What if there s much less coal than we think

Post on: 16 Март, 2015 No Comment

What if there s much less coal than we think

How much coal is there in the world?

Its tough to think of a more important question for the next half-century. The answer will play a huge role in shaping public policy and directing capital investments. So weve got it pretty well nailed down, right?

Turns out, maybe not.

The prevailing conventional wisdom is that the U.S. has a 200-year supply of coal sometimes jacked up to 400-year by industry enthusiasts. If thats true, theres obviously an enormous incentive to build the infrastructure to keep using it. Such is the essential argument for carbon capture and sequestration: coal will always be abundant and cheap, so we have to keep burning it, so we have to find some way of burying its carbon pollution.

But what if were overestimating the amount of coal left? What if its actually going to get scarce and expensive in the near- to mid-term?

If thats true, it has huge, huge implications. Two in particular:

1. If coal is soon going to get harder to reach and more expensive, an enormous investment in carbon capture and storage may not make sense. Remember, building the infrastructure necessary to run our economy on renewables and efficiency will itself be an expensive, energy-intensive undertaking. If our fossil-fuel savings are running low, we urgently need to spend every penny of that energy wisely. If we waste a huge chunk of it on CCS only to find coal drying up, well have that much less to put toward building post-fossil infrastructure.

2. If theres much less coal than widely assumed, climate change may not be humanitys biggest problem. Most of the more dire IPCC climate change scenarios assume endlessly rising energy demand and use, and thus endlessly rising CO2 emissions. But those models tend not to pay heed to the physical world. If some of the new research on coal reserves is accurate, it is mathematically impossible to emit as much as the high-end IPCC scenarios. There just wont be enough fossil fuels.

Now, this latter point needs to be made carefully. Theres almost certainly enough coal left for us to do the atmosphere (and by extension, ourselves) serious damage. But the really epic crash may not be in the climate, it may be in human civilization, which is by now entirely dependent for its growth and complexity on relatively cheap, relatively abundant fossil fuels. The absence of extreme global warming will be of little comfort if we end up in a post-apocalyptic Mad Max hellscape.

Briefly, lets look at the latest research on coal reserves. The current issue of the scientific journal Energy contains A global coal production forecast with multi-Hubbert cycle analysis , by Tad Patzek and Gregory Croft. (Just the name gives you a tingle, right?) Its somewhat technical, but the main point is fairly clear: A realistic look at coal reserves yields grim results.

The authors argue that stated coal reserves are a poor guide to actual, recoverable coal. Reserve numbers have been inflated for years; every time someones taken a close look, theyve been revised sharply downward. Instead, Patzek and Croft propose to use historical production data to build a Hubbert curve. a familiar analytic device thats often applied to oil reserves (and is the basis for peak oil).

Long story short:

The global peak of coal production from existing coalfields is predicted to occur close to the year 2011. After 2011, the production rates of coal and CO2 decline, reaching 1990 levels by the year 2037, and reaching 50% of the peak value in the year 2047. It is unlikely that future mines will reverse the trend predicted in this BAU scenario. [Emphasis mine.]

Heres a visual on that:

The curve for CO2 emissions from coal looks roughly similar peaks soon and plunges.

What if there s much less coal than we think

Just to avoid a frequent misunderstanding: This doesnt mean the world is going to run out of coal. It simply means that most of the easily reachable coal has already been reached. Going forward, supplies will be more difficult to reach, lower in quality, and/or more expensive to transport. The combination of those factors means that new supply wont be able to keep up with the drop-off in old supply; overall production will peak and decline. As it does, prices will rise sharply.

Now, for those of you without a calendar: 2011 is soon! Think about it: 40 years from now, despite growth in population and energy demand, there will be about half as much coal available as there is now. Thats a big relief for the atmosphere but serious trouble for, yknow, people.

I dont have anything near the mathematical chops to know whos right in this dispute about coal reserves. But given that its pretty much the most important fing thing ever, it seems like it deserves a lot more attention from scientists and politicians. Some further reading:

Heres another post I did exploring the subject in more detail: Blackout: Heinberg on dwindling coal reserves and the siren song of clean coal. Of course its well worth reading Heinbergs book, too, as it gathers much of the current research.

Heres a good two-parter on the subject from Joe Romm:

CalTech professor David Rutledge has done tons of original work on this. You could watch his 2007 lecture on the subject or read his post on The Oil Drum, The Coal Question and Climate Change .

If youve read other good stuff on the subject, leave it in comments.


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