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Sustainable Energy Future Options

Environmental Science
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Sustainable Energy Future Options

Environmental Science
01 May 2026

Options for Building a Sustainable Energy Future

A sustainable energy future must meet three criteria simultaneously: lower greenhouse gas emissions (for climate), reliability (security of supply) and affordability (accessible to all). VCE Environmental Science identifies four key strategies.

The Challenge

Current global energy systems face a structural problem:
- ~80% of energy comes from fossil fuels
- These fuels generate ~75% of global GHG emissions
- Maintaining reliability during transition to renewables is technically and economically complex
- Energy access is unequal — billions lack reliable energy

Strategy 1: Improving Resource Efficiency

What it means: Getting more economic output or human well-being from each unit of energy consumed.

Examples:
- Industrial processes: Combined heat and power (cogeneration) captures waste heat for industrial heating — improves overall efficiency from ~35% to ~80%
- Buildings: Improved insulation, double glazing, thermal mass reduce heating and cooling energy demand
- Smart grids: Match supply and demand in real time, reducing wastage and grid losses
- Urban design: Compact cities with efficient public transport reduce per capita energy use for transport
- Agricultural efficiency: Precision irrigation and fertiliser application reduce energy inputs per unit food produced

Sustainability connection:
- Efficiency of resource use principle: directly satisfied
- Reduces total resource extraction and associated environmental impacts
- Cost-effective — often the cheapest ‘source’ of new energy is energy saved

Strategy 2: Increasing the Efficiency of Energy Conversion Devices

What it means: Using technology to convert energy with less waste at each step.

Device Old Efficiency New/Best Available Improvement
Incandescent bulb ~5% (light:input) LED: ~20–30% 4–6×
Simple steam turbine ~25–35% Combined-cycle gas: ~60%
Electric motor (old) ~80% High-efficiency motor: ~95%
Petrol car engine ~20–25% Best ICE: ~40%
Solar panel (1980s) ~10% Commercial 2024: ~22–25% 2.5×

Key technologies:
- LED lighting — most cost-effective efficiency improvement globally; 90%+ of countries now transitioning
- Heat pumps — use electricity to move heat (rather than generate it); effective efficiency (COP) of 2–5 means 200–500% conversion efficiency
- High-efficiency electric motors — industrial motors are the largest single electricity-consuming technology globally

Sustainability connection:
- Reduces total fuel combustion and associated GHG emissions per unit of energy service
- Applies first and second law of thermodynamics — minimises entropy losses

Strategy 3: Replacing Fossil Fuels with Non-Fossil Fuel Energy Sources

What it means: Transitioning electricity generation, heating, transport and industry from fossil fuels to renewable and nuclear sources.

Electricity Generation

  • Solar PV and wind are now the cheapest sources of new electricity generation in most regions globally
  • Australia’s National Electricity Market transitioning rapidly: coal capacity retiring; large-scale solar and wind replacing it
  • Offshore wind: large potential, particularly for SE Australia

Transport

  • Electric vehicles: Eliminate tailpipe emissions; only as clean as the grid charging them (increasingly clean as renewables grow)
  • Green hydrogen: Produced by electrolysis using renewable electricity; fuel for heavy vehicles, ships, aircraft
  • Public and active transport: Reduces private vehicle fleet size and energy demand

Heat

  • Heat pumps replace gas for space and water heating
  • Solar thermal provides hot water and industrial process heat
  • Green hydrogen for high-temperature industrial processes (steel, cement) where electrification is difficult

Industry

  • Electrification of processes currently using natural gas
  • Green hydrogen as a reducing agent in steel making (replacing coal)
  • Carbon capture for cement and chemical industries

Strategy 4: Reducing Personal Energy Consumption

What it means: Behavioural and lifestyle changes that reduce individual energy demand.

Examples:
- Transport: Cycling, walking, carpooling, public transport instead of private car
- Dietary choices: Plant-based diets require 2–10× less energy than meat-heavy diets
- Home energy: Turn off standby appliances; use cold water washing; reduce unnecessary air conditioning
- Consumer choices: Buy fewer goods; choose durable products; repair rather than replace
- Flying less: Long-haul aviation is difficult to decarbonise; reducing air travel is one of the highest-impact individual actions

Co-benefits: Many personal consumption reductions also improve health (active transport, plant-based diet) and reduce costs.

Limits: Individual action alone cannot decarbonise the global economy — systemic changes in energy infrastructure, urban design and industrial processes are also required.

Integrating the Four Strategies

Strategy Reduces emissions? Improves reliability? Reduces cost?
Resource efficiency Yes (less fuel needed) Yes (less demand to supply) Yes (less energy to buy)
Conversion efficiency Yes Indirectly Yes (less fuel per kWh)
Fuel switching (renewables) Yes Depends on storage/grid Increasingly yes
Personal consumption reduction Yes Yes (less load) Yes

A comprehensive sustainable energy transition deploys all four strategies simultaneously.

EXAM TIP: VCAA may ask you to evaluate one or more of these strategies in terms of feasibility, sustainability principles, and stakeholder trade-offs. Structure your answer: describe the strategy → link to a sustainability principle → identify limitations or trade-offs → suggest complementary strategies.

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