Archive for June, 2016
June 30, 2016
Opinion:
¶ “Floating Solar: A Win-Win for Drought-Stricken Lakes in
U.S.” • Floating PV projects are increasingly used around the world. One prime spot for them could be the US Southwest, where they could prevent evaporation in major man-made reservoirs as they make energy. [Yale Environment 360]

A 2.3-MW floating solar array in Kasai City, Japan.
¶ “The End of the Era of Baseload Power Plants” • PG&E’s plan to close the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant marks a historic transition for the electric power industry. While it ends nuclear power in California, it also ushers in an entirely new paradigm for our electric system. [Greentech Media]
World:
¶ HVDC grid connections in the German North Sea could be planned and built almost two years faster than is currently the case, and technical innovations could also help cut costs by up to 30%, according to a new report commissioned by Germany’s offshore wind industry. [reNews]

Riffgat offshore wind farm in the German North Sea (EWE image)
¶ The UK’s Secretary of State for Energy and Climate said the UK’s energy plan of offshore wind, new nuclear, and gas would remain despite the EU referendum. She added small modular nuclear reactors to the mix, despite the fact that they are decades away from any delivery. [Blue & Green Tomorrow]
¶ Pope Francis’ Laudato Si makes clear that the Catholic Church is committed to the environment. So top Vatican officials responded enthusiastically as all 31 schools in one Queensland diocese switched to solar power. The switch resulted in annual electricity savings of $250,000. [CleanTechnica]

Solarized catholic schools in the Townsville Diocese are
now saving $250,000 a year. Credit: catholicleader.com.au
¶ The British government is set to confirm a world-leading climate change target. Ministers are expected to announce that the UK will cut carbon emissions by 57% by 2032, from 1990 levels. This may be reassuring for investors needed to overhaul the UK’s ageing energy system. [BBC]
¶ The Global Wind Energy Council has set out the basis for future offshore wind feasibility assessments in the states of Gujarat and Tamil Nadu in India. In a new report, the council assesses key supply chain elements, port infrastructure, logistics, vessel requirements and installation strategies. [reNews]

London Array. Credit reNews.
¶ India won’t buy GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy’s atomic reactors that haven’t been used in nuclear power plants before, the country’s top atomic-energy bureaucrat said. GE Hitachi has signed an accord for supplying reactors for a nuclear power plant in the state of Andhra Pradesh. [Livemint]
¶ French renewable energy company Akuo Energy has been chosen to build 100 MW of PV power plants on the Indonesian island of Bali. The scheme will be carried out based on the Agrinergie model for production of clean energy and organic farming on the shared land. [SeeNews Renewables]

Solar park in Indonesia. Author: Bart Speelman.
License: Creative Commons. Attribution 2.0 Generic.
¶ Denmark’s Vestas Wind Systems A/S said it has received an order for 22 turbines to be installed at the Lyrestad wind park in Mariestad, Sweden, with power produced from the development sold to Google as part of the tech company’s drive to power its entire operations on clean energy. [Nasdaq]
¶ A grand opening ceremony has been held for Ontario’s 180-MW Armow Wind power facility, expected to generate enough energy to power approximately 70,000 Ontario homes each year. The wind farm’s 91 Siemens turbines have locally made towers and blades. [Windpower Engineering]

Armow wind farm.
US:
¶ The District of Columbia took another step toward nation-leading climate action today, as the DC Council unanimously approved legislation to expand DC’s renewable energy target to 50% by 2032. The bill creates incentives for 1,500 MW of new solar and wind power. [RealEstateRama]
¶ The San Diego region reached a milestone on Wednesday, as private, rooftop solar power produces 5% of the city’s peak electricity demand. San Diego Gas & Electric and major solar installers cheered the milestone in what has become a $1 billion local industry. [Times of San Diego]

Solar panels during installation on a San Diego home.
Courtesy San Diego County News Center
¶ Vermont Democratic gubernatorial candidate Sue Minter has offered an energy plan that sets goals of reducing peak electricity demand by 10% over five years and cutting carbon pollution emitted through transportation. The plan focuses on efficiency, solar power, and energy storage. [vtdigger.org]
¶ All HP brand paper and paper-based product packaging will be derived from certified and recycled sources by 2020, with a preference for virgin fiber from Forest Stewardship Council certified sources. This pledge is outlined in the company’s latest Sustainability Report. [Power Engineering Magazine]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 29, 2016
World:
¶ India’s National Hydro Power Corporation has announced plans to set up a 600 MW floating solar project at one of its largest hydro power complexes. Media reports say that the company will set up the solar project at the 1,960 MW Koyna hydro power project. [CleanTechnica]

The Koyna Dam in Maharashtra, India. Photo by Nichalp.
CC BY-SA 2.5. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ The Jamaican Minister for Science, Energy, and Technology recently told the country’s legislature that the government will allocate 150 MW of renewable energy capacity this year. The minister said that 50 MW of capacity will be based on waste-to-energy technology. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The London Array has reliably powered 500,000 homes. Originally leased a second area in the hope of doubling the size of the farm, but this second phase was cancelled due to concerns about the welfare of the red-throated diver, a seabird that spends winter in the area. [The Guardian]

One of the London Array’s two substations.
Photograph: Pedro Alvarez for the Observer
¶ According to GlobalData’s latest report, the global installed capacity of solar PV will increase from 271.4 GW in 2016 at a compound annual growth rate of 13.1% to 756.1 GW in 2025. Unsurprisingly, China is expected to remain the world leader in PV installations. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Harith General Partners and Africa Finance Corporation have announced they are merging their power sector assets. Their joint portfolio will supply energy to over 30 million people in 10 African countries and will have a gross operational capacity of 1,575 MW. [reNews]

Kenya’s Lake Turkana Wind Power Project (ltwp.co.ke)
¶ Siemens, one of the few firms to openly back a Remain vote, will not make new investments in the UK until its relationship with Europe becomes clearer. A £310-million manufacturing hub in Hull that employs 1,000 people will not be affected by the decision. [The Guardian]
¶ A canal-top solar power project of 1 MW capacity at a cost of ₹8 crore ($1.7 million) will be coming up on Losari Main Canal in rural West Godavari, India. The project is already generating power and people from 10 villages are getting uninterrupted quality power from it. [Deccan Chronicle]

Canal-top solar power project
¶ MAKE Consulting expects 255 GW of wind power to be installed and 263 GW commissioned in China between 2016 and 2025. China’s central government introduced multiple policies over the last year to support growth in wind power and other renewables. [North American Windpower]
US:
¶ The first batch of GE 6-MW Haliade 150 turbine blades for use at the 30-MW Block Island offshore wind farm in the US have arrived at the ProvPort facility in Providence. The project will feature five of the GE turbines and will be the first offshore wind farm in the US. [reNews]

Construction at the Block Island wind farm site (Deepwater Wind)
¶ Vermont’s largest utility is also the first utility in the country to sell Tesla home batteries to its customers, betting that this could be the way of the future. It is doing this both for the homeowner’s private use and for the utility to draw on as a source of electricity. [WBUR]
¶ US coal generation fell slightly in April to 72.2 GWh, down 0.1 GWh from March and down 18.5% from the same month a year ago. Overall, coal accounted for 24.6% of April generation compared to 34.1% from natural gas, 21.3% from nuclear and 19.8% from renewables. [Platts]
¶ After a daylong public hearing, the State Lands Commission in California voted to extend PG&E’s lease of the power plant land for the next nine years without an environmental impact report on the promise that the utility would not extend its license to operate the nuclear plant. [FOX40]
Posted in nuclear power, renewable power, solar, wind | 1 Comment »
Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 28, 2016
Opinion:
¶ “Diablo Canyon’s closure is good news for energy and the
earth” • The nuclear plant’s closure is important for the future of energy generation and for the health of the earth. The agreement to close the plant could also serve as a positive example for other states. [The San Luis Obispo Tribune]

Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant. Joe Johnston jjohnston@thetribunenews.com
Science and Technology:
¶ Four years ago, Professor Peter Wadhams, head of the Polar Ocean Physics Group at Cambridge University, said the Arctic Ocean could well be free of sea ice within only a few years. Some considered his statement controversial. Now, it appears that he may have been right. [CleanTechnica]
World:
¶ Scotland’s carbon emission level in 2014 was around 46% lower than its emission levels in 1990, meaning that the country has managed to achieve its 2020 target of 42% lower emissions, and even beat it, a full 6 years early. Recent data show a year-on-year decrease of 12.5%. [CleanTechnica]

Scottish wind farm
¶ A new European research project coordinated by DTU Energy will develop innovative electrolysis technologies to convert excess renewable electricity into methane, which can be easily stored in the existing natural gas grid. The methane can be distributed in natural gas pipelines. [I-Connect007]
¶ Denham Capital and GreenWish Partners have signed an agreement to finance and develop 600 MW of renewable energy projects across Africa. The companies will target sub-Saharan countries and markets where renewable energy projects are competitive without subsidies. [CleanTechies]
¶ EDF Group announced the commissioning of Ensemble Eolien Catalan wind farm, a 96-MW facility at Languedoc-Roussillon-Midi-Pyrénées. The wind farm has “stealth” wind turbines, the world’s first solution for interference from wind farms for weather radar. [CleanTechnology News]
¶ Saft has clinched a deal to supply its Uptimax battery systems at E.ON’s Amrumbank West offshore wind farm. The 302-MW wind farm’s remote location meant backup batteries were required for reliable operation without the need for regular maintenance visits. [SeeNews Renewables]

Offshore wind turbines.
Image: Teun van den Dries / Shutterstock.com
¶ This week, the US and Mexico will commit to joining Canada in boosting their use of wind, solar, and other carbon-free sources of electricity, helping the North American group meet an ambitious goal of generating at least 50% of its energy from “clean” sources by 2025. [BOE Report]
¶ Diesel fuel has long been the primary source of energy in Arctic communities. Above all else, it is reliable. But its reliability has high logistical, financial and environmental costs. A WWF-Canada report shows these sacrifices in the name of reliability may no longer be necessary. [Huffington Post Canada]

