Lessons from Livermore’s 2023 Energy Consumption Chart

I have been reading Lloyd for about 20 years now. His specialty I would say is the environment and environmental issues and how humans cause the good, bad, and ugly of them. Good reading with multiple flow charts.

Flow charts, also referred to as Sankey Diagrams, are single-page references that contain quantitative data about resource, commodity, and byproduct flows in a graphical form. These flow charts help scientists, analysts, and other decision makers to visualize the complex interrelationships involved in managing our nation’s resources.

Lesson 1: don’t get buried in the detail and look at the big pictures.

It’s that time of year when the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) releases its estimated energy consumption chart for the previous year and when I do my annual examination of the entrails to see what is happening and what has changed.

The most important big picture in the LLNL chart is its representation of “energy services” as opposed to “rejected energy.” LLNL used to call energy services “useful energy,” which I think is more accurate. I am not sure about “rejected energy” either, because it is not rejected; it is the cost of doing business in a heat engine.

The EIA classes it as “renewable energy” because it comes from plants, but the bulk of it is biofuels like ethanol that are mixed into gasoline and probably take as much energy to make as you get out of it. Other biomass includes wood and wood waste, municipal solid waste, and sewage. These all produce more CO2 per kW/hr of power generated than burning coal.

Adding this to the renewable and zero-carbon sources would pump up the numbers, but biogenic CO2 is still CO2, the atmosphere doesn’t know the difference. We have to replace this with true renewables as well.

Looking at the big picture over time can be a bit depressing; over ten years, the needles have hardly moved. Coal use is half of what it was so CO2 emissions will be lower. Total useful energy consumption is way down by six quads, primarily due to changes in the industrial sector.

The economy grew significantly in the ten years, but total energy use is down. This is very good. But given how much we have to do in such a short time, it is just not good enough.