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Battelle

WANTED:
The Right Technologies
at the Right Price

Based on research from the Global Energy Technology Strategy Program (GTSP), JGCRI researchers are exploring potential technologies for an energy portfolio—specifically energy-producing technologies that can be competitive with fossil fuels or technologies that can reduce the CO2 in our current energy system.
The Earth’s average temperature is rising. So is the level of carbon dioxide (CO2) in Earth’s atmosphere. Blame it—in part—on human beings. Fossil fuel emissions from energy production are considered the greatest contributor to rising CO2 in the atmosphere and, ultimately, global climate change.

Scientists at the Battelle-managed Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) are developing a technology strategy to address the risks of increasing CO2 concentrations and their effect on global climate change as well as the costs associated with limiting CO2 concentrations.

“The need to develop a portfolio of energy technologies is the first and most enduring lesson that comes out of this work,” said Dr. Jae Edmonds, who manages the Global Energy Technology Strategy Program at PNNL’s Joint Global Climate Research Institute (JGCRI).

“Energy plays a critical role in our standard of living as well as in climate change,” Edmonds said. “Because energy from fossil fuels is inexpensive, there is not yet an incentive to stop using it.”

Climate Research—Integrating the Scientific and Human Sides
PNNL’s Joint Global Change Research Institute takes a broad view of climate change, seeking to understand the connection between humans, climate, technology and economics. Using an integrated assessment approach, JGCRI researchers are developing a strategy for identifying the appropriate technologies for preventing or slowing down the release of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. They focus on technologies for particular regions or parts of the world—that could be implemented on a scale large enough to achieve the required emissions reductions. Created in 2001, the JGCRI is a collaborative effort between PNNL and the University of Maryland. For more information on JGCRI, see the institute’s web site at http://globalchange.umd.edu/.
JGCRI researchers have developed a unique integrated modeling framework for evaluating the interactions between energy technologies and market forces under different scenarios of economic growth and a variety of policy and institutional settings. This work suggests that developing a portfolio of technologies could have a dramatic effect on the cost of addressing climate change. The portfolio would include improved versions of more familiar technologies such as fossil fuels as well as economically competitive versions of less-familiar technologies such as advanced biotechnology.

Edmonds and his colleagues are conducting in-depth research on technologies that are critical to achieving an energy system with net-zero carbon emissions. These technologies include carbon dioxide capture and storage, a technology that captures CO2 from the smokestacks of power plants and deposits it deep underground; renewables, such as wind and solar; and specialty crops, such as switch grass. Like other plants, switch grass takes CO2 out of the air during photosynthesis, but it can be burned to produce energy. This results in a recycling of atmospheric CO2 instead of releasing fossil CO2.

For more information on GTSP see the program’s web site at http://www.pnl.gov/gtsp/index.stm.