Tag: energy

Datacenter Energy

Bapat is also right to point to electricity as a weak link in the system. The centralization of computing can bring dramatic increases in overall energy efficiency, compared to the fragmented, subscale private data centers we have today. The megacenters tend to operate at much higher levels of capacity utilization than the private centers can achieve, and their operators have the skill and wherewithal to install cutting-edge power-management and cooling technologies. At the same time, however, the centralization of computing assets concentrates energy demand, putting new strains on the aging electric grid. Efficiency increases, but vulnerability does, too.

politicians will soon be forced to wake up to the importance of data centers as national assets. maybe data centers can lead the necessary changes to the energy grid?

Africa powering Europe

Not a bad start. With DC all the way to Norway, they could of course play a colossal game of battery charging across the continent.

Europe is considering plans to spend more than £5b on a string of giant solar power stations along the Mediterranean desert shores of northern Africa and the Middle East. More than 100 of the generators, each fitted with 1000s of huge mirrors, would generate electricity to be transmitted by undersea cable to Europe and then distributed across the continent to European Union member nations, including Britain.

2017-06-19: Off-grid solar is making inroads in Africa.

Many Western entrepreneurs see solar power in Africa as a chance to reach a large market and make a substantial profit. This is a nascent industry, which, at the moment, represents a small % of the electrification in the region, and is mostly in rural areas. There’s plenty of uncertainty about its future, and no guarantee that it will spread at the pace of cell phones. Still, in the past 18 months, these businesses have brought electricity to 100Ks of consumers—many of them in places that the grid failed to reach, despite a 100-year head start.

2018-09-10: It would also green the Sahara

Canada sized Solar and wind farms could make the Sahara Desert green again with 2x the rain. With enough solar panels, albedo increases enough to cause lots of extra rain.

2023-05-13: If solar is so cheap, why hasn’t it scaled in Sub-Saharan Africa? Because do-gooders are lying.

Scaling Solar continues to be paraded as an example that the MDBs can use billions of dollars of ODA to catalyze trillions of private sector investments needed to fund sustainability goals. The facts tell a different story. Every $1 of concessional financing catalyzed only 28 cents of private sector financing. Scaling Solar’s official messaging masqueraded a heavily subsidized development finance program as a private sector driven solution. Governments canceled existing solar contracts citing Zambia’s purportedly unsubsidized low tariffs. Developers left the space because the deal economics no longer made sense.Beyond distorting market signals, the messaging perpetuated the myth that solar can be funded by the private sector in lower-income countries. Solar isn’t scaling in poor countries. The cost of capital is too high.

The IFC could take 3 actionable steps to return to the original vision of the Scaling Solar initiative:

  1. Acknowledge that expanding clean power access will continue to rely heavily on concessional DFI lending and guarantees to reduce the cost of capital.
  2. Transparently report explicit and implicit subsidies.
  3. Innovate to enhance power contract transparency, empowering market participants to scrutinize pricing drivers and prevent the accumulation of large undisclosed public debts.

Google Climate

If Google’s can come up with a way to make renewable energy cheaper than the fossil-based alternatives, lowering the cost of just about everything, while reducing environmental externalities, then, by God, each and every one of them deserve to become rich

2007-12-21: I love Kim Stanley Robinson

2008-01-25: Google attitude

the cultural difference between the movement and Google: Google has the positive message of the potential for change through technology. The other unspoken divide is about economics: Gore and Friedman favor raising the cost of CO2. Page and Brin see a victory in reducing the price of the clean energy. Tax versus investment.

Space Solar Power

None of the 4 new design concepts now offer as credible a price tag as the SERT designs, simply because sufficient funding has not yet been available to evaluate the uncertainties and develop sharp cost estimates. But in at least 3 of the 4 cases, there is excellent reason to expect that costs will be much less than 17 cents / kWh when we get there. There are important risks – but with all 4 options together, the objective risk of not being able to beat coal or fission on cost is probably less here than with any other technology large enough to meet all the world’s energy needs.

Why are we wasting time and money on ethanol again? Another company thinks 2500MW of space based solar power plants for $4b is doable. A similar nuclear reactor would come to ~$18b.
2021-09-01: With starship, this now seems feasible and perhaps inevitable.

