Sunday, September 15, 2013

Threats and promises - computer models, conflict and cheap solar


Seems a bit of a waste for the content of HotWhopper to focus solely on what deniers want to highlight or scoff at.  Here are a few things that caught my attention in the past few days and weeks.


A Promise: Computer models


Scott K Johnson has written an article at ArsTechnica on computer models.  It's a behind-the-scenes look and I like the way it's written for a broader audience. A tiny taste with two excerpts (my bold italics):
Climate models are, at heart, giant bundles of equations—mathematical representations of everything we’ve learned about the climate system. Equations for the physics of absorbing energy from the Sun’s radiation. Equations for atmospheric and oceanic circulation. Equations for chemical cycles. Equations for the growth of vegetation. Some of these equations are simple physical laws, but some are empirical approximations of processes that occur at a scale too small to be simulated directly....
...Steve Easterbrook, a professor of computer science at the University of Toronto, has been studying climate models for several years. “I'd done a lot of research in the past studying the development of commercial and open source software systems, including four years with NASA studying the verification and validation processes used on their spacecraft flight control software,” he told Ars.
When Easterbrook started looking into the processes followed by climate modeling groups, he was surprised by what he found. “I expected to see a messy process, dominated by quick fixes and muddling through, as that's the typical practice in much small-scale scientific software. What I found instead was a community that takes very seriously the importance of rigorous testing, and which is already using most of the tools a modern software development company would use (version control, automated testing, bug tracking systems, a planned release cycle, etc.).”

Read the full article at ArsTechnica here.

If you get the taste for exploring computer models, go to Isaac Held's blog.  There was also an interesting technical discussion at William Connolley's place, Stoat, a few weeks ago.


A Threat: Climate change leads to conflict - a striking convergence of results


Seems logical, but is there any evidence?  There's a new paper in Science (paywalled) that explores the evidence through an analysis of 60 quantitative studies.  You can download the paper here. Here is the abstract:
A rapidly growing body of research examines whether human conflict can be affected by climatic changes. Drawing from archaeology, criminology, economics, geography, history, political science, and psychology, we assemble and analyze the 60 most rigorous quantitative studies and document, for the first time, a striking convergence of results. We find strong causal evidence linking climatic events to human conflict across a range of spatial and temporal scales and across all major regions of the world.
The magnitude of climate’s influence is substantial: for each one standard deviation (1σ) change in climate toward warmer temperatures or more extreme rainfall, median estimates indicate that the frequency of interpersonal violence rises 4% and the frequency of intergroup conflict rises 14%. Because locations throughout the inhabited world are expected to warm 2σ to 4σ by 2050, amplified rates of human conflict could represent a large and critical impact of anthropogenic climate change.
The last paragraph suggests that we learn more about the underlying causes so as to minimise conflict as global warming kicks in.  Will we?  In fifty years' time there will still be deniers expecting an ice age "any day now", arguing that "the world hasn't warmed since 2062".  At some stage the rest of us will decide to ignore them completely.
Numerous competing theories have been proposed to explain the linkages between the climate and human conflict, but none have been convincingly rejected, and all appear to be consistent with at least some existing results. It seems likely that climatic changes influence conflict through multiple pathways that may differ between contexts, and innovative research to identify these mechanisms is a top research priority. Achieving this research objective holds great promise, as the policies and institutions necessary for conflict resolution can be built only if we understand why conflicts arise. The success of such institutions will be increasingly important in the coming decades, as changes in climatic conditions amplify the risk of human conflicts.
Hsiang, Solomon M., Marshall Burke, and Edward Miguel. "Quantifying the influence of climate on human conflict." Science (2013): DOI: 10.1126/science.1235367.


A Promise: Advances in solar technology - making it cheaper and more efficient


And in Nature this week, there's a paper describing a new solar technology (paywalled).  According to Science News, this could lead to much cheaper solar cells "possibly for as little as $0.15 per watt, or one-quarter the price of thin-film silicon devices".

