Chasing Carbon Zero | Full Documentary | NOVA | PBS
cN-P4ilk7Iw • 2023-04-26
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Kind: captions Language: en foreign what would it take to convert our technology and reach a once unimaginable goal we are at a critical point in our history right now zero carbon by 2050. so what do we need to do to actually meet that goal we'll need to move fast shall we yeah let's go and in some ways we are let's go fast we need our electricity our power plants to be zero carbon so we have to keep floating new ideas there's enough offshore wind capacity to power the country four times over and giant batteries to keep everything still going this is something that just a few years ago was considered impossible running our homes without lighting a flame we want to turn buildings into Teslas we want to make them smart green healthy all-electric no technological breakthroughs required we just have to get down to business right away chasing carbon zero right now on Nova [Music] thank you we're departing late on a long journey our destination is 2050. scientists say that's the deadline for putting the brakes on greenhouse gas emissions it is arguably the most important challenge Humanity has ever faced and that is why I want to understand how we'll get there the Brian and I've been a reporter on the climate beat for 30 years a born witness to it all dead coral reefs melting ice Rising Seas catastrophic storms the main evacuation Center in New Orleans is the Superdome epic wildfires I've watched this slow motion train wreck and so have you and now the question is can we stop what we started at the dawn of the Industrial Age before it's too late do that as much as we can we need to stop burning things stop emitting greenhouse gases into our atmosphere or we will have made our planet a very uncomfortable place to live but how to avoid that what is the road to carbon zero it's a long trip but it's not beyond our range let's start in Detroit the Motor City my hometown a City built on the power utility and reliability of internal combustion is now embarking on a New Journey welcome to the Electric Motor City it's my first stop because on the road to zero I'm gonna need a ride I want to test drive with you this will be a special ride in the lightning let's go with Lightning's mama so to speak right sounds good I met Linda Zhang at the Ford Rouge Center West of downtown she is the chief engineer for the all-electric Ford F-150 shall we yeah let's go the truck they call the lightning let's go fast I gotta tell you never get tired of that right that's always a fun and smooth acceleration what is the official zero to 60 anyway it's just under four seconds it's pretty exciting that torque is really instant you step on it and you go electric motors don't just cut out tailpipe emissions from Vehicles they're also much more efficient than internal combustion engines at converting energy into motion 85 to 90 percent as opposed to about 40 percent and the acceleration is lightning fast the propulsion is definitely there so it's almost like a shame if you don't use it demand is strong so how often are you seeing your vehicles on the road these days it's still a small percentage right um yeah there's definitely um more and more on the road and I always love seeing them on the road I have to be honest with you it's like seeing um seeing you know one of my kids off the F-150 is a Ford Mainstay a vehicle favored by loyal owners who use it for work did you feel like it was a risky thing to Electrify something as iconic as an F-150 yeah yeah absolutely this was a big risk for us but at the same time it came with big rewards you know being able to take this product that is already America's favorite truck but electrifying it really helps bring this into the light for for customers that didn't know much about electrification we're now taking this electrification concept and really making it a mass adoption that's happening right now in the U.S more than five percent of new cars now sold are all electric that may not seem like much but it is a marketing Milestone the line between novelty and mass adoption but internal combustion cars stay on the road for 14 years on average teaching zero tailpipe emissions from Cars and Trucks will take some time [Music] so we're headed towards net zero but we are on the local train need to hop over to the express Melissa Lott is an engineer focused on energy so I take the energy used in this train let's just really focus little plastic paper glass in the windows everywhere she looks she sees embedded carbon so I could probably figure out the carbon footprint it's a superpower 20 people average per car or is it an obsession I see energy and everything I'm looking at I actually enjoy it and I don't even notice it that much I really it's just something that I'm running kind of in the background all the time since it turns out this Obsession actually comes in handy in my line of work good to see you I'm the director of research at the center on global energy policy here at Columbia University and that's where I met her I figured she can help me understand where we are in the chase to carbon zero so when we look at where our emissions