Alternative Energy/Give an overall picture of the AE field

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Answer the questions:

Give an overall picture of the field.

*How was this field born and how is it evolving?

Energy History
  • The sun is the origin of most renewable energy (Sorenson 1991, 8)
    • Sunlight has historically been used for warmth and water heating
    • Biomass is plant matter that has stored energy from photosynthesis. It is burned for energy - heat, steam to run a turbine.
    • Sunlight warms the earth in some areas more than others, as atmosphere warms and warm air rises, cool air moves in to fill its place creating the wind which powers wind turbines.
    • Wind also creates a portion of the waves on the ocean transferring that power into harvestable energy.
  • Hydropower is a result of the force of gravity causing water to flow downhill. Moving water exerts its force of energy on objects it comes in contact with like the blades of a turbine.
  • Ocean tides, the energy for tidal energy technology, is a result of the tidal forces acting on the earth from the sun and moon. [1]
  • Renewable energy technologies harness the energy in the sunlight, wind, ocean, rivers, and plant matter, and turn it into electricity.
Technology History

"No single technology will be the answer; what is needed is an array of technologies aimed at different markets and different ends of the supply/demand equation.” Dr. Joseph A. Stanislaw, Independent Senior Advisor to Deloitte LLP’s Energy & Resources group. (An industry in its growth stage)

Solar Energy
  • Solar technology for electricity can be divided into two major categories:
    1. Concentrating solar power (CSP) - mirrors or other reflective materials concentrate the sun's heat and energy on pipes or towers containing a heat exchange substance which transfer heat to water through a heat exchanger making steam to drive a turbine for electricity production - this technology is mature though it still costs more than conventional energy due to the high capital expenditures for new plants.
    2. Solar photovoltaic panels (PV) - sun hitting certain materials will be converted directly into direct current (DC) electricity; it must then be converted into alternating current (AC) electricity through an inverter - this technology is relatively immature, and very expensive.
CSP History
  • "Solar thermal power generation systems capture energy from solar radiation, transform it into heat, and then use an engine cycle to generate electricity." (Luzzi & Lovegrove 2004, 1)
  • Solar furnaces were developed in the eighteenth century, which led to temperatures high enough to create steam for running a turbine to an electrical generator. (Sorenson 1991, 8)
  • "Small-scale solar thermal power generation systems were demonstrated as early as the 1860s, mainly in France and the United States." (Luzzi & Lovegrove 2004, 1)
  • In 2003, the largest examples of solar thermal power plants were the 80 megawatt electric (MWe) parabolic trough systems that have been operating in southern California since the late 1980s.
    • There are nine such power plants with variable sizes that have a combined nominal capacity of 354 MWe and generate approximately 800,000 MWh (megawatt-hours) of electricity every year, sufficient to service a medium-sized city of approximately 200,000 people.
    • These power plants generate electricity on a competitive basis thanks to previous tax incentives, long-term amortization, green-power credits, some natural gas back-up, and expert operation and maintenance. (Luzzi & Lovegrove 2004, 1)
PV History
  • 1839 - The photovoltaic effect was discovered by Alexandre-Edmond Becquerel (Sorenson 1991, 9)
  • 1953 - Scientists at Bell Laboratories (a private lab that later became part of AT&T then Lucent) discovered the photovoltaic (PV) properties of silicon, and started R&D on the first silicon solar PV panel (Perlin 2004, 616)
  • 1955 - US government contracts Bell Labs to develop PV panels for the space program. First steps toward creating high efficiency panels. (Perlin 2004, 617)
  • 1969 - Elliot Berman, a chemist, receives venture capital funds from Exxon to develop a commercially affordable PV panel and through engineering with cheap materials, drops panel prices from $200/Watt to $20/Watt. (Perlin 2004, 617)
  • 1970's - Solar PV market expands to commercial use for remote location energy needs: electronics on oil rigs, train track signals, remote farms and solar telephones in Australia. (Perlin 2004, 617-619)
  • Solar PV technologies have developed in a number of ways based on the materials used on the panels
    • The most common panels are made from a lower grade silicon than that which is used for computer chips
    • New thin-film panels are starting to be developed, which can be produced at a lower cost than silicon panels, and are flexible and light, but they have a much lower rate of conversion of sunlight to electricity.
    • Other PV technology developments are being pioneered monthly through research at universities, and government labs.

"The solar PV sector surged forward in 2007, attracting record levels of investment in technology, manufacturing and capacity installation (US$28.6 billion, according to New Energy Finance), but in general solar PV generation capacity thrives only where capital subsidies and feed-in-tariffs (FiTs) are there to support it. Even with oil prices at US$120/barrel, PV is still not competitive with conventional energy in the majority of markets, and is only just approaching grid parity where PV has been actively promoted and financially supported, as in California. In Germany, only the generous FiT makes PV economically viable." (Hohler 2008)

