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PRESS RELEASE
November 1, 2001
Copyright © 2001 Earth Policy Institute
Eco-Economy Offers Alternative to Middle
East Oil
Lester R. Brown
"For
the first time since the oil age began, the world has the technology
to wean itself from petroleum coming from the politically volatile
Middle East," says Lester R. Brown in his new book, Eco-Economy:
Building an Economy for the Earth.
"A combination of wind turbines, solar cells, hydrogen generators,
and fuel cell engines offers not only energy independence, but an
alternative to climate-disrupting fossil fuels," said Brown, President
of the newly established Earth Policy Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based
environmental research organization.
In Eco-Economy, Brown says the global economy is out of sync
with the earth's ecosystem, as evidenced by collapsing fisheries,
shrinking forests, expanding deserts, eroding soils, and falling
water tables. This can also be seen in the earth's changing climate
as rising temperatures lead to more destructive storms, melting
glaciers, and rising sea levels.
In the new economy, which Brown calls an eco-economy, renewable
energy will replace climate-disrupting fossil fuels and a recycling
economy will replace the throwaway economy. Wind turbines will replace
coal mines and recycling industries will replace mining industries.
The needed restructuring of the global economy has already begun,
Brown reports. The shift from the fossil fuel era to the solar/hydrogen
era can be seen in the contrasting growth rates of these energy
sources in recent years. During the last decade, the use of wind
power grew by 25 percent a year, solar cells at 20 percent a year,
and geothermal energy at 4 percent annually. In stark contrast,
oil expanded by only 1 percent a year and coal use declined by 1
percent annually. Natural gas, which is destined to be the transition
fuel from the fossil fuel era to the hydrogen era, grew by 2 percent
per year.
The restructuring is gaining momentum. For example, from 1995 to
2000, world wind electric generation expanded nearly fourfold, a
growth rate previously found only in the computer industry. Denmark
gets 15 percent of its electricity from wind. In the north German
state of Schleswig-Holstein, it is 19 percent. For Spain's state
of Navarra, it is 22 percent.
"Wind power has an enormous potential," said Brown. "According to
a U.S. Department of Energy wind resources inventory, three of the
most wind-rich states-North Dakota, Kansas, and Texas-have enough
harnessable wind energy to satisfy national electricity needs. China
can double its current electricity generation from wind alone. Europe's
offshore wind potential is sufficient to meet the continent's electricity
needs."
Advances in wind turbine design have reduced electricity costs from
38¢ per kilowatt hour in the early 1980s to less than 4¢ at prime
wind sites in 2001. Further cuts are in prospect. In response to
falling costs, wind farms have come online recently in Minnesota,
Iowa, Kansas, Texas, Colorado, Wyoming, Oregon, Washington, and
Pennsylvania.
A quarter-acre of land leased to the local utility to site a large,
advanced design wind turbine can easily yield a farmer or rancher
$2,000 in royalties per year while providing the community with
$100,000 worth of electricity. Money spent on wind-generated electricity
tends to remain in the community, providing income, jobs, and tax
revenue.
A project in the planning stages in eastern South Dakota to develop
3,000 megawatts of wind power for transmission across Iowa to the
industrial Midwest around Chicago is not only a large wind power
project, it is one of the largest energy projects in the world today.
As wind-generating costs continue to fall and concern about climate
change escalates, more and more countries are turning to wind energy.
In December 2000, France announced plans to develop 5,000 megawatts
of wind power by 2010 (1 megawatt supplies 350 homes in an industrial
society). Argentina followed with a plan to develop 3,000 megawatts
of wind power by 2010 in Patagonia, with its world-class wind resources.
In April, the United Kingdom accepted offshore bids to develop 1,500
megawatts of wind power. And in May 2001, China reported that it
will develop some 2,500 megawatts of wind power by 2005.
The European Wind Energy Association, which in 1996 had set a target
of 40,000 megawatts for Europe by 2010, recently raised its goal
to 60,000 megawatts. The United States is projected to increase
its wind-generating capacity in 2001 by at least 60 percent.
Cheap electricity from wind farms can be used to electrolyze water
and produce hydrogen, which can be used to power gas turbines that
supply electricity when the wind ebbs. Hydrogen is also the fuel
of choice for the new fuel cell engines that every major automobile
manufacturer is now working on. The farmers and ranchers who own
most of the U.S. wind rights could one day supply not only most
of the country's electricity, but also much of the fuel used in
its automobiles.
