
Hydropower
Doesn't Count as Clean Energy
By Sarah
Phelan,
Earth
Island
Journal
October 5, 2007
Opponents of dams have
long argued against putting barriers in the natural flow of a river.
Dams, they point out, prevent endangered fish from migrating, alter
ecosystems, and threaten the livelihoods of local communities.
Native Americans, fishing
communities, and environmentalists have made these arguments in their
quest to decommission four dams on
Klamath River
, which runs from southwest
Oregon
to the coast of
California
. But with
California
requiring a 25 percent
reduction in the state's carbon dioxide emissions by 2020, clean energy
has suddenly entered the Klamath dam debate.
Bill Fehrman, president
of PacifiCorp, the hydropower company that owns these Klamath dams, says
replacing the power from these dams "could result in adding
combustion emissions to the environment."
Meanwhile, across the
border in
Canada
, Hydro-Québec, the world's
biggest producer of hydropower, claims that "compared with other
generating options, hydropower emits very little greenhouse gas,"
thus "contributing significantly to the fight against climate
change."
Maybe not. Recent reports
on methane emissions suggest that dams are anything but carbon-neutral.
According to recently
published estimates from Ivan Lima and some of his colleagues at
Brazil
's National Institute for
Space Research, the world's 52,000 largest dams release 104 million
metric tons of methane annually. If
Lima
's calculations are correct, then dams would account for about four
percent of the total warming impact of human activities -- and would
constitute the largest single source of human-related methane emissions.
As
Lima
points out, if methane
released from reservoir surfaces, spillways, and turbines were taken
into account,
India
's greenhouse emissions
could be as much as 40 percent higher than its current official
estimates. But though
India
ranks among the world's top
polluters, as a developing nation it is not required to cut emissions --
and has yet to measure methane from its 4,500 dams. And that's a
problem, because while methane does not last as long in the atmosphere
as carbon dioxide, its heat-trapping potential is 25 times stronger.
A Swirling Debate
Lima
is not alone in questioning
whether dams' emissions may be as harmful in terms of climate change as
those from fossil fuel plants. In 2004, Philip Fearnside of the National
Institute for Research in the Amazon suggested that a massive surge of
methane emissions could occur when water is discharged under pressure at
hydroelectric dams in a process known in the industry as
"degassing."
The problem with dams is
that organic matter gets trapped in them when land is first flooded, and
more gets flushed in, or grows there, later on. In tropical zones, such
as
Brazil
, this matter quickly decays
to form methane and carbon dioxide.
But just how big a
problem this creates is controversial. A debate has been raging for
years between researchers connected to Hydro-Québec and
Brazil
's Electrobras, the world's
largest hydropower companies, and several small teams of independent
hydrologists.
According to Fearnside,
if degassing emissions were factored in at several large hydropower
plants in
Brazil
, then these dams would be
larger contributors to global warming than their fossil fuel
counterparts. To be precise, Fearnside suggested that during the first
decade of its life, each of these dams would emit four times as much
carbon as a fossil fuel plant that makes the same amount of electricity.
Fearnside's claims have
triggered a firestorm. Luis Pinguelli Rosa, formerly of Electrobras but
now based at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, claimed Fearnside
had made "scientific errors," including a failure to grasp how
degassing works, and so had exaggerated the emission levels.
Rosa pointed out that
Fearnside had extrapolated his calculations from data taken from the
Petit Saut dam in French Guyana in the years immediately following the
creation of the reservoir, when organic matter, and thus methane
emissions, would likely be their highest. Patrick McCully, executive
director of the Berkeley, CA-based International Rivers Network, says
that one of the areas of strongest disagreement among reservoir
emissions researchers is how to quantify net emissions.
In a recent paper,
"Fizzy Science," McCully shows that key factors influencing
reservoir greenhouse gas emissions include fluctuations in water level,
growth and decay of aquatic plants, decomposition of flooded biomass and
soils, the amount of methane bubbling from the surface, and the amount
of carbon dioxide diffusing in.
But as McCully points
out, "The most comprehensive analyses of net emissions have been
done by Fearnside -- while Pinguelli Rosa has only presented data on
gross emissions."
With controversy
continuing to swirl about methane emissions from dams, including those
in boreal regions such as Québec, where the soil is famously peaty, as
well as those in China and India, where lots more dams are planned,
Stanford University researchers Danny Cullenward and David Victor are
calling for more study of the issue. "Whether you are a
conservative Brazilian like
Rosa
, or a more aggressive
Brazilian like Fearnside, we are looking at a significant amount of
methane that currently is not being factored into global models for
atmospheric methane and global [climate] change," says Cullenward,
who believes that more data are sorely needed.