Solar Energy Technology Development
  • CSP and PV technologies differ drastically, especially in their innovation patterns.
  • CSP is a fairly straightforward technology requiring a concentrator (mirrors, for example, that concentrate the suns rays), a receiver (a pipe or other surface that comes in contact with some material that stores the suns heat), a heat transport mechanism (a material capable of storing the suns heat and transferring it through a heat exchanger to the water which will create steam) and a conversion system (a turbine) that drives the electrical generator. (Luzzi & Lovegrove 2004, 672 - 675)
    • The majority of the innovation in CSP technology is the heat transport mechanism material. Materials being used currently are:
      • Synthetic heat transfer oil - effective, but suffers from slow decomposition due to high heat and creates environmental and fire hazard if it leaks
      • Air - apparently quite effective
      • Molten Salt - very effective, especially for heat storage overnight in insulated tanks (this can allow electricity generation when the sun is down). Can be corrosive and reacts with air or water.
      • Chemical - Thermochemical cycles with fluid reactants can provide very effective heat transport and storage for use when the sun is down.
    • CSP plants are very effective and quite cheap in comparison to PV, while still a bit more expensive than conventional gas and coal electricity plants. At 80MW, the plants in California are generating a great deal of electricity at a levelized electricity cost of $0.12 - $0.16 per kWh, a fairly competitive cost compared to a US "Average Retail Price of Electricity to Ultimate Customers" of ~$0.10 per kWh. [2]
  • PV technologies are much more complicated, varied, and expensive. The promise of a panel that can convert sunlight directly into electricity is monumental, but the technology suffers from the high cost of materials and low efficiency of sunlight energy conversion to electricity.
    • Over 90% of the panels on the market are made with silicon. These typically come in polycrystalline and monocrystalline forms, and have conversion efficiencies of 16% - 17%. (Meyer 2004, 43)
    • Thin film panels use flexible materials like copper indium diselenide or cadmium telluride and some thin silicon designs, and can be mass produced at low cost. They have lower efficiencies of around 8% - 11%.
      • Thin film PV only accounted for 7% of the global market in 2006, but in the US it accounted for 30%, led by the thin film world market leader and US company, FirstSolar. (Cappello 2008, 6)
    • Electricity generated from PV panels is on average about $0.30 per kWh, much more expensive than the average retail price of electricity of ~$0.10 per kWh. [3] (Kammen 2004, 401)
Wind
  • Evidence of windmills has been found in India from 2500 years ago (Sorenson 1991, 8)
  • 1887 - James Blythe builds first electricity generating wind turbine in Scotland [4]
  • 1887 - 1888 - Charles Brush builds another electricity generating wind turbine in Cleveland, Ohio. [5]
  • 1930’s - US wind turbines were used to generate electricity on farms that were not tied the electrical grid. Turbines built and produced by private companies. [6]
  • 1970’s and 1980’s - US Government (NASA) received funding from the National Science Foundation, and later the Department of Energy to work with industry to create commercially viable wind turbines at the Lewis Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio. [7]
  • Late 1970"s - Early 1980's - PURPA (see policy history below) led to huge growth in the wind industry, contributing to economies of scale.

"Most of the leading large wind turbine manufacturing companies in the market today were rooted, at least in part, in wind power technology research and development that began in the late 1970s, most notably in Denmark, the Netherlands, Germany and the United States. Many studies of innovation in the wind power industry have also shown that the dominance of the Danish wind companies Vestas and NEG Micon stemmed in large part from their first-mover advantage (Karnoe, 1990; Connor, 2004; Kamp et al., 2004)." (Lewis, Wiser 2007, 1)
In the US it has been suggested that there is room for improvement in all aspects of wind turbines, which would require a larger R&D program in the new FY 2010 budget. (Anadon et al 2009, 8)

Tidal/Wave

"It is evident that humanity could cover a significant part of its electricity demand from these energy sources. The potential global wave energy contribution to the electricity market is estimated to be on the order of 2000 TWh/year, approximately 10% of the world electricity consumption. The global tidal range energy potential is estimated to be on the order of 3000 GW, with approximately 1000 GW (~3800 TWh/year) being available at comparably shallow waters. Tidal current energy conversion technologies, which have started to be investigated during the recent past, are predicted to supply up to 48 TWh/year from sites around Europe. Furthermore, other large tidal current resources are still to be explored worldwide. Although research and development on ocean energy exploitation is under way in several countries around the world, ocean energy conversion technologies have not yet progressed to the point of massive power generation. This is due in part to the often rough and unpredictable conditions under which these technologies have to operate. However, considerable progress has been made during the past decade in various engineering fields associated with ocean energy conversion. Recent advances indicate that some technologies could meet the goal of power production at the commercial level by or before 2010." (Lemonis 2004, 1)

  • Tidal Energy: "The tides are cyclic variations in the levels of the seas and oceans. Water currents accompany these variations in sea level, which, in some locations such as the Pentland Firth to the North of the Scottish mainland, can be extreme." (Lemonis 2004, 385) Capturing the energy in these tide movements is a nascent technology frontier called tidal energy.
    • Unlike solar energy, wind energy, and wave energy, tidal energy provides a completely predictable energy source.
  • "An important feature of ocean energy sources is their high density, and density is highest among the renewables." (Lemonis 2004, 385)
Tidal Energy history

"The world's first serious scheme to exploit tidal energy was constructed in France, at La Rance in Brittany between 1961 and 1967, and consists of a barrage across a tidal estuary to utilize the rise and fall in sea level induced by the tides. This scheme has proven to be highly successful despite some early teething problems. Many engineers and developers now favor, however, the use of alternative technology, which will utilize the kinetic energy in flowing tidal currents." (Bryden 2004, 139)

  • Tidal energy has been met with a fair amount of opposition from environmentalists due to plans for tidal barrage technology, which act like a dam across the opening to an inner bay with turbines mounted in the barrier.