come from today we see a couple of big wedges on this pie there are three big nearly equal pieces of the pie first one is transportation Transportation Planes Trains automobiles trucks and ships the next wedge on this pie is going to be our electric power our power plants electric power about 60 percent is still generated with fossil fuels after that we're looking at industry so how we create all the things that we use day to day industry manufacturing and construction and two smaller pieces remain the rest of this pie is actually our building so the homes we live in and the offices we work in and then also our agricultural system so how we produce food these wedges represent total greenhouse gas emissions the U.S is releasing into the atmosphere more than 6 billion metric tons a year what would be better the idea is called Net Zero meaning first we reduce our carbon output as far as we can then for the most stubborn sources develop techniques to capture and store the carbon netting zero most experts agree it's really the only way to avoid a worsening climate disaster the U.S goal is to get halfway to Net Zero by 2030 and here's a surprise as of 2023 we are further down the road than I thought compared to 2005 which is our Baseline we've already reduced emissions by about 18 percent and thanks to cheap solar cheap wind cheap natural gas replacing coal and cheap storage we're working our way towards 25 reduction getting the rest of the way to zero won't be easy the pie gives us an idea of how we can make some Headway but where do we start close to home buildings buildings represent 13 of total emissions in this country we look at buildings overall there's a couple things we can do we can move ahead with electrifying our buildings with taking natural gas out of our buildings and replacing it with other Technologies we have for cooking for heating and cooling our air for heating our water so what's the best alternative all electric homes on rooftops all over New York City there is evidence that electricity is gaining currency in 2022 Americans bought more heat pumps than gas furnaces landlord Lincoln Echols was thinking about his son Ace when he made the decision we've built an infrastructure based on oil gas burning things that's what we're used to but it doesn't have to be that way it's the third iteration for the early 20th century building he owns in Crown Heights Brooklyn when it was built they burned coal in a boiler to stay warm now there's a heat pump for each of the 14 units heat pumps work not by creating heat but by moving it from one place to another inside there's a fluid called refrigerant that boils at 40 degrees below zero fahrenheit as long as it is warmer than -40 outside the refrigerant picks up heat from Air as it becomes a gas it flows into an electric compressor where it is put under pressure adding more warmth to the gas the warm gas flows into the room unit as it heats the space the gas itself condenses back into a liquid now the liquid travels back out flowing through a valve that lowers the pressure and thus the temperature and the cycle starts all over again so in the winter it can pump heat inside and in the summer the process is reversed to pump heat outside cooling the room in Lincoln's building each unit has its own wireless thermostat easy enough for his son to operate Lincoln hopes Ace will be the landlord here someday so you think when Ace is your age everything around us here will be electric definitely these two behind us are green these developments over here they're green if they could do my building they could do every building on the Block but heat pumps are not cheap and for us to reach Net Zero nearly every building will need to make the transition so how can this technology become accessible to everyone that is precisely the goal for Donnell Baird if we can do one building we can do a whole block of buildings and if we can do a block of buildings we can do a whole city he is the CEO of a startup called block power block bar wants to turn buildings into Teslas we want to make them smart green healthy all electric founded in 2014 block power is making it more affordable for landlords to make the switch Lincoln Echols old building is one of about 2 000 conversions the company says it has spearheaded so far we have everything that we need to Green all the buildings now that's why it's so important that we focus on buildings because we don't need any more Innovation yeah when there is some data Danelle was able to mix the pressing needs of a landlord with a bad boiler and a planet boiling over into something attractive to Wall Street investors it's a company committed to executing the conversion at scale bundling a lot of projects together to lower the cost and lower the risk we show up and we say look we've got capital from Goldman Sachs and Microsoft to finance moving you to a functioning better system and it costs you nothing as a matter of fact you're going to save money because the payment that you make to us over 15 years is going to be less than what you would pay to the oil company or to the gas company as an alternative the arithmetic relies on incentives from the government and assumptions that the cost of