At Large : The non-renewables

The Cape Wind 130-turbine renewable energy wind-farm project is planned for that odd and surprising hernia of federal waters that pops into Nantucket Sound over Horseshoe Shoals. And now, in our eagerness for renewables, the near-shore state waters along the Vineyard's shores and those of Vineyard Sound and Buzzards Bay may host smaller turbine installations and other non-carbon energy developments. Neither the state nor its Oceans Act governs Cape Wind, but as regards everything else roundabout, the state has extended its authority.

The ocean management plan draft, a derivative of the state legislature's Oceans Act, is part of an effort to regulate and guide offshore developments, including wind turbines, cables and pipelines, and even sand mining projects. We reported last week that about two percent of state waters would, under this first draft, be opened to commercial wind development, capable of supporting about 600 total megawatts, enough to power up to 200,000 homes, according to the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs.

The news came with what one supposes were intended to be comforting assurances that the Martha's Vineyard Commission and the Cape Cod Commission will, according to this plan, have review authority over such industrial development within their respective jurisdictions. One suspects that means the power to waterboard prospective energy developers, but not the unilateral power to outright quash the proposals, much as the MVC can review Chapter 40B affordable housing proposals but may not be free to say simply, "Hell, no."

The focus is on renewables, the energy sources that we imagine will displace carbon-based sources in the future as, to make it so, we constrain and tax abundant oil, natural gas, and coal supplies into undeserved oblivion. Good luck to us, I suppose.

But, bearing in mind the allure of the renewables, one despairs of what is non-renewable about the near shore waters we have till now enjoyed and exploited so enthusiastically, so exultantly and, doing so, realized such relaxation, delight, beauty, challenge, and freedom. The fog-drenched, tide-wracked, mysteriously meandering sandy shoals over which Cape Wind will be built will not be Horseshoe Shoals after the 130 turbines are in place. The energy we're told the turbines will yield may be renewable. Horseshoe Shoals is not. Neither are the alongshore waters over which the Oceans Act will impose itself. The turbine installations, the sand mines, the cable conduits, and whatever other developments may be attracted to these waters will extinguish, to an important degree, the lovely, free, non-renewable nature of these salt water acres.

So, if it will be, what's in it for us? Not much of value, weighing renewable gain and non-renewable loss. The president and others may promise that with spurs to wind farm developments and taxes and caps on carbon fuels, we'll double the amount of renewable energy the nation produces in a few years, but what does that really mean?

Robert Bryce, the managing editor of Energy Tribune, writing in March 2009, in the Wall Street Journal, explains, "The key problem facing [President] Obama and anyone else advocating a rapid transition away from the hydrocarbons that have dominated the world's energy mix since the dawn of the Industrial Age, is the same issue that dogs every alternative energy idea: scale.

"Let's start by deciphering exactly what Mr. Obama includes in his definition of 'renewable' energy. If he's including hydropower, which now provides about 2.4 percent of America's total primary energy needs, then the president clearly has no concept of what he is promising. Hydro now provides more than 16 times as much energy as wind and solar power combined. Yet more dams are being dismantled than built. Since 1999, more than 200 dams in the U.S. have been removed.

"If Mr. Obama is only counting wind power and solar power as renewables, then his promise is clearly doable. But the unfortunate truth is that even if he matches former President [George W.] Bush's effort by doubling wind and solar output by 2012, the contribution of those two sources to America's overall energy needs will still be almost inconsequential.

"Here's why. The latest data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration show that total solar and wind output for 2008 will likely be about 45,493,000 megawatt-hours. That sounds significant until you consider this number:4,118,198,000 megawatt-hours. That's the total amount of electricity generated during the rolling 12-month period that ended last November. Solar and wind, in other words, produce about 1.1% of America's total electricity consumption ...

"That issue aside, the scale problem persists. For the sake of convenience, let's convert the energy produced by U.S. wind and solar installations into oil equivalents. The conversion of electricity into oil terms is straightforward: one barrel of oil contains the energy equivalent of 1.64 megawatt-hours of electricity. Thus, 45,493,000 megawatt-hours divided by 1.64 megawatt-hours per barrel of oil equals 27.7 million barrels of oil equivalent from solar and wind for all of 2008. Now divide that 27.7 million barrels by 365 days and you find that solar and wind sources are providing the equivalent of 76,000 barrels of oil per day. America's total primary energy use is about 47.4 million barrels of oil equivalent per day."

You can double that 76,000 barrel contribution from solar and wind, and double it again, and the current and growing need for electricity production in the U.S. means that oil, gas, and coal are not going to be replaced by renewables in the national electrical energy budget anytime soon. So, the question comes: is the fractional (when realistically estimated) contribution of electrical power from renewables worth the cost of inviting predation among what have been our cherished non-renewables, namely the Vineyard and indeed the Massachusetts coastal waters?

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