Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
For a few years, I managed a combination of businesses on a very remote 100 hectare (250 acre) South Pacific island. The main businesses were a shipyard; a machine shop building aluminum boats and water tanks; a banking agency; a postal agency; a buying point for locals selling copra (dried coconut), beche-de-mer (sea cucumber), and trocus shell; and a trade store. About 80 acres of the island were planted to coconut, which was harvested and sold. In addition to getting into the 1000-Metre Sweat and the Two-Month Wait as Olympic events, I learned a lot about the logistics and the economics of running a business on an island in the middle of nowhere. The operation was, of course, diesel-powered. You can’t run a big lathe on a few batteries and some solar panels. So I know the problems of supplying fuel in remote islands in the most intimate and personal way, because I was the person who had to arrange the fuel supply, the guy who took the heat when it ran short. I have also looked very, very closely at the economics of coconut oil as an energy source.
As a result, I was both glad and sad to see that the island nation of Tokelau was switching their entire energy system to solar power plus coconut oil … because Tokelau is definitely in the middle of nowhere …
Figure 1. Where on Earth is Tokelau? Australia is at the lower left, and New Zealand is at the bottom center. Papua New Guinea is at the upper left. Tokelau is at the upper right.
Let me explain why I have mixed feelings about the changeover to the two alternative fuels, solar and coconut oil.
The first problem has nothing to do with energy sources. The difficulty is that as near as I can tell, the islanders have no stake in the project. The New Zealand Aid Programme is “advancing” the money to Tokelau, in the form of hiring a New Zealand company to purchase and install all of the solar gear. This kind of “parachute aid” tends not to last, because the local folks don’t have any skin in the game. If the people living in the area don’t take ownership of a project, if they don’t have to sweat to make the project happen, the odds of success plummet. I will be quite surprised if the “advance” of six million dollars from New Zealand Aid ever gets repaid. That’s a huge debt in a nation with the worlds smallest economy. Not just a small economy, the world’s smallest economy, and one of the poorest (182nd out of 194 countries in GDP/capita). So the project has a very shaky foundation.
Regarding solar and coconuts, let me take the easy one first, coconuts. Yes, you can run a diesel engine on coconut oil … if you have the oil. Figure 2 shows the main and largest atoll of the three atolls that make up Tokelau. It contains about half the land in the country. Like many atolls, it is in the form of a ring, with the widest and solidest individual islands on the windward side of the atoll. A coral atoll is not a solid thing. It is a hesitation in a storm-driven river of coral sand and rubble. As a result, on the side where the storms hit, the river of coral rubble is larger, and the islands are longer and more connected. Typically, none of the individual islands rise more than a few metres above sea level. The long island at the lower right of Figure 2 is only about 300 metres (1,000 ft) wide.
Figure 2. Nukunono, the main atoll of the three atolls (Atafu, Nukunono and Fakaofo) that make up the island nation of Tokelau. 5.53 miles equals ~ 9 km. There are about 1,200 people living in Tokelau, and there are about 5,000 Tokelauans living in New Zealand … go figure. Total land area is about 10 sq. km., but a good chunk of that is bare sand and uninhabited islets.
As you can see, there is very little usable land in Tokelau, and that’s the first problem with the coconut oil plan. It takes a heap of coconuts to equal the energy in a barrel of diesel. And it takes a heap of land to grow a heap of coconuts. I should know, coconuts were one of my businesses. And on the coral atolls of Tokelau, there’s very little spare land at all.
Next, humans and coconut palms have travelled together around the Pacific for a very good reason. Coconut palms are an astonishing plant. They can transubstantiate the worst soils, even the salty coral sands of tropical atolls, into rich oil, milk coconut meat, and fats. There are only a few food plants that can grow on the coral rubble and sand, so coconuts are very important to the nutrition of the children, because the coconut milk, meat, and foods cooked in coconut milk make up a large portion of the kids’ diet.
As a result of those issues, for me, on the atolls any coconut oil that gets burned is taken directly from the children’s nutrition … and I can’t see that as being a brilliant plan. Sure, on large volcanic islands like Fiji or the Solomon Islands it makes sense. Those islands have acres and acres of land on which they can and do plant coconuts. But on the atolls? Very doubtful.
Next, the solar question. In the US people say “What goes around, comes around.” In the South Pacific, I used to say “What goes around … stops.” The combination of heat, sand, humidity, and salt makes tropical islands one of the most corrosive and destructive natural environments. As a result, even “hardened” or “weatherized” systems tend to have both a high infant mortality rate and a short life expectancy.