Assuming a 70% transmission loss from orbit (beaming power by microwave to antenna farms on Earth is inherently lossy) we would need 60TW of PV panels in space. Which is 60k GW of panels, at 1 km^2 per GW. With maximum optimism that looks like somewhere in the range of 3k-60k Starship launches, at $2M/flight is $6b to $120b … which, over a period of years to decades, is chicken feed compared to the profit to be made by disrupting the 95% of the fossil fuel industry that just burns the stuff for energy. The cost of manufacturing the PV cells is another matter, but again: ground-based solar is already cheaper to install than shoveling coal into existing power stations, and in orbit it produces 4x as much electricity per unit area. Even if Musk doesn’t go there, someone is going to get SBPS working by 2030-2040, and in 2060 people will be scratching their heads and wondering why we ever bothered burning all that oil. But most likely Musk has noticed that this is a scheme that would make him unearthly shitpiles of money (the global energy sector in 2014 had revenue of $8t) and demand the 1000s of Starship flights it will take to turn reusable orbital heavy lift into the sort of industry in its own right that it needs to be before you can start talking about building a city on Mars.

2023-06-09: Prototype confirmation

A satellite has steered power in a microwave beam onto targets in space, and even sent some of that power to a detector on Earth. “No one has done this before. They’re bringing credibility to the topic by demonstrating this capability.” The transmitted power was small, just 200 milliwatts, less than that of a cellphone camera light. But the team was still able to steer the beam toward Earth and detect it with a receiver at Caltech.

2024-01-22: NASA study goes into great detail, and concludes

The following combination of revised assumptions yields SBSP solutions that are cost competitive with terrestrial alternatives, with lower GHG emissions:

  • launch cost: $50M per launch, or $500/kg; $425/kg with 15% block discount
  • electric propulsion orbital transfer from LEO to GEO
  • extended hardware lifetimes: 15 years
  • cheaper servicer and debris removal vehicles: $100M and $50M, respectively
  • efficient manufacturing at scale: learning curves of 85% and below

Photosynthesis

Quantum coherence allows photosynthesis to operate at nearly 100% efficiency. If this effect could be used for photovoltaics.
2009-07-15: Converting the photosynthesis of rice from the less-efficient C3 form to the C4 form would increase yields by 50% and would also use water 2x as efficiently.
2014-01-09: Rubisco. This little molecule underwrites your lavish lifestyle. It isn’t a very prolific sugar daddy:

Typical enzymes can process 1000 molecules per second, but rubisco fixes only 3 CO2 molecules per second.

2015-03-28: 2x photosynthesis?

“We have unprecedented computational resources that allow us to model every stage of photosynthesis and determine where the bottlenecks are, and advances in genetic engineering will help us augment or circumvent those steps that impede efficiency. Long suggested several strategies.

Add pigments. “Our lab and others have put a gene from cyanobacteria into crop plants and found that it boosts the photosynthetic rate by 30%. Some bacteria and algae contain pigments that utilize more of the solar spectrum than plant pigments do. If added to plants, those pigments could bolster the plants’ access to solar energy.

Add the blue-green algae system. Some scientists are trying to engineer C4 photosynthesis in C3 plants, but this means altering plant anatomy, changing the expression of many genes and inserting new genes from C4 plants.

“Another, possibly simpler approach is to add to the C3 chloroplast the system used by blue-green algae”. This would increase the activity of Rubisco, an enzyme that catalyzes a vital step of the conversion of atmospheric CO2 into plant biomass. Computer models suggest adding this system would increase photosynthesis as much as 60%.

More sunlight for lower leaves. Computer analyses of the way plant leaves intercept sunlight have revealed other ways to improve photosynthesis. Many plants intercept too much light in their topmost leaves and too little in lower leaves; this probably allows them to outcompete their neighbors, but in a farmer’s field such competition is counterproductive. Studies aim to make plants’ upper leaves lighter, allowing more sunlight to penetrate to the light-starved lower leaves.

Eliminate traffic jams. “The computer model predicts that by altering this system by up-regulating some genes and down-regulating others, a 60% improvement could be achieved without any additional resource”.

In silico simulation. “The next step is to create an in silico plant to virtually simulate the amazingly complex interactions among biological scales. This type of model is essential to fill current gaps in knowledge and better direct our engineering efforts.”

2015-03-31: Improving photosynthetic efficiency from the current 1-2% would be very profound.

worldwide agricultural yields must increase by 50% by 2050. And that ambitious goal does not factor in the effects of climate change. RIPE researchers demonstrated for the first time that it was possible to improve crop yields in the field by engineering photosynthesis. By increasing the expression levels of 3 genes involved in processing light, they improved tobacco yields by 20%

2015-05-03: Artificial photosynthesis

a nanowire array captures light, and bacteria convert CO2 into acetate. The bacteria directly interact with light-absorbing materials, the first example of “microbial photoelectrosynthesis.” Another kind of bacteria then transforms the acetate into chemical precursors that can be used to make a wide range of everyday products from antibiotics to paints, replacing fossil fuels and electrical power

2016-06-05: Bionic leaf

the work addresses 2 fundamental goals: storing the energy of the sun, and building something useful from CO2 in the atmosphere, thereby reducing a major greenhouse gas.