"It has been estimated that the total energy from the tides, which is currently dissipated through friction and drag, is equivalent to 3000 GW of thermal energy worldwide. Much of this power is in inaccessible places, but up to 1000 GW is available in relatively shallow coastal regions. Estimates of the achievable worldwide electrical power capability range from about 120 GW of rated capacity to approaching 400 GW. This is obviously a substantial energy resource, the significance of which has yet to be fully appreciated. Many enthusiasts believe these to be hopelessly pessimistic estimates. It is probably reasonable, however, to consider these estimates as representing, with an element of uncertainty, what could be exploited now using available technology." (Bryden 2004, 141 - 142)

Tidal Energy Technology

Tidal energy technology is divided into two main categories: Tidal Barrage Energy and Tidal Current Energy

  • Tidal Barrage Energy (Bryden 2004, 142)
    • "An estuary or bay with a large natural tidal range is identified and then artificially enclosed with a barrage. This would, typically, also provide a road or rail crossing of the gap in order to maximize the economic benefit. Electrical energy is produced by allowing water to flow from one side of the barrage through low head turbines"
    • The barrage turbines can generate electricity during both the incoming and outgoing tides and have four periods a day in areas where there are two high tides and two low tides each day.
    • "A recently proposed technology to exploit tidal range energy, termed “offshore tidal conversion,” relies on the use of impoundment structures placed offshore on shallow flats with large tidal ranges. Rather than blocking an estuary, impoundment structures would be completely independent of the shoreline. Such structures, which could be built of economical rubble mound construction materials, would resolve many of the environmental and economic problems of shoreline tidal barrages." (Lemonis 2004, 392)
  • Tidal Current Energy
    • "Tidal currents can be harnessed using technologies similar to those used for wind energy conversion, that is, turbines of horizontal or vertical axes (“cross-flow” turbines). Because the density of water is some 850 times higher than that of air, the power intensity in water currents is significantly higher than that in airflows. Consequently, a water current turbine can be built considerably smaller than an equivalent-powered wind turbine." (Lemonis 2004, 393)
    • A novel technique recently developed in the United Kingdom uses a hydrofoil, which has its attack angle relative to the onset water flow varied by a simple mechanism. This causes the supporting arm to oscillate, which in turn forces hydraulic cylinders to extend and retract. This produces high-pressure oil, which is used to drive a generator. (Lemonis 2004, 393)
    • "At the time of writing, there is no commercial generation of electricity from tidal currents anywhere in the world. It is anticipated, however, that two large prototype systems will be installed in European waters in 2002. These devices — one of which will be located close to Lynmouth in the Bristol Channel, which lies between England and Wales, and the other in Yell Sound in Shetland - will be capable of producing approximately 300 kW each." (Bryden 2004, 147 - 148)
Wave Energy History
  • Wave Energy: Wave energy technologies capture the undulations of the ocean caused by wind or ocean motion and turn them into electricity through various turbine functions.
    • Wind Waves: (Lemonis 2004, 386)
      • "Wind-generated waves have the highest energy concentration."
      • "Wind waves are derived from the winds as they blow across the oceans. This energy transfer provides natural storage of wind energy in the water near the free surface. Once created, wind waves can travel thousands of kilometers with little energy loss unless they encounter head winds."
    • Ocean Waves: (Lemonis 2004, 386)
      • "Ocean waves contain two forms of energy: the kinetic energy of the water particles that generally follow circular paths (the radius of which decreases with depth) and the potential energy of elevated water particles."


(The information below was acquired from: (Lemonis 2004, 389))

  • Wave energy conversion is being investigated in a number of countries, particularly in the European Union member states, China, India, Japan, Russia, and the United States.
  • Although the first patent certificate on wave energy conversion was issued in 1799, the intensive research and development (R&D) study of wave energy conversion began after the dramatic increase in oil prices in 1973.
  • During the past 5 years or so, there has been a resurgent interest in wave energy, especially in Europe. Nascent wave energy companies have been highly involved in the development of new wave energy schemes.
  • Currently, the world-installed capacity is approximately 2 MW, mainly from pilot and demonstration projects.
  • The electricity generating costs from wave energy converters have shown significant improvement during the past 20 years or so and have reached an average price of approximately $0.11/kWh at a discount rate of 8%. Compared with the average electricity price in the European Union (~$0.05/kWh or ~0.04€/kWh), the electricity price produced from wave energy is still high, but it is forecasted to decrease further with the development of the technologies.
  • Although early programs for R&D on wave energy considered designs of several megawatts output power, more recent designs are rated at power levels ranging from a few kilowatts up to 2 to 4 MW.
  • Massive power production can be achieved by interconnection of large numbers of devices.
  • The amount of ongoing development work on wave energy technologies is very large, so much so that it is hard to quantify.
Wave Energy Technology