Nunavut (AP Photo / Ted S. Warren)
¶ The UK’s nuclear future could be left on the chopping block by the country’s shock referendum vote to quit the EU. One government energy adviser said the Hinkley Point C project, which is expected to cost upwards of £20 billion, is now “extremely unlikely” to be completed. [Ars Technica UK]
US:
¶ Gulf Power filed a petition asking the Florida Public Service Commission to approve adding 94 MW of wind energy from the Kingfisher Wind farm in Oklahoma. The diversification of the energy sources reduces price fluctuations, including some caused by natural disasters. [Pensacola News Journal]

Kingfisher Wind farm in Oklahoma
(Photo: Special to the News Journal)
¶ Volkswagen has reportedly reached a $15 billion settlement with US car owners after admitting it cheated emission tests. The deal would offer to repair or buy back the affected diesel vehicles and pay owners compensation. The US settlement is still pending approval by a judge. [BBC]
($15 billion is about 23% of VW’s market capitalization.)
¶ The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission affirmed the right of the Delta-Montrose Electric Authority, a distribution cooperative, to buy electricity outside of purchases from Tri-State Generation & Transmission Association. It rejected a fee the G&T utility sought for the lost revenue. [Utility Dive]

Fort Mill solar trackers
¶ In Pennsylvania, the Lancaster County Solid Waste Management Authority contracted with a Dutch company that specializes in processing municipal waste-to-energy ash to sell recovered metals at premium prices. A $14 million facility will be built next to the Frey Farm Landfill. [PennLive.com]
¶ California regulators are expected to decide whether to drop environmental objections to the state’s last nuclear power plant in return for its promised early closing. Their vote is one of a number of regulatory hurdles facing the agreement to shut down plant ahead of schedule. [Greenfield Daily Reporter]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 27, 2016
Opinion:
¶ “IEA report says fossil fuels killing three million people a year” • The International Energy Agency has adopted a more informed vision in a new report. Anyone parroting the mantra that ‘coal is the lowest cost source of electricity’ is clearly also putting a pretty low value on human life. [RenewEconomy]

Coal worker with pneumoconiosis. Photo: Greenpeace India.
Science and Technology:
¶ US solar panels maker and project developer SunPower Corp said it achieved a 24.1% efficiency for its X-Series solar module, beating the prior world record for PV panel efficiency for silicon cells. The record was validated by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. [SeeNews Renewables]
World:
¶ Indonesia’s decision to stop coal imports to the Philippines could spell problems for the local power industry that relies on coal-fired power plants to supply electricity, the Department of Energy said. The Philippines is heavily reliant on Indonesia for coal for power plants. [Philippine Star]

Transmission lines in the Philippines. Philstar.com/File photo
¶ Dubai Electricity and Water Authority has awarded a consortium led by Abu Dhabi’s Masdar to build the 800-MW third phase of the Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park. The contract was awarded to the lowest bid, which is 2.99¢/kWh, which sets a new world record. [Emirates 24|7]
¶ BMW’s new $1 billion plant in Mexico will rely on renewable energy to become BMW’s most efficient factory. The ground-breaking for the plant was two weeks ago. The plant will have a capacity of up to 150,000 cars a year and will be powered entirely by the sun and wind. [BMWBLOG]

Image of BMW plant in Mexico.
¶ In India, Greater Chennai Corporation will install solar panels on the rooftops of 130 buildings in the second phase of a project to power its offices. The civic body had identified 836 buildings suitable in a feasibility study. Of these, 77 buildings were part of phase one implementation. [Times of India]
¶ India is looking to announce a comprehensive policy to promote hydropower generation by September, with viability gap funding for projects, compulsory hydropower purchase obligations for distribution companies and a set of good practices that states have to follow. [Livemint]
US:
¶ Georgetown, a small city in Texas, about 40 kilometers north of the Lone Star state’s capital Austin, has a big dream to become greener by using 100% renewable energy next year. It will be the first in the state and one of the few in the nation to be entirely powered by wind and solar energy. [Xinhua]
¶ Iberdrola Renewables is developing a 40-turbine wind farm project in the New York state towns of Hopkinton and Parishville. The project is moving forward despite five years of seeming inactivity. The 100-MW North Ridge Wind Farm could power up to 24,000 homes. [North Country Now]
¶ National Grid wants to build New York’s largest solar energy farm on Long Island, but residents are not welcoming the plan. The plan calls for a 350-acre farm near the former Shoreham Nuclear Plant. Some residents about cutting down trees to make space for solar panels. [WSHU]

Solar panels. Credit courtesy of Pixabay
¶ Greensmith Energy, founded in Herndon, Virginia, in 2008, has delivered over 70 MW of energy storage over the last two years for things like renewables smoothing, frequency regulation, and microgrids. It announced that at the current pace, it will install over 100 MW this year. [CleanTechnica]
¶ After watching Iowa and other states harness the wind, Nebraska is working to catch up. New incentives are helping to build the largest wind farm in the state, in which 200 turbines will turn over farmland in Holt County by the end of the year. It will be Nebraska’s largest wind farm. [KETV Omaha]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 26, 2016
World:
¶ Sweden is testing its first electric highway system for trucks. Siemens will help the country for next two years to test the eHighway system on a 1.25 miles stretch of highway on the north of Stockholm. The project may see a similar testing phase unveiled soon in California. [The TeCake]

Electric highway in Sweden
¶ The Chief Minister of the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh, addressing a seminar of Chinese companies and businesses, said the state is planning to increase its installed renewable energy capacity by five times in coming three years. The capacity is currently 2567 MW. [The Hitavada]
¶ The World Bank has approved a loan of $90 million to Vietnam. This is the first in a series of three credits that will support climate change and green growth policy actions under the Vietnamese government’s Support Program to Respond to Climate Change. [Thanh Nien Daily]

Flooded street after a heavy rain in the northern province
of Quang Ninh. Photo: Pham Hai Sam / Thanh Nien
¶ Indian state-run National Hydroelectric Power Corporation is planning to set up a 600-MW solar power project at the Koyna power complex in Maharashtra as part of an initiative to expand its solar portfolio. The company is already carrying out the feasibility study for the project. [Moneycontrol.com]
¶ New Brunswick Power customers received a record amount of renewable energy in 2015-16, experienced fewer and shorter outages and took advantage of rebates that will save them millions of dollars’ worth of energy in the years ahead, according to utility financial statements. [Sackville Tribune Post]

Cape Enrage, Bay of Fundy, New Brunswick. Photo by Tango7174. CC BY-SA 4.0 international. Wikimedia Commons.
US:
¶ Democrats approved a draft of the party platform that shows Bernie Sanders’ influence. Among lacking elements, however, were a carbon tax to address climate change and a moratorium on fracking. Bernie Sanders has said climate change is our biggest problem. [Sarasota Herald-Tribune]
¶ Idaho has been slow to adopt solar power. It ranks 43rd on the National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s list of solar production, though members of the Snake River Alliance say that the state has great solar producing potential. Now Canyon County has a Solarize campaign. [Idaho Press-Tribune]

Aerial view of a CPV solar farm in Canyon County, Idaho. Photo by Morgan Solar. CC BY-SA 2.0 generic. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Every year, the EPA releases a proposed figure for the Renewable Volume Obligations, the amount of biofuel that fuel blenders are required to blend into fuel. The EPA proposed 14.8 billion gallons for 2017, rather than the anticipated 15 billion. Some political leaders are upset. [The Dickinson Press]
¶ In Colorado, the El Paso County Assessor’s Office reported in February that values on property around a recently constructed wind farm near Calhan were on the rise. That trend still has not changed, county assessor told the county commissioners on Tuesday. [Colorado Springs Gazette]

One attraction in El Paso County is Pike’s Peak. Photo by Aravis. Released into the public domain. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ A new report addresses the important issue of solar equity and access, the idea that we need to do more so underserved people have better access to solar PV systems and the benefits that come from them. The report focuses on three things utility companies can do. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Public Service Company of New Mexico, the state’s largest utility, is buying a controlling interest in one of three units at the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station in Arizona, which it has leased for 30 years. And the company is asking its customers to pay for the purchase. [Santa Fe New Mexican]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 25, 2016
Opinion:
¶ “Overview – Brexit charts uneasy future for renewables” • The “world’s most complicated divorce” will have a huge impact on the UK’s environment and energy policies and on climate policy in the EU, the world’s largest political bloc, with a combined population of 500 million people. [SeeNews Renewables]

Brexit CC0 1.0 Universal by PublicDomainPictures.net
World:
¶ The Australian Renewable Energy Agency says the final round of bidding for its large scale solar funding shows technology costs are still falling, and will likely continue to fall. ARENA may be in its last grant funding round before funds are stripped by the Coalition government. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Dong Energy is to go ahead with the 448-MW Borkum Riffgrund 2 offshore wind farm in the German North Sea. The company said the project, which is expected to be fully commissioned in the first half of 2019, will consist of 56 MHI Vestas 8-MW turbines with rotor spans of 164 meters. [reNews]

Borkum Riffgrund 1 (Dong Energy)
¶ The World Health Organization estimates that two-thirds of the EU’s 50 most-polluted cities are in Poland, largely in the mining region of Upper Silesia. As other European countries shun coal, Poland is still addicted, getting almost 90% of its electricity from it. [Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide]
¶ The Australian electric utility company AGL will be offering a flat AUS$1 a day for all-you-can-do electric vehicle charging to customers with one of the company’s smart meters, according to recent reports. Media reports say the offer applies any car that plug into a charger. [EV Obsession]

Toyota Prius Plugin charging
US:
¶ Rhode Island is already leading the way on utilizing the nation’s vast offshore wind energy potential, and its General Assembly has just signed on to an extended renewable energy standard that sets an ambitious statewide goal of 38.5% by 2035, based on the state’s wind capacity. [CleanTechnica]

