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This can be achieved by the use of energy wedges to achieve a stabilization triangle. This triangle is to be made of eight wedges with each wedge representing a reduction of one billion tonnes of carbon emitted per year and hence a total of eight billion tonnes in reduction (Margolis, 2003).
Experimental methods
The methodology that we shall use for this experiment will be the Stabilization Wedge Game whose procedure that we followed is as below;
(1 “wedge” = 1 billion tons of carbon per year)
- 6 electricity wedges (E)
- 5 transportation wedges (T)
- 5 heat or direct fuel use wedges (H)
Strategy
Sector
(E, T, H, or B)
Cost
Challenges
1
Efficiency Transport
T
$
Car size and power
2
Efficiency Building
E H
$
House size, consumer demand for appliances
3
Conservation Transport
T
$
Increased public transport, urban design
4
Efficiency Electricity
E
$
Increased plant cost
5
Forest Storage
B
$
Bio-diversity, competing land
6
Soil Storage
B
$
Reversed if the land is deep-plowed later
7
Biofuels
TH
$
Bio-diversity, competing land
8
Wind Energy
E
$
Not in my backyard
TOTALS
E= 3
T= 3
H= 3
B= 3
10
Judge
Taxpayers/ Consumers
Energy companies
Environmental Groups
Manufacturers
Industrialized country governments
Developing country governments
Score
1
5
5
4
5
5
Results and discussion
In the group discussion, everyone contributed substantially and significantly and we all agreed unanimously on the choice of wedges. The wedges selected as shown earlier in this report were due to the relative ease of achieving them. Also considering the effectiveness of each wedge we agreed that our choices were the best. Our group majorly based our choices on the relative costs as they were low cost and this would attract the political will as well as public will in general. (Hotinski, 2007)
Strategy
Source of Wedge
1
Efficiency Transport
The double fuel efficiency of 2 billion cars from 30 to 60 mpg
2
Efficiency Building
Use best efficiency practices in all residential and commercial buildings
3
Conservation Transport
Decrease the number of car miles traveled by half
4
Efficiency Electricity
Produce current coal-based electricity with twice today’s efficiency.
5
Forest Storage
Eliminate tropical deforestation and double the current rate of new forest planting
6
Soil Storage
Adopt conservation tillage in all agricultural soils worldwide
7
Biofuels
Increase ethanol production 50 times by creating biomass plantations with an area equal to 1/6th of world crop-land
8
Wind Energy
Increase in wind electricity capacity by 50 times relative to today for a total of 2 million large windmills
Each of the 8 strategies above has the potential to reduce global carbon emissions by at least 1 billion tons per year by 2054, or 1 wedge. A combination of strategies will be needed to build the 7 wedges of the stabilization triangle.
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