"In contrast to other renewable energy sources, the number of concepts for wave energy conversion is very large. Although more than 1000 wave energy conversion techniques are patented worldwide, the apparent large number of concepts for wave energy converters can be classified into a few basic types. The followings concepts are widely adopted:" (Lemonis 2004,387 - 388)

  • The oscillating water column that consists of a partially submerged hollow structure open to the seabed below the water line. The heave motion of the sea surface alternatively pressurizes and depressurizes the air inside the structure, generating a reciprocating flow through a “Wells” turbine installed beneath the roof of the device. This type of turbine is capable of maintaining constant direction of revolution despite the direction of the airflow passing through it.
  • Overtopping devices that collect the water of incident waves to drive one or more low head turbines.
  • Heaving devices (floating or submerged) that provide a heave motion that is converted by mechanical and/or hydraulic systems in linear or rotational motion for driving electrical generators.
  • Pitching devices that consist of a number of floating bodies, hinged together across their beams. The relative motions between the floating bodies are used to pump high-pressure oil through hydraulic motors that drive electrical generators.
  • Surging devices that exploit the horizontal particle velocity in a wave to drive a deflector or to generate a pumping effect of a flexible bag facing the wave front.

"Obviously, the design of a wave power converter has to be highly sophisticated to be operationally efficient and reliable, on the one hand, and economically feasible, on the other. As with all renewables, the available resource and variability at the installation site have to be determined first. The preceding constraints imply comparably high construction costs and possibly reduced survivability. These factors, together with misinformation and lack of understanding of wave energy by the industry, government, and public, have often slowed down wave energy development." (Lemonis 2004, 389)

Technology development barriers

The transition from energy technology research to practical technology is stifled in the US by the governments development structure. "The Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) funds and manages primarily later-stage applied research and development, as well as technology demonstrations. It has limited history with successful demonstrations; its staff lacks depth in financing and in the management of commercial project engineering. The DOE also hosts seventeen national laboratories of widely varying size. These laboratories employ probably the largest collection of PhD scientists in the world working for a single agency, approximately 12,400. Of these seventeen, the largest three (Lawrence Livermore, Sandia, and Los Alamos) have historically focused primarily on the design and development of nuclear weapons, whose sole customer is the federal government." The secrecy around nuclear research and weapons research in general at many of the labs combined with the limited market they usually produce technology for (the US government), has resulted in a limited history of successful transfer of commercial products into the private sector. The labs "do not perform many of the broad range of both front- and back-end energy missions that are now required." Additionally, of the 12,400 PhD scientists, 5000 of them work at the top three weapons labs despite the US's shrinking arsenal, and far fewer PhD scientists work at the energy labs. The Largest alternative energy lab, The National Renewable Energy Laboratory, employs 350 PhD scientists. (Weiss & Bonvillian 2009, 152 - 153) Currently, there is also no system in the Department of Energy that encourages collaboration between the public and private sectors. The private sector has the important knowledge about market deployment, while the government should play the primary role in technology research and development. (Weiss & Bonvillian 2009, 154)
The absence of a comprehensive energy-innovation strategy in the US "has too often meant that different parts of the U.S. government have supported different energy technologies at different times, with inadequate coordination and follow-through. For too many years, DOE has conducted R&D almost in isolation from demonstration and deployment policies, which are usually enacted by the Congress—leading, in many cases, to technologies failing to make it over the barriers to widespread commercial deployment." (Anadon et al 2009, 11)

  • Barriers to Solar Development:
    • "Despite all the strong factors favoring the solar market, major obstacles must still be overcome before it reaches a mainstream “take-off” stage. Perhaps surprising to those who do not follow the solar market, most of these obstacles are not technological but economic in nature. In other words, solar is being held back mainly by issues involving money. These issues include solar pricing, affordability, financing, and lack of investment. Even seemingly unrelated obstacles—such as supply shortages, unfavorable legal structures, utility barriers, and even lack of skilled labor—are ultimately expressions of economic problems." (Cappello 2008, 10)
US Policy History

"Another, equally important problem is the deep politicization of energy policy in the United States. For decades, the environmental wing of American politics, now tied to the political left, has urged subsidies to renewable energy — specifically to sun and wind, with notable neglect of geothermal energy. The right has been no less enthusiastic in its support of subsidies to oil, natural gas, and nuclear energy. The coal and oil industries, moreover, are protected by the congressional delegations in key states where they provide employment. Reflecting these pressures, plus a long regulatory history, the role of the government in the energy sector has long been intense and interventionist. Despite growing geopolitical and climate realities, a balanced, technology-neutral approach to energy policy has not been attempted by either political party. Today, a coherent approach to energy technology policy is still missing from the legislative policy debate in the U.S. Congress; each technology, new and old, seeks its own separate legislative deal for federal backing." (Weiss and Bonvillian 2009)