The whole solar package consists of over 4,000 solar panels, 392 inverters, and 1,344 batteries. I would suggest that the lifetime of the batteries and the inverters will not be large. And who will do the repairs when they come due? I have looked at a variety of solar systems that have been installed in some of the more remote Pacific islands … hey, evaluating solar systems on tropical islands is a brutal job, but someone had to take it. Let me say that long-term success in Pacific solar systems is far less common than failure …
Finally, the entire concept of maintenance is quite foreign to the mindset of most Pacific Islanders. I ascribe this to the lack of winter. If you live in say Norway and you don’t plan ahead for the winter, you will die … which puts a real premium on, and selects for, folks who not only think about tomorrow, but act before tomorrow arrives. In the tropics, on the other hand, there is no winter, and no need to plan for the future. Here’s an example.
I once visited a lovely island in the outer reaches of Fiji in order to look at a solar system that they had installed. It was all designed to be foolproof … but the people in the islands are no fools, they are quite ingenious.
In order to keep the batteries from being killed by being drawn down too far, the people who designed the solar system had wisely designed it so that it would only provide power until the battery voltage fell below a certain threshold. At that point, the system was designed to shut off entirely to protect the battery. However, some enterprising soul found out that if you stuck a paper clip or a bit of wire between a certain pair of the contacts on the controller, it would let you drain the batteries entirely … and as a result, every battery on the island was stone, cold dead.
I was new to the Pacific at the time, and I didn’t understand that at all. Didn’t these folks think about what the future would bring when their batteries were dead? But it was all explained by what happened as I was leaving the island. We were all getting in the boat to depart, when a charming guy I’d met on the island came running up with a string of fish. He said “Here, I caught these, take these fish with you.”
I tried to demur, saying “Keep some for yourself, are you sure that you have enough for your wife and your kids?”, because I knew he had a whole passel of children.
“Oh, yes,” he said, “I have plenty. I have kept enough fish for all day tomorrow.”
I realized at that instant that I had just witnessed the long-term time horizon for event planning on a small island … the end of tomorrow. So I didn’t bother to lecture him on smoking fish and salting fish and pickling fish and all the stuff that a good Norwegian burgher would do. I took the fish, and I thanked him profusely.
And I realized later that his response was indeed much more reasonable than mine—the fish would keep much better swimming around in the lagoon than they would last as salted fish in a hot environment …
Sadly, however, while this point of view worked fine for many, many years, it doesn’t work all that well these days when it comes to the maintenance of complex machinery … and while solar systems are better than most in requiring minimum maintenance, they still do need to be maintained. This does not bode well for the future of the Tokelau solar system.
Fortunately, since the Kiwis are putting up the money, none of this really matters. Let me say, however, that my prediction is that in ten years, Tokelau will still be importing fossil fuels for a host of uses, and that much if not all of the solar system will be quietly rusting away … I could be wrong, and I truly hope that I am wrong. I hope that the good folks of Tokelau realize what they have, and that they learn to cherish and maintain and protect it so it serves them well, long into the future, and that they repay the six million dollar “advance” to the Kiwis …
I just wouldn’t bet any money on that happening.
w.
PS—Why do I think the “advance” from New Zealand won’t be repaid? Well, GDP per capita in Tokelau is about a thousand bucks a year … but that doesn’t mean that an average individual earns that much cash in a year, much of that is subsistence farming and fishing, or government income from tuna fishing licenses. What little money the people have goes to things like school fees and clothing and medicines and the like. Most people survive in large measure because of “remittances”, money sent back to the “old country” by Tokelauans living in New Zealand and elsewhere.
The CIA World Factbook says:
The people rely heavily on aid from New Zealand – about $10 million annually in 2008 and 2009 – to maintain public services. New Zealand’s support amounts to 80% of Tokelau’s recurrent government budget. An international trust fund, currently worth nearly US$32 million, was established in 2004 to provide Tokelau an independent source of revenue. The principal sources of revenue come from sales of copra, postage stamps, souvenir coins, and handicrafts. Money is also remitted to families from relatives in New Zealand.
The annual government expenses in Tokelau are four times their revenue … a neat trick made possible by the New Zealand Government making up the shortfall each and every year. In other words, forget about affording to repay the “advance”, they can’t even afford the government that they have.
