PRIMARY ENERGY AND CO2 OF US, NE AND VERMONT ELECTRICITY SYSTEMS

Primary Energy Sources Requiring Combustion

 

Source energy is the energy taken from the earth, such as from a well, a mine, a forest. The energy for exploration, extraction, processing and transport is used to convert the source energy to primary energy for the US economy. The US electrical system uses about 40% of all primary energy.

 

- Source energy is the energy taken from coalmines, oil and gas wells, and forests for conversion (by means of combustion) to electricity and heat.

- Primary energy = source energy - energy used for exploration, extraction, processing and transport of fuels (coal, oil, gas, biofuels, wastes, etc.) to fuel users, such as electricity generating plants, process plants, buildings and vehicles, etc.

- Consumed energy by users = electricity fed to grid + electricity imports fed to grid + fuel to process plants, buildings and vehicles, etc.

- Gross electricity generation = primary energy (fuel to power plants) x conversion efficiency.

- Net electricity generation = gross electricity generation - plant self-use = electricity fed to grid.

- Plant efficiency = energy out/energy in = electricity fed to grid/gross electricity generation

- Electricity at user meters = electricity fed to grid - transmission & distribution losses.

 

For exploration and extraction mostly diesel and electricity are used.

For processing mostly diesel, natural gas and electricity are used.

For transport mostly diesel is used.

 

Primary Energy Sources Not Requiring Combustion

 

Examples of such primary energy sources are nuclear, hydro, geothermal, solar and wind. Their primary energy factors are set at 1.0, according to the Direct Equivalent Method used by the UN.

 

Other entities, such as the EIA, BP, World Bank, etc., use other methods, which assign artificial factors to those energy sources, but they are not part of this article.

 

Primary Energy of US Grid

 

The PE factors are shown in table 1 for the US grid. They were obtained from this website. Google the title and the article displays as a PDF.

“Primary Energy Demand of Renewable Energy Carriers”. See page 12, left column in table.

 

The CO2 is only the combustion CO2, i.e., upstream is not included. See URLs.

The combustion CO2 of hydro; geo; solar and wind were set at zero.

The combustion CO2 of muni refuse; solid biomass (such as wood/pellets); biogas (such as landfill methane) & bio-liquids (such as ethanol) were not counted, per international agreement.

 

NOTE: Hydro, geo, solar and wind have upstream CO2 emissions. That CO2 is counted as part of A to Z, lifecycle, cradle to grave analyses.

 

NOTE: In case of ethanol from corn, the upstream CO2/gallon is actually greater than the combustion CO2/gallon. That CO2 is counted as part of A to Z, lifecycle, cradle to grave analyses.

 

NOTE:

1 quad = 10^15 Btu

1 quad = 293.071070 TWh

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_in_the_United_States

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/fd/Energy_Flow_US_...

https://www.eia.gov/environment/emissions/co2_vol_mass.php

CO2 Emissions of an EV: Almost all EV owners do not have a wall meter dedicated to measure the kWh charged into an EV. They use the vehicle meter to calculate their electricity consumption.

 

Vehicle meter = 12000 miles/y x 0.300 = 3600 kWh/y

Vehicle meter, CO emissions = 3600 x 520 = 1.872 million gram/y. See table 1.

Wall meter = 12000 miles/y x 1.125 x 0.300 = 4050 kWh/y purchased from utility.

Wall meter, CO2 emissions = 4050 x 463 = 1.872 million gram/y. See table 1.   

 

Direct Equivalent Method

Factor

PE

PE

To grid

CO2

To grid

To meters

In EV batteries

Table 1/US Grid/2017

Combustion

Combustion

Combustion

Combustion

T&D 6.5%

Charge 12.5%

quad

TWh

TWh

million mt

g/kWh

g/kWh

g/kWh

Coal

0.3245

12.700

3722.00

1207.90

1207.1

999

Oil

0.3427

0.210

61.54

21.09

30.5

1446

Gas

0.4603

9.540

2795.90

1287.02

506.4

393

Total Fossil

0.3824

22.450

6579.45

2516.02

1744.0

693

738

830

Nuclear

1.0000

2.747

804.95

804.95

Hydro

1.0000

1.024

300.05

300.05

Geo

1.0000

0.055

15.98

15.98

Solar

1.0000

0.181

52.96

52.96

Wind

1.0000

0.868

254.25

254.25

Muni Refuse

0.1770

Biomass, solid

0.2860

0.520

185.38

53.02

Biogas & bio-liquids

0.2620

Total RE

1.0000

2.648

687.29

687.29

Imports

1.0000

0.060

17.58

17.58

Total

27.905

8178.15

4014.80

1744.0

434

463

520

 

Primary Energy of NE Grid

 

The below table 2 is for the NE grid. Generation and CO2 data were obtained from the URLs.