heat pump manufacturing and installation will decline for block power the goal and the risks are big Lincoln Echols says it's working for him they just made it work at the end of the day it was a lot of back and forth but it can be done it's not an impossible task we're Powers mission is altruistic but it is also a startup hoping to make a profit it makes a percentage on financing charges fees to manage electrification projects and eventually hopes to market the very heat pumps it installs as producers of carbon credits this is capitalism deciding that there are trillion dollar companies to be made addressing the climate crisis that entrepreneurs who figure it out are going to make money and there's going to be so much money to be made by bringing those Solutions into the economy that we are going to make our Venture Capital returns and you can choose to do business and make profits in a sector and in a way that helps people spoken like the Columbia business school grad that he is that combined with his roots in Bedford Stuyvesant are what gave him the inspiration for black power the furnace in his building never worked ultimately when got really cold we'd have to heat our apartment with our oven we would turn on the gas oven turn on the the burner on top of the oven open up the oven door to let the heat into the apartment I really empathize with a lot of our customers because I I know how uncomfortable it is to be cold and how difficult it is to like sleep through the night when you're freezing the road to Zero by definition must pass through neighborhoods like this there isn't going to be a Green Revolution in America without working class and poor people so there must be a financial solution that includes them in New York City buildings account for around 70 percent of greenhouse gas emissions if you include electricity the city is aiming for carbon neutrality by 2050 and there are several laws designed to make that happen one eliminates the burning of fossil fuels in all new buildings by 2027. but there is an important asterisk the city's commercial kitchens are exempt here gas stoves and ovens dominate so the biggest polluter in these buildings are the kitchens so why would you exempt the biggest polluters Chef Chris Galarza has years of experience working in kitchens at popular high-end restaurants in this case art has found a recipe for imitating life whether it's Hell's Kitchen or the bear Hollywood has made it clear to all of us if you can't take the heat you really should get out of the kitchen what you notice is as soon as you open the door going from say the dining room to the kitchen is this wall of heat I've looked down on my thermometer in my chef coat and it would reach 135 degrees Fahrenheit so I can't tell you how many times that after a rush we would be rushing to the bathroom to throw up the main ingredient of natural gas is methane and research shows burning it in a kitchen can be harmful to human health because it triggers a reaction between nitrogen and oxygen which creates nitric oxide and nitrogen dioxide pollutants collectively known as Knox gases they can cause all sorts of cardiovascular and respiratory illnesses including asthma the no gas alternative looks and feels very different it's lunchtime at Chatham University's Eden Hall campus near Pittsburgh what I need is the cooks tour literally okay the kitchen here is quiet cool and all electric this is our four burner range like there's two of them this is the Workhorse of the kitchen this is now the Tilt Skillet also induction two Steamers two electric convection oven triple deck oven with two built-in proofers for breads pizzas pastries and things like that Chris was the executive chef here in 2016 when the school opened this dining hall the university built the Eden Hall campus as a showcase for Sustainable Solutions so there's not a single single the cooktops here use a technology called induction I had my own vices as well and it wasn't until I experienced induction cooking that I became a fan traditional electric stoves create Heat by simply resisting the electric current but newer induction cooktops use electricity to create a magnetic field the electrons inside pots and pans that contain iron try to align with the magnet vibrating tens of thousands of times per second creating friction and heat the result is better Energy Efficiency faster cooking and no combustion fumes they have caught on in commercial kitchens in Europe and Asia but in the U.S chefs are skeptical it's the rest of the world is looking at us going what are you complaining about because effectively we're arguing about how to get a piece of metal hot so we can cook the fossil fuel industry has done a good job at inducing resistance cooking with gas cooking with gas we all remember the rap in the 80s we all cook better when cooking with gas it's cringe-worthy cooking with gas cooking with gas we all cook better when we're cooking with gas there's a lot to unpack there I cook with gas because the cost is much less than electricity but you know what that was effective what was said in there still gets said today cooking with gas is cheaper it's more precise all these things which are just not true today Chris