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Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

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Page 1: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries

Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland

Dr Fulcieri MaltiniDr Jean-Roger Mercier

November 2012

Page 2: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Overview

• Germany, Italy, Japan and Switzerland are currently implementing an energy transition away from nuclear power and giving priority to energy conservation and renewables,

• Motivations behind these transitions vary and so do their pace, costs and fundings,

• This presentation tries to distill lessons from these transitions that can apply to Europe and France.

Page 3: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Germany - background

• Historically, a divided country after WW2 reuniting in 1990 and requiring high power supply for its reunification and industrial development: 4,140 TWh/year in 1990

• Politically, a strong surge of the Green party (« die Grünen ») that makes, from the onset, nuclear phasing-out as one of its key targets

• A strong energy efficiency policy has allowed a 10% power demand reduction, with only 3,715 TWh consumed in 2011

Page 4: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Germany - Strategy

• In 2000, the socialist-green coalition puts a moratorium on nuclear power in the country

• The decision is reversed by the Merkel Government in 2010, at a time when nuclear produces 11% of Germany’s primary energy

• And in 2011, the political decision comes to phase out nuclear entirely with several potential deadlines,

Page 5: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Germany – the plan(s)

• Energiewende (energy transition) becomes a household name and the world looks at Germany for guidance and enlightment

• March of 2011: 8 nuclear plants are closed down

• Summer of 2011: the legal package adopted projects the end of nuclear generation by 2022

• Many challenges have been identified

Page 6: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Germany – objectives for 2050

• Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emission reduction: 80 to 95% (ref. 1990)

• Renewables in the overall energy balance 60%• Ditto in gross power production 80%• Primary energy production (ref 2008) - 50%• Electric power consumption (ditto) - 25%

Page 7: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Germany 2050 – Renewables

• Lion’s share to wind 170 TWh (113 offshore)

• Biomass and photovoltaics 40 TWh each• Hydro: stable at 24 TWhIn all, 80% of domestic power production, and

needing creative network management to compensate for volatility

Another huge challenge: extending the transmission grid at a pace of 470 km/year vs 35 at present.

Page 8: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Opportunities and euros

• The decentralized management of the country opens up great local opportunies and several « cantons » are already generating more energy than they consume (« positive energy »)

• DIW’s prognosis: up to 800 billion € to spend over the coming 50 years. Increases of consumer prices have begun and are confronted with criticism and protests.

Page 9: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Italy - Background

• End of WW2: Italy relies almost exclusively on hydro (88% of power generation)

• 1990: thermal power has taken over the lead (63%), with hydro down to 16% and electricty imports making up for the rest (12%)

• After a brief attempt to develop nuclear, the Italian people, in a 1990 referendum following Chernobyl, reject further nuclear power development.

Page 10: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Italy – the historic referendum

• Under the pressure of the French, the Berlusconi government embarks on a new referendum in 2011, hoping to reintroduce nuclear

• Over 90% of the voters reject nuclear again and the Italian government moves forward

• Targets of 17% renewables by 2020, inferior to the European average, are set

Page 11: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Italy – Local Power

• After the referendum, municipalities and regions are encouraged to develop their own power generation/conservation programs

• By2012, over 400,000 local power generation units of various dimensions were operational across the country and over 95% municipalities, large cities as well as small villages, were equipped with multiple sources of energy mix

Page 12: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Italy – Renewable present

• Growth in the number of municipalities equipped with renewable energy generation is spectacular: from 3,190 in 2008 to 7,986 in 2011,

• As a result, Italy comes second in Europe for solar power generation (12,750 MW vs 24,700 for Germany)

• Energy mixes are adapted to local resource availability (solar, wind, biomass, geothermal, hydro)

Page 13: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Italy – the pionneer

• Large solar thermal power generation plants are also being installed and run: 30 MW in Sicily in operation, more planned in this range

• Wind farms are multiplying and Italy is third produced behind Germany and Spain

• Biomass use is maximized with various substrates and processes: e.g. fermentation of wine production by-products, biogas distribution in local natural gas grids, biogas in vehicles, ….

Page 14: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Italy – more good news

• Energy efficiency and conservation are highly developed

• Smart grids and smart meters (over 30 million units sold and installed) complement the approach

• As of 2012, 23 municipalities were selling more energy than they were producing

• Energy storage is diversified and is putting Italy at the forefront of this critical element of Energiewende.