 

https://www.iso-ne.com/about/key-stats/resource-mix/

https://www.iso-ne.com/static-assets/documents/2018/01/2016_emissio...

 

The NE grid is significantly “cleaner “, has much less g CO2/kWh, than the US grid. That is largely due to the high percentages of gas, nuclear and hydro, which contribute about 90% of all electricity generated in NE.

The CO2/kWh is 454 g/lb x 36389000 US ton x 2000 lb/US ton/(102532 GWh x 1000000 kWh/GWh) = 322 g. See table 2.

 

ISO-NE estimates NE generation with CO2 at 59% and without CO2 at 41%.

 

NOTE:

Combustion CO2 was 37.468 million US ton in 2016. Generation was 105572 GWh.

Combustion CO2 for 2017 was estimated a 37.468 million US ton x 102532/105572 = 36.389 million US ton.

 

CO2 Emissions of an EV: Almost all EV owners do not have a wall meter dedicated to measure the kWh charged into an EV. They use the vehicle meter to calculate their electricity consumption.

 

Vehicle meter = 12000 miles/y x 0.300 = 3600 kWh/y

Vehicle meter, CO emissions = 3600 x 327 = 1.1772 million gram/y. See table 2.

Wall meter = 12000 miles/y x 1.125 x 0.300 = 4050 kWh/y purchased from utility.

Wall meter, CO2 emissions = 4050 x 291 = 1.1772 million gram/y. See table 2.  

 

Direct Equivalent Method

Factor

PE

To Grid

CO2

To grid

To meters

In EV batteries

Table 2/NE Grid/2017

Combustion

Combustion

Combustion

Combustion

2016

T&D 6.5%

Charging 12.5%

GWh

GWh

million US ton

g/kWh

g/kWh

g/kWh

Coal

0.3245

5190

1684

Oil

0.3427

2031

696

Gas

0.4603

106882

49198

Total fossil

0.4520

114103

51578

Nuclear

1.0000

31538

31538

Hydro

1.0000

8572

8572

- Geo

1.0000

0

0

- Solar

1.0000

880

880

- Wind

1.0000

3280

3280

- Muni Refuse

0.1770

17881

3165

- Biomass, solid

0.2860

10538

3014

- Biogas & bio-liquids

0.2620

1874

491

- Steam

1.0000

0

0

Total RE

0.3143

34454

10830

Other 

1.0000

14

14

Total Generation 

0.5434

188681

102532

36.389

322

343

386

Net Flow over External Ties 

1.0000

20243

20243

- Québec

1.0000

14401

14401

- New Brunswick

1.0000

4306

4306

- New York

1.0000

1536

1536

Pumping Load 

1.0000

-1716

-1716

Net Energy for Load 

0.5842

207208

121059

36.389

273

291

327

 

Primary Energy of Vermont Grid

 

The below table 3 is for the VT grid. Generation and CO2 data were obtained from the Energy Action Network.

 

The Vermont grid is significantly “cleaner “, has much less g CO2/kWh, than the US and NE grid. That is largely due to the high percentages of VT-generated RE, purchased nuclear, purchased H-Q hydro (via a connection that is not monitored by ISO-NE), which contribute about 72% of the total supply to the VT grid.

Fossil CO2 = 322 x 1618775 x 1000/1000000 = 521246 metric ton, as allocated to VT by ISO-NE.

 

ISO-NE estimates NE generation with CO2 at 59% and without CO2 at 41%

VT estimates its electricity supply with CO2 at 40.6% and without CO2 at 59.6%

 

CO2 Emissions of an EV: Almost all EV owners do not have a wall meter dedicated to measure the kWh charged into an EV. They use the vehicle meter to calculate their electricity consumption.

 

Vehicle meter = 12000 miles/y x 0.300 = 3600 kWh/y

Vehicle meter, CO emissions = 3600 x 104, table 3 = 0.3744 million gram/y. See table 2.