is an independent consultant who travels the country promoting induction in commercial kitchens he gave me a quick demonstration okay so this has been in the freezer correct so this is just to show how quickly things come up to Temp so we're going to dump this oh yeah it's cold so just getting the water off you can tell things are hot oh how hot all right that was in a matter of what seconds yeah right and so there's no more preheating it's just straight hot and it doesn't take long right shrimp got some good color on it add our sauce and then you go that was dinner in about two minutes in a fraction of the time and here's the beautiful thing we just did all of that not a sweat on you nothing gets hot except for the pan itself so it's time for us to evolve to get together and say what's better for our world and cooking with a flame is not dousing the Home Fires will take a lot longer than that stir fry for sure when we look at the buildings that will be here in 2050 most of them are already built today retrofitting this building is not going to be cheap and it's going to take a lot of work and it's going to be disruptive but what we can do in the next seven years is set up our building codes and our regulations that we can retrofit and build buildings in a way that is net zero compliant from day one when it is burned the methane in natural gas is converted to carbon dioxide that's problem enough but unburned methane is an even greater concern it doesn't last as long in the atmosphere as carbon dioxide but over 20 years methane traps about 80 times more heat than CO2 so methane is currently responsible for nearly a third of human-caused global warming so when we look at overall greenhouse gas emissions methane is a big player and it's also something that we can address right away it's one of these gases where the more and more we look at it we realize that a ton of it is just being wasted thrown into the air on a rooftop observatory in West Harlem roshin command an assistant professor in Earth and environmental Sciences at Columbia is using a suite of sensors to measure air quality the Mauna Kea of New York right The Observatory we are at the advanced science research center of the city University of New York do you try to make excuses to come here on nice days to check the gear it's usually on bad pollution days when we get dragged here but yes it's lovely to be here it's early and chimneys in Harlem are billowing puffs of proof the city that never sleeps is in fact waking up as you look out over the city what are you looking for on a day like today you can kind of see a lot of chimneys or you can see the smoke coming from chimneys we did and what we've been trying to figure out is where is all the methane coming from and is it from these chimneys it's not just Gas Appliances methane leaks from wastewater treatment facilities power plants and landfills one of the challenges you face why is it so difficult there's so much of it it could be a mixture of there's a wastewater treatment plant that has a power plant with natural gas as part of it and then between there and here are a whole bunch of boilers so everything is just mashed together so much that that's what we spend our time trying to figure out is how to pull all that apart how does it look today scientists are measuring more than twice as much methane as the EPA can account for they've got a pretty good throughput they're about a liter a minute each so we're either missing a sector or we're getting the wrong numbers for certain things and that's what I've been working on is to try and make sure do we have the right number the sensor technology has dramatically improved in the past few years making the devices she uses much more sensitive and more portable now we can just put this thing in K around and get really really easy and her team carry sensors chasing zero on foot [Music] about 2 000 miles away in Texas there is another kind of methane hunt underway this is the Permian Basin the largest oil field in America about 86 000 square miles spanning Texas and New Mexico there are tens of thousands of oil wells here and there is no mystery where the methane is coming from this is happening because they developed the technology to Frack oil and gas from shale if they hadn't done that we would have converted to clean energy a long time ago Sharon Wilson is an environmental Advocate who is bearing witness to an ongoing greenhouse gas disaster in the Permian Basin pressure it ches Brew of hydrocarbon gases including methane in the U.S oil and natural gas production and distribution is the largest industrial source of methane emissions and the Permian may be the largest methane emitting oil and gas Basin in the country and we call this a climate bomb the industry cannot stop this pollution methane is a volatile gas it will not stay inside a closed unpressurized system and so you have to release it or it will blow the equipment up methane is invisible and odorless working with the non-profit Earthworks Sharon is using a hundred thousand dollar camera that gives her superpower Vision I'm going to get one more video the camera records the spectral signature of hydrocarbons and volatile organic compounds so what