What's Wrong with Wind and Solar? - YouTube

Channel: PragerU

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Have you ever heard of "unobtanium"?
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It's the magical energy mineral found on the planet Pandora in the movie, Avatar. It's
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a fantasy in a science fiction script. But environmentalists think they've found it here
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on earth in the form of wind and solar power.
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They think all the energy we need can be supplied by building enough wind and solar farms; and
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enough batteries.
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The simple truth is that we can't. Nor should we want to—not if our goal is to be good
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stewards of the planet.
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To understand why, consider some simple physics realities that aren't being talked about.
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All sources of energy have limits that can't be exceeded. The maximum rate at which the
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sun's photons can be converted to electrons is about 33%. Our best solar technology is
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at 26% efficiency. For wind, the maximum capture is 60%. Our best machines are at 45%.
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So, we're pretty close to wind and solar limits. Despite PR claims about big gains coming,
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there just aren't any possible. And wind and solar only work when the wind blows and the
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sun shines. But we need energy all the time. The solution we're told is to use batteries.
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Again, physics and chemistry make this very hard to do.
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Consider the world's biggest battery factory, the one Tesla built in Nevada. It would take
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500 years for that factory to make enough batteries to store just one day's worth of
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America's electricity needs. This helps explain why wind and solar currently still supply
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less than 3% of the world's energy, after 20 years and billions of dollars in subsidies.
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Putting aside the economics, if your motive is to protect the environment, you might want
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to rethink wind, solar, and batteries because, like all machines, they're built from nonrenewable
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materials.
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Consider some sobering numbers:
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A single electric-car battery weighs about half a ton. Fabricating one requires digging
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up, moving, and processing more than 250 tons of earth somewhere on the planet.
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Building a single 100 Megawatt wind farm, which can power 75,000 homes requires some
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30,000 tons of iron ore and 50,000 tons of concrete, as well as 900 tons of non-recyclable
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plastics for the huge blades. To get the same power from solar, the amount of cement, steel,
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and glass needed is 150% greater.
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Then there are the other minerals needed, including elements known as rare earth metals.
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With current plans, the world will need an incredible 200 to 2,000 percent increase in
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mining for elements such as cobalt, lithium, and dysprosium, to name just a few.
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Where's all this stuff going to come from? Massive new mining operations. Almost none
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of it in America, some imported from places hostile to America, and some in places we
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all want to protect.
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Australia's Institute for a Sustainable Future cautions that a global "gold" rush for energy
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materials will take miners into "…remote wilderness areas [that] have maintained high
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biodiversity because they haven't yet been disturbed."
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And who is doing the mining? Let's just say that they're not all going to be union workers
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with union protections.
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Amnesty International paints a disturbing picture: "The… marketing of state-of-the-art
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technologies are a stark contrast to the children carrying bags of rocks."
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And then the mining itself requires massive amounts of conventional energy, as do the
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energy-intensive industrial processes needed to refine the materials and then build the
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wind, solar, and battery hardware.
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Then there's the waste. Wind turbines, solar panels, and batteries have a relatively short
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life; about twenty years. Conventional energy machines, like gas turbines, last twice as
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long.
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With current plans, the International Renewable Energy Agency calculates that by 2050, the
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disposal of worn-out solar panels will constitute over double the tonnage of all of today's
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global plastic waste. Worn-out wind turbines and batteries will add millions of tons more
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waste. It will be a whole new environmental challenge.
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Before we launch history's biggest increase in mining, dig up millions of acres in pristine
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areas, encourage childhood labor, and create epic waste problems, we might want to reconsider
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our almost inexhaustible supply of hydrocarbons—the fuels that make our marvelous modern world
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possible.
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And technology is making it easier to acquire and cleaner to use them every day.
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The following comparisons are typical—and instructive:
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It costs about the same to drill one oil well as it does to build one giant wind turbine.
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And while that turbine generates the energy equivalent of about one barrel of oil per
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hour, the oil rig produces 10 barrels per hour. It costs less than 50 cents to store
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a barrel of oil or its equivalent in natural gas. But you need $200 worth of batteries
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to hold the energy contained in one oil barrel.
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Next time someone tells you that wind, solar and batteries are the magical solution for
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all our energy needs ask them if they have an idea of the cost... to the environment.
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"Unobtanium" works fine in the movies. But we don't live in movies. We live in the real
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world.
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I'm Mark Mills, Senior Fellow at the Manhattan Institute, for Prager University.