The use of solar cells is also expanding rapidly. In remote villages
where supplying electricity traditionally depended on building a
centralized power plant and constructing a grid to distribute the
electricity, it is now often cheaper simply to install solar cells.
In inaccessible Andean villages, investing in solar cells may be
cheaper than buying candles. The same is true for those villages
in India where lighting comes from kerosene lamps.
At the end of 2000, nearly one million homes worldwide were getting
their electricity from solar cells. With the new solar cell roofing
material developed in Japan, the stage is set for dramatic gains
in this new energy source as rooftops become the power plants of
buildings. For many of the nearly 2 billion people without electricity,
solar cells are their best hope.
"The materials economy is also changing," said Brown. "The challenge
is to shift from a linear flow-through economy to a comprehensive
recycling economy. Progress is being made on this front, but not
nearly enough. Some countries are advancing. For example, 58 percent
of U.S. steel production now comes from scrap. In Germany 72 percent
of all paper comes from paper recycling mills. If the entire world
were to achieve this rate, wood needed for pulp production would
drop by nearly one third."
In describing the transition to the eco-economy, Brown identifies
both sunset and sunrise industries. Among the sunset industries
are coal mining, oil pumping, clearcut logging, and the manufacture
of internal combustion engines and throwaway products. Among the
sunrise industries are wind turbine manufacturing, hydrogen generation,
fuel cell manufacturing, solar cell manufacturing, light rail construction,
reforestation, and fish farming. Rapidly growing professions include
ecological economists, wind meteorologists, recycling engineers,
geothermal geologists, and environmental architects.
In an eco-economy most energy is produced locally from wind, solar
cells, hydropower, biomass, and geothermal sources, thus offering
a new grassroots development potential for developing countries,
one that does not require spending scarce foreign exchange on imported
oil. With a comprehensive recycling economy, the need for imported
raw materials will also diminish, reducing vulnerability to external
political and economic instability.
Another key characteristic of an eco-economy is population stability.
Over the last few decades, some 31 countries in Europe plus Japan
have stabilized their populations. One of the keys to this is improving
the status of women. The more education women have, the fewer children
they have. World Bank research indicates that investing in the education
of girls yields an economic return perhaps four times that of investing
in electric utilities.
Economic decisionmakers at all levels-corporate planners, government
leaders, investment bankers, and individual consumers-all rely on
market signals. But the market often does not tell the truth. For
example, when we buy a gallon of gasoline, we pay the costs of producing
gasoline, but not the health care costs of those who suffer from
the polluted air, the acid rain damage, or the costs of climate
disruption from burning the gasoline.
Sometimes we learn of the market's shortcomings the hard way. For
example, by 1998, China's Yangtze River basin had lost 85 percent
of its original forest cover. Partly as a result, flooding of the
Yangtze River basin that year displaced 120 million people and caused
$30 billion worth of damage. In response, Chinese officials banned
tree cutting in the upper reaches of the basin. Trees standing,
they argued, were worth three times as much as trees cut.
The key to restructuring the economy is to restructure the tax system,
to get the market to tell the ecological truth. As Øystein Dahle,
former Exxon vice president for Norway and the North Sea, observes,
"Socialism collapsed because it did not allow prices to tell the
economic truth. Capitalism may collapse because it does not allow
prices to tell the ecological truth."
Restructuring the global economy will require ecologists and economists
to work together to identify the indirect costs associated with
a particular product or service. These costs can then be incorporated
into market prices in the form of a tax and offset by a reduction
in income taxes. "This restructuring of the tax system, which is
the key to restructuring the economy, does not change the level
of taxes," Brown emphasized, "only their composition."
Building an eco-economy represents the greatest investment opportunity
in history. The companies that have a vision of the new economy
and incorporate it into their planning will be the winners. Those
that cling to the past risk becoming part of it.
The eco-economy is beginning to take shape. Glimpses of it can be
seen in the wind farms of Denmark, the solar rooftops of Japan,
the paper recycling mills of Germany, the steel recycling mills
of the United States, the irrigation systems of Israel, the reforested
mountains of South Korea, and the bicycle networks of the Netherlands.
Almost all the components of an eco-economy can be found in at least
one country. The challenge now is for each country to put all the
pieces of an eco-economy together.
"Building an eco-economy is a goal that cannot be compromised,"
said Brown. "If we are going to restructure the economy in the time
available, all of us will need to be involved. One way or another,
the choice will be made by our generation. But it will affect life
on earth for all generations to come."
Copyright
© 2000 Earth Policy Institute
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