EU Urged to Make
Massive Solar Investment
June 14, 2006
Source: Clean Edge News
The European Union
and its member states are being urged by leading scientists to make a
major multimillion Euro commitment to solar driven production of
environmentally clean electricity, hydrogen and other fuels, as the only
sustainable long-term solution for global energy needs.
The most promising routes to eventual full-scale commercial solar energy
conversion directly into fuels were identified at a recent international
meeting in Regensburg, sponsored by the European Science Foundation (ESF).
An interdisciplinary task force was established at this meeting to make
the case for substantial investments in these technologies to EU and
national government decision makers.
The fundamental issue is that total annual global energy consumption is
set to at least double from its current level of 14 TW by 2050, while
fossil fuels will start to run out. The use of fossil fuels also
produces unacceptable levels of carbon dioxide, causing global warming
and has disastrous effects in many areas, such as food production.
Apart from solar energy, the shortfall can only be made up by renewable
sources such as wind, along with the other non-fossil, non-renewable
fuel source of energy, nuclear. But these will be unable to satisfy the
predicted increased energy needs and certainly will not be able to
replace fossil fuels entirely, even for electricity production alone.
Another problem is that they will not readily yield stored fuels.
Without an unexpected breakthrough in electricity storage, there will be
a continued need for fuels for around 70 percent of total global energy
requirements, particularly in transportation, manufacturing, and
domestic heating. Electricity only accounts for 30 percent of global
energy consumption at present.
However solar energy is plentiful since enough reaches the earth's
surface every hour to meet the world's annual energy needs. The problem
lies in harnessing it. Nature has perfected, in photosynthesis, a highly
efficient and flexible means of doing this across a wide variety of
scales, from isolated bacterial colonies to large forests.
Substantial progress has been made recently, particularly in Europe, in
understanding and mimicking these natural processes, sufficient for
scientists to be confident that they could use them to produce fuels on
a commercial scale. The focus of research should therefore be on drawing
inspiration from biological systems for the creation of both natural and
artificial solar energy conversion systems that allow in the long run
for a stable and sustainable energy supply. There should also be an aim
to reduce the human ecological footprint and thereby increase the global
ecological capacity using technology that is environmentally clean, for
instance by conversion of carbon dioxide back into fuels in a cyclic
process.
The ESF task force is recommending that three parallel avenues of solar
energy research for generating clean fuel cycles should be pursued in
Europe:
Extending and adapting current photovoltaic technology to generate
clean fuels directly from solar radiation.
Constructing artificial chemical and biomimetic devices mimicking
photosynthesis to collect, direct, and apply solar radiation, for
example to split water, convert atmospheric carbon dioxide and thus
produce various forms of environmentally clean fuels.
Tuning natural systems to produce fuels such as hydrogen and
methanol directly rather than carbohydrates that are converted into
fuels in an indirect and inefficient process.
These three research themes will overlap, and all will exploit
fundamental research elucidating the precise molecular mechanism
involved in the splitting of water into hydrogen and oxygen in
photosynthesis by both plants and oxygenic bacteria. This process, which
evolved 2.5 billion years ago, created the conditions for animal life by
converting atmospheric carbon dioxide into oxygen and carbohydrates, and
also produced all the fossil fuels, which humans are turning back into
carbon dioxide at an increasing rate, threatening catastrophic
environmental effects. The same process now holds our salvation again.
Although the principal products of photosynthesis in plants and bacteria
are carbohydrates, some hydrogen is produced in certain algae and
bacteria, providing a basis for genetic modification to increase yields,
and for the creation of suitable artificial systems. Furthermore,
photosynthesis is capable of generating other chemicals currently made
industrially, such as nitrates amino acids, and other compounds of high
value for chemical industry. The European research program will
therefore seek to develop systems for converting solar energy directly
into such chemicals with much greater efficiency, offering the prospect
not just of producing unlimited energy, but also fixing atmospheric
carbon dioxide to bring concentrations back down to pre-industrial
levels as part of the overall thrust for clean renewable energy.
There are considerable challenges, with the first being to mimic the
functioning of natural photosynthetic systems, particularly photosystem
II, the enzyme complex in the leaves of plants that splits water into
hydrogen and water via a catalyst comprising four manganese atoms along
with some calcium. Significant progress has been made recently on this
front. Participants at the ESF's brainstorming conference, describe the
solar fuels project as the quest for building the "artificial leaf."
There is growing conviction in Europe and elsewhere that, by 2050, a
large proportion of our fuels will come from such "artificial leaves,"
and that there is no time to lose starting the crucial enabling
research, in order to gain technology leadership in this important
future key technology.
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