Power Surge 14.1

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Power Surge 14.1

Volume 14 Issue 1
September 21, 2022 – September 27, 2022
Andrew Ji ‘25 | Wilder Crosier ‘25 | Cameron Farid ‘26 | Hagop Alajajian ‘26 | Neha Ayyalapu ‘26

America has Lost Its Oil Buffer

September 22, 2022 | The Wall Street Journal | Jinjoo Lee

America has been rapidly drawing from its oil reserves, reducing prices but leaving it vulnerable to market disturbances. Enacted in response to the 1973-1974 oil embargo, the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) consists of multiple underground tanks in Louisiana and Texas with the maximum capacity to store 714 million barrels of crude oil. When Russia invaded Ukraine earlier this year, fears of a supply emergency resulting from a reduction in Russian exports spurred the government to pull from the SPR. Since March 31, 2021, the US has sold 155 million barrels from the stockpile, reducing the reserves to their lowest level since 1983. The government action has helped bring gas prices down from over $5 per gallon in June to near $3.50 today. However, given uncertainty around Russian exports and the potential for additional Covid lockdowns around the world, the lack of cushioning leaves the US at the whim of potentially painful energy shocks in the future. –WC

British Government to Lift 2019 Ban on Fracking Ahead of Growing Energy Concerns

September 22, 2022 | CNBC | Jenni Reid


As energy prices continue to surge across Europe as a result of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the British government has lifted a 2019 ban on hydraulic fracturing. Hydraulic fracturing, also known as fracking, is an extraction method in which a pressurized fluid is injected into the ground, creating cracks which free trapped oil and gas. It has drastically reduced energy dependence within the US over the past two decades, but was banned in the UK after an earthquake occurred near the nation’s sole fracking site. Natural gas heats 80% of the UK’s homes and produces nearly 50% of the nation’s electricity, so amping production can help Britain supply its energy demand through the cold winter ahead. That’s not to say this is a perfect solution. Water contamination, for example, can become an issue near fracking sites. Additionally, it is uncertain whether production has the speed or financial feasibility to offset the monetary strain of many British families. - CF

An Israel-Lebanon Border Deal Could Increase Natural Gas Supplied

September 27, 2022 | The New York Times | Clifford Krauss

Since 2018, countries in the eastern Mediterranean have increased their efforts to take advantage of gas buried on the seafloor. The crisis in Ukraine has accelerated this process in an attempt to end their dependence on Russian gas. The agreement is still rather contentious, with Lebanese officials threatening to attack an oil field, and the Israeli government shooting down the unarmed drone. However, if Israel and Lebanon resolve their long-standing maritime border dispute (with the Biden administration acting as an intermediary), the increased energy production would not offset the losses from the cutoff of Russian gas. Regardless, this represents an opportunity for a revival of eastern Mediterranean economies. -NA

Feds commit $50 million to for-profit nuclear fusion companies, chasing the ‘holy grail’ of clean energy

September 26, 2022 | CNBC | Hagop Alajajian


The Department of Energy (DOE) is committing another funding package into the fusion energy industry, announcing today that $50 million will finance the private nuclear sector. This is in addition to another $650 million invested into fusion research by the US government annually. This recent contribution was authorized by the Energy Act of 2020, which was signed into law in December 2020 by the Trump administration. This new round of investment can help prove the commercial viability of nuclear fusion. As opposed to nuclear fission, which involves the process of large atoms splitting, nuclear fusion occurs when two heavy atoms bind together to form a new atom. Research on nuclear fusion—known for its ability to produce boundless amounts of energy in a safe and clean manner—today looks to find ways to commercialize and scale, which has faced steep challenges so far. -HA

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Power Surge 13.8

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Power Surge 13.8

Volume 13 Issue 8
April 11, 2022 – April 17, 2022
Riti Bhandarkar ‘23 | Zihan Lin ‘23 | Sunay Joshi ‘24 | Wilder Crosier ‘25 | Jackson Lichtenberger ‘25 | Andrew Ji ‘25