Image source: Facebook
¶ According to Bloomberg, Volkswagen has agreed to pay up to $10 billion to resolve all issues pending before the US District Court in the cheating scandal. The agreement will be presented in court on June 28. Details are not known, but people who bought the cars in question may be paid $1,000 to $7,000. [Gas2]
¶ Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker visited a Belchertown fish hatchery for the groundbreaking of a new pipeline and hydropower turbine that will bring water from the Quabbin Reservoir. The pipeline is intended to add renewable energy and improve trout production. [GazetteNET]
¶ Key lawmakers in the Massachusetts Senate released a version of an energy bill that is more comprehensive than the House has passed. The Senate bill would require more renewable energy and would also include new provisions related to energy efficiency and energy storage. [MassLive.com]

Searsburg Wind Power Facility in Searsburg, Vt.
(AP File Photo/Tim Roske)
¶ The North Carolina Senate this week approved a bill to add siting restrictions for wind farms, including new noise restrictions, requiring a review by the Department of Health and Human Services, as well as giving some oversight to the Department of Military Affairs. [Utility Dive]
¶ Polling has revealed widespread support for New York’s Reforming the Energy Vision initiative, which was already transforming utility stakeholders views of the sector’s future. Strongly positive consumer attitudes toward the plan have major implications for utilities. [CleanTechnica]

Solar installation under construction in New York State. Photo by Lucas Braun. CC BY-SA 3.0 unported. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Georgia Power Co will add 1,200 MW of renewable energy to its generating portfolio during the next five years, enough to power nearly 200,000 homes, under an agreement with the state Public Service Commission. The agreement envisions 150 MW of distributed power. [Atlanta Business Chronicle]
¶ Approximately 80 protesters gathered and locked down the entrance to Greenpeace’s San Francisco headquarters because PG&E announced a closing date for the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant. SFPD officers reported that multiple groups were protestong from opposing positions. [SFist]
Posted in nuclear power, renewable power, solar, wind | 2 Comments »
Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 24, 2016
Opinion:
¶ “We’re all going solar, rooftop panels or not” • Solar power has gone beyond a rooftop revolution. Thanks to rapid cost reductions that even surprised experts, solar is on the verge of transforming Australia’s energy mix, whatever the outcome of the July 2 election. [The Australian Financial Review]

Solar power is set to capture almost all the investment in new generation. Justin McManus
¶ “EDF should delay Hinkley Point decision following Brexit: union” • EDF’s unions have argued for months that the state-owned firm should delay its investment decision on the Hinkley Point. Now, the UK has voted to leave the EU, and UK politics have taken uncertainty to a new level. [The Fiscal Times]
Science and Technology:
¶ BMW announced battery packs from its i3 model can power your home, integrating seamlessly with solar panels to store energy for use at night, to offset peak tariffs and act as a backup supply. Used BMW i3 battery packs could expand the system as they become available, extending their life. [Car Keys]

BMW i3
¶ A solution to help mitigate the impact of wind turbines on radar performance has been successfully implemented at two radar sites in the UK. It will enable the release of 600 MW of renewable energy by allowing otherwise impossible wind turbine developments to go ahead. [Air Traffic Management]
World:
¶ Giving a major push to clean energy, the Delhi’s AAP government on June 6, 2016, came out with an ambitious policy, announcing incentives and tax breaks to promote solar power and making it mandatory for government and public institutions to install rooftop solar panels. [Firstpost]

Delhi
¶ The German state of Schleswig-Holstein announced plans to completely electrify its railway network, using hydrogen fuel cells to power it. The state expects to have a hydrail system in place by 2025, making the railway system more environmentally friendly and efficient. [Hydrogen Fuel News]
¶ The Indian Ministry of New and Renewable Energy’s draft national policy for minigrids and microgrids aims to create up to 500 MW of capacity over the next five years, supporting rural electrification. This follows past challenges in getting the sector off the ground. [Greentech Media]

Indian microgrid. UK Department for International Development photo.
¶ The French branch of Renewable Energy Systems Ltd inaugurated a 54-MW wind power plant in the Cote-d’Or department, in eastern France. The development has 27 turbines of 2 MW each. The total investment was less than €85 million ($96.7 million). [SeeNews Renewables]
¶ Ulstein delivered a new offshore wind service vessel to BS Offshore, chartered to Siemens Wind Power Service to be deployed at the 600-MW Gemini offshore wind farm. It is designed to offer increased accessibility with less time lost waiting for suitable weather conditions. [reNews]

The vessel during sea trials (Ivan Schrooyen)
¶ Resistance from incumbents in the economy may be fierce, but according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance, the future is clear: In Australia, wind and solar will replace coal and gas, and a lot quicker than many people think, with one third of all capacity “behind the meter.” [Echonetdaily]
¶ Berlin’s parliament voted to pull its money out of coal, gas and oil companies. The new investment policy, part of the German capital’s goal of completely weaning off carbon by 2050, will make the city’s pension fund, of $852.8 million, divest itself of fossil fuel companies. [Huffington Post]
¶ Shikoku Electric Power Co started loading nuclear fuel Friday into a reactor at its Ikata power plant, paving the way for a scheduled restart next month. On Friday, a group of local residents shouted, “No to restart” near the power plant, saying the reactors should be decommissioned. [Japan Today]
US:
¶ The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission removed an exemption for wind generators from the requirement to provide reactive power as a condition of interconnection. The costs of building wind facilities that could provide reactive power had been high but have come down. [SeeNews Renewables]

Wind farm in USA. Author: Brian Jeffery Beggerly.
License: Creative Commons. Attribution-2.0 Generic
¶ The US is expected to deploy 77.3 GW of distributed renewables, especially solar PVs, distributed wind power and biogas, between 2016 and 2025, according to a new report from Navigant Research. The report takes changes in net metering and tax incentives into account. [North American Windpower]
¶ Maui Electric’s solar grid has reached its limit, but the electric company says those customers who want solar still have options. They can opt for the Self Supply program by installing PV systems, typically with batteries, providing power to the home but not exporting electricity to the grid. [KHON2]
Posted in nuclear power, renewable power, solar, wind | 2 Comments »
Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 23, 2016
Opinion:
¶ “Can Renewables Replace Nuclear Power?” • Utility PG&E’s announcement that it would shutter California’s last nuclear plant and replace the power with energy efficiency and renewable energy was the result of a confluence of progressive state policies making it more feasible. [Scientific American]

Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Station, on the coast of California. Credit: Doc Searls/Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0
Science and Technology:
¶ Solar Impulse 2 has landed in Spain, completing the Atlantic leg of its historic bid to circumnavigate the globe. The landing in Seville marked the end of the 15th stage of Solar Impulse’s route. Mission managers will now plot a route to Abu Dhabi where the venture began in March, 2015. [BBC]
World:
¶ Brazil’s Ministry of Mines and Energy approved six renewable energy plants, with a combined capacity of 165 MW, to join the national Incentive Regime for Infrastructure Development. REIDI grants tax incentives to companies investing in infrastructure projects. [SeeNews Renewables]

Brazilian wind farm. Author: Carla Wosniak.
License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic
¶ In its Global Market Outlook for Solar Power 2016-2020, SolarPower Europe lauded the record 50.6 GW of new solar capacity which was added worldwide in 2015, while predicting that it would smash through that record, passing the 60 GW mark in 2016. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Zambia is having two solar power projects built that will provide the cheapest electricity in Africa. First Solar Inc and Neoen will partner to build a 45-MW plant that will sell electricity for just over 6¢/kWh, and Enel will build a 28-MW plant selling it for just under 8¢/kWh. [Africa Middle East]

Zambia is getting solar power.
¶ Siemens projects that from 2025 its offshore wind farms will deliver electricity at a levelized cost of energy below €0.08/kWh. The company said at that it is confident its current goal of generating offshore wind power below €0.10/kWh by 2020 will be reached. [reNews]
¶ Offshore wind turbine manufacturer Adwen and turbine rotor blade supplier LM Wind Power announced this week that manufacture of the first of the 88.4 metre-long blades has now been completed at a factory in Denmark. It was designed for a new 8-MW turbine. [Business Green]

New 88-meter turbine blade
¶ Ghana is giving a big boost to renewable power under a ”Capital Subsidy Scheme” for installing solar panels on rooftop of homes across the country. The country expects to add 20,000 rooftop solar systems under the scheme, according to the its Energy Commission. [domain-B]
US:
¶ The California High-Speed Rail Authority and the California Energy Commission have agreed to a Memorandum of Understanding that focuses attention on how the high-speed rail program can help California meets its climate goals and become a greener state. [RailwayAge Magazine]

California high-speed rail
¶ Vermont Democratic gubernatorial candidate Sue Minter laid out an energy plan focused on reducing emissions, supporting clean energy job growth, and cutting energy costs. Minter also called on all candidates to oppose moratoriums and bans on clean energy technologies. [Vermont Biz]
¶ A judge ruled that federal regulators lack the authority to set rules for hydraulic fracturing, dealing a setback to the Obama administration. The judge said the Bureau of Land Management can’t set the rules because Congress has not authorized it to do so. [PennEnergy]

Drilling for gas. AP image.
¶ Solar shade canopies installed at two North County San Diego schools have saved San Dieguito Union High School District more than $4.4 million in energy in five years. This exceeded the original projections. The developer had guaranteed a $10.5 million savings over 15 years. [PennEnergy]
¶ The US government has kicked off an offshore wind competitive lease sale in Hawaii. Secretary of the interior Sally Jewell issued a call for information and nominations on Wednesday to gauge developer interest in two areas offshore Oahu spanning about 485,000 acres. [reNews]

Windfloat system in action off Portugal (Principle Power image)
¶ The Governor of Montana announced a new blueprint for the state’s energy future. The American Wind Energy Association praised the plan, pointing out that the blueprint recognizes the value of a stronger electricity grid and the expansion of wind power in the state. [North American Windpower]
¶ The Rhode Island legislature has passed a bill to advance the state’s renewable energy target from 14.5% by 2019 to 40% by 2035. The bill would ensure that Rhode Island homeowners and businesses have greater access to renewable energy, including wind power. [North American Windpower]
Posted in nuclear power, renewable power, solar, wind | 1 Comment »
Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 22, 2016
Opinion:
¶ “The U.S. Nuclear Boom Has Turned Into a Dud” • Five years ago, we were supposed to be entering a nuclear renaissance. New nuclear plants were being planned and there were loan guarantee programs in place. Today, the nuclear industry in the US is dying. [Motley Fool]

Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant. NRC photo. Public domain.
World:
¶ Warmer winters played an important role in the decline in EU greenhouse gas emissions. A report says CO2 emissions across the bloc dropped by almost 25% from 1990 to 2014. Renewable energy, a switch from coal to natural gas, and recession also contributed to the fall. [BBC]
¶ The University of Cambridge has blacklisted all investment in coal and tar sands companies following mounting pressure to divest from fossil fuels. The University currently has no coal or tar sands investments, and has “no expectation of having any such exposure.” [CleanTechnica]

Image Credit: University of Cambridge
¶ Dutch technology company Royal Philips has committed to a new sustainability program that it hopes will render its operations carbon neutral by 2020. The company announced a new 5-year sustainability program, “Healthy people, sustainable planet.” [CleanTechnica]
¶ Leading investment bank Morgan Stanley believes the Australian energy market is seriously underestimating the grow of solar and battery storage, and says the technology will be installed at rates four times quicker than the incumbent energy industry expects. [RenewEconomy]
¶ A new £20-million biogas plant is being built in Ireland to generate 3 MW of renewable energy from up to 40,000 tons of chicken litter each year. One important goal of the project is to avoid the unhealthy spreading of untreated litter on land. [Power Technology]
¶ Brazil’s wind power hit an average of 2,935 MW in the first two weeks of June, marking a 30.6% year-on-year increase, according to preliminary figures. Wind power’s share of the country’s electricity generation grew to 4.9% from 3.8% a year ago. [SeeNews Renewables]

Wind farm in Brazil. Author: Otávio Nogueira.
License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic.
¶ A wind farm in the Scottish borders will power Nestlé’s operations in the UK and Ireland. The deal will see a brand new nine-turbine wind farm open in Dumfries and Galloway in the first half of 2017. It will produce enough power annually for 30,000 homes. [Your Renewable News]
¶ The NorthConnect project cleared its first hurdle as Ofgem, the UK energy regulator, granted a licence to the developers, paving the way for the project to begin navigating a set of complex regulatory rules governing electricity transmission in Europe. [Telegraph.co.uk]

Credit Alamy / Alamy
¶ The utility that ran the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant admitted its delayed disclosure of the meltdowns at three reactors was tantamount to a cover-up and apologized. TEPCO’s president in 2011 instructed officials to avoid using the word “meltdown.” [Japan Today]
¶ Solar Citizens says it has calculated the savings solar owners have made on their electricity bills since 2007-2008. It says solar households have saved $4.4 billion on their power bills since that time and almost a billion dollars every year for the past three years. [Energy Matters]
US:
¶ The nuclear reactors at Diablo Canyon, the last two in California, will close in 2024 and 2025 when their licenses expire, according to a proposal by PG&E, environmental groups, and unions. They are not economically viable, as costs for solar and wind power decline. [Bloomberg]
¶ Exelon, known mostly as the largest nuclear generator in the US, is to become a wind energy developer as well. It notified the Ohio Power Siting Board of its intent to install up to 87 turbines to generate as much as 200 MW in northern Ohio’s Seneca County. [Platts]

Wind farm in Ohio. Photo by Nyttend, released
into the public domain. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ The Missouri Chamber of Commerce backs wind energy is endorsing the Grain Belt Express Clean Line, which would transmit wind-generated electricity from Dodge City, Kansas, across northern Missouri and Illinois, to a substation in Sullivan, Indiana. [CBS Local]
¶ As part of an effort to transform how it delivers energy, DTE Energy Co recently said it will retire eight coal-fired generators at three coal plants in Michigan in the next seven years. It will also build one of the largest solar arrays east of the Mississippi River. [Daily Energy Insider]
Posted in nuclear power, renewable power, solar, wind | 1 Comment »
Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 21, 2016
Science and Technology:
¶ An electric plane project is in the works at NASA, and the new aircraft is called the X-57. It’s an initiative to demonstrate that electric-powered aviation can be clean, quiet, and quick. With 14 small engines means the X-57 will need less energy to cruise at a speed of 175 mph. [Fox News]

Artist’s concept of the X-57. (NASA
Langley / Advanced Concepts Lab, AMA, Inc.)
¶ Planet OS, a provider of online geospatial environmental data, announced a data intelligence system to help wind farm operators and renewable energy service providers boost power output by up to 30%. RWE has joined forces with Planet OS as the launch partner. [GISuser.com]
¶ A study says temperatures are rising faster than the development of crop varieties that can cope with them. Researchers found that it can take 10-30 years before farmers can grow a new breed of maize, by which time the new crops face conditions different from what was intended. [BBC]

Maize in a drought in Texas. Photo by Billy Hathorn.
CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.
World:
¶ ABB has commissioned an integrated solar-diesel microgrid installation at a 96,000 square meter facility in Johannesburg, South Africa. ABB’s solution is designed to maximize the use of renewable energy while providing an uninterrupted power supply during outages. [Renewable Energy Focus]
¶ Throughout the second half of 2015, and first six months of 2016, renewables have weathered the global price slump for oil handily. This is turning out to be the year when cheap renewable energy sources are beginning to dominate the global energy markets. [Global Risk Insights]

Kobenhavn Energy photo.
¶ Greenpeace NZ put together its renewable energy and legal experts to create a solar hot desk service to assist people stung by New Zealand’s first-ever charge for using solar. Lines company Unison had said it would increase fees for any households generating renewable power. [Scoop.co.nz]
¶ China is on track to generate more than a quarter of its electricity from wind power by 2030, and the figure could rise to nearly a third with power sector reforms, a new study found. More new generating capacity will come online in China than currently exists in the entire US. [The Guardian]

Beijing wants to increase the country’s wind capacity.
Photograph: Carlos Barria/Reuters
US:
¶ The advocacy group Public Citizen released a report showing how top executives for three giant coal companies got large compensation boosts even as they laid off workers. Peabody Energy, Arch Coal, and Alpha Natural Resources are all operating under bankruptcy protection. [CleanTechnica]
¶ A proposal by the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority to build an 8.8-MW power plant in an industrial complex near one of its stations might have attracted little attention. Members of the climate-change campaign 350 Philadelphia, however, have sounded an alert. [Philly.com]

GE Jenbacher engines like those to be installed. GE Power photo.
¶ Recent trends demonstrate a rapid growth in corporations directly buying renewable energy from wind, solar and other renewable energy generators. Renewable energy capacity under corporate power purchase agreements doubled each year from 2012 to 2015. [Lexology]
¶ North Dakota regulators approved NextEra Energy Resources’ 150-MW Brady wind project. They also granted a certificate for a 19-mile transmission line and associated facilities to connect the project to the grid. NextEra hopes to complete the wind farm by the end of 2016. [reNews]

Summerhaven wind farm in Ontario NextEra image
¶ In a recent study published in the journal Nature Climate Change, researchers at MIT found that it currently makes economic sense to combine large-scale energy storage systems with renewable energy projects, such as wind and solar farms, in some locations. [The National Law Review]
¶ Entergy is pitching a new natural gas-fired plant as an affordable way for New Orleans to meet future electricity demand. Opponents argue the plant will pollute and contribute to subsidence the area, and it will allow Entergy to continue to dodge investment in renewable energy. [NOLA.com]

Entergy linemen at work. (Photo by Susan Poag,
NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune archive)
¶ Entergy Nuclear got approval from state regulators to build another storage facility to hold the balance of its spent nuclear fuel that is currently in Vermont Yankee’s spent-fuel pool. The decision allows Entergy to create space for 22 dry casks to hold radioactive fuel. [Barre Montpelier Times Argus]
Posted in nuclear power, renewable power, solar, wind | 2 Comments »
Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 20, 2016
Science and Technology:
¶ The Linthal hydropower plant is the world’s biggest pumped-storage facility. It works as a battery, using water to store electricity as potential energy. The plant’s operating mechanisms are mostly underground, reducing environmental and wildlife impact. [Industry Leaders Magazine]

The Linthal plant is located above a narrow Swiss valley.
Image credit: GE Reports / Tomas Kellner
¶ University of Iowa researchers are working with a California-based startup company to make clean energy from sunlight and any source of water. They have created a small solar-powered device that can be placed in any type of water, even including seawater or wastewater. [Chemie.de]
¶ The sun-powered Solar Impulse 2 aircraft set off from New York’s JFK airport, embarking on the transatlantic leg of its flight around the world to promote renewable energy. The flight is expected to take about 90 hours before landing at Spain’s Seville airport. [Bangkok Post]

Solar Impulse SI2. November 14, 2014. Photo by Milko Vuille.
CC BY-SA 4.0 international. Wikimedia Commons.
World:
¶ A recent report from Navigant Research examines the global market for energy storage systems for renewable energy integration (ESRI) through 2025. According to this report, global new installed ESRI power capacity is expected to total 45.1 GW from 2015 to 2025. [solarserver.com]
¶ The Philippines has “nothing to lose but all to gain” in a shift investors away from coal to renewable energy sources, particularly solar, wind and geothermal energy, a Climate Change Commission official said. Scaling up RE is the best and only way to meet climate goals. [Inquirer.net]

Philippine wind turbines. AFP file photo.
¶ Herb supplier Langmeads, based near Selsey, West Sussex, is building its first community’s owned solar site. In total, Langmeads will now produce enough energy to power 12,500 homes, displacing 17,000 tonnes of CO2 a year from a total of 40 MW of solar panels. [Fruitnet]
¶ Estonia’s wind farm output reached a peak of 207.79 MW at one point on Saturday, which was nearly 26.3% of total power generation in the country at the time. Estonia is one of eight member states that have surpassed their renewable energy target for 2020. [SeeNews Renewables]

