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ENERGY-DENMARK: Samsø Island, Beyond Fantasy By Julio Godoy* TRANEBJERG, Denmark, Nov 15, 2009 (Tierramérica) - On the Danish island of Samsø, a model of energy self-sufficiency, even cow's
milk helps reduce emissions of climate changing gases.
Samsø has an area of 114 square kilometres with just over 4,000 people,
located in the Bay of Kattegat, in the North Sea, some 120 km west of
Copenhagen.
Its reputation as a model of sustainability is due to the fact that it uses wind
turbines and solar panels to generate all of the electricity consumed by local
residents.
Since 1997, when Samsø won a national competition to become a prototype
community in the use of renewable energy sources, the Samsingers, as locals
are known, revolutionised all aspects of their daily lives in order to contribute
to greater efficiency.
The effort has such a broad scope that even milk production is part of the
energy system.
At the time of milking, cow's milk has a temperature of about 38 degrees
Celsius and has to be cooled immediately to three degrees. Some dairy
farmers in Samsø connected a heat transfer mechanism to the collection tank
to prevent the warmth from the milk from dissipating into the air, and
harnessing it instead to help heat their homes.
So far, despite their inventiveness, the farmers have not resolved the problem
of methane and other greenhouse gases generated by the bovine digestive
system. But they are studying the system used on a model farm on the
Jutland Peninsula, which recycles gases and waste from raising pigs and uses
them as energy sources and fertiliser to grow tomatoes.
Although the transfer of heat from the milk to household heating is just a
small component in the Samsø community's energy system, it illustrates how
hard the Samsingers are willing to work towards living in harmony with
nature.
The centrepiece of the system are 11 wind turbines, which generate an
average of 28,000 megawatts annually. That's enough to meet the
community's electricity demands, supply the island's entire public
transportation system, and have a surplus of 10 percent to sell to other
regions of Denmark.
The income from those sales is reinvested in the local renewable energy
system.
It's not that the Samsingers have given up their cars and other usual modes of
transport. For example, the three ferries that connect the island with the
mainland consume 9,000 litres of petroleum per day. Even so, Samsø sells
more clean energy to the continent than it purchases in fossil fuels.
The community is interested in experimenting with electric cars. "The
distances here are very short, less than 50 kilometres," said Søren
Hermansen, director of the island's Energy Academy and a pioneer in the
local environmental revolution.
"If the battery of an electric car can store up energy for, say, 120 kilometres,
then that would mean we wouldn't have to sell our clean energy and we
would use it here," Hermansen told Tierramérica.
Farmers have adapted their tractors and other vehicles to consume ethanol or
other fuels distilled from locally grown plants, like canola.
Samsø also has four generators that run on the combustion of hay, which is
abundant on the island. The generators are especially efficient because they
produce both heat and electricity. Many homes have installed solar panels,
geothermal heating, and boilers fuelled with biomass or wood treated to
eliminate carbon emissions.
In addition to the renewable energy sources, also of great importance is the
Samsingers' effort to reduce their consumption of electricity.
Jytte Nauntoft, owner of an electrical appliance shop in Tranebjerg, the
island's largest town, told Tierramérica that all homes have the usual
appliances, from refrigerators to washing machines and televisions. "But
because electricity is so expensive, people here buy the most basic and most
efficient models," she explained.
This complex system of energy production and improved efficiency has
brought the island from being 100 percent reliant on petroleum and coal in
1997, at the beginning of the experiment, to being energy self-sufficient in
2003, utilising only renewable sources. Since 2007, the system has not
produced greenhouse gases.
The certification of the energy balance was entrusted to the Danish
governmental energy agency and to Planenergi, a consultancy, co-authors of
the 2007 evaluation.
The achievements are evaluated according to energy density, which measures
the ideal quantity of energy generated per unit of area. In Samsø's case, the
density should be at least two watts per square metre.
"Samsø reached that density by the end of 2008," Hermansen told
Tierramérica.
The great success of the experiment has meant frequent visits by officials
from foreign governments, environmental experts, journalists and students
from around the world.
One recent group of visitors came from the Global Legislators Organisation
for a Balanced Environment (GLOBE), which met Oct. 24-25 in Copenhagen to
give a boost to progress towards achieving a new international climate treaty
in December.
The GLOBE meet included lawmakers from the G8 most powerful countries -
Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States -
as well as Brazil, China, India, Mexico, South Africa, Australia, South Korea
and host Denmark.
Hermansen told Tierramérica about how on a recent visit to Samsø, the
ambassador from Egypt had stated that the island was too small to serve as a
global example.
"Four thousand people! This island represents less than three apartment
blocks in Cairo," said the diplomat, according to Hermansen, who told him:
"Egypt doesn't need to revolutionise its entire energy system at once. Perhaps
you should start by reforming three apartment blocks in Cairo."
In addition to the Samsø energy system, Hermansen also has a different take
on the long-standing environmental slogan: "Think globally; act locally."
"What each one of has to do is to think in local environmental terms, and act
locally. The rest will resolve itself through synergies," he says.
Jörgen Tranberg, one of the farmers who use the warmth from the milk of his
150 cows to heat his home, takes Hermansen's idea a step further.
"Each place has its particularities. Given that Norway has so many waterfalls,
the Norwegians generate a great deal of electricity from dams. In Samsø we
have always burned straw, which is abundant on the island. But we used to
burn it outdoors in the open air. Today we burn it in highly efficient boilers,"
Tranberg told Tierramérica.
The farmer pointed out that one must look beyond the market price of fuels.
"At first glance, the cheapest fuels are petroleum and coal. But both have
many hidden costs that aren't expressed in the market price," he said.
One of the factors that has made Samsø such a success is the high degree of
participation of the residents. According to Hermansen, when the process
began in 1997, he was already convinced of its possibilities.
The key, he said, was to convince the community to participate economically
in the revolution. And it worked. Today, the Samsingers are private owners of
the wind turbines, the solar panels and the Samsø communal heating system.
(*This story was originally published by Latin American newspapers that are
part of the Tierramérica network. Tierramérica is a specialised news service
produced by IPS with the backing of the United Nations Development
Programme, United Nations Environment Programme and the World Bank.)
(END)
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