The work was described in Science News (excerpts):
A solar cell converts sunlight into electricity. A typical cell contains layers of materials known as semiconductors—most often silicon. When a particle of light, or photon, strikes an atom in one of these semiconductors, it knocks free a negative electron that can scoot through the material and leaves behind a positively charged "hole" that can also move about. The electrons and holes travel in opposite directions, through layers of semiconductors with different properties, to create a flow of current...
So far, improving the efficiency of solar technology has used very expensive semiconductors such as gallium arsenide.  Recently scientists have been experimenting with perovskites, which can be tuned to absorb sunlight.  Perovskites are "compounds such as calcium titanium oxide in which the atoms arrange themselves in a particular mix of cube and diamond shapes".  There have been some twists and turns - with promising results (my bold):
...Last year saw a breakthrough for perovskite cells, however, when physicist Henry Snaith at the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom and colleagues discovered that the devices actually worked better if they replaced the semiconducting bubbles with an insulating scaffold. The perovskite, as it turned out, was a pretty good semiconductor, and could shift electrons efficiently by itself.
Now, Snaith and colleagues have delivered another surprise: The bubblelike nanostructure is completely irrelevant. The Oxford team has demonstrated that perovskite cells are just as efficient if they are constructed in the same flat design, and using the same method—known as vapor deposition—as cheap thin-film silicon cells. “Having started with a complicated nanostructure, we’ve reduced it to a thin film,” Snaith says. “It’s amusing, I agree!”
What's more, the simple layered cell converts more than 15% of sunlight to electricity—equal to the record for perovskite cells, set just 2 months ago for a nanostructured device—as the researchers report today in Nature. Had physicists known perovskite was a good semiconductor, they probably would have started off with a regular, thin-film cell, Snaith says.
Perovskite cells now have a greater chance of hitting the mainstream market—possibly for as little as $0.15 per watt, or one-quarter the price of thin-film silicon devices, Snaith says.

Mingzhen Liu, Michael B. Johnston & Henry J. Snaith,  Efficient planar heterojunction perovskite solar cells by vapour deposition, Nature (2013) DOI: 10.1038/nature12509

4 comments:

  1. Here's the problem with solar. When I started studying renewables back in the early 80's, solar cells were hugely expensive, and 99% of the price of a solar panel was embobied in the cell. The remaining 1% was the physical panel structure and electrical connections. Today, thanks to Moore's Law, the price of the cells has dropped like a rock, and now the price of the cells only makes up 60% of the panel price, with 40% being everything else (which isn't subject to Moore's Law). That means that even if we could make the cells as cheap as paper -- even if the cells were free -- the module price will never be much less than 40% of the current module price. And that's still not cheap enough to compete with wind, or nuclear, or fossil.

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    1. I think it depends where you live. For example in Australia we don't have any nuclear power and it would be prohibitively expensive to introduce even if a site could be found that no-one objected to. Finding a site in Australia that has reliable source of cool water is tricky too, especially given we now have to factor in sea level rise.

      That means it's just solar, hydro, coal and wind - with some attempts at tidal/wave and geothermal.

      Solar has the advantage here of providing the most input to the grid when there is a spike in demand in very hot weather.

      The price of coal power keeps rising and in any case it's on its way out, so we can discount that. Wind is great and very cost competitive, but it would be unwise to rely only on wind power. Solar in Australia makes a lot of sense and we should have a lot more of it. Over time wind and solar will be much cheaper than coal power. I think that will happen sooner rather than later. (Wind is already cheaper than other sources in many places.)

      BTW I am now getting paid for electricity instead of paying for it, which is nice - although that's because I get a good price (under a previous incentive scheme).

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    2. KAP I suspect what you're overlooking is that up till very recently, there wasn't any strong motive to try and make those other parts cheaper. Now there is.

      Why even mount PV cells on a "panel"? why not go for roofs and walls that are photovoltaic as an integrated property? Just an idea.

      BTW I also started looking at renewables that far back (1970s even!), and came to the conclusion that, e.g., wind power would never get anywhere. Too expensive, too intermittent. Not any more; and not because of any major technology breakthroughs, but simply the learning curve and economies of scale of mass production. And today, when some folks claim that inexpensive storage technologies for wind and solar are impossible, I remember how expensive wind was when still at few-percent penetration --- just the percentage wind "spillage" is at today even in high-penetration countries like Denmark. We're just too early in the transition for storage to be meaningful yet; the learning curve is all in front of us.

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  2. We love the hard work and effort Tesla Motors and Elon Musk have done, way to rock the competition.www.youtube.com/watch?v=SrzMdoKPPaA

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