Pakri wind farm, Estonia. Author: Kain Kalju.
License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic
¶ Cleantech Global Renewables Inc is set to invest heavily on solar power projects to complement its hydroelectric power pipeline. The company’s CEO said they want to build up solar capacity to 500 MW over the next five years, at a cost of $750 million to $1 billion. [Inquirer.net]
¶ Solar thermal technology is being used to power the air-conditioning system of an entire shopping center in Australia. The system’s trough collectors capture solar heat and stores it in oil. The oil’s heat powers an indirect evaporative cooler to cool the center in summer. [Gizmag]

Solar thermal collection troughs. (Credit: CSIRO)
¶ Japan’s Nuclear Regulation Authority approved 20-year extensions for two reactors at the Takahama nuclear power plant in Fukui Prefecture, both of which had been operating for more than 40 years. It is first time that the NRA approved such an extension. [Asahi Shimbun]
US:
¶ Some state lawmakers will spend this summer working to earn enough votes to pass the biggest overhaul of Michigan’s energy policy in eight years, with just 25 scheduled session days left before the end of the legislative term at the summer break. [Crain’s Detroit Business]

View from Point Iroquois Light Station. Photo by ValerieWood.
CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Clean Energy Collective is executing the next phase of its Massachusetts development plan by adding 21 MW of solar projects to its portfolio. The new community solar capacity, delivered across 14 projects, will serve customers in areas of Uxbridge and southeast Massachusetts. [Worcester Telegram]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 19, 2016
Science and Technology:
¶ This past May was the warmest May month in a 137-year period, breaking global temperature records, according to a report published Thursday by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Right now, 2016 is on pace to be the hottest year on record. [CNN]

The planet could see 20 more hurricanes and tropical
storms each year by the end of the century.
World:
¶ India’s Ministry of New and Renewable Energy has come out with its most ambitious capacity addition target yet, for 16,600 MW of renewables added this fiscal year. During the current fiscal year, solar capacity is expected to reach its largest-ever capacity addition target of 12,000 MW. [CleanTechnica]
¶ India’s renewable energy targets will see massive amounts of capacity added quickly to the grid. The Indian government is looking at ways to minimize its impact on the existing grid. A possible energy storage policy would most likely be linked with the solar or wind energy policy. [CleanTechnica]

Aliyar Reservoir Dam. Solar and wind plants are developed faster. Photo by Siva301in. CC BY-SA 3.0 unported. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ In the middle of southern Israel’s desert, engineers are hard at work building the world’s tallest solar tower, reflecting the country’s high hopes for renewable energy. Once completed in late 2017, the Ashalim Tower will rise to 240 metres and will resemble a giant lighthouse. [The Express Tribune]
¶ Researchers from the University of Sussex found that the ancient West African method of adding charcoal and kitchen waste to highly weathered, nutrient poor tropical soils can transform the land into enduringly fertile, carbon-rich black soils which they call “African Dark Earths.” [The Marshalltown]

Soil samples in Africa
¶ Plans to start cutting greenhouse gases by 80% from 1990 levels by the year 2050 will go before Manx legislature. A detailed strategy on reducing emissions will start a series of five-year action plans. Included on the list is encouraging people to reduce use of cars. [Isle of Man Today]
US:
¶ President Obama says climate change is the biggest threat to US national parks. He says meadows are already drying out at Yosemite National Park in California, where he spoke Saturday after spending the night in the park with his wife, Michelle, and daughters Malia and Sasha. [Capital Public Radio News]

President Barack Obama speaks in front of the Yosemite Falls. Jacquelyn Martin / AP Photo
¶ Residents of Davis, California, and rural Yolo County may soon get access to renewable energy at a cheaper price than PG&E. Supervisors started the ball rolling on a community choice energy program. The project could reduce the county’s greenhouse gas production by 45%. [Daily Democrat]
¶ The largest solar power rooftop in Central Texas was unveiled at the Strictly Pediatrics Surgery Center in Austin. Built by Freedom Solar Power, its nearly 2,500 solar panels should meet half of the building’s energy needs. It is expected to create more than 1.2 million kWh of electricity annually. [KXAN.com]

Aerial view of the solar rooftop at Strictly Pediatrics Surgical Center.
¶ While the oil boom in North Dakota may be over, the recent wind boom could be here to stay. In the past decade, there have been more than 400 wind turbines placed on the western side of the state with an additional 550 proposed to be constructed by 2018, with more to come. [The Dickinson Press]
¶ State legislation allowing South Carolina Electric & Gas Co to charge customers for two new reactors at its nuclear power plant years before they are completed has been compared to making payments on a new car before it leaves the assembly line, without knowing the final price. [Charleston Post Courier]
Posted in nuclear power, renewable power, solar, wind | 1 Comment »
Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 18, 2016
Science and Technology:
¶ The Dead Sea, the salty lake located at the lowest point on Earth, is gradually shrinking under the heat of the Middle Eastern sun. It surface level is dropping by more than a meter (3.4 feet) per year. For those who live on its shores it’s an ongoing slow-motion crisis. [BBC]

The ruins of the Naharayim hydro-electric power plant.
World:
¶ According to Solar Intelligence analyst Finlay Colville, the UK installed 1.553 GW of new solar PV capacity during the first quarter of 2016. The UK’s first quarter was the second highest quarter ever for the UK solar PV industry, as the first quarter of last year retains its record. [CleanTechnica]
¶ El Salvador will conduct an auction to deploy 170 MW of renewable electricity. This follows an award of 100 MW of PV projects in its previous auction, even though no project is operational yet. The solicitation is structured for a 100 MW block using solar PV and 70 MW using wind. [PlanetSave.com]

El Salvador. Image via Shutterstock
¶ German industrial megalith Siemens and Spanish wind energy giant Gamesa have announced they will merge their wind energy businesses. They have signed binding agreements to merge Siemens’ wind business with Gamesa, to create a leading global wind power player [CleanTechnica]
¶ The president of SaskWind says a report from Canada’s parliamentary budget office shows carbon capture technology will double the price of power from Boundary Dam Unit 3. The wholesale cost of power is about $60 per megawatt hour. Removing CO2 has about the same price. [CBC.ca]

Carbon capture and storage project at Boundary Dam is the first such commercial operation. (Michael Bell / Canadian Press)
¶ Construction has started on Scotland’s first community hydro scheme. When complete, the Donside Hydro scheme will produce electricity to be sold to the national grid, generating clean, renewable electricity and a sustainable income for the local community to invest in local priorities. [Third Force News]
¶ EDF EN Canada Inc has dedicated the 74-MW Mont Rothery Wind Project, which generates enough electricity for about 15,000 Quebec homes. The project consists of 37 wind turbines supplied by Senvion. Construction began in 2014 and was completed in December. [Windpower Engineering]

The 74-MW Mont Rothery Wind Farm. (Credit: Business Wire)
¶ The Japanese government has advised Nigeria to adopt renewable energy for the provision of electricity in the country. The leader of a Japanese delegation gave the advice in relation to the continuous militant activities which is disrupting gas supply for the generation of electricity. [TODAY.ng]
US:
¶ Renewable power production in the US is expected to overtake coal-fired generation by 2029, according to the Reference case of the US Energy Information Administration. This projection is based on the assumption that the EPA’s Clean Power Plan (CPP) is implemented. [SeeNews Renewables]
NB The EIA is notorious for overstating the time it takes for renewable energy to grow.

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Annual Energy Outlook 2016. Please click on the image to enlarge it.
¶ The EPA proposed adding new hydropower and geothermal generation to the criteria of projects eligible to receive emissions reductions credits under a voluntary program that would reward states that choose to make early investments in preparation for the Clean Power Plan. [Bloomberg BNA]
¶ Iowa is a leader in wind energy due to bipartisan support. Amid the variability in crop prices, the turbines mean a steady annual income for the farmers who have long-term leases for turbines on their land. Such lease payments can net $5,000 to $10,000 a year per tower. [chinadialogue]

Wind turbines near Nevada, Iowa. (Image by Carl Wycoff)
¶ Ameresco Inc has completed an 18.6-MW solar project at the US Army Garrison Fort Detrick Army installation in Frederick, Maryland. The project consists of 59,994 solar panels on 67 acres, and is designed to serve about 12% of Fort Detrick’s annual electric load requirements. [Solar Industry]
¶ Exelon Corp’s recent threat to close the Nine Mile 1 and Ginna nuclear reactors if it doesn’t get a subsidy from utility ratepayers by September has drawn barbed complaints from business, municipal and green energy advocates, many of whom would rather the money go to wind or solar power. [Syracuse.com]

Exelon Corp is looking for state incentives. (Michael Greenlar)
¶ Florida Power & Light Co will install several different types of battery systems in southern Florida as part of a pilot project. The systems will be at locations in the counties of Miami-Dade and Monroe to research a range of potential future benefits of energy storage. [North American Windpower]
Posted in nuclear power, renewable power, solar, wind | 2 Comments »
Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 17, 2016
World:
¶ Stockholm, the capital of Sweden, has announced it will divest from investments in coal, oil, and gas, following a one-and-a-half year citizen-led campaign. The city declared that it would withdraw investments in coal, oil, and gas companies, amounting to about $3.5 million. [CleanTechnica]

Stockholm
¶ The Indian Ministry of New and Renewable Energy has floated a draft policy for large-scale development of geothermal power projects in the country. The policy calls for installed geothermal power capacity of 1 GW by 2022, which will then be increased to 10 GW by 2030. [Planetsave]
¶ The energy and climate change select committee has called on the UK government to split up National Grid to radically change the way power transmission and distribution is operated. Their inquiry report recommends transferring system operation from National Grid to a more distributed system. [reNews]

T pylon (National Grid)
¶ Lebanon plans to bulk up on renewable-energy assets beyond just rooftop solar in a move that could wean reliance on fossil fuels and avoid blackouts, according to a government agency. The country is currently dependent on imported fossil fuels for its power. [Bloomberg]
¶ Volkswagen plans to launch 30 all-electric models to reposition itself as a leader in “green” transport. VW’s chief executive said huge investments would be needed as the firm moves beyond the “dieselgate” scandal. He hopes that all-electric cars would account for about 20-25% of sales by 2025. [BBC]