Six million dollars divided by the 1,200 inhabitants of the atolls is a debt of about $5,000 for every man, woman, and child in Tokelau. Or we could divide it by the “labor force”, which the CIA Factbook puts at 440 souls, which means a debt of about $13,600 per adult …
Given that disparity, I see no feasible way that the advance will ever be repaid. Which is perfectly fine, it simply means that solar energy in Tokelau is just another NZ Aid project, good on ya, Kiwis … but let’s not pretend that it is a loan.
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Thanks, Willis. You are spot on. The Greens seemed determined to target food supplies, I guess that way they get two birds with one stone. It’s all about stopping humans, after all.
Something I learned from this post (and I thank you for) is that hydrogen is not such a promising choice either. I admit, I was one of those who thought it a great idea and had no knowledge of the complications. Fortunately, I have no problem with welcoming new knowledge into my life and can shift my views accordingly. Thank you again. 🙂
Africa too. A relative did work on electrical grids and power in Africa in 70 and 80’s. You know changing oil every X hours of big diesel generators ( the kind that are re-purposed marine engines about the size of a house.), yep, never done. Filters changed… nah, bypassed.
Also then transformers, you may not know but when they have major “issues” it’s a good idea to switch out the out oil there too, the events create carbon in the oil which is conductive, which the oil is not supposed to be. Happens enough times and the oil quench of the arc, uhm, doesn’t snuff, it whoofs.
Sad to see the whole place go up like a bomb and the genny’s wear out in a few years. Inthe west they’d be good for 30 to 40 years.
Paul Deacon says:
August 9, 2012 at 5:29 pm
Yeah, yeah, I’m working on it during the spaces between my work (I’m a house builder), my climate research, my music with my wife, and my writing for the blog … but it’s a slow business. I’m about 75,000 words into the story and at that point in the tale I’m about 32 years old and have already completed a variety of fascinating projects, sentences, jobs, felonies, voyages, and associated misdemeanors, not to mention a combination of sins of commission, sins of omission, and sins of emission …
That all takes time to relate.
w.
75,000 words! Maybe 2/3 of the way through the process for Volume 1.
You’re a born-writer Willis. Hugely entertaining and thought provoking.
Crack on. I’d certainly buy it but I’d have to join a massive queue!
I would wager that this idea was hatched as some artsy fartsy wine oriented function attended by the dandies of Wellington or Aukland. I can picture it, replete with concerned Baby Boomers with that special Kiwi version of warmed over late 1960s nostalgia.
Wilis,
You are a treasure indeed.
Thank you.
JT
face a lot of these issues myself. biogas from coconut understorey biomass to biogas spec genset or capstone turbine. get electricity, heat, fertilser and runs 24/7. pay locals to cut biomass or better still combine with beef/chicken feedlot manure. if have grid not so much need for batteries and biomass can be stored as silage. if a dude is already maintaining a diesel genset now she can handle a biogas reactor and genset.
By targeting quality-of-life cost-effectiveness,
that same money could have upgraded every building on the island and all its streets and harbors, as well as the kids’ education, such as for the importation of educational toys.
Storm barriers.
Safer boats.
Medical supplies.
Repatriated native doctors.
Third-World PV mats with LED night-lights.
I get as angry at the shameful opportunity costs to these islanders imposed by this solar folly as I do at the criminally vast bird-slaughter by those super-ugly mega-slicers, imposed on us by the same feel-good liberalism in all its massively bovine stupidity, crass arrogance, and impenetrable ignorance.
Think I exaggerate?
Bird-slicers degrade a grid’s reliability as revoltingly as they depopulate the local birds.
They are a thousand times as technologically obscene as nuclear weapons.
The Tokelau solar installation is slow-motion techno-obscenity.
The idea of turning coconut oil into diesel fuel is madness. We are paying about $20 per litre here in Australia, where diesel is worth about $1.50. Clearly the best way to turn coconut oil into diesel is to use the market. The only oil that can be rationally turned into diesel is used cooking oil, which we do. The world of nutrition is waking up to the fact that coconut oil is very healthy food. Its price is assured for the long term. It used to be spurned because it is highly saturated, but it is becoming obvious that the belief that polyunsaturated oils are better is nothing more than a scam. It is like the climate warming alarmism scam. If you have doubts, do a google search.
@ur momisugly DirkH
To make a simplified analogy, in cold climates the ant gene survives and the grasshopper gene does not, leaving far more ants than grasshoppers when the conditions are right for development/ enlightenment.
