The greenest energy is the energy saved

By Fred Kindle (China Daily)
Updated: 2007-06-07 10:02

The author Fred Kindle is chief executive officer of ABB, the Zurich-based power and automation technology group

Barely a day goes by without talk of climate change. The latest scientific reports have shown it is happening and that human activity is responsible. If we are to move beyond talk and prevarication, we need urgent solutions.

Renewable energy, carbon capture and biofuels are among the main solutions put forward to mitigate climate change. They are valid methods and must be pursued but the truth is that most of the technologies are either not ripe, still too expensive or have unwanted side effects.

There is a quicker, cheaper and more effective way of reducing carbon dioxide emissions that can be applied right now: energy-efficient technologies that are commercially available and proven. Energy efficiency is the low-hanging fruit in the campaign to protect the environment because the technologies exist and we know the savings they will deliver.

China, for example, has vast energy requirements that alternative fuels are not ready to meet. The country is set to open a new coal-fired power plant every week for the next 10 years, not because it's addicted to coal but because that's the affordable energy source that is available.

The issue that needs to be tackled today is how we can help and encourage China to raise the efficiency of those coal-fired power plants to minimize emissions of carbon dioxide. Like China, all fast growing countries are facing more or less the same challenging situation.

Similarly in industry, the biggest reductions in emissions in the short term will come from measures to run processes more efficiently.

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Breakthrough on new energy source

To give one example, electricity consumption by industries ranges between 40 percent to 70 percent across the world, and two-thirds of that is used by electric motors.

Devices to regulate the speed of a motor can reduce energy consumption by 50 percent in many applications. Yet less than 10 percent of motors are equipped with such devices.

Fitting them to all the motors shipped last year alone would avoid 200 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions per year, more than the annual emissions of the Netherlands. And there are many more energy saving opportunities like this.

The G8 leaders meeting from June 6 to 8 in Germany are right to focus on energy efficiency in their planned debate on ways to mitigate climate change. This is a great opportunity to raise awareness of the need to use existing resources more carefully. Industry can make a huge positive contribution but political will and support are needed to exploit its full potential.

There are many things politicians can do.
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