VW e-Golf. Photo by Norsk Elbilforening (Norwegian Electric Vehicle Association). CC BY-SA 2.0 generic. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government is pushing coal power, both at home and through exporting technology abroad. At the same time, some of Japan’s powerful trading houses are cutting or freezing coal investments over concerns about the environmental fallout. [Financial Express]
¶ Alberta and Saskatchewan are renewable energy laggards, while Ontario and Quebec are leaders, according to a new report from Clean Energy Canada. While $78 million was spent in Alberta and $60 million in Saskatchewan, investment in Ontario was $5.3 billion. [CBC.ca]

Magrath Wind Power Project in southern Alberta. Photo by Chuck Szmurlo. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ The outlook for Australia’s four remaining big brown coal generators looks bleak following the Victorian Labor government’s decision to set a 40% renewable energy target for 2025. The inherent inflexibility of the ageing brown coal power stations marginalizes their capacity. [RenewEconomy]
¶ Hive Energy is set to become the first British company to net a major PV project contract in Cuba. Hive Energy will develop a 50-MW installation. It will stand as the first utility-scale site to be developed in the country and is expected to generate up to 93 GWh of electricity annually. [PV-Tech]

The 50-MW project is expected to generate up to 93 GWh of electricity annually. Image: Hive Energy
¶ The Japanese nuclear industry has had another setback, as it tries to recover after the Fukushima Disaster. A Japanese court upheld an order to keep two reactors at the Takahama nuclear plant closed, leaving efforts to get the struggling industry up and running in limbo. [Asahi Shimbun]
US:
¶ Canadian renewable energy company Alterra Power Corp announced that it has acquired the Flat Top scheme, a 200-MW wind project under development in Texas. Alterra also said that it had placed a $1.6-million security deposit with the local transmission provider. [SeeNews Renewables]

An existing wind park in Texas. Author: Kool Cats Photography over 2 Million Views. License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic
¶ The American Wind Energy Association celebrated the 10th annual Global Wind Day by highlighting the 66% drop in the costs of wind-generated electricity that has happened over the past six years. The AWEA also pointed to wind industry’s employment figures for the country. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The Omaha Public Power District voted Thursday to shutter the Fort Calhoun Nuclear Station, which is the nation’s smallest nuclear power plant. The board decided it was in the best financial interest of the utility and its customers to close the plant by the end of this year. [York News-Times]

Fort Calhoun nuclear reactor during Missouri River flood. Photo by US Army Corps of Engineers. Public Domain. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ The Nikola Motor Company has revealed a plug-in gas/electric semi-truck. Following the opening of pre-orders for the Nikola One semi-truck , they apparently received more than 7,000 pre-orders. This means about $10.5 million in reservation funds for around $2.3 billion in sales. [EVObsession]
¶ The Obama Administration laid out an extensive list of federal, utility and private actions to scale up microgrids, energy storage and renewable energy throughout the US. The commitments made at the event represent about $1 billion in energy storage investments alone. [Microgrid Knowledge]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 16, 2016
World:
¶ The global wind power industry now employs 1.1 million people, representing growth of 5%, according to International Renewable Energy Agency data. The increase in jobs is mainly due to strong installation rates in China, the US, and Germany, and it is being driven by declining costs. [reNews]

Onshore wind farm turbines pic credit MorgueFile.
¶ Australia is expected to be producing 25,000 GWh of annual power from rooftop PV systems by 2035-36, as compared to 5,600 GWh today, the Australian Energy Market Operator said. This would be equivalent to 11% of current electricity consumption from the grid. [SeeNews Renewables]
¶ An energy park in Scotland will be used for the construction of a £2.8 billion wind farm. Siemens will use Nigg Energy Park’s facilities in Moray Firth to build the Beatrice Offshore Wind Farm. The engineering giant has signed a contract to use the site from spring 2018. [Energy Live News]

Artist’s impression of the Beatrice Offshore Wind Farm. Image: SSE
¶ The Indian Ministry of Power says slowing demand growth means India doesn’t need any power plants over the next three years beyond those already under construction, or renewable projects which the government is committed to. It is a sign that the coal industry is weakening. [RenewEconomy]
¶ Siemens said it will deliver the steam plants and generators for the Noor II and Noor III concentrating solar power plants in Morocco at the end of 2016. Noor II and III are parts of a huge solar thermal power complex, which is to become the world’s largest of its type. [SeeNews Renewables]

Below the mirrors at the Noor I CSP park in Morocco.
Source: http://www.kfw.de. All Rights Reserved.
¶ A senior official of the German government stated that all new cars registered in Germany will need to be emissions-free by the year 2030. If the Germans hope to cut 80%-95% of their carbon dioxide output by 2050, they need to radically reduce pollution from transportation. [Carscoops]
US:
¶ Maryland could soon join 10 other US states with community solar programs, as the state’s Public Service Commission has just approved its final regulations for establishing a three-year pilot community solar program, which are expected to be published in the coming weeks. [CleanTechnica]

SunGen Sharon Solar Farm in Sharon, Vermont. Photo by SayCheeeeeese. CC0 public domain. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ LG Chem delivered and installed batteries for a 7 MW/3 MWh system in Minster, Ohio, which is combined with a 4.2 MW solar PV array. The system benefits will be shaving of peak demand, improving power quality, and deferring $350,000 in transmission and distribution costs. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Embracing the sun or wind isn’t necessarily a scalable option for islands such as Hawaii that have limited soil-bound real estate. The state is also still heavily dependent on oil, which was responsible for about 68% of its electricity as recently as 2014. Ocean energy is an option. [GreenBiz]

WindFloat prototype in Portuguese waters. Courtesy of WindFloat.
¶ The New York Power Authority has completed the Marcy South Series Compensation Project, a $120 million transmission upgrade that will move up to 440 MW of additional capacity from upstate, where there are abundant wind and hydro resources, to downstate cities. [Greentech Media]
¶ Wyoming’s energy-based economy is faltering with increased fossil fuel regulations and dropping prices, but the University of Wyoming is taking steps to expand its renewable options. The university’s solar array, which was old and had fallen into disrepair, has been replaced. [Wyoming Business Report]
Posted in nuclear power, renewable power, solar, wind | 1 Comment »
Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 15, 2016
Science and Technology:
¶ A new study by Harvard University shows why criticisms of high costs to lower carbon emissions are nothing more than 100% baloney. It not only gives the lie to such absurd notions, it demonstrates in stark terms just how much economic value lowering emissions can create. [CleanTechnica]

Smokestacks.
World:
¶ As grids get smarter and consumers get savvier about energy consumption, letting customers have more control over their own energy needs is one way to get to a more efficient, less costly, and lower carbon system. The EDF Group is transforming its residential PV solutions accordingly. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Scotrenewables Tidal Power has launched its SR2000 turbine at the marine engineering company Harland and Wolff Heavy Industries in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The 2-MW machine is the company’s first commercial-scale turbine and also the largest in the world. [Power Technology]

SR2000 tidal turbine. Photo courtesy of Scotrenewables Tidal Power.
¶ The Delhi Metro Rail Corporation reportedly has signed an agreement to purchase electricity generated from a planned 750-MW solar power park in Madhya Pradesh. Power generated from the Rewa-based solar park will be transmitted to Delhi, around 800 km away. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Zambia set a new benchmark for low-cost solar power in Africa with a competitive auction under the ‘Scaling Solar’ program. The winners of the auction are France’s Neoen SAS and American PV manufacturer First Solar, who jointly bid at just 6.02¢/kWh, and Enel SA, which bid 7.84¢/kWh. [PV-Tech]

Northern Cape scenergy. Source: Flickr – Zoe Shuttleworth
¶ Saudi Arabia’s first wind turbine will be operational later this year. It will be installed by GE and Saudi Aramco at Turaif bulk plant and will replace diesel as the primary source of power generation for the site. It has been specially designed to cope with the harsh climate. [Energy Live News]
¶ The average cost of electricity from renewable sources is set to decline more, according to a report by the International Renewable Energy Agency. The cost from PVs could fall as much as 59% by 2025. Offshore wind may see cost reductions of 35%, followed by onshore wind at 26%. [Bloomberg]

Source: International Renewable Energy Agency.
Please click on image to enlarge.
¶ Struggling French nuclear giant Areva said Wednesday it will create a new nuclear fuel subsidiary as it withdraws from the business of building reactors. Areva, 87% owned by the French state, is restructuring after being hit by a slump in demand for nuclear power. [The News International]
¶ Vienna will soon be home to the world’s tallest wooden building, the so-called HoHo project. It will be 276 feet tall and cost about $65 million to construct. The project developer told The Guardian that her firm chose wood because of its environmental benefits. [CleanTechnica]

HoHo wooden high-rise. Credit: Rüdiger Lainer and Partner
US:
¶ Con Edison and SunPower Corp will partner on a pilot program to offer solar power systems with battery storage to more than 300 New York homeowners. In aggregate, they can be a cost-effective and innovative “virtual power plant” to improve grid resiliency, reliability, and sustainability. [PennEnergy]
¶ The Boardman Hill Solar Farm is a great example of neighbors coming together to get affordable power through community-scale solar. The 150-kW project in West Rutland, Vermont arose when two people invited the town to a meeting to talk about a community project. [GreenBiz]

Aerial view of Boardman Hill Solar Farm in Rutland, Vermont.
¶ Senator Chuck Grassley accused those who oppose wind energy tax credits of employing a double standard, pointing to “market-distorting” benefits to other electricity sources such as nuclear power. The Iowa Republican has championed the production tax credit for wind power since 1992. [Morning Consult]
¶ Exelon Generation told the New York State Public Service Commission the company needs to know by September whether the regulator will approve a compensation plan for nuclear generators, otherwise Exelon will shut the Nine Mile Point-1 and Ginna reactors, according to a letter. [Platts]
Posted in nuclear power, renewable power, solar, wind | 2 Comments »
Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 14, 2016
Science and Technology:
¶ A big spike in atmospheric CO2 levels means the greenhouse gas is about to pass a symbolic threshold. This year will very likely mark the first time the concentration of CO2, as measured atop Hawaii’s famous Mauna Loa volcano, has been above 400 parts per million for the entire year. [BBC]

