DocumentCode
1510281
Title
Renewable electricity-what is the true cost?
Author
Norton, Brian
Author_Institution
Dept. of Eng., Ulster Univ., UK
Volume
13
Issue
1
fYear
1999
Firstpage
6
Lastpage
12
Abstract
Energy consumed in the chain of processes from extraction, processing, fabrication/manufacture and transport to their ultimate end use is embodied in all materials. Depending on the particular fuels employed, the specific process used and the degree of materials recycling/reuse at each stage of the chain, a particular manufactured item will concomitantly embody environmental emissions and wider consequential environmental impacts. The renewable energy generation of electricity is advocated as a means of reducing carbon dioxide emissions associated with the generation from fossil fuels. Renewable sources, as with fossil-fuelled plants, embody significant emissions in their materials of construction. "Full-chain" embodied energy and CO/sub 2/ emissions calculations for wind, hydro, solar-thermal and photovoltaic conversion are quite different and the likely trend in future reduction of embodied energy of next generation systems reflects the relative maturity of each technology.
Keywords
renewable energy sources; CO/sub 2/; air emissions control; full-chain environmental considerations; hydropower; life-cycle costs; photovoltaic conversion; renewable electricity generation; solar-thermal conversion; wind energy;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Power Engineering Journal
Publisher
iet
ISSN
0950-3366
Type
jour
DOI
10.1049/pe:19990104
Filename
765697
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