Climate Change: Electrical Industry's 'Dirty Secret' Boosts Warming
It's the
most powerful greenhouse gas known to humanity, and emissions have risen
rapidly in recent years, the BBC has learned.
Sulphur
hexafluoride, or SF6, is widely used in the electrical industry to prevent
short circuits and accidents.
But leaks of
the little-known gas in the UK and the rest of the EU in 2017 were the
equivalent of putting an extra 1.3 million cars on the road.
Levels are
rising as an unintended consequence of the green energy boom.
Cheap and
non-flammable, SF6 is a colourless, odourless, synthetic gas. It makes a hugely
effective insulating material for medium and high-voltage electrical
installations.
It is widely
used across the industry, from large power stations to wind turbines to
electrical sub-stations in towns and cities. It prevents electrical accidents
and fires.
However, the
significant downside to using the gas is that it has the highest global warming
potential of any known substance. It is 23,500 times more warming than carbon
dioxide (CO2).
Just one
kilogram of SF6 warms the Earth to the same extent as 24 people flying London
to New York return.
It also
persists in the atmosphere for a long time, warming the Earth for at least
1,000 years.
The way we
make electricity around the world is changing rapidly.
Where once
large coal-fired power stations brought energy to millions, the drive to combat
climate change means they are now being replaced by mixed sources of power
including wind, solar and gas.
This has
resulted in many more connections to the electricity grid, and a rise in the
number of electrical switches and circuit breakers that are needed to prevent
serious accidents.
Collectively,
these safety devices are called switchgear. The vast majority use SF6 gas to
quench arcs and stop short circuits.
"As
renewable projects are getting bigger and bigger, we have had to use it within
wind turbines specifically," said Costa Pirgousis, an engineer with
Scottish Power Renewables on its new East Anglia wind farm, which doesn't use
SF6 in turbines.
"As we
are putting in more and more turbines, we need more and more switchgear and, as
a result, more SF6 is being introduced into big turbines off shore.
"It's
been proven for years and we know how it works, and as a result it is very
reliable and very low maintenance for us offshore."
Across the
entire UK network of power lines and substations, there are around one million
kilograms of SF6 installed.
A study
from the University of Cardiff found that across all transmission and
distribution networks, the amount used was increasing by 30-40 tonnes per year.
This rise
was also reflected across Europe with total emissions from the 28 member states
in 2017 equivalent to 6.73 million tonnes of CO2. That's the same as the
emissions from 1.3 million extra cars on the road for a year.
Researchers
at the University of Bristol who monitor concentrations of warming gases in the
atmosphere say they have seen significant rises in the last 20 years.
"We
make measurements of SF6 in the background atmosphere," said Dr Matt
Rigby, reader in atmospheric chemistry at Bristol.
"What
we've seen is that the levels have increased substantially, and we've seen
almost a doubling of the atmospheric concentration in the last two
decades."
The most
important means by which SF6 gets into the atmosphere is from leaks in the
electricity industry.
Electrical
company Eaton, which manufactures switchgear without SF6, says its research
indicates that for the full life-cycle of the product, leaks could be as high
as 15% - much higher than many other estimates.
Louis
Schaffer, electrical business manager at Eaton, said: "The newer gear has
very low leak rates but the key question is do you have newer gear?
"We
looked at all equipment and looked at the average of all those leak rates, and
we didn't see people taking into account the filling of the gas. Plus, we
looked at how you recycle it and return it and also included the catastrophic
leaks."
Concentrations
in the atmosphere are very small right now, just a fraction of the amount of
CO2 in the air.
However, the
global installed base of SF6 is expected to grow by 75% by 2030.
Another
concern is that SF6 is a synthetic gas and isn't absorbed or destroyed
naturally. It will all have to be replaced and destroyed to limit the impact on
the climate.
Developed
countries are expected to report every year to the UN on how much SF6 they use,
but developing countries do not face any restrictions on use.
Right now,
scientists are detecting concentrations in the atmosphere that are 10 times the
amount declared by countries in their reports. Scientists say this is not all
coming from countries like India, China and South Korea.
One study
found that the methods used to calculate emissions in richer countries
"severely under-reported" emissions over the past two decades.
SF6 comes
under a group of human-produced substances known as F-gases. The European
Commission tried to prohibit a number of these environmentally harmful substances,
including gases in refrigeration and air conditioning, back in 2014.
But they
faced strong opposition from industries across Europe.
"In the
end, the electrical industry lobby was too strong and we had to give in to
them," said Dutch Green MEP Bas Eickhout, who was responsible for the
attempt to regulate F-gases.
"The
electric sector was very strong in arguing that if you want an energy
transition, and you have to shift more to electricity, you will need more
electric devices. And then you also will need more SF6.
"They
used the argument that otherwise the energy transition would be slowed
down."
Everyone is
trying to reduce their dependence on the gas, as it is universally recognised
as harmful to the climate.
In the UK,
energy regulator Ofgem says it is working with utilities to try to limit leaks
of the gas.
"We are
using a range of tools to make sure that companies limit their use of SF6, a
potent greenhouse gas, where this is in the interest of energy consumers,"
an Ofgem spokesperson told BBC News.
"This
includes funding innovation trials and rewarding companies to research and find
alternatives, setting emissions targets, rewarding companies that beat those
targets, and penalising those that miss them."
The question
of alternatives to SF6 has been contentious over recent years.
For
high-voltage applications, experts say there are very few solutions that have
been rigorously tested.
"There
is no real alternative that is proven," said Prof Manu Haddad from the
school of engineering at Cardiff University.
"There
are some that are being proposed now but to prove their operation over a long
period of time is a risk that many companies don't want to take."
However, for
medium voltage operations there are several tried-and-tested materials. Some in
the industry say that the conservative nature of the electrical industry is the
key reason that few want to change to a less harmful alternative.
"I will
tell you, everyone in this industry knows you can do this; there is not a
technical reason not to do it," said Louis Schaffer from Eaton.
"It's
not really economic; it's more a question that change takes effort and if you
don't have to, you won't do it."
Sitting in
the North Sea some 43km from the Suffolk coast, Scottish Power Renewables has
installed one of world's biggest wind farms where the turbines will be free of
SF6 gas.
East Anglia
One will see 102 of these towering generators erected, with the capacity to
produce up to 714MW (megawatts) of power by 2020, enough to supply half a
million homes.
Previously,
an installation like this would have used switchgear supplied with SF6, to
prevent the electrical accidents that can lead to fires.
Each turbine
would normally have contained around 5kg of SF6, which, if it leaked into the
atmosphere, would add the equivalent of around 117 tonnes of carbon dioxide.
This is roughly the same as the annual emissions from 25 cars.
"In
this case we are using a combination of clean air and vacuum technology within
the turbine. It allows us to still have a very efficient, reliable,
high-voltage network but to also be environmentally friendly," said Costa
Pirgousis from Scottish Power Renewables.
"Once
there are viable alternatives on the market, there is no reason not to use
them. In this case, we've got a viable alternative and that's why we are using
it."
But even for
companies that are trying to limit the use of SF6, there are still limitations.
At the heart of East Anglia One sits a giant offshore substation to which all
102 turbines will connect. It still uses significant quantities of the highly
warming gas.
The EU will
review the use of SF6 next year and will examine whether alternatives are
available. However, even the most optimistic experts don't think that any ban
is likely to be put in place before 2025.
FROM .bbc.com/news/science-environment
No comments