  • 1970 Oil Embargo raised US interest in alternative energies for energy/economic security and resource and environmental sustainability. (Carlin 2004, 347)
  • Before 1970, hydropower was the predominant alternative energy in the US.
  • After 1995 hydropower production stagnated due to lack of available water.
  • Hydro facilities still account for the majority of alternative energy production in the US, but there has been very little growth in hydropower capacity or production since 1995.
  • Alternative energy plants such as wind, solar, biomass, geothermal, and tidal cost more than coal and natural gas power plants.
  • Since the 1970's the US has used government run subsidy programs to give these technologies a competitive advantage in the US market.
Solar Policy History

"From the early 1980s to the first 2K decade, the federal government provided next to no support for solar—little in the way of R&D (well under $100 million annually), no tax credits to speak of, no subsidies, and no regulatory framework. This situation is slowly beginning to change, though, as national energy priorities shift. The Energy Bill of 2005 witnessed this shift, as federal tax credits for solar were suddenly available—although at a maximum $3,000 per residential system they were fairly mild. In 2006, another step was taken when the DOE installed a $30 million PV system at its headquarters. The idea is to encourage all other federal buildings to install solar. Most significant to date, in 2006, President Bush declared a Solar America Initiative (SAI) that accelerates R&D funding for potential leapfrog technologies. In line with this mandate, in March 2007, the DOE announced funding of $168 million over three years (2007-2009) in support of the SAI." (Capello 2008, 16)

US Renewable Energy Policies
  • The Public Utilities and Regulatory Policy Act of 1978 (PURPA) was the first US policy that gave alternative energy a competitive advantage (Carlin 2004, 351):
    • Required Utilities to buy energy from alternative energy producers
    • Paid premium prices for each kilowatt hour of electricity produced
    • Guaranteed the prices for the entirety of 20 year contracts
    • Act was ultimately unpopular because:
    1. The high prices created windfall profits for alternative energy producers
    2. PURPA contracts were paid for by the electric utility, raising the price of electricity for all consumers
  • After PURPAs initial, but brief, success, there was stagnation in US alternative energy development until 1997 caused by:
    • Electric power sector restructuring
    • repeal of federal and state incentives
    • sharply lower natural gas prices - making new natural gas plants more financially appealing
  • In 1997 a new era of alternative energy policies began, which has helped to grow the alternative energy sector in the US.
  • The most important of these policies are:
    1. Sets state goals for renewable energy (RE) generation in a %RE of total state electricity generation by a particular year (2020 for instance)
    2. Requires all state electric utilities to reach same level of RE generation and uses tradable credit market to drive process
    3. Credits are proof that one MWh (megawatt hour) of renewable energy has been produced and fed into the electricity grid.
    4. Utilities will decide to generate RE, buy RE from another retailer or buy the tradable credits to comply with RPS policy.
    5. Compliance measured by a state regulatory office which verifies that each electric utility holds the proper # of tradable credits by the end of the year.
    6. If utility generates 200,000 MWh per year, and the RPS goal is 10%, the utility must present 20,000 credits at the end of the year to show compliance.
    • The Business Energy Investment Tax Credit (ITC) [9]
    1. Provides a 30% tax credit for qualified renewable developments. Most importantly solar developments.
    • The Renewable Energy Production Tax Credit (PTC) [10]
    1. Provides a $0.01 - $0.02 payment per kWh for qualified renewable technologies. Most importantly, for wind energy.
    2. Recent change allows developers to opt instead for the 30% tax credit offered by the ITC.
    • U.S. Department of the Treasury Grant Program
    1. Recent Obama Administration addition which allows ITC or PTC eligible RE developments to opt for a grant equal to the 30% ITC tax credit in year 1 of the RE project.
    • Public Benefits Funds (PBFs) [11]
    1. State renewable energy offices collect a small surcharge on all consumer electricity bills to fund renewable energy programs for the public.
    2. PBFs can be used for public education on RE and energy efficiency, or for programs that help fund RE or energy efficiency projects
  • RPS policies, the main AE policy model used in the US, "have proven effective in encouraging renewable energy generation." (Anadon et al 2009, 18)
    • From 2001 to 2007, roughly 65 percent of total wind additions in the US were motivated at least in part, by state RPS policies.
    • In 2007 alone, 76 percent of non-hydropower renewable capacity additions took place in states with RPS policies. (Anadon et al 2009, 18) (Wiser & Barbose 2008)
Visions on International Collaborations and leadership
  • "The problem of climate change is global, so that the new paradigm will need to be global. Even so, technology advance still largely follows a nation-state model. Although multinational corporations are moving the development stage toward international collaboration, other key features of innovation systems, such as research funding, science and technical education, and publicly funded research institutions, remain rooted in national funding and support. The U.S. innovation system has led world technology waves for many decades, and despite the rapid rise of capabilities in other countries, there is no easy substitute for its technology leadership in this arena. There is a trade-off between the need to share technology in order to work together to meet a common danger and to benefit from the exchange of knowledge, on the one hand, and the need to provide incentives to industry to gain competitive advantage through innovation and capacity building, on the other. The United States should keep in mind, too, that the economic advantages of leadership in technology have been the source of its wealth and well-being." (Weiss and Bonvillian 2009, 6)
  • IRENA - International Renewable Energy Agency. IRENA is an international alliance of 82 countries that have agreed to collaborate to promote a rapid transition to renewable energy on a global scale. Among the states that have signed the Statute of Agency are 30 African, 27 European, 17 Asian and 8 Latin-American countries. The agency aspires to provide access to relevant information such as reliable data on the potentials for renewable energy, best practices, effective financial mechanisms, and state-of-the-art technological expertise. [12] To date, the US and China have not joined IRENA though Rep. Ed Markey of Massachusetts introduced a resolution in March asking Congress and the President to consider joining. As the world's two largest carbon emitters and countries where a great deal of renewable energy technology innovation is happening, it would be monumental for these countries to agree to join.
Movements toward strengthening IP rights
  • IDEA - Innovation Development Employment Alliance. While IRENA and Rep. Markey are hoping remove the barriers to renewable energy technology development created by intellectual property rights, IDEA is pushing for the opposite. The Alliance believes that ideas must be respected, encouraged and protected, and that strong intellectual property (IP) laws provide the incentive to transform ideas into products and services to improve and enrich our lives. [13] The goal of the Alliance is to encourage Congress and the President to maintain strong IP protections and not to follow the statements of Rep. Markey and the Secretary of Energy, Steven Chu, who stated that the US should strive to share all intellectual property in renewable energy technology collaboration.

