Energy Blue Print

resources & security of supply

The issue of security of supply is now at the top of the energy policy agenda. Concern is focused both on price security and the security of physical supply. At present around 80% of global energy demand is met by fossil fuels.The unrelenting increase in energy demand is matched by the finite nature of these sources.The regional distribution of oil and gas resources also does not match the distribution of demand. Some countries have to rely almost entirely on fossil fuel imports.The downloadable maps provide an overview of the availability of different fuels and their regional distribution.

renewable energy

Nature offers a variety of freely available options for producing energy. It is mainly a question of how to convert sunlight, wind, biomass or water into electricity, heat or power as efficiently, sustainably and costeffectively as possible.

On average, the energy in the sunshine that reaches the earth is about one kilowatt per square metre worldwide. According to the Research Association for Solar Power, power is gushing from renewable energy sources at a rate of 2,850 times more energy than is needed in the world today. In one day, the sunlight which reaches the earth produces enough energy to satisfy the world’s current power requirements for eight years. Even though only a percentage of that potential is technically accessible, this is still enough to provide just under six times more power than the world currently requires.

definition of types of energy resource potential

theoretical potentials

The theoretical potential identifies the physical upper limit of the energy available from a certain source. For solar energy, for example, this would be the total solar radiation falling on a particular surface.

conversion potential

This is derived from the annual efficiency of the respective conversion technology. It is therefore not a strictly defined value, since the efficiency of a particular technology depends on technological progress.

technical potential

This takes into account additional restrictions regarding the area that is realistically available for energy generation.Technological, structural and ecological restrictions, as well as legislative requirements, are accounted for.

economic potential

The proportion of the technical potential that can be utilised economically. For biomass, for example, those quantities are included that can be exploited economically in competition with other products and land uses.

sustainable potential

This limits the potential of an energy source based on evaluation of ecological and socio-economic factors. The accompanying resource maps show the regional distribution of the estimated energy that can be recovered and utilised.The calculations were carried out based on a global grid with a resolution of 0.5° longitude and latitude.The resulting potential is specified as average power density per surface area or per tilted module/converter area, so that the unit of measurement is always ‘output per area’.

energy resources and security of supply

(PDF document, 2.8MB)

  

 

 

 


Institute DLR, Institute of Technical Thermodynamics, Department of Systems Analysis and Technology Assessment, Stuttgart, Germany
Ecofys BV, P.O. Box 8408, NL-3503 RK Utrecht, Kanaalweg 16-G

Regional Partners: OECD North America WorldWatch Institute; Greenpeace USA Latin America University of Sao Paulo; Greenpeace Brazil; OECD Europe European Renewable Energy Council; Transition Economies Vladimir Tchouprov Africa & Middle East Reference Project: “Trans-Mediterranean Interconnection for Concentrating Solar Power” 2006; Greenpeace Mediterranean; South Asia Rangan Banerjee, Bangalore, India; Greenpeace India; East Asia ISEP-Institute Tokyo; Greenpeace South East Asia; China Prof. Zhang Xilian, Tsinghua University, Beijing; Greenpeace China; OECD Pacific ISEP-Institute Tokyo, Japan; Dialog Institute,Wellington, New Zealand; Greenpeace Australia Pacific; Greenpeace New Zealand