looks like this invisible light becomes this in Sharon's viewfinder I am seeing a a lot of methane blasting out from that flare that is barely lit unfortunately this is not unusual there's just way too much methane even though methane is the primary ingredient of natural gas here in the Permian Basin it's mostly considered waste to reduce methane emissions operators are supposed to burn it in flare Stacks like this this converts methane CH4 into CO2 reducing its impact on the climate crisis but frequently the flare Stacks flicker falter or fail cracking down on unlit flares and enabling Innovative cost-effective leak detection systems are the cornerstones of a new EPA rule aimed at curbing methane emissions what in your view is the solution the best available control technology for methane is to keep it in the ground never never drill that hole in the first place because once you drill that hole that's where it all starts but is it practical to hit the brakes on oil and gas production if we're out of gas can we reach the finish line even in a net zero world we will probably use some amount of oil and gas it will certainly be less than today but we can't go from one to zero and all of a sudden to shut it all off while we need gas and oil for now eventually we must eliminate burning as much as possible and the easiest way to do that is to take fossil fuels out of power plants and off the grid the question is how are we going to get those emissions off the board so today we produce a little over a third of our electricity using zero carbon resources we want to get that number up by 2030 to 75 what we're going to see is explosive growth in both wind and solar those are the big ones that are driving down emissions there are now more than 70 thousand utility size wind turbines on U.S soil enough to power about 39 million homes but the best places to put the wind farms are often far from the population centers that use the electricity this is helping Drive wind power offshore Beyond the Horizon the turbines connected to the power grid with submerged cables the federal government is auctioning leases for 30 gigawatts of offshore wind energy by 2030 and 15 gigawatts of floating offshore Wind by 2035. the promised electricity should be enough to power roughly 15 million homes floating wind is a relatively new idea that opens up Waters deeper than about 200 feet which is the limit for turbines fixed to the bottom this technology appears ripe for rapid growth it's really a big physics experiment what you try to do is try to get as much valuable data as you can at a small scale is it 500 here it's maybe 50 year Habib dogger is executive director of the University of Maine's Advanced structures and composite Center he and his team are deploying a unique wind and wave simulator to test a scale model of a floating Hull for wind turbines called volternis we have load cells on the very top and bottom of the tower that tell us how much stress the tower is really seeing at that time the base of the full-size version will be made of concrete and inside some of the hulls are counterweights attached to Springs and actuators they are designed to negate the motion of the Rolling sea you want to make sure it doesn't move too much so we're trying to minimize the Motions at the turbine level and we're trying to reduce the pitch of the hole so it doesn't pitch too much over in 2013 they moored a floating 20 kilowatt 1 8 scale model offshore for more than a year it got hammered during the long main winter but never tilted more than five degrees Habib hopes to have a bigger 11 megawatt turbine floating in the next few years so you want to make it lighter you want to make it easier to build so it's not just about designing something and making sure it works you got to figure out how to build it how to build it in an automated fashion we built the lab to try to answer those questions [Music] the offshore floating wind is multi-faceted the turbines are built on Shore reducing construction cost and environmental impact they can be towed to wherever the wind is more consistent but the water too deep for fixed bottom installations you can go 20 or 30 or 40 miles offshore you can't do that with fixed bottom winds you can put them in places where people can't see them and you can design them to put them in places where you minimize the impact on the environment the birds the bats and the fisheries and the mammals it gives you a lot more places to work with floating offshore turbines also make it possible to develop wind energy on the west coast of the us where the waters are precipitously deeper within 50 miles of the U.S coasts both east and west coast there's enough offshore wind capacity theoretically to power the country four times over but even if there is in fact enough wind it alone won't be enough [Music] so when I think about a zero carbon grid and how we get to zero carbon electricity I think of it as a team sport you need a lot of different types of Technologies all playing together if you want to win the game so you're going to have variable Renewables you're going to have wind and solar so when they're around they're cheap that's great but they fade sometimes the wind goes away the