What do you think the good people of Tokelau would have chosen if given the choice between this project or $5000 for every man, woman and child?
Is the objective to produce enough energy to survive, or thrive ?
Actually read the minipak site info.
Metalhydride, no pressure, no leakage, stores for years. Refilled from any hydrogen source, such as industrial gas bottles. Not perfect, but workable. Fuel paks also refillable with their Hydrofill system, which breaks water with AC or DC power. Reasonable use for solar panel output.
But useful in that form factor only for electronic devices, AA battery substitute.
______
Islanders have developed a way of life that is “on the edge” but not over it. They have made a local peace with Malthus. Attempting to upgrade to a technological modern economy is a dead end. IMO.
typo: “to a technological …”
[Fixed. -w.]
Just some rambling thoughts:
Coconuts in the raw are not good for your heart. Refined, it is good for you and for your brain. Raw coconut is better than no fresh food at all, though, and using that to generate energy seems a cruel fate. US farmers are now asking for a moratorium in biofuel production so they can feed their animals.
Hydrogen in the form of water is nature’s ash. Without an inexpensive way to disassociate it from what it has coupled with, any ash will have the same value. Not all refined ash will leak and exploded as does hydrogen. Research Canada’s Hydrogen Highway to see what the challenges are when depending on ash to fuel your economy.
Back to coconuts – there is a burgeoning market for refined coconut oil in the US as a diet supplement. It is also kickass in popcorn. When I was a kid growing up in Hawaii I would climb, catch, gut, clean, and eat at least one coconut/week when school was out. There was also banana, papaya, mango, and opihi. Pineapple too if you didn’t mind angering Dole. No shortage of things to eat without going to a store, and growing wild (except the pineapples 🙂 ). I’ve often wondered if the coconut had in any way contributed to the heart attack I finally had. Coconut trees need to be felled and replaced regularly or they grow so tall the falling fruit will kill you. Witness the royal grounds in Kaunakakai, Molokai. Once a royal gathering place for King David Kalakaua, it is now populated by very tall coconut trees and keep out signs. The ground is littered with self-buried coconuts that made the long trip to earth and there they rot because nobody needs them. For all their faults, though, coconuts are important to atoll life. Turning them into biofuel is probably criminal.
The tropics is where complexity goes to die. As you say nothing can stand up to the battering of the elements and is why there are so many broken things in equatorial Oceania. If they were to park RTGs every 500′ there the people would find a way to break them or the elements would. And perfect power like RTGs are probably the worst thing that can happen there anyway. The atolls by nature force residents to fight daily for their lives. Anything that makes life easier will cause population expansion and the one thing none of the atolls can allow is unmoderated population growth.
The Pacific ocean has zillions of islands where there are no residents. More can be made very quickly by growing populations to the tripping point. Case in point: Hawaii’s population cannot survive without massive world support. We are one thunderous world war or economic collapse away from Hawaii losing that support at which time getting out fast will be critical. When enough people have left or died and a supportable population remains, Hawaii will once again become the home of fishermen and gatherers.
profile says:
August 9, 2012 at 7:17 pm
Thanks, profile. Biogas is a relatively mature technology, and certainly can work given the proper supplies of raw materials. A number of the dairies and piggeries around here went to biogas simply because of the cost of treating the farm effluent. Other than that, around here they are not much used. Seems like they require the feedlot manure, that other sources of raw material aren’t enough to make it work economically.
The best biomass system I’ve seen was a coconut husk and shell fired steam engine that I saw on a commercial coconut plantation in Fiji in 1984. It was small, only 10 kilowatts. They ran cattle under the coconuts, and used the electricity to run their freezers for the beef, and provide electricity for the main house/office. It wasn’t a steam turbine, it was a triple-expansion steam engine, and so whisper-quiet that you could hold a conversation right next to it in a normal voice. He ran it entirely on coconut shells and husks from his own plantation. He used the waste heat off of the condenser to dry copra, both their own and from neighboring plantations. After passing over the drying copra, the remaining waste heat was used to dry the coconut husks, which don’t burn if they are green.
And to my surprise, looking around on the web tonight I find that in 2007 the owner of the plantation, Adrian Tarte, was still running the engine, writing to a steam engine website as follows:
But … steam engines require steam engineers, or at least competent mechanics like Adrian who are knowledgeable enough to know where to ask for assistance … if I was going biomass electricity, though, that’s how I’d go. Triple-expansion steam, the best of 19th century technology, it’s a whiz. Bear in mind, though, that this was not on an atoll, it was on a volcanic island with rich volcanic soil.
w.
@ur momisugly gravity32: I’m all over it (coconut oil, that is). I learned about its benefits 10 years ago. Also learned about the scam at that time. When I learned the truth about saturated fat and what healthy people groups traditionally eat, I was able to avoid chaining myself and my family to the medical establishment.
You know, too many things are being run the way that scam is/was. In fact, these days I’m telling my friends that I can see that the politicians/bureaucrats and media mavens are in cahoots – even if they will not admit it. I figure they both have the same motivation: keep stirring the pot and promoting things that nurture a culture of death and sickness, so as to keep the level of strife and crime high. When the level of strife and crime is high, they stay busier and make more money.
Willis Eschenbach responded to James from Arding
And one more slight issue with Hydrogen… enhanced metal fatigue. That’s why specialized piping and tanks have to be used that are resistant to this annoying little molecule that tends to react with whatever metal it comes in contact with.
? Got atolls ?
Outer swell can move a bouy with integrated drive for generating current.
See the video http://www.oceanpowertechnologies.com/technology.htm
gravity32 says:
August 9, 2012 at 7:46 pm
Thanks, gravity. As with most things, it’s a bit more complicated than that. The further that you go out into the more remote islands, the cheaper the coconut oil gets, and the more expensive the diesel gets. As you might imagine, at some point the two lines cross …
As a result, the only place that it can work is on a very local, isolated level. The good news is that includes many of the islands. But even then, it requires the kind of village-scale technology from kokonut pacific. And it requires engines that can run on virgin cold-pressed coconut oil, some can and some can’t. Fortunately, the old two-cylinder Lister engines found around the Pacific will run on that kind of coconut oil. Modern engines, not so much.
I last looked closely at the numbers in the Solomon Islands in 2009. At that time, it was a bit ahead of break-even in the villages. By that I mean that the money that they got from selling a gallon of coconut oil to the kokonut pacific folks would only buy about 3/4 of a gallon of diesel. So it would be economical there, but only just marginally, and not worth the effort, better to sell it as coconut oil.
Of course, the comparison depends sensitively on the price of diesel …
w.
The Bellis and Morcom is a Rolls-Royce of marine steam gensets: totally enclosed, quiet, superbly built. There was one in the Darfield brickworks in Canterbury, New Zealand fed by a rocker-grate marine bolier. All power for the whole works was produced by the one genset, and the exhaust steam and stack heat dried the clay bricks pre-oven. Old man Boyes ran the show, to the eternal regret of the local Power Board. Showed me through it with quiet pride. His sons run the show now, and I wouldn’t bet the farm on the genset’s survival.
dp said
Quote
Coconuts in the raw are not good for your heart. Refined, it is good for you and for your brain. Raw coconut is better than no fresh food at all, though, and using that to generate energy seems a cruel fate.
Unquote
Well done, 100% false. Suggest you look up the facts., you might be surprised.
Using it for fuel is basically criminal.
Brian H says:
August 9, 2012 at 8:33 pm
Appreciate that you read the link Brian H…
It seems to me that the major problem with solar and wind power is the cost of storage of that energy, or in other words “the base load problem”. I have been watching the company that I linked to (I have no financial interest in it BTW) for some years now and having bought one of their dinky little toy cars for fun and interest – I feel that they have a very sound strategy. Start with smaller systems including the education market, develop the technology, build expertise and capital and expand. The electricity can be generated through any source to electrolyse water and produce Hydrogen.
As Willis points out Hydrogen is hard to store but that was the point of the link – these guys have two options;
One is a type of cylinder with a metal hydride matrix which they claim works effectively to give a significantly higher energy density than any chemical battery technology and is rechargeable from electrolysis units they sell, the other is a system using some form of hydrate which you add water on demand to produce H2. I don’t know if this is a rechargeable system or not. Once you have the H2 they have a range of fuel cell technology up to many kW to produce electricity. The smaller systems are available now (just released to market) and more to come in the future.
I thought it might be interesting to some of the readers here at WUWT who may not have heard of these systems. Maybe not……
thanks for the feedback willis. couple of things. compared to manure grass is a way better biogas fuel maybe 5x better. cow gut sucks all the energy out leaving a poor biogas fuel. also in tropics dont need to insulate/heat reactor can just use a bag or covered lagoon. given way weeds grow in tropics could be way to go.
Willis: please don’t ever lose this line: