Ancient water supports today's energy needs
Autor: | James N. Galloway, Jessica A. Gephart, Elizabeth A. Castner, Kyle A. Emery, Michael L. Pace, Allison M. Leach, Paolo D'Odorico, Kyle Frankel Davis, Jennifer L. Natyzak |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
Water-energy nexus
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences business.industry Ecology Fossil fuel Virtual water Renewable fuels 010501 environmental sciences 01 natural sciences Renewable energy Environmental protection Biofuel Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) Farm water Environmental science business Water use 0105 earth and related environmental sciences General Environmental Science |
Zdroj: | Earth's Future. 5:515-519 |
ISSN: | 2328-4277 |
DOI: | 10.1002/2017ef000544 |
Popis: | The water footprint for fossil fuels typically accounts for water utilized in mining and fuel processing, whereas the water footprint of biofuels assesses the agricultural water used by crops through their lifetime. Fossil fuels have an additional water footprint that is not easily accounted for: ancient water that was used by plants millions of years ago, before they were transformed into fossil fuel. How much water is mankind using from the past to sustain current energy needs? We evaluate the link between ancient water virtually embodied in fossil fuels to current global energy demands by determining the water demand required to replace fossil fuels with biomass produced with water from the present. Using equal energy units of wood, bioethanol, and biodiesel to replace coal, natural gas, and crude oil, respectively, the resulting water demand is 7.39 × 1013 m3y−1, approximately the same as the total annual evaporation from all land masses and transpiration from all terrestrial vegetation. Thus, there are strong hydrologic constraints to a reliance on biofuel energy produced with water from the present because the conversion from fossil fuels to biofuels would have a disproportionate and unsustainable impact on the modern water. By using fossil fuels to meet today's energy needs, we are virtually using water from a geological past. The water cycle is insufficient to sustain the production of the fuel presently consumed by human societies. Thus, non-fuel based renewable energy sources are needed to decrease mankind's reliance on fossil fuel energy without placing an overwhelming pressure on global freshwater resources. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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