Page 15: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Italy – Towards 2020 - Objectives

• Primary energy demand - 4% (reference 2010). • Stable power demand• Renewables 20% of final energy demand and 38%

superior of gas’s• The required 180 billion € investment to be

allocated at 72% for renewables and remaining 28 % for conventional sectors (extraction, oil & gas production and transportation, GNL regazeification and thermal power plant construction)

Page 16: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Japan – Recovering from the trauma

• The third largest power consumer in the world, Japan started, in the late 40’s with a simple energy mix: coal 50%, hydro 33%.

• In the early 70’s, nuclear comes into the picture and is hailed as a miracle source for an oil importer,

• Nuclear share in power production grew from 4% in 1973 to 24% in 2009 in spite of activists’ protest, overheated after each nuclear accident (TMI, Chernobyl)

Page 17: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

The Fukushima turning point

• The vast majority of Japanese, however, were following suit with the nuclear lobby, very well organized under the auspices of the powerful Nippon Keidanren

• 54 nuclear power plants were in operation in early 2011,

• And then Fukushima happened and, beyond the human/economic drama, exposed the lack of preparation and the ineffectiveness of TepCo and the Japanese Government

Page 18: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Eighteen months later…

• The situation is yet to be stabilized in Fukushima and surroundings (e.g. sea pollution)

• The Japanese government, under the pressure of the street, had to revise and deeply modify its energy plans

• All nuclear plants were closed and their production rapidly substituted with thermal plants

Page 19: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Prospects

• Japan will have difficulties meeting its carbon emission reduction targets if the ban on nuclear is confirmed

• The new target (- 20% by 2030 vs the previous – 25% by 2020) is heavily critized by local activists

• Japan plans to spend nearly 500 b US$ on renewables in the coming two decades

• No cost estimate for Energiewende seems to have been produced/discussed

Page 20: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Switzerland - background

• After WW2, the country was relying primarily on hydro, then attempted to introduce nuclear

• The accident at the Lucens nuclear experimental power plant in 1969 killed the public sector program

• In parallel, between 1969 and 1984, the private sector built five nuclear power plants that are in operation and provide 3.2 of the 20 GW national power demand

Page 21: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Switzerland after Fukushima

• March 25, 2011, the Federal council opts out of nuclear, programming the closing of the 5 existing plants between 2019 and 2034, possibly earlier for Mühlenberg that has similar features with Fukushima

• The Federal Government is actively preparing a national energy law to be adopted by Parliament in end of 2012 and subjected to referendum in 2014

Page 22: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Key features of the Energiewende

• Focus on energy efficiency, with targets of demand reduction of 70 TWh and 20 TWh resp. for total energy and electricity demand reduction by 2050

• Priority to energy conservation measures in houses and offices

• Reliance on rapid take-off of a variety of renewables

Page 23: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Noteworthy 2050 targets

• Photovoltaics + 10 TWh• Wind + 4 TWh• Geothermal + 4.4 TWh• Wood biomass + 1.1 TWh• Biogas + 1.4 TWh• Hydro + 3.2 TWh

Page 24: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Parallel processes

• Three « popular initiatives » launched– Closing of all nuclear plants by 2023– Cleantech: to accelerate energy efficiency and

renewables development– Ecological fiscal reform

• Several « cantons », opposed to nuclear, have set their own bans (e.g. Geneva which gets 87% of energy from renewables and imports the rest)

Page 25: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

Costing

• The Cleantech initiative has been costed by the University of Lausanne

• The losers would be importers (0.6 billion CHF over 2012-2030, power producers 3.1 and the Federal Treasury 2.1)…

• In exchange for 21-26 b CHF increase in GDP, or 2% and the creation of 15,000 jobs

Page 26: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

What lessons for France and Europe?

• France lives in the economic crisis mode. The Fukushima shock has largely been forgotten and the nuclear lobby is strong as ever

• France is, however, increasingly isolated in the refusal of the Energiewende

• In the four countries studied here, the Energiewende is in place and central as well as local governments are marching. France’s centralization is also a handicap.

Page 27: Learning from the energy transition in four OECD Countries Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland Dr Fulcieri Maltini Dr Jean-Roger Mercier November 2012

France and Europe

• Adding to the French delay is the inertia of a system that took 11 years to transpose the European Directive 2001/42 on the environmental assessment on plans and programs in the energy sector

• The only viable solution can come from Europe, which has the tools and mechanisms to help integrate these Energiewende into a stable and effective system. Will there be the politicial will?