sun sets so you complement them with other team members like energy storage so how best to give electricity some shelf life batteries the challenge is making them big enough and cheap enough to work at scale yet Ming Chang is a professor in the department of Material Science and Engineering at MIT and co-founder of a company called form energy he's aiming to eliminate some of the gaps in energy availability when the weather isn't right for solar or wind but you see are gaps of several days we're now able to tackle those multi-day intervals that's 100 hour intervals and I want to point out that this is something that just a few years ago was considered impossible for the past 30 years researchers have focused on lithium-ion battery technology the chemistry enables a high energy density powerful for their size and weight they are perfect for laptops phones and cars but they're not well suited for multi-day storage on the grid to compete with a natural gas power plant a hundred hour battery pack must cost no more than twenty dollars per kilowatt hour but if we take a Lithium-Ion battery pack the cost of that pack today is about two hundred dollars per kilowatt hour in order to do multi-day storage we have to have batteries that cost about one tenth or less than that of today's lithium-ion battery packs so they found a novel way to harness the energy released when air interacts with iron it's the power of rust that's right rust it's called an iron air battery iron air batteries were you know first studied back in the 60s at that time no one saw a practical application for a very cheap very heavy battery the grid may be the problem this solution was waiting for you're ever still free and iron is one of the most widely produced lowest cost materials in the world so the iron air battery is the lowest cost rechargeable battery chemistry that we know of today the battery contains an iron metal anode and an air breathing cathode they sit in an electrolyte solution a permeable separator between them when the iron is exposed to the oxygen in air it triggers a chemical process called oxidation we call this rust that oxidation process releases electrons that are separated and sent to the Grid electricity when the demand exceeds renewable production when there is Excess power from wind or solar the process is reversed electrons flow in releasing the oxygen causing the iron to unrust we put in electricity we provide electrons to that iron electrode and turn it back into iron metal that's why we refer to the you know Iron air battery as the rusting and unrusting of iron I carried out in a very intestinal and deliberate way so these are full-scale iron air batteries form energy co-founder and chief technology officer Billy Woodford there are oxygen bubbles showed me what the batteries look like and these have got four of those iron anodes inside of them he says their iron air batteries are working just fine in the lab but they haven't been tried on the grid yet we need to scale up the manufacturing of this and really build the next generation of larger systems and deploy them and that really brings us to utility scaled systems they plan on building their rust batteries in the Rust Belt where the infrastructure and transportation Network are already tailor-made for it the first plant will be built beside the Ohio river in Weirton West Virginia 750 good paying jobs promised in a place of broken promises and so this will you know create real manufacturing jobs in parts of the country that have seen a great loss of jobs from you know traditional Industries and may not have seen themselves as part of the screening Revolution so the road to zero will pass through an old steel town in the heart of coal country now there's some irony batteries are just one storage idea there are many other Technologies in development globally the point of energy storage is saying you know what I can produce electricity right now but I don't need it well let me hold on to it let me put it in a savings account and cash it out later and then you complement those Technologies with firm dispatchable power which is a nerdy way of saying something that's around 24 7 365. this is things like big Hydro power plants and it's things like nuclear power and geothermal power power plants that are around when our wind and our solar and our batteries aren't quite enough to keep the lights on and prices low experts say that current nuclear and hydroelectric power are important energy sources to maintain but are impractical to grow much in time to reach our 2030 goal geothermal may be a different story welcome to California's Salton Sea one of the largest geothermal fields in the world it's renewable carbon free and it's always on so exploring new ways to tap into this resource is now a very hot field geothermal is the residual heat left over from the formation of the planet and from the decay of radioactive particles deep below the Earth's surface and a geothermal electric power plant they drill down far enough to reach very hot water a source of steam to generate power another Well injects the water back into the ground historically geothermal power has only been practical in seismically active places like this where