Night falls at the Mauna Loa Observatory. Photo by LCDR Eric Johnson, NOAA Corps. Public Domain. Wikimedia Commons.
World:
¶ India’s Ministry of New & Renewable Energy announced that it has received a major funding boost for its ambitious rooftop solar power program. The program is expected to receive low-cost debt funding worth $2.5 billion from several international development banks. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Siemens and Van Oord have installed 75 of the 150 4-MW turbines at the 600-MW Gemini wind farm in the Dutch North Sea. The units are being transported from Esbjerg, in Denmark, to the project. It should be completed in 2017; it delivered first power in February. [reNews]

Turbines being installed at Gemini (Van Oord image)
¶ According to a recently issued document by the Ministry of New & Renewable Energy, as many as 52 departments and ministries of the central government have pledged to add almost 6 GW of rooftops solar power capacity on land and rooftop area available with them. [PlanetSave.com]
¶ The Indian Energy Ministry cancelled plans for four coal-fired power plants to reduce carbon emission and focus on renewable energy. The four plants have a total capacity of 16 GW and were initially planned to be built in Karnataka, Maharashtra, Odisha, and Chhattisgarh. [Power Technology]

India cancels plan to build four coal-fired power plants.
Photo courtesy of meepoohfoto / Freedigitalphotos.
¶ Last week, the much-awaited monsoon rains arrived in India, to the relief of authorities and citizens. But this isn’t going to fix India’s long-term water issues. A Greenpeace report highlights how India’s coal industry is depleting water resources, though Renewables can mitigate this. [Quartz]
US:
¶ Last year 35% of all the electricity provided by San Diego Gas & Electric came from renewable sources, a record for the company and for California investor-owned utilities. That puts the company well ahead of schedule for California climate change requirements of 33% by 2020. [inewsource]

NRG Borrego Springs plant. Jim Sulley / newscast
¶ The Supreme Court on Monday left intact a key Obama administration environmental regulation, refusing to hear an appeal from 20 states seeking to block rules that limit the emissions of mercury and other toxic pollutants from the nation’s power plants. [Washington Post]
¶ Toyota is about to move into its new 2.1 million square foot North American headquarters in Plano, Texas. It engaged Priority Power Management, an independent energy management and consulting services firm, to help it plan how to use almost entirely renewable power. [CleanTechnica]

Toyota image
¶ Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin signed S. 260. He said the bill addresses criticism of weak local control over wind and solar-energy projects in an earlier bill he had vetoed, while at the same time supporting the growth of green-energy infrastructure. [Barre Montpelier Times Argus]
¶ Utah is one of several states with budget shortfalls this year, as oil and gas production hit all-time lows. Coal production was at a 30-year low in 2015 and total energy revenues were half of what they were in 2014. Consumers are considering rooftop solar to take control of their own power. [KSL.com]

Photo Courtesy of Legend Solar
¶ New York policymakers are considering the most cost-effective way to reach the state’s 50% renewable energy target by 2030 within a competitive market. The Public Service Commission held a conference on a plan to transition the state away from fossil fuel, and eventually nuclear. [RTO Insider]
¶ The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission approved a plan by Minnesota Power Co to idle two units totaling 150 MW at the company’s Taconite Harbor Energy Center this fall and ceasing coal operations at the site in 2020. The plan also move up the date for closing two other facilities. [POWER magazine]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 13, 2016
Opinion:
¶ “The World Nears Peak Fossil Fuels for Electricity” • The way we get electricity is about to change dramatically, as the era of ever-expanding demand for fossil fuels comes to an end, in less than a decade. That’s according to a new forecast by Bloomberg New Energy Finance. [Bloomberg] (More articles about this below.)

Bloomberg New Energy Finance image
World:
¶ The French Ecology Minister announced the 33 winners at a 52-MW solar power plus storage tender for France’s overseas departments and territories. The projects will have a feed-in tariff of €204/MWh, which is competitive for islands not connected to the mainland grid. [SeeNews Renewables]
¶ Taiwan Power Co is planning to invest NT$400 billion ($12.37 billion) developing renewable energy over the next 15 years, spending more than 80% of that on wind power. Green energy is one of the five key industries in President Tsai Ing-wen’s economic policy. [Focus Taiwan News Channel]

Wind turbines in Penghu County. (CNA file photo)
¶ Victoria says it will “lead the nation” on climate change, with a goal to become net zero by 2050. It is good news for the built environment, and in accord with Paris climate goals. The move puts the state into direct competition with South Australia and the Australian Capital Territory. [eco-business.com]
¶ BluEarth Renewables Inc announced the official inauguration of its 29.2-MW Bull Creek wind park in Alberta. The facility consists of 17 General Electric wind turbines near Provost. They will be able to generate enough power annually for 10,000 average Alberta homes. [SeeNews Renewables]

The Bull Creek Wind Facility. Source: BluEarth
Renewables Inc. License: All Rights Reserved
¶ Twelve months ago, Indonesia was the world’s biggest exporter of fossil fuels, but now, the rest of the world is moving away from the products. The country is reacting to the drop in coal exports by ramping up local production, putting health, environment and economy in danger. [Southeast Asia Globe]
¶ Bloomberg New Energy Finance says low prices for coal and gas are likely to persist, but will fail to prevent a fundamental transformation of the world electricity system towards renewable sources such as wind and solar, and towards balancing options such as batteries. [Offshore Wind Journal]

BNEF’s latest NEO suggests that investment in renewables
is going to grow rapidly and their cost will fall steeply
¶ Norway’s oil and energy ministry gave permission for Oslo-based Fred.Olsen Renewables to build a 135-MW onshore wind power plant. The newly approved plant in Norway’s southeastern region of Rogaland would be able to produce 400 GWh per year, enough to supply 20,000 homes. [Reuters Africa]
¶ The way we get electricity is about to change dramatically, as the era of ever-expanding demand for fossil fuels comes to an end—in less than a decade. That’s according to a new forecast by Bloomberg New Energy Finance, which plots out global power markets for the next 25 years. [Livemint]

Wind and solar will be the cheapest forms of producing
electricity in most of the world by the 2030s. Photo: Bloomberg
¶ A dress rehearsal is under way to install a huge “hat” over a crippled nuclear reactor building at Fukushima Daiichi. The dome-shaped cover is meant to stop the spread of radioactive material and protect equipment necessary to retrieve 566 bundles of fuel rods from a spent fuel pool. [Asahi Shimbun]
US:
¶ While state officials are struggling to define New Hampshire’s energy future through a variety of legislative and regulatory proceedings, cities and towns in the state are not standing by waiting for the next signal from Concord. Many of them are moving forward aggressively, on their own. [The Union Leader]

Dan Reed of Siemens installs a LED street light on Carroll
Street in Manchester last year. (Union Leader File)
¶ Renewables will overtake natural gas as the dominant source of electricity generation in the US in 2031, even without subsidies, as wind and solar costs plunge, a Bloomberg New Energy Finance analysis showed. This shift will be driven by $745 billion in investments through 2040. [Bloomberg]
¶ WPPI Energy, based in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin, has issued a request for proposals for approximately 100 MW of generating capacity from wind, or an equivalent amount of energy from other renewable resources. WPPI Energy is owned by 51 local not-for-profit electric utilities. [hngnews.com]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 12, 2016
Science and Technology:
¶ Solar Impulse 2, the largest solar-powered aircraft in the world, landed early Saturday in New York City. It is the 14th stop and the final US destination in its year-old trek around the world. It flew past the Statue of Liberty before landing at John F. Kennedy International Airport. [CNN]

Solar Impulse 2 flies above the Statue of Liberty.
World:
¶ The heat of the sun is already scorching the era of oil and coal in the Philippine energy sector. A host of factors, including reduced prices of solar panels, new government policy, and growing reliability of solar power plants, is leading the increasing shift to renewable energy. [The Standard]
¶ Vast rainforests, which once covered more than half of Panama’s land surface, are shrinking, eaten away by development. In response, seven indigenous tribes, whose members live in autonomous zones, have begun using drones to keep an eye on their forests. [Christian Science Monitor]

Rainforest in Brazil. Alexander Lees/Reuters / File
¶ The government of Bangladesh has planned to set up 50 solar mini-grids in remote off-grid areas of the country, mainly in islands, by 2018. Seven have already been installed, 11 are under the installation process, and the remaining 32 are at the planning stage, official sources said. [The Daily Star]
¶ Christian and other faith communities around the world are hosting 120 events in 35 countries, all calling for governments, businesses and individuals to do more to reduce global warming. The event, “Sacred Earth, Sacred Trust,” is urging world nations to make 1.5° a legally binding limit. [Premier]

Stopping climate change requires action.
¶ Saudi Arabia’s state electricity utility is seeking bids from international developers to build two solar-power plants in the kingdom’s northern region. The plants will each generate as much as 50 MW using PV technology. The announcement was posted at Saudi Electricity Company’s website. [The National]
¶ An international team of scientists provided calculations on recent floods in France. They found that global warming increased the chances for the Loire river basin flooding by 90% and the Seine river basin by 80%. That’s compared to a world with no man-made climate change. [Tulsa World]

Flood in Paris on June 4. Photo by Thesupermat.
CC BY-SA 4.0 international. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ The Indian power tariff is likely to increase by 8% to 10% after Coal India decided to hike the commodity’s prices, according to Tata Power’s CEO and Managing Director. He also warned against early exuberance over a government revival scheme and claims of electricity surplus. [Financial Express]
¶ There have been some efforts to deal with marine carbon emissions, but ship owners feel little need to green their fleets, as those hiring the vessels pay the fuel costs. When the price of bunker fuel (the sludgiest oil left over from refining) drops, as it has, ecological resolve disappears. [The Guardian]

