July 31 Energy News

July 31, 2012

Technology:

¶   An advance in colloidal quantum dot technology has produced a record-breaking solar cell.  This technology produces electric power using a thin film instead of semiconductors, and is 7% efficient, making it competitive with current semiconductor technology.  [R & D Magazine]

Japan:

¶   The debate in Japan over nuclear power is bringing into the open the question of whether Japan should have nuclear bombs. [Associated Press]

¶   Japan will cooperate more closely with foreign governments, especially the US and UK, on decommissioning and decontamination. [The Denki Shimbun]

¶   Masao Yoshida had emergency surgery for a cerebral hemorrhage.  He was the head of Fukushima Daiichi at the time of the disaster there, and previously had to retire because of esophageal cancer. Officially, neither medical problem was due to the exposure he had to radiation. [The Japan Times]

¶   TEPCO has now passed to government control, in exchange for a ¥1 trillion ($12.8 billion) bailout. [Bloomberg]

¶   TEPCO may use a balloon to inspect the top floor of Fukushima Daiichi Unit 1. [Asahi Shimbun]

World:

¶   Germany is now producing 25% of its electrical power from renewable sources. [GlobalPost]

US:

¶   Owners say San Onofre could have both reactors online by the end of this year, providing nothing else goes wrong. [Huffington Post]

¶   Jeff Immelt, CEO of GE, says nuclear power is so expensive it is “really hard to justify.” [Albany Times Union]

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