*What are the main business models?

coming soon

*What are the innovation dynamics in this field? (inputs/outputs, timing of innovation/ disruptive or incremental innovation?)

"The system for energy innovation is complex, non-linear, and iterative; the idea that there can be a logical separation between policy for energy R&D versus energy deployment policies (or between supply-push and demand-pull in technology) is inaccurate and obsolete. The forces and signals that might lead to a new and improved energy technology from invention to eventual adoption all interact. Coordination not only among federal agencies but with private industry, both parties in Congress, states, universities, and other stakeholders will be critical in forging and implementing such an integrated approach." (Anadon et al 2009, 11)

Energy-technology innovation does not take place as a linear, sequential process, rather the theory, as offered by Gallagher, Holdren and Sagar 2006, which is an amalgamation from various other experts, is that it is a chain-link model that accounts for two-way learning and includes the various actors and the supply-push and demand-pull public policies that stimulate supply and demand in the industry. The stages of innovation can be regarded as fundamental research, applied research, development, demonstration, pre-commercial and niche deployment, and widespread deployment (diffusion). Technology transfer between countries can also be regarded as part of diffusion. (Gallagher et. al. 2006)

Typically, in industrialized countries, the government tends to provide R&D funding earlier in the technology innovation process, around the fundamental research stage. The funding from private organizations tends to increase at the applied research and development stages as private companies have more interest in funding technology closer to the deployment stage where they are more likely to make a profit from the technology. Governments have also come to realize that private companies do a better job of moving later stage technologies from the development stage to the market, because that is their specialty. (Gallagher et. al. 2006)

Recent patterns of alternative energy technology innovation in OECD countries have shown that the private sector provides the majority of expenditures for energy R&D, though governments provide a large portion as well. Still, it is difficult to pinpoint the level of support for different technologies from different actors in different countries due to the lack of available data. (Gallagher et. al. 2006)

  • International and national government demand-pull policies have been a main driving force behind innovation in the alternative energy field. (Weiss & Bonvillian 2009)
  • Germany, Spain and Denmark are three countries that have been world leaders in alternative energy production both from the production of electricity from these technologies, and the production of the technology itself.
  • The main government subsidy program used in these countries is a Feed-in Tariff, which pays the owners of the technology a premium fixed price for the electricity they produce, which is contractually guaranteed for 20 years.
    • The alternative energy producer is also guaranteed a free interconnection to the electric transmission grid and the transmission grid operators are contractually obligated to buy every kilowatt hour of electricity the alternative energy producer creates.
  • The Feed-in Tariff has created stable long term markets for alternative energy technologies in the aforementioned countries, and the accelerated development of the technology markets has caused rapid innovation in alternative energies to bring costs down and ensure the highest profits for the energy producers.
  • Similar policies in the US, like the tax credits, PURPA, and RPS policies mentioned above, have been effective but not as powerful as the Feed-in Tariff.
  • Government subsidies in response to climate change, energy security, and environmental damage concerns raised by coal, natural gas and oil electricity generation have resulted in increased government R&D funding for alternative energy technologies in the US and abroad.
  • In the US, disruptive patterns around both technology innovation, and market growth in alternative energy, can be observed based on the support of government funding for R&D and for subsidy policies.
    • The Federal tax credits for alternative energy developments, the Investment tax Credit (ITC) and Production Tax Credit (PTC), have been inconsistently approved by Congress for short periods of a few years, making the financing for new AE plants either affordable - when the credits are in force - or unaffordable. AE technology development and deployment has experienced boom and bust periods due to the ineffective application of these policies.
    • Funding for R&D by the US Government reached it's all time high of 2.9% of GDP during the space race and dropped significantly after that period. It has finally started to rise again, but energy is still vastly underfunded.

*How does knowledge flow in this field?

coming soon

*Is this field replicating models from other fields?

The alternative energy sector does not mirror the technology revolutions of the past due to a few differences:

  • Alternative energy is a collection of various technologies unlike past technology developments, and therefore the cost (in public and private R&D) of development is much greater, and the landscape for AE technologies is much larger and much more complicated.
  • AE has to be comprised of various technologies, because any one technology alone cannot ween the US or any other country off of fossil fuels
    • This has to do with the higher cost of the technologies, the intermittency of wind, solar and tidal/wave, the locational constraints of different technologies based on resource quality, and electrical grid transmission constraints due to technology location.
  • There is significant investment and lobbying for the oil, gas and coal industries, and many AE technologies are trying to provide direct competition to their market share.
    • The oil, gas and coal lobby is exerting heavy pressure against the market entry of new technologies.

The result of all of these factors is a market landscape that is unmatched in our existing technology histories. (Weiss & Bonvillian 2009)

*How many companies?

coming soon

*How much money do they make or how much money do they “move” in the American economy?

coming soon

*How important is research from universities in this specific field?

Research from universities is very important. Much of the new innovation in the field takes place at these institutions though there is a disconnect between initial research & development (R&D) and the step to market deployment. Venture capitalists are wary of making initial bets on early innovation at the university level, and therefore many promising technology innovations are lost in the "valley of death," the area between initial R&D and the step to market deployment. The US government exacerbates this issue by developing policies that pick technology winners rather than adopting a technology-neutral approach to help all alternative energy technologies make it to market. The other major hurdle for all AE technologies is the powerful oil and gas lobby and the US subsidies for these types of energy production, which make it very hard for new innovations to supplant the incumbent technologies, and also very expensive to do so. (Weiss & Bonvillian 2009)

*How important is public funding in this field?

Investment history

"Federal support for energy R&D has fallen by more than half since a high point in 1980, and private-sector energy R&D has similarly fallen. These levels of expenditure compare poorly to other major federal R&D efforts that met challenges of similar magnitude: the Manhattan Project, the Apollo Project, the Carter-Reagan defense buildup, and the doubling of the budget of the National Institutes of Health. Advances in energy technology will not occur on the scale required without significantly increased investment by both government and business." (Weiss and Bonvillian 2009, 9)
In contrast, President Obama announced on April 27, 2009 that he hopes to raise the level of R&D funding in the US to over 3% of GDP, a higher level than was reached during the space race. One of the main research areas for this funding would be alternative energy. [14]

Public funding and Technology Policy

Public funding, inside an appropriate technology policy, is crucial to drive the market for alternative energy: "Technology policy lies at the core of the climate change challenge. Even with a cutback in wasteful energy spending, our current technologies cannot support both a decline in carbon dioxide emissions and an expanding global economy. If we try to restrain emissions without a fundamentally new set of technologies, we will end up stifling economic growth, including the development prospects for billions of people. Economists often talk as though putting a price on carbon emissions through tradable permits or a carbon tax will be enough to deliver the needed reductions in those emissions. This is not true. . . . We will need much more than a price on carbon. Consider three potentially transformative low-emissions technologies: carbon capture and sequestration (CCS), plug-in hybrid automobiles and concentrated solar-thermal electricity generation. Each will require a combination of factors to succeed: more applied scientific research, important regulatory changes, appropriate infrastructure, public acceptance and early high-cost investments. A failure on one or more of these points could kill the technologies." (Weiss and Bonvillian 2009, 8, citing Jeffrey Sachs)

  • Research in Europe has shown that innovations in the wind industry are induced by deployment policies like the feed-in tariff used in Germany, Spain and Denmark, but that public R&D, while reduced, still plays a role in this innovation. The unfortunate side affect of the successful growth of the wind industry in Germany, Spain and Denmark has been a high degree of "protectionism" of the technology, which could hurt the long-term technological development. (Soderholm & Klaassen 2006, 184)
The importance of Public Funding to face sectorial barriers

Due to the barriers created by the oil, gas and coal lobby and these incumbent's dominant stature in the energy field, AE faces a significant challenge to gain a foothold in the market. This makes public funding crucial. Other factors that make public funding indispensable for AE are:

  • Technologies like wind, solar and tidal/wave are more expensive than coal or natural gas plants, and produce less energy for the land area of the AE plant.
  • The intermittency of the electricity produced by wind, solar and tidal/wave makes it difficult to predict when there will be usable electricity being fed into the transmission grid.
    • the transmission grid requires a constant steady flow of base-load electricity to remain stable, wind, solar and tidal/wave compromise this stability.
  • Wind, solar and tidal/wave plants require a great deal of land/coastline, and the logistics of running transmissions lines from these plants can be very expensive and legally difficult.
Main government policies

*How important is private funding / venture capital in this field?