Dirty business: cargo ships in the English Channel.
Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters
¶ The announcement by India and the US to begin planning construction of six nuclear reactors has led to considerable unease among those likely to be affected. After Gujarat rejected them, their siting was shifted to Andhra Pradesh, but they are finding opposition there. [domain-B]
US:
¶ A French company, DCNS Group, has joined Aqua Ventus, a consortium the University of Maine, to develop a floating offshore wind farm. It will help develop the project, is one of three offshore wind proposals eligible for nearly $40 million in funding from the DOE. [Press Herald]

The prototype Volturn US generates power off Castine in 2013. Bukaty / 2013 Associated Press file.
¶ When Hurricane Sandy blacked out most of the city, New York University continued to buzz and glow throughout the night. NYU runs on a microgrid, a semi-independent energy system able to generate and store its own power. Now the state is supporting microgrid developments. [Business Insider]
¶ Traverse City Light & Power will buy 5% of the output of a Huron County wind farm that could be online by 2018, about 3.6 MW. It is one of 18 Michigan Public Power Agency members buying a share of the output. There will be no appreciable rate increase. [Traverse City Record Eagle]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 11, 2016
Opinion:
¶ “US Carbon Tax ‘Close To Inevitable,’ Conservative Leader Proclaims – Moral Disgrace Of Ignoring Global Warming Too Strong” • Some Republican congresspeople have taken the time to learn about global warming. They don’t want their party’s legacy to be denial supporting corruption. [CleanTechnica]

George Shultz, Secretary of State under President Ronald Reagan, has long been an outspoken supporter of a carbon tax.
World:
¶ TenneT Holding BV presented a plan for building an island in the North Sea to connect over 30 GW of offshore wind farms and deliver power to countries in the region. The transmission system operator says the most suitable location for that island will be the Dogger Bank. [SeeNews Renewables]

The island. Image by Tennet (www.tennet.eu).
¶ Costa Rica is finishing up the largest hydroelectric power project in Central America, as the last generators come on line. The Reventazon dam is expected to produce 305.5 MW, enough for 525,000 homes. Costa Rica already gets 98% of its power from renewables. [PennEnergy]
¶ When Prince Edward Island’s government crafted a plan to wean their grid off costly and carbon-intensive diesel, they turned to wind power, one renewable resource that the island has plenty of. Now, 34% of PEI’s electricity is wind powered, with 204 MW of wind capacity installed. [Huffington Post Canada]

A wind farm at North Cape, PEI, had a capacity factor of 69% for the entire month of January. Photo Wind Energy Institute of Canada
¶ The UK solar power industry has lost more than half its 35,000 jobs due to recent changes in government energy policy, just at a time when solar power has eclipsed coal as a major generator of Britain’s electricity. Experts believe ministers had cut subsidies too far and too fast. [The Guardian]
¶ The Swedish government coalition, with some opposition parties, presented a new agreement for Sweden’s energy consumption. Sweden’s energy production will be 100% renewable by 2040, but nuclear power gets lower taxation, new facilities, and no expiration date. [Business Insider Nordic]

Forsmark nuclear power plant. Source: Tomas Oneborg – TT
US:
¶ Coal production during in the first quarter of 2016 was the lowest its been since 1981. Demand for coal is down because of low natural gas prices, competition from renewables, and environmental regulations. An unusually warm winter also reduced demand. [Wyoming Public Media]
¶ Los Angeles’ City Council will consider a motion to direct the municipal utility to determine how to move the city to 100% renewable energy. The motion has broad support on the council, and the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power is already working on the report. [ThinkProgress]

It takes a lot of energy to run all those lights.
But could it all be green? Credit: Shutterstock.
¶ Consumers Energy celebrated its first solar power plant located at Grand Valley State University yesterday that will produce electricity for many Michigan homes and businesses. Called the Solar Gardens, the 17-acre facility generates 3MW, enough to power around 600 homes. [WHTC]
¶ The Kodiak Electric Association has two flywheels, each of which can store up to 1 MW. That’s enough power to lift a heavy cargo container from the dock and move it to the ship. Renewables are supplying power at a much reduced cost, and diesel is 99.8% out. [Environment & Energy Publishing]

Matson Inc’s massive electric crane and the Pillar
Mountain wind farm. Photo by Margaret Kriz Hobson.
¶ The Charlevoix, Michigan, City Council diversified one city portfolio Monday to give it less exposure to a particular sector of the market. The council approved an electrical purchasing agreement that will boost the city’s renewable energy portfolio to 22.4% for 20 years. [Petoskey News-Review]
¶ A solar energy generating facility to be built in Alabama will help the world’s largest retailer move a step closer to meeting its renewable energy goals. Under a long-term contract with Alabama Power, Walmart will subscribe to a majority of the solar plant’s renewable energy credits. [Yellowhammer News]
Posted in nuclear power, renewable power, solar, wind | 1 Comment »
Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 10, 2016
Opinion:
¶ “Illinois power plant closings reveal worldwide nuclear issues” • Exelon and Illinois are dancing around the issues, with the industry taking the position that government (read: the people) should subsidize the waning years of nuclear installations, or else. It is a global issue, however. [CleanTechnica]

Clinton power station, near Clinton, Illinois. Photo by Dual Freq.
CC BY-SA 3.0 unported. Wikimedia Commons.
Science and Technology:
¶ Researchers reported on an experiment in Iceland where they have pumped CO2 and water underground into volcanic rock. Reactions with the minerals in the deep basalts converted the carbon dioxide to a stable, immobile chalky solid. It took only months to covert 220 tonnes of CO2. [BBC]
World:
¶ Australian wind energy saw its biggest ever month in May, producing nearly a quarter more electricity than any previous month, and overtaking hydro to provide 8.5% of the country’s grid electricity. And new analysis shows wind generation keeps a lid on wholesale electricity prices. [CleanTechnica]

Wind farm in Australia.
¶ Siemens has received its first order from J-Wind Setana to supply, install and commission 16 direct-drive wind turbines of 3.2 MW capacity each. The Setana Osato wind farm, which will have a total capacity of 50 MW, will be installed off the Japanese coast. [Renewable Energy Magazine]
¶ The Paris Agreement may provide a major to boost wind turbine sales over the next decade. In a report, Moody’s said it expects to see renewable energies such as wind and solar get a significant increased investment needed to meet carbon reductions implied by the Agreement. [Business Green]

Offshore wind farm.
¶ Portugal’s Economy Ministry and Morocco’s Energy Ministry have agreed to research the possibility of laying an undersea electricity interconnector between the two countries, according to an announcement published by the Portuguese government on Wednesday evening. [Platts]
¶ The European Investment Bank has signed a €125-million loan agreement with Landsvirkjun, the National Power Company of Iceland, to finance a new geothermal power station and its geothermal wells at Þeistareykir, near Húsavik in north-eastern Iceland. [Iceland Monitor]

Construction at the Þeistareykjavirkjun power plant. Photo: Mbl.is
US:
¶ Apple became the world’s most valuable company by selling a lot of stuff. But one thing it’s never sold is power. That looks like it’s about to change, as Apple has created Apple Energy, a Cupertino-owned subsidiary that has the ability to sell power to end users at market rates. [Yahoo News]
¶ New US solar PV installations in the first quarter accounted for 64% of all new electric generating capacity installed across the country, according to new figures from GTM Research and the Solar Energy Industries Association. They predict 14.5 GW of new solar PV installed in the US in 2016. [CleanTechnica]

Share of New US Electric Generating Capacity Additions.
Please click on the image to see a larger view of it.
¶ A new report from the Brookings Institution points to numerous examples of solar actually lowering rates for utility customers, whether they have solar panels or not. Net-metered solar power reduced needs for more expensive power sources and helped stabilize the grid. [Grist]
¶ In Vermont, newly installed turbines at Ball Mountain Dam in Jamaica and Townshend Dam are now operational. Crews remain on site for final details, but the projects have been successfully tested and have met state commissioning deadlines, Eagle Creek Renewable Energy said. [vtdigger.org]

Ball Mountain Lake and Dam. US Army Corps of
Engineers photo. Public domain. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ After 11 hours in the Vermont Statehouse, there has been a policy resolution. A renewable energy bill vetoed by Governor Peter Shumlin earlier this week has been replaced by lawmakers with a substantially similar stand-in that addresses the governor’s concerns. [Vermont Public Radio]
¶ Some rural electric co-ops in Nebraska are exploring renewable energy to help them reduce costs in months when power demand peaks. Just 10% of power in Nebraska comes from renewable sources like wind and hydroelectricity, but declining costs are changing that. [Nebraska Radio Network]
¶ An agreement administered through the Michigan Public Power Agency Energy Services Project Agreement would allow the Zeeland Board of Public Works to buy up to 11.796 MW of wind energy from Huron Wind for 20 years, eliminating the need to buy energy credits. [HollandSentinel.com]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 9, 2016
Science and Technology:
¶ Carbon emissions stopped growing in 2015 for the first time in 10 years as the world turned its back on coal and embraced energy efficiency and renewable power more vigorously, according to a new set of statistics from BP. China led the way, but the progress may not last. [The Guardian]

China passed Germany and the US as the biggest generator of solar power in 2015. Photograph: ChinaFotoPress via Getty Images.
World:
¶ Saudi Arabia’s deputy crown prince Mohammed bin Salman has taken bold steps in his role as chairman of the Council for Economic and Development Affairs. The latest of these is an ambitious plan to move the country away from an oil-based economy to one that is investment-based. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Norway has become the first country to stop clear-cutting of trees, a huge step toward curbing global deforestation. In their pledge last week, Norwegian lawmakers also committed to find a way to source essential products like palm oil, soy, beef, and timber sustainably. [CNN]

Deforestation for palm oil in Liberia.
¶ The German firm, Energtrag, is adding a power-to-gas facility to its existing hybrid power plant. Deutsche Bahn is the first customer. The process uses electrolysis to make hydrogen, then adds carbon to that to create synthetic methane, which can be stored indefinitely. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Enel Green Power grid-connected