Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Friday, 24 February 2017
Energy positive: how Denmark's Samsø island switched to zero carbon
The small island’s energy makeover took less than a decade and was
spurred on by local commitment, providing a template for how regional
Australia could transition to renewables
Samsø island in Denmark was transformed into a green powerhouse with
onshore and offshore wind turbines, biomass boilers and solar.
Photograph: Birger Jensen/Samsø Tourism
Anyone
doubting the potential of renewable energy need look no further than
the Danish island of Samsø. The 4,000-inhabitant island nestled in the
Kattegat Sea has been energy-positive for the past decade, producing
more energy from wind and biomass than it consumes.
Samsø’s transformation from a carbon-dependent importer of oil and
coal-fuelled electricity to a paragon of renewables started in 1998.
That year, the island won a competition sponsored by the Danish ministry
of environment and energy that was looking for a showcase community –
one that could prove the country’s freshly announced Kyoto target to cut
greenhouse gas emissions by 21% was, in fact, achievable.
The contest didn’t bring with it funds to bankroll the energy
transition. But it did pay for the salary of one person tasked with
making the island’s 10-year renewables master plan a reality.
That person was Søren Hermansen, a Samsø native vegetable
farmer–turned–environmental teacher. Hermansen has wielded his
pragmatic, roll-up-your-sleeves attitude to great effect over the past
two decades, turning his own rural community into a green powerhouse,
and evangelising to communities around the world that they, too, can
make the transition.
“It was not an overnight process,” says Hermansen, who heads the
Samsø Energy and Environment Organisation, and is chief executive of the
Samsø Energy Academy. He is currently in Australia to speak at the Community Energy Congress in Melbourne.
In less than a decade, the transformation to carbon neutral was
complete. By 2000, 11 one-megawatt (MW) wind turbines supplied the
island’s 22 villages with enough energy to make it self-sufficient. An
additional 10 offshore wind turbines were erected in 2002, generating
23MW of electricity to offset emissions from the island’s cars, buses,
tractors and ferries that connect it to the mainland.
Electricity generation wasn’t the only goal. Between 2002 and 2005,
three district heating systems were built. These now supply – via “miles
of miles of piping” – three-quarters of the island’s houses with
heating and hot water from centralised biomass boilers fuelled with
locally grown straw. Meanwhile, houses outside of the heating districts
have replaced old oil furnaces with solar collectors or biomass boilers
of their own.
Samsø residents can now boast a carbon footprint of negative 12
tonnes per person per year, compared with a Danish average of 6.2 tonnes
and 17 tonnes in Australia in 2015.
Søren Hermansen was tasked with making the Danish island
of Samsø 100% carbon neutral – and he did so in less than a decade.
Photograph: Samsø Tourism
Community buy-in was essential to making the zero-carbon master plan a
reality, says Hermansen. And although there were sceptics in the
beginning, the level of commitment by locals is evident in the unique
patterns of ownership that have emerged. The wind turbines, for
instance, are owned by a combination of private owners, investor groups,
the municipal government and local cooperatives.
“We live in a small community, so it’s very important that we share
the ownership,” says Hermansen. For the onshore wind turbines, the idea
was that if you could see the turbine from your window, you could sign
on as a co-investor. According to Hermansen, this approach quelled any
simmering discontent (over the look of the turbines, say) that could
have arisen if only some in the community stood to benefit.
Locals signed on to the tune of AU $2.5m, enough to purchase two
turbines outright, with the remaining nine purchased by individuals. Two
offshore turbines are also cooperatively owned, and the five owned by
the municipality generate income the local government can reinvest in
ongoing sustainability projects.
Everyone has taken the green ethos to heart. Locals own the highest number of electric cars per capita in Denmark, and are often champing at the bit to get involved in the next green project in the offing, says Hermansen.
That enthusiasm derives as much from a desire to be a
self-sufficient, thriving rural community as it does from a desire to
cut emissions. The constant hum of infrastructure projects has had an
invigorating effect on the community, providing much-needed jobs for
locals and a steady stream of eco-visitors looking to learn from the
island’s achievements.
The island’s vision now is to be fossil fuel-free by 2030. Two years
ago the municipality replaced its diesel-powered ferry with one that
runs on gas, and the long-term plan is to convert the ferry to run off
island-generated biofuel and wind-charged batteries. Other
petrol-powered vehicles will also be phased out in favour of electric or
biofuel alternatives.
It’s
easy to think of Samsø’s energy makeover as a special case, driven by
the grit and determination of sturdy Scandinavians living on a windswept
former Viking outpost. But Hermansen insists that’s not the case. “You
shouldn’t see Samsø as ‘the’ model,” he says. Far larger communities of
tens of thousands of residents are also transitioning to renewable
energy, for example. “Samsø is just a reflection of what is happening in
Danish society in general. We are national policy in practice,” he
says.
This hasn’t been his experience here in Australia. Local enthusiasm –
in the New South Wales town of Armidale, or South Australia’s Kangaroo
Island, for example – isn’t matched at the federal government level in
Canberra. “I think there’s a disconnect between rural areas and the
federal administration,” he says.
In his experience, federal-level support – through appropriate
feed-in tariffs for renewable energy, and government incentives to adopt
new technologies – is essential. “It is very important that the federal
government gives it the right framework,” he says. •The Community Energy Congress takes place in Melbourne on 27 and 28 February.
No comments:
Post a Comment