  • "In 2007, Cleantech companies began making strategic alliances with Fortune 100 companies; for example, Chevron Texaco Technology Ventures invested in BrightSource Energy Inc., a developer of utility-scale solar plants, Konarka Technologies, Inc., a developer of photovoltaic materials, and Southwest Windpower, a producer of small wind turbines. Additionally, non-financial drivers such as regulation, political will, and fears over energy supplies remain strong, creating a more competitive commercial environment and presenting unique challenges in some areas such as wind energy, solar energy, and biofuels." (Ward et al. 2008, 243)
  • "Private investment in research on alternatives to fossil fuels is discouraged by the history of wild oscillations in the price of energy. A barrel of oil may cost about $60 as these words are written in the fall of 2008, but it cost more than $140 in the summer of 2008 and less than $20 in 1998. If energy companies were convinced that $100-a-barrel oil were here to stay, some would see the long-term business wisdom of major investments to diversify their raw materials and their technologies, despite their current high profit levels. As things now stand, however, many of them remain opposed, skeptical, or at best ambivalent. Yet there are clear indications that, unlike the price spike induced by the oil embargo of the 1970s, increasing energy prices are predominantly due to a significant rise in world demand from developed and particularly emerging economies. Here we distinguish between the demand for energy itself, and the demand for improved energy technology. The two are related but are not the same. In the short term, carbon charges or high energy prices will reduce the immediate demand for fossil fuels or energy, respectively. Demand for improved or alternative energy technology, on the other hand, will be created only if these prices are seen as likely to be sustained. We may similarly distinguish between the supply of energy technology and the supply of energy itself;" (Weiss & Bonvillian 2009, 7)
  • "During the first quarter of 2009, investment in green technologies by venture capitalists, who drive a disproportionate amount of financing in new technologies, shriveled. They invested only $154 million in 33 young companies, a drop of 84 percent from the last quarter of 2008 when, despite the crumbling economy, they invested $971 million in 67 start-ups, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers and the National Venture Capital Association. Investment in the first quarter of 2009 reached the lowest level since 2005, before clean technology became Silicon Valley’s newest new trend." [15]
    • Venture capital professionals note that the credit crunch has been a major factor in this precipitous drop-off.
  • private funding for R&D is most important for the less mature developing technologies like solar photovoltaic cells and tidal energy technology
  • private funding in wind technology is not focused so much on technology development as it is in marketing and growth.

*Are there any specific public policies (from agencies, federal or state policies) that give incentives for openness or enclosure?

  • R&D funding is provided by Department of Energy through the national energy laboratories listed under public funding.
    • These labs offer technology transfer programs that license their patents to interested private-sector companies.
    • There is also a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) for collaboration between a lab such as The National Renewable Energy Laboratory, and a partner company. "It (CRADA) protects a company's and NREL's existing intellectual property, and allows the company to negotiate for an exclusive field-of-use license to subject inventions that arise during the CRADA's execution." [16]
    • These CRADA agreements can be:
      • "Shared-resources" which means the research is funded by the government and is part of ongoing research at NREL. In this case no funds change hands.
      • "Funds-in" which means the partner will pay for all or part of the research, but NREL does not provide the partner with any funds.
  • Further research is required to determine how the above policies may incentivize openness or enclosure.

*What is the cost structure of the field?

  • The main issue for alternative energy generation is that it generally costs more than conventional sources of energy like coal, natural gas and nuclear generation.
  • The cost of electricity is generally measured by an average price per kilowatt hour ($/kWh) of electricity generation, or the "generation cost."
  • The generation cost of coal, natural gas and nuclear electricity is lower than alternative energies because the energy plant infrastructure and technology has been developed over a long period of time and the costs have come down due to the large economies of scale.
  • The captial expenditures and labor cost of new conventional energy plants are lower due to vast information diffusion and streamlined building processes.
  • Among the alternative energies we're studying, wind energy is the cheapest to develop because it is the most mature and most prevalent alternative energy worldwide (outside of hydropower).
  • Solar and tidal technologies are less mature and cost more than wind to develop.
  • Tidal energy is a new and very immature technology which has high costs and very little diffusion in the world market.
    • It is not targeted in government subsidy policies as much as wind and solar due to its high cost and relative immaturity in the market.

*Who are the producers, the buyers, and the users?

Alternative Energy Technology

  • The producers of alternative energy technologies are universities, the government, for-profit companies, and non-profit companies.
  • The buyers of the technology are alternative energy plant developers, individuals, communities interested in co-op electricity production, and sometimes large electric utilities.
  • The users of the technology are the utilities, the developers, the communities, and the indivduals who purchase the technology.

Electricity produced by Alternative Energy Technologies

  • The producers of alternative energy are the alternative energy plants
  • The buyers of alternative energy are the utilities and the consumers
  • the users of alternative energy are the residential and commercial consumers

*What is the structure of power from the production side and what is the structure of power in the demand side? E.g., who has the power to control production and demand? How is the control distributed?

  • The production of alternative energy technologies is controlled by private companies and the government.
    • While private companies control a lot of the solar, wind, and tidal technologies and bring them to the market, the government has a lot of control on the market demand through subsidy policies.
    • When there are generous government policies encouraging the adoption of alternative energies in the US, the demand for the technologies increases pushing the production side.
    • When the government subsidy policies lag or are allowed to expire, historically, the alternative energy markets have stagnated, limiting demand and production.

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