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Sustainable Development Linking Energy and the Environment Washington U. Carbon Impact Rudolf B. Husar & Erin Robinson Director, Center for Air Pollution.

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Presentation on theme: "Sustainable Development Linking Energy and the Environment Washington U. Carbon Impact Rudolf B. Husar & Erin Robinson Director, Center for Air Pollution."— Presentation transcript:

1 Sustainable Development Linking Energy and the Environment Washington U. Carbon Impact Rudolf B. Husar & Erin Robinson Director, Center for Air Pollution and Trends Analysis (CAPITA) Professor, Department of Energy, Environmental & Chemical Engineering EECE Seminar, Friday, November 2, 2007, 11:00am, Lopata 101, Washington University

2 Integrative Science and Engineering for ‘Grand Challenges’ The problems of Energy and Environment (EE) are Grand Challenges Solutions require engineering, biological, socio-economic and other sciences A rigorous and practical integrated framework for EE is not available This is an exploration of frameworks for integrated Energy Environmental Analysis Interested in the EE integration challenge? Join us on the wiki!wiki

3 Sustainable Development (SD) A process of reconciling society’s developmental needs with the environmental limits over the long term. But, What should be developed, what should be sustained? SD as an uncertain and adaptive process, “ in which society's discovery of where it wants to go is intertwined with how it might try to get there ”. During the SD ‘ journey ’ toward sustainability, the pathways have to be ‘ navigated ’ adaptively Continuing the metaphors, science is the compass, giving the directions and laws-regulations are the gyroscope for staying on course. National Academy, 1999

4 Life and non-life on Earth form a combined system (Gaia Theory) Carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, calcium are in constant circulation between the earth’s major environmental compartments Earth’s compartments remain in balance as long as the rate of flow of matter and energy in and out of the compartments is unchanged. Changes in the environmental compartments will occur if the circulation (in and out flow) of the substances is perturbed. Atmospheric CO 2 has been increasing because the rate of input is larger than the rate of output from the atmosphere.

5 Major Biogeochemical Processes Visualized by Aerosols Dust storms VolcanoesAnthropogenic pollution Fires Anthropogenic pollution perturbs the natural processes and material flows

6 Ice extent during the Last Glacial Maximum Is our climate changing?

7 Northern Hemisphere Sea Ice Extent (1979 versus 2003) Image courtesy of NASA-Goddard Space Flight Center

8 237 105 342 68 169 390 327 90 16 H 2 O, CO 2, O 3

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10 [Hansen and Sato (2004)]

11 Last 50 Years Surface Temperature Change Based on Linear Trends ( o C)

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13 Human activities generate CO 2 Global CO 2 emissions from fossil fuel burning, cement production, and gas flaring for 1751-2002

14 Analysis Frameworks Sensory-Motor Feedback Loop (System Science; Regulatory) Assessment Controls Monitoring Causality Loop (Combined Social-Physical-Biological System) Biogeochemical Cycling Loop (Engineering; Biology; Conservation Laws)

15 Analysis Framework I: Sensory-Motor Loop Assessment Compare to Goals, Plan Reductions Track Progress Controls (Actions) Monitoring (Sensing) Set Goals Assessment turns data into knowledge for decision making & actions through analysis (science & eng.) Monitoring collects multi-sensory data from surface and satellite platforms and Human activities exert pressures, e.g burning fossil fuels, that alter the state of environment. The impaired environmental state, elicits responses, such as regulations in a feedback loop All living organisms use this type of sensory-motor feedback to maintain their existence. Monitoring, Assessment, Control are the necessary steps for sustainable development.

16 Monitoring: New Global Measurements - Satellites ERBS Terra Aqua Grace IceSat QuikScat Sage SeaWinds TRMM Toms-EP UARS Jason Landsat 7 SORCE SeaWiFS ACRIMSAT TOPEX/Poseidon EO-1

17 Eskes at al, 2006 Source Identification: - Man-made, Soil, Biomass, Lightning - Seasonal pattern of each Trend 1995-2005: - Reductions in N. America & Europe - Increase over East Asia (China) Monitoring Global Change: Tropospheric NO2 Measurements from Satellites:

18 Controls: Sustainability Transition

19 Analysis Framework II: Materials & Energy Flow Loop

20 Biogeochemical Cycles - Carbon

21 Nitrogen Cycle

22 Consequences of Ecosystem Changes

23 How and what to Control?? Analysis Framework III – Causality Loop Economic Development with Due Care of the Environment The system approach links human activities and their consequences in closed loop It is the minimum set of linked components – if any missing, the system is crippled Each component depends on its causal upstream driver – and external environment The causal loop can be used as an organizing principle for sustainability analysis

24 Analysis Framework III – Causality Loop Economic Development with Due Care of the Environment Health-Welfare Energy- Environment Socio-Economic

25 Causality: Linear System Model

26 Trend of Indicators SOx = Pop x GDP/P x Btu/GDP x Sox/Btu 1960s 1980s 1990s

27 Carbon Emission Drivers for Transportation 1960-2003 Env 449 Class project, SP 2007 The C emission in transportation sector increased 200% since 1960 The upward drivers were Population, Vehicle/Person and Passenger miles The slight improvement resulted from the better fuel energy efficiency/vehicle

28 Carbon Emission Drivers for US Housing The carbon emissions in the housing sector increased 23% since ‘Kyoto’ (1990-2005) The upward drivers were Population, Housing Units/person and Surface Area/person. The key improvement (13%) resulted from the better energy efficiency/sqft Env 449 Class project, SP 2007

29 Summary Frameworks for Energy-Environment Integration: –Sensory-Motor Feedback Loop (System Science) –Biogeochemical Cycling Loop (Materials Balance) –Causality Loop (Socio-economic, Physical, Heatlh/Welfare Sciences) Opportunities: –There is a sensing revolution for monitoring energy-environmental systems –The web facilitates accessing and metabolizing the new observations –There is a more collaborative culture for faster, adoptive learning Key Challenges: –Augmenting reductionist science with integrative systems science –Enhancing information exchange and synergy between disciplines –Inherent structural and dynamic complexity of environmental systems


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