aesthetic grounds but
there’s no accounting for taste is there?
Finally
sunlight. We could all use sunlight to heat our water and generate electricity.
Government subsidies (Feed-in Tariff and Renewable Heat Obligations to be
technical) make investment profitable for the homeowner whilst contributing
power to the grid. Unfortunately Enfield lags behind on solar electricity –
only one home in 362 has solar panels – compared to 1 in 8 in Waltham Forest. Enfield
has only 1.5MW of installed solar capacity.
Solar
PV is not limited to private homes. The Council has installed panels on the
Civic Centre and on schools. Many offices and factories could also benefit from
solar panels. As a Green I’d like to see the Council make this mandatory for
new and existing buildings. But national legislation make this impossible and
the need to persuade hundreds of employers and to co-ordinate thousands of
installations in a voluntary programme is daunting. And speed is vital.
That’s
why I support the proposed solar array for Sloeman’s Farm. Once approved it would
provide 15MW within just a few months. That’s ten times Enfield’s current solar capacity and it would increase
London’s solar capacity by 30%. No other current scheme can do so much so fast.
Renewable
energy is not a fad. To reduce our greenhouse gas emissions, fast, is an
obligation we owe to future generations, to people in low-lying lands and to
all the species threatened by climate change. Inaction is not an option I can
live with.
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