For the new bionic leaf, Nocera’s team has designed a system in which bacteria use hydrogen from the water split by the artificial leaf plus CO2 from the atmosphere to make a bioplastic that the bacteria store inside themselves as fuel. “I can then put the bug [bacteria] in the soil because it has already used the sunlight to make the bioplastic. Then the bug pulls nitrogen from the air and uses the bioplastic, which is basically stored hydrogen, to drive the fixation cycle to make ammonia for fertilizing crops.” The researchers have used their approach to grow 5 crop cycles of radishes. The vegetables receiving the bionic-leaf-derived fertilizer weigh 150% more than the control crops. The next step is to boost throughput so that 1 day, farmers in India or sub-Saharan Africa can produce their own fertilizer with this method.

there’s also

Researchers have engineered a potentially game-changing solar cell that cheaply and efficiently converts atmospheric CO2 directly into usable hydrocarbon fuel, using only sunlight for energy.

2019-01-11: More on improving RuBisCO:

Unfortunately, RuBisCO is, well, terrible at its job. It might not be obvious based on the plant growth around us, but the enzyme is not especially efficient at catalyzing the CO2 reaction. And, worse still, it often uses oxygen instead. This produces a useless byproduct that, if allowed to build up, will eventually shut down photosynthesis entirely. It’s estimated that crops such as wheat and rice lose anywhere from 20-50% of their growth potential due to this byproduct. While plants have evolved ways of dealing with this byproduct, they’re not especially efficient. So a group of researchers at the University of Illinois, Urbana decided to step in and engineer a better way. The result? In field tests, the engineered plants grew up to 40% more mass than ones that relied on the normal pathways.

2020-08-10: Plants are Green to reduce Photosynthesis Noise. Plants ignore the most energy-rich part of sunlight because stability matters more than efficiency
2022-07-04: Acetate could be a photosynthesis alternative

Experiments showed that a wide range of food-producing organisms can be grown in the dark directly on the acetate-rich electrolyzer output, including green algae, yeast, and fungal mycelium that produce mushrooms. Producing algae with this technology is 4x more energy efficient than growing it photosynthetically. Yeast production is 18x more energy efficient than how it is typically cultivated using sugar extracted from corn. “We found that a wide range of crops could take the acetate we provided and build it into the major molecular building blocks an organism needs to grow and thrive. With some breeding and engineering that we are currently working on we might be able to grow crops with acetate as an extra energy source to boost crop yields.”

2022-08-22: Better gene regulation increases yield by 20%

“Plants dissipate potentially damaging excess absorbed light energy in full sunlight by inducing a mechanism termed nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ),” the investigators explained. However, when the leaves are shaded (by other leaves, clouds, or the sun moving in the sky) this photoprotection needs to switch off so the leaves can continue the photosynthesis process with a reserve of sunlight.

It takes several minutes for the plant to switch off the protective mechanism, costing plants valuable time that could have been used for photosynthesis. “… NPQ mechanisms are slow to relax following the frequent sun–shade transitions that occur within crop canopies”. This results in 7.5% to 30% loss of photochemical energy that could otherwise be used for photosynthesis. “For soybean crop canopies, this slow NPQ relaxation upon sun–shade transitions was calculated to cost >11% of daily CO2 assimilation”. Modifications resulted in a 20% increase in yield, and importantly, without impacting seed quality. “Despite higher yield, seed protein content was unchanged. This suggests some of the extra energy gained from improved photosynthesis was likely diverted to the nitrogen-fixing bacteria in the plant’s nodules.”

Global Grid

Converting the worlds power lines to DC would cost terabucks and save terawatts. it would allow for a global energy grid with all its load balancing advantages.

the premier global strategy is the interconnection of electric power networks between regions and continents into a global energy grid, with an emphasis on tapping abundant renewable energy resources – a world wide web of electricity.

2016-11-14: Asia Super Grid

Entrepreneurs in China, South Korea, Russia, and Japan have signed a Memorandum of Understanding that seeks to create the Asia Super Grid. It will transmit electrical power from renewable sources from areas of the world that are best able to produce it to consumers in other parts of the world. The idea is dependent on development of an ultra-high voltage grid operating at 1000 kilovolts AC and 800 kilovolts DC over 1000s of kilometers. It envisions interconnecting grids across regions, nations, and even continents with a capacity of 10 gigawatts.


2022-01-04: This doesn’t make a lot of sense for the reasons explained in this video: Huge cost for the grid, red tape.