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Vegan Sustainability Magazine - Autumn 2015

A free, online, quarterly magazine for vegans and non-vegans worldwide who are interested in the environment and sustainability.

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Can Ireland Meet Its Energy Demand<br />

with Renewables?<br />

James O’Donovan looks at the various sources of green, renewable energy that are<br />

available to us here in Ireland, and for each type he calculates how much we would<br />

need to increase its use in order to meet our energy needs.<br />

In this article I explore Ireland’s renewable energy<br />

sources, looking at our current levels of renewable<br />

energy and estimating its potential to meet<br />

our current energy demand.<br />

Ireland’s energy use in 2012 was 13,229 ktoe<br />

(thousand tonnes of oil equivalent), or 94 kWh/p/d<br />

(kilowatt hours per person per day).<br />

further 50 kWh/p/d of energy consumed by Irish<br />

people but produced elsewhere.<br />

Ireland’s Renewable Energy<br />

Sources:<br />

Onshore and Off Shore Wind Energy:<br />

Wind Energy can provide an average<br />

energy yield of approx. 2 W/m 2 . If we cover<br />

5% of the country then we can get 40 kWh/<br />

p/d, which is a very significant amount of<br />

our energy demand but this would require a<br />

Domestic Consumption<br />

Heating 30<br />

Aviation 4<br />

Transport 25<br />

Electricity 34<br />

Ireland’s current energy use—contribution of each energy type as a percentage of total<br />

Average European energy demand is 110 kWh/<br />

p/d, US demand is 240 kWh/p/d, and Chinese demand<br />

is 50 kWh/p/d. The 2008 global world per<br />

capita energy consumption is 58 kWh/p/d.<br />

It’s worth noting that imported commodities<br />

(vehicles (7 kWh/p/d), food, construction materials,<br />

furniture, computers, industrial goods, domestic<br />

appliances, mobile devices, etc.) possibly add a<br />

large land area covered in turbines to get there<br />

(3,750 Km 2 ). Shallow offshore wind energy is<br />

economically viable. Assuming 2.5 W/m 2 and<br />

450 km 2 we could get a yield of 6 kWh/p/d. So I<br />

will assume that there is a possibility of 46 kWh/<br />

p/d from wind power in Ireland. In 2012 we got<br />

345 ktoe from wind energy, which comes to 2.4<br />

kWh/p/d. So 46 kWh/p/d would be a nineteen<br />

fold increase. The intermittent nature of wind en-<br />

34

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