fault lines allow lots of hot water to rise relatively close to the surface elsewhere adequate heat is found at much greater depth so that's going down ten thousand feet ten thousand feet right it's not just we drill the well and we're done we have to know what's going on under the ground you want to listen to the system you want to have a talk to you Cornell University engineer Jeff tester is pushing new ways to harness geothermal heat to generate electricity if we could drop the costs of drilling to a very very low value and we could use our knowledge of the subsurface in a way where we can engineer systems effectively I think we certainly could do it we're not there yet though Jeff tester has led the charge developing something called enhanced geothermal systems or EGS the idea drill two deep Wells into hot rock if the rock is not naturally permeable fracture it in between to create an artificial Reservoir and then pump water into the cracks it returns to the surface hot enough to generate electricity [Music] if the technique proves out it could make geothermal power generation possible almost anywhere but the but the cost of drilling must drop dramatically and once again an ironic twist the Shale fracking boom responsible for producing so much oil and gas may have put this zero emissions technology Within Reach if we can crack the nut on this low temperature geothermal we can put it anywhere petroleum engineer Cindy Taff is a 36-year veteran of the oil business now she is CEO of houston-based sage Geo systems near McAllen Texas they're drilling down on a geothermal concept that they hope will close the business case on EGS that's the most important part is we have to get it cost effective to wind and solar conventional geothermal power plants must Harvest underground water between 300 and 700 degrees Fahrenheit Cindy says Sage's design is targeting rock that is 30 percent cooler feature this small desk size turbine instead of spinning the blades with steam from water it uses carbon dioxide under pressure inside a closed loop in a separate pipe water is pumped into fractured cracks in the Rock now hot the water flows into a heat exchanger raising the temperature of the CO2 at around 88 degrees Fahrenheit less than half the heat required to boil water the CO2 can become super critical meaning it has properties of both a gas and a liquid and it is able to spin a high RPM turbine what we're excited about with this supercritical CO2 turbine is that it is double the efficiency of converting that heat to electricity Sage envisions an array of about 18 Wells spaced roughly 10 feet apart combined able to produce more than 50 megawatts if it works as they hope enough to power more than 40 000 homes what we're trying to do is turn geothermal from an art into a science one of Sage's Partners lives nearby being a good Steward of the land is uh is making sure that the land is sustainable James McAllen is the manager of land his family has owned since 1791. there's a lot of things around me every day built by my ancestors by my dad by my grandfather fences that were built by my great grandfather so there's little reminders everywhere of people that have come before me he may be steeped in family history but James is a forward-thinking steward of their land he has installed a solar array to sell electricity back to the grid and now Sage is poised to drill Wells on his property you have to look forward because if you don't look forward you're not going to have this for very long yeah so that and that's what this geothermal Project's all about is looking forward I think it's exciting that we're getting into something that I think is now the next level um I think it's a game changer so there's two things going on with power that we need to make sure we understand the first is as we go to Net Zero we need our electricity our power plants to be zero carbon the second is we're going to need more of them because in our homes our cars a lot of the economy we're going to use more electricity so we need more electricity and we need it all to be clean at the same time so if we have all these Technologies on the field together we get affordable reliable zero carbon power if we take any one of these different teammates off the field we won't win the game we end up with unaffordable or unreliable power [Music] many of the Technologies to get us to net zero emissions by 2050 are already here and many more are well along in their development but as I discovered on the road with the Ford Lightning there are still some speed bumps left to navigate the Technology's existence is only half the battle you have to strategize when you're doing a long trip with an electric vehicle it makes you um think a little more about your trip than you would otherwise Ford loaned me the truck for a week-long test drive producer will twoman and I decided to stress test the EV charging Network so we drove the lightning from the Boston area to Oro domain to film that floating wind turbine prototype Ford promotes the truck as a backup power supply at home but on the road getting electricity into the vehicle quickly can be a challenge we are headed for Portland which will get us there right around 6 p.m good