Doug Dixon, manager of
Hydropower Research at the Electric Power Research Institute in
Washington
,
DC
says his group is not doing
any research into methane emissions from dams at the present time.
"It's a
controversial issue," says
Dixon
. "There are scientists on both sides of fence as to
whether there are significant greenhouse gas emissions from dams."
Noting that methane
emissions from dams has not surfaced as a major concern in temperate
areas of the
US
,
Dixon
adds, "But it's a big
issue for the World Bank."
While the World Bank
acknowledges the goal of addressing greenhouse gas concerns in its
investment portfolio, and though it funds fewer dams then it used to, it
still invests tens of millions a year, and it's unclear if it considers
methane emissions when deciding on projects.
Former World Bank
Director Paul Wolfowitz spoke publicly about the importance of investing
in clean energy, but the climate change position of the bank's new
director, Robert Zoellick, is less clear. Carbon Credits for Dams?
If methane emissions from
dams turn out to be as big as a problem as some scientists now estimate,
how will this affect the politics of hydroelectricity?
Cullenwald says he and
IRN's McCully have both argued that the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) should take up the issue as a Special Project, but
that global geopolitics are confounding the effort. At the United
Nations Climate Change Conference in
Nairobi
,
Kenya
in the fall of 2006,
McCully urged IPCC officials to do a study on dams and methane -- but he
ran into opposition.
"They said they
wouldn't be able to do a Special Report, because that would need a lot
of agreements, and
Brazil
, which is very powerful
politically, is dead set against it, as is
India
," McCully says.
"However, the IPCC folks did say that this definitely is an issue
that needs to be better understood, and that their next report is going
to be on renewables. They made a verbal commitment to deal with the
methane emissions issue, but it could take years."
Other climate-related
bodies have already been forced to look at methane emissions as they
relate to dams. Currently developed nations that fund clean energy
projects can get carbon credits to meet their Kyoto Protocol targets
through a program called the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM). Under
the program, some dams are eligible for credits, while others are not.
"They (CDM) have
adopted a policy that says 'no' to very large reservoirs being able to
get carbon credits," McCully says. Medium-sized dams are given some
allowances, however.
"It means that at
least the very worst, dams are not going to get carbon credits,"
says McCully, noting that 400 dams have applied to receive carbon
credits under the CDM, and that half of all these dams are in
China
.
McCully argues that dams
are not the best option in terms of energy efficiency compared to solar,
wind, and geothermal options.
"So, in terms of
energy efficiency, solar, wind and geothermal options are better, and
hydropower is not renewable, because reservoirs fill up with sediment
and cost billions to dredge," he says, pointing to dams on the
Colorado River, which are seeing the lowest water levels in recorded
history.
There is a potential
energy upside to the methane emissions equation. Capturing methane in
reservoirs and using it to fuel power plants, says
Lima
, would mean we could
"avoid the need to build new dams with their associated human and
environmental costs."
McCully agrees that there
could be benefits to capturing and burning the methane from reservoirs.
"Doing so could significantly reduce the methane emissions. So
while it would do away with an argument against the dams-as-clean-energy
theory, extracting methane for electricity could help
Brazil
to not build any more dams.
And removing methane reduces the dam's warming impact by 25 times."
Murky Waters
For now, at least, the
science surrounding methane and dams remains so inconclusive that the
issue is unlikely to play a decisive role in the immediate debates about
dam construction and decommissioning. As the fight continues over the
dams on the Klamath and many other rivers, uncertainties about methane
emissions will mostly serve to make already complex arguments even
thornier. To make the issue even murkier, removing a dam could lead to a
short-term burst of emissions.
"No one has measured
emissions there [on the Klamath], and they may be high," McCully
says. "A couple of the dams have horrendous water quality and a
huge algae problem, but there's also the question of how much
[greenhouse gases] could be released if these dams are decommissioned,
because there could be loads of carbon in the sediments. No one really
knows. It's pretty complicated."
Sarah Phelan covers
the environment and City Hall for the
San Francisco
Bay
Guardian. A native of
London
,
England
, she loves bridges and
fog.
© 2007
Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
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Source: http://www.alternet.org/environment/64445/?page=entire
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