Solar Systems: Gas Shortages, Coming Full Circle in the Wake of Hurricane Harvey and the Path of Hurricane Irma, Jose and God?
Part III in a four part series on Renewable Energy
Ah, the Seventies! Paislies! Poofy smocks! Blondie, Queen and myriad reflectors (aka disco balls) spinning over the heads
of bushy-headed, bell-bottom-ringing rockers! I wish I had a time machine so I
could go hit just one night at Studio 54—rocking my own paisley-patterned
bell-bottoms and fringed leather halter top. Just one night.
I was just digging
into the history of solar power in the 1970s and apparently you can’t google
anything 70s-related without getting some Studio 54 images popping up in the
feed. At first glance it looks like the 70s were defined by wild parties, bad taste, Nixon and the Vietnam War. But
take a second scroll and you’ll see a few headlines about something called “The Energy Crisis.”
I bumped right up against an article about how in
1979, President Jimmy Carter had solar panels installed on the White House in reaction to suffering two energy crises over the decade, but then President Ronald Reagan called them a
joke and had them removed when he became president in the next election. A
joke? Really? A researcher driven by a touch of OCD, I dove head first into the
endless, swirling bog of text.
What I learned was that it wasn’t so much an “energy crisis”
or a “gas shortage,” as much as it was an almost complete redefining and
restructuring of world-wide power and alliances, and that these, now understated, energy crises had far more of an impact on our world than Freddy Mercury
wearing leather britches while cadenza-ing ‘We Are The Champions.’ Cars waited
in line for hours at stations, then were sometimes turned away. Signs were posted:
“Pumps Closed.” “No Gas.” There was a “Don’t be Fuelish” campaign reminding
people to be responsible with their energy usage during the “gas shortage.” In
an effort to save fuel, interstate speed limits were dropped to, gasp, 55 mph. Needless to say, gas prices soared. Psst: We might be experiencing something like that again by the time Hurricane Harvey finishes knawing on the oil infrastructure on the Gulf Coast. Today's Thursday, August 31st. Day 4 of Hurricane Harvey's rampage which has so far shut down three refineries and is expected to shut down a fourth today, according to this morning's Wall Street Journal.
Here’s the thing: Back then, there wasn’t a shortage. Select countries,
including the United States, were denied or had their supplies significantly
reduced by Middle Eastern suppliers in retaliation for our support of Israel,
among other reasons. That’s when we found out what can happen when we become über
dependent on something we can’t produce locally. It was also a huge check on
Western arrogance. We thought we could strong arm the Middle East by flexing
our big money. Turned out we couldn’t. We needed the oil and they knew it. They
gave us less oil, then charged more for it. That’s my extremely pithy cliff
note interpretation and it’s way, way, WAY
more complicated than that. Check out the full story for yourself. It’s
fascinating.
One good thing about it was that it sparked renewed interest
in terrestrial applications for solar power. That’s when President Jimmy Carter
had those 32 solar panels put on the white house.
Through the following decades, slow but steady progress
continued. In 1991, President H.W. Bush created the National Renewable Energy
Laboratory, funding real research on renewable energy. In 2001, while President
George W. Bush was off clearing brush on his ranch, the National Park Service
quietly dressed up a white house maintenance shed with 167 solar panels and two
thermal solar systems for heating hot water. Since he never mentioned it, not
sure Bush ever knew they were there, but still: Yay!
President Barack Obama was far more open about his support
of renewable energy. In 2013, White House spokesman, Matt Lehrich, announced,
“Continuing President Obama’s commitment to lead by example to increase the use
of clean energy in the U.S., the White House has completed installation of
American-made solar panels on the first family’s residence as a part of an
energy retrofit that will improve the overall energy efficiency of the
building.”
Speaking of American-made panels, most of the panels
currently made in the world aren’t. Fortune
Magazine says that, “China is utterly and totally dominating solar panels.” They are the
world’s largest manufacturer of solar panels at a time where markets are
“predicted to expand by 13 percent a year,” according to a December article in
Scientific American. The U.S., is a distant third, maybe 4th, which is not where
we probably want to be given these recent findings from the Solar Jobs Census2016:
•
One out of every 50 new jobs added in the United States in 2016 was
created by the solar industry
•
Solar jobs in the United States have increased at least 20 percent per
year for the past four years, and jobs have nearly tripled since the first
Solar Jobs Census was released in 2010.
•
Over the next 12 months, employers surveyed expect to see total solar
industry employment increase by 10 percent to 286,335 solar workers. Last year
the coal industry tallied 75,000 jobs.
•
The solar industry added $84 billion to the US GDP in 2016
So third ain't so bad, but that's assuming we aren't about to get left in the dust by countries giving it their full attention, especially as renewables on the verge of significant
advancements. Perovskites, a new material under research at Purdue University
and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, could create solar cells that are
more flexible, allowing for broader applications, are also cheap and easy to
make. Berkeley Labs predicts they could double efficiency, further driving down costs that have just dropped for the seventh straight year
in a row. Rumor has it, Audi has partnered with China to produce a solar
rooftop “film” that will power ancillary operations for select vehicles,
rolling out of the show rooms in 2018.
The real pickle, however, has always been how to store surplus
energy for when ‘the sun don’t shine or the wind don’t blow. Tesla’s Elon Musk
believes we are on the brink of rapid advances in energy storage so strongly
that, in late March, he tweet-boasted he could deliver a battery solution to
fix Australia’s notoriously cranky electrical system issues within 100 days –
or it’s free. He also predicted the energy-storage market would grow at “twice
the rate of the automotive business.” Then, next month, hee, hee, Tesla unveiled its sleek
new solar panels that pair perfectly with…the
Powerwall, Tesla’s sexy little, stackable battery, that promises to store
sun from the day to light the night. Boom!
Do a search for solar power in google news and you’ll see a
nice long list of big companies and government agencies signing contracts and
installing solar, ahem, systems: Comcast, Audi, The United States Federal
Reserve, Corvalis Airport, Indonesia,
etc. etc. etc. It’s beautiful. Since the 70s, “we’ve come a long way, baby.”
Now, with nation’s all over the world committing to reduce
the use of fossil fuels, some of them taking Musk’s offer seriously, ScientificAmerican’s 13% market expansion prediction might just be sand-bagged. Between that and Hurricane Harvey's decimation of U.S. oil production and the oil shortages expected from that, if we
don’t get more into this game…the joke may be on us. You “dig?”
Donna Stewart is a freelance writer and author of Yoga Mama's Buddha Sandals: Mayans, Zapatistas and Silly Little White Girls, available
at your lovely, local bookstore, public library, Amazon.com or
Barnes&Noble. You can see more of her work at www.donnastewartwrites.com.
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