time to get a bite there's a fast charger there we slog through some traffic arrived at the fast charger plugged in and went to dinner return 90 minutes later the fast charger was set to turn off after one hour we needed more than an hour as it turns out we currently have 123 miles of range and we have 133 miles to go we re-upped plugged in and waited a watched pot of electrons we've been charging now for 30 minutes we have increased our range by uh 33 miles so about a mile a minute nothing fast about this fast charger a dozen unused Tesla superchargers across the lot incompatible with the lightning seem to gloat in silence we resumed our journey with a promise of 153 miles of range few hours and 133 miles later we arrived at the only fast charger I could find in Bangor at a car dealership it was about 11 pm we had only about 20 miles of range remaining and we were in no mood for this okay so it says cash only it's the right kind of charger let's see if I put a card in the mix here if it would do anything for me [Applause] swipe error oh boy so uh I think we're seeing the problem here aren't we Plan B a charger at another car dealership nearby so let's pull in see what this looks like oh no not in service come on looks like it's brand new something supposedly there was another one here supposedly and it too is looks like it's brand new and still not online so we've got two Chargers coming to a dealership near you soon again not much help to us now with 18 miles of range at 11 23 at night plan C a slow charger a few miles away at a main Department of Transportation maintenance yard hopefully this thing works let's pop this vehicle in and let's make sure we're charging yes we are we are charging we stopped to charge eight times the nearly 500 Mile round trip took twice as long as it would have in an internal combustion vehicle and there were a lot of mental gymnastics kilowatts 30 miles and change kilowatt hour I feel like we've learned about nine lessons in the last 24 hours about how not to do this since 2010 Americans have bought about three and a quarter million plug-in hybrid and Battery electric vehicles the government goal by 2030 half of new cars sold will be electric so the charging infrastructure will need to grow fast to keep up across the country right now there are more than a hundred and thirty thousand publicly available EV Chargers the 2030 goal a half million public Chargers a nearly four-fold increase engineers and entrepreneurs are seeing opportunities we found one company that is installing Chargers on utility poles just one clean tech Innovation amid thousands that are bubbling up with possible solutions these are all entirely new industries that are being created and you know investors want to be part of this new Industrial Revolution as it were the green Industrial Revolution a green Industrial Revolution it's a reminder that this is how we evolve Humanity has made big energy transitions before from wood to Coal to oil and oil is just what's familiar now is it natural to like dig up dead dinosaurs and burn them in our kitchen in 2022 this is an ancient Mesopotamia there's better ways to cook there's better ways to heat up hot water and provide heating and air conditioning to our homes the transition from fossil fuels to Renewables is all but inevitable after all the wells will go dry one day if we keep pumping and do we really have that luxury climate change is not a crisis for the planet it's a crisis for us as human beings it's an existential crisis because if we don't do something with the Earth's just going to shake us off like fleas and move on but change can be frightening when you are in the throes of it and fear can beget apathy in the absence of good leaders if we stop the methane very quickly it can make a huge dent it's the low-hanging fruit in solving the climate problem the only thing we lack is the political will and yet there are some signs of a course correction the U.S now has climate and infrastructure laws that set things in motion but do we need to go faster we don't have a sense of urgency yet enough to do this when we had to fight in World War II there was no question things were going to happen quickly I think we just have to get down to business right away a route to zero is clearly marked first focus on Energy Efficiency and then plug as many things as possible into the grid while pulling fossil fuels Off the Grid and adding zero carbon power production as fast as we can it'll get us close to 50 percent we hope it'll get us all the way to 50 by 2030 but it'll put us on the pathway we need to be on to get to Net Zero by 2050. no breakthroughs required for that at the same time push for the innovations that can tackle the thorniest problems like industry Aviation shipping and agriculture by 2050. do I know that we're going to get to 50 reduction by 2030 no I think it's going to be close we could go overshoot it if a couple things go right we might undershoot it but when I look back at what we thought we'd be doing by this time we're so much further along the road this all gives me cause for a lot of optimism [Music] thank you foreign [Music] [Applause] [Music]
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