EROEI -- or energy return on energy investment -- is an interesting concept. A simple equation for calculating EROEI is provided by Wikipedia:
But beware of the false simplicity of equations and charts. The denominator for the equation above: "Energy Expended," can be devilishly difficult to quantify in simple terms.
EROEI is never quite well-defined because you don't know how "deeply" you should go in your energy audit. If Joe Sixpack works for a hydroelectric power plant, should you include the energy expenses that his grandfather had to make to get laid with his grandmother? What about the projector in the cinema in 1934 before they had the first intercourse? :-) These things were needed for the power plant to work. My example is meant to be amusing but the essence is very serious. _LubosWhen it comes to EROEI, only a range of values is acceptable. If you are given a point estimate of EROEI without error bars or a range -- as in the Wiki chart above -- you are being lied to.
Robert Rapier is going to delve into the treacherous topic of EROEI in a talk at the ASPO-USA Conference. Robert discusses various ways in which an investment with a low EROEI can be superior to one with a higher EROEI. For example:
... it is possible for a lower EROEI process to be more attractive than a higher EROEI process if the former returns the energy over a shorter time interval. Think of it in terms of interest. Consider an investment that returns 3% on a daily basis versus one that returns 50% on an annual basis. If you invested $1 in each, the 3% daily return will earn you more than $47,000 at the end of one year (assuming you reinvest the returns) while the 50% annual return will earn you 50 cents. But EROEI would simply say that one return is 1.03 to 1 and the other is 1.5 to 1. So, if someone says that a process has an EROEI of 1.5, the first question needs to be “Over what time interval?” _RobertRapierIn fact there are many situations where other factors will trump the narrow EROEI consideration. Environmentalists, for example, may disqualify hydroelectric, coal, nuclear, oil sands, and oil shale, simply on environmental concerns -- regardless of EROEI. Utility manager may wish to disqualify wind and solar, based upon their intermittency, expense, requirement for expensive backup facilities, and the fascist way that green governments are forcing such unreliable forms of power production down their throats.
Energy mechanism | EROEI | Cents/kWh |
Hydro | 11:1 to 267:1 | 1 |
Coal | 50:1 | 2 to 4 |
Oil (Ghawar supergiant field) | 100:1 | |
Oil (global average) | 19:1 | |
Natural gas | 10:1 | 4 to 7 |
Wind | 18:1 | 4.5 to 10 |
Wave | 15:1 | 12 |
Solar Photovoltaic | 3.75:1 to 10:1 | 21 to 83 |
Geothermal | 2:1 to 13:1 | 10 |
Tidal | ~ 6:1 | 10 |
Tar sands | 5.2:1 to 5.8:1 | |
Oil shale | 1.5:1 to 4:1 | |
Nuclear | 1.1:1 to 15:1 | 2 to 9 |
Biodiesel | 1.9:1 to 9:1 | |
Solar thermal | 1.6:1 | 6 to 15 |
Ethanol | 0.5:1 to 8:1 |
Imagine you are driving through downtown Santa Fe, running low on fuel, and you see two gasoline stations on opposite sides of the street. One sells fuel for $3.85 a gallon, and the other for $10.99 a gallon. The higher priced fuel boasts an EROEI of 10:1, whereas the lower priced fuel can only claim an EROEI of 3:1. Which fuel will you buy, and on what basis?
In fact, we base our energy decisions on price, not EROEI. The fact that prices can change erratically, while EROEI may stay the same, is not a black mark against economics. It is rather a commentary on how simplistic the concept of EROEI is compared to the complexity of life. Pricing in markets reflects far more dimensions of reality than the deceptively simple calculation of EROEI.
Biodiesel- 3:1If you can produce and sell power reliably and profitably over a long period of time using a relatively low cost method of production -- but the EROEI was only 1.5 to 1 -- would you do it? It depends on a lot of things, the EROEI being one of the least important.
Coal- 1:1 to 10:1
Ethanol- 1.2:1
Natural Gas- 1:1 to 10:1
Hydropower- 10:1
Hydrogen- 0.5:1
Nuclear- 4:1
Oil- 1:1 to 100:1
Oil Sands- 2:1
Solar PV (2) - 1:1 to 10:1
Wind (2) - 3:1 to 20:1 _Energy Bulletin
EROEI can be important in some contexts, irrelevant in others, and downright misleading in most. I have included three different charts or tables comparing EROEI for various forms of energy production or energy source. Notice that the range of estimates for EROEI is quite wide -- where ranges are provided. These ranges are more honest than a simple point estimate, but even such wide ranges can be made obsolete.
As technologies change, EROEIs necessarily change as well. What was once not economically viable suddenly becomes viable, with the introduction of new technologies. 20 year old EROEIs given for deep sea oil, oil sands, shale oil & gas, methane clathrates are less than meaningless today, and will be even less worth considering in 20 years time.
The EROEIs given for wind energy are particularly misleading, given that wind is not dispatchable, has a capacity factor between 20% and 30% at best, and produces most of its power at non-peak demand times. Wind is not present in sufficient quantities for large areas of the globe. Throw away the EROEI for wind, or fool yourself, as you please.
Other forms of energy suffer from the same problem of EROEI irrelevancy. Solar, for example, is also intermittent, non-dispatchable, not suitable for most parts of the world due to issues of weather and latitude. Despite what solar advocates may say, solar energy is not a good match to peak loads most of the year, for most of the planet. Throw away EROEI for solar.
EROEI is a broad and deceptively simplistic measure of energy efficiency, is perhaps best thought of in connection with the broader concept of entropy in a closed system. In open systems, such as those which humans deal in, EROEI has only limited utility, and is most frequently misused and abused when used.
Then why do the doomers have EROEI as their main talking point? Like on ever site I see oil used to be 100:1 now its down to 13:1 or some other number they probably pull out of thin air.
ReplyDeleteIm sure Robert Raiper is getting balls of hate thrown at him by the extremists peak oilers.
People grasp at certainty -- even if it is certainty of doom. Once a person has settled on a belief in doom, he resents it very much if anyone threatens to weaken the support structure of his beliefs.
ReplyDeleteThe EROEIs of oil sands and shale oils is tending in the opposite direction, and deep sea drilling will also become more efficient as autonomous robotic systems of seafloor drilling come into play.
People are emotional animals. They frequently feel compelled to hold strong opinions on matters they know nothing about, then feel personally threatened when their beliefs are doubted by those from outside the circular jerkular echo choir.
Robert Rapier is accustomed to being attacked by true believers of all kinds. I suspect that it doesn't move him very much.