Wall meter = 12000 miles/y x 1.125 x 0.300 = 4050 kWh/y purchased from utility.

Wall meter, CO2 emissions = 4050 x 92, table 2 = 0.3744 million gram/y

 

Direct Equivalent Method

Table 3/VT Grid/2016

Energy Action Network

To grid

To meters

In EV batteries

Vermont 2016 Electricity Sources

Combustion

Combustion

Combustion

2018 update

Factor

PE

PE

To Grid

2016

T&D 6.5%

Charge 12.5%

%

million Btu

MWh

MWh

g/kWh

g/kWh

g/kWh

Oil/Distillate

0.3189

77987

22857

7288

Gas

0.4319

140350

41134

17766

ISO-NE Non-RE

0.4319

12590386

3690031

1593721

Total fossil

0.4312

12808723

3754022

1618775

322

343

386

Nuclear

0.3281

8046529

2358303

773705

H-Q system mix* 

0.9600

4790000

1403869

1347714

Hydro*

1.0000

2457967

720389

720389

Solar*

1.0000

876318

256834

256834

Wind*

1.0000

1628658

477332

477332

Landfill methane/Muni Refuse*

1.0000

327327

95934

95934

Biomass, solid (wood)*

0.2275

6982047

2046321

465470

Farm Biogas & bio-liquids*

1.0000

77364

22674

22674

ISO-NE RE*

1.0000

855945

250863

250863

Net Energy for Load 

0.5295

38850878

11386541

6029690

86

92

104

Total RE*

0.6794

17995626

5274216

3583301

59.4%

Total Non-RE

0.4002

20855252

6112325

2446389

40.5%

NOTE:

- Landfill methane/Muni refuse should be 0.1770, instead of 1.0000

- Biomass, solid (wood) of 0.2860 used by “Primary Energy Demand of Renewable Energy Carriers” (See page 12, left column in table), is for very efficient biomass plants, but should be 0.2275 in case of Vermont’s very old McNeil and Ryegate plants.

 - Farm biogas & bio-liquids should be 0.2620, instead of 1.0000

 

 

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Maine Center For Public Interest Reporting – Three Part Series: A CRITICAL LOOK AT MAINE’S WIND ACT

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(excerpts) From Part 1 – On Maine’s Wind Law “Once the committee passed the wind energy bill on to the full House and Senate, lawmakers there didn’t even debate it. They passed it unanimously and with no discussion. House Majority Leader Hannah Pingree, a Democrat from North Haven, says legislators probably didn’t know how many turbines would be constructed in Maine if the law’s goals were met." . – Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting, August 2010 https://www.pinetreewatchdog.org/wind-power-bandwagon-hits-bumps-in-the-road-3/From Part 2 – On Wind and Oil Yet using wind energy doesn’t lower dependence on imported foreign oil. That’s because the majority of imported oil in Maine is used for heating and transportation. And switching our dependence from foreign oil to Maine-produced electricity isn’t likely to happen very soon, says Bartlett. “Right now, people can’t switch to electric cars and heating – if they did, we’d be in trouble.” So was one of the fundamental premises of the task force false, or at least misleading?" https://www.pinetreewatchdog.org/wind-swept-task-force-set-the-rules/From Part 3 – On Wind-Required New Transmission Lines Finally, the building of enormous, high-voltage transmission lines that the regional electricity system operator says are required to move substantial amounts of wind power to markets south of Maine was never even discussed by the task force – an omission that Mills said will come to haunt the state.“If you try to put 2,500 or 3,000 megawatts in northern or eastern Maine – oh, my god, try to build the transmission!” said Mills. “It’s not just the towers, it’s the lines – that’s when I begin to think that the goal is a little farfetched.” https://www.pinetreewatchdog.org/flaws-in-bill-like-skating-with-dull-skates/

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Hannah Pingree on the Maine expedited wind law

Hannah Pingree - Director of Maine's Office of Innovation and the Future

"Once the committee passed the wind energy bill on to the full House and Senate, lawmakers there didn’t even debate it. They passed it unanimously and with no discussion. House Majority Leader Hannah Pingree, a Democrat from North Haven, says legislators probably didn’t know how many turbines would be constructed in Maine."

https://pinetreewatch.org/wind-power-bandwagon-hits-bumps-in-the-road-3/

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