Truckers Get Slammed by Diesel Freight Train

April 8, 2022 | The Wall Street Journal | Spencer Jakab

Oil prices continue to rise in the US, causing headaches for consumers and truckers, but not the rail industry. The trucking industry, already facing a shortage of drivers and challenges buying and maintaining their fleets, are now also dealing with an additional 30 cents per mile of costs from surging diesel prices. Transportation by rail, on the other hand, is more energy efficient. On one gallon of fuel, trains can move cargo 492 miles, while trucks can only make it 134 miles with the same load. In fact, Union Pacific claims that the US could save 1.5 billion gallons of fuel a year—the equivalent of removing over three million cars from the roads—simply by switching 10% of trucking freight to rail transport. The transportation industry has not seen major shifts towards railroads, but the pandemic consumption boom did lead railroad companies to transport four times as many trailers, and the ever-increasing prices continue to support this trend. WC

Biden to Allow More Ethanol in Gas This Summer in Bid to Lower Prices

April 12, 2022 | The Wall Street Journal | Timothy Puko

The Biden administration will allow high-ethanol fuels to be sold over the summer. So-called E15 fuels with ethanol content at 15% are typically not sold in the summer in order to reduce pollution. However, the move may lower gas prices and also help Biden politically in Midwestern ethanol-producing states. Critics of the policy point to a possible increase in the price of corn, which is used to produce ethanol, as well as the use of wildlife for corn production. - SJ

A new path to nuclear fusion? A novel pistol shrimp-inspired system succeeded

Apr 11, 2022 | Interesting Engineering | Chris Young

The fusion startup First Light Fusion announced Monday that it had succeeded in creating fusion without relying on powerful lasers and magnets. According to its press release, its novel approach may be the “fastest, simplest, and cheapest route to commercial fusion power,” and surprisingly, it is inspired by a tiny sea creature - the pistol shrimp. Rather than using tokamaks and stellarators to achieve sustained fusion, First Light’s approach uses railguns to propel a tiny projectile into a fuel-containing target faster than the speed of sound. By adjusting the timing and environment of the firing, shockwaves can momentarily simulate pressure levels hundreds of millions of times higher than atmospheric pressure, which kickstarts a reaction by causing fuel pellets to implode and fuse.  AJ

Amid Soaring Demand for Warehouses, An Effort to Make Them Greener

April 12, 2022 | New York Times | Jane Margolies
The explosion in consumer demand for online shopping during the pandemic has caused an equal explosion in the need for huge warehouses and distribution centers, and now companies are turning those buildings green. The change is coming especially fast in Europe, where government incentives (and coercion) for building net-zero facilities have led the rush towards renewables. In the US, some companies are jumping to capitalize on the unused open space on warehouse roofs to create solar farms that power their buildings and the surrounding communities; others are leasing their roofs to solar companies to do the job for them. The warehouses are the perfect place for new solar projects: they are large open spaces with direct sunlight all day, they’re out of sight and out of mind (a common complaint about new solar projects on the ground), and the buildings are already connected to the grid, making the distribution of electricity just as easy as the products inside. - JL

Queensland advances green hydrogen and ammonia project to be powered by renewables

April 11, 2022 | The Guardian | Ben Smee

The H2-Hub Gladstone project, recently set in a streamlined approval process, is going to make Gladstone a milestone site of Australia’s net zero mission. The $4.7bn project will build up to 3 gigawatts of electrolysis for hydrogen production and is projected to make 5,000 tons of ammonia everyday, all of which will be powered by solar and wind energy. Energy analysts are optimistic about the status of green hydrogen, which they predict will supersede hydrogen produced from coal and gas by the end of the decade. This development will likely make Queensland prosper with renewable energy jobs in the future. Operations of the H2-Hub Gladstone project is set in 2025 with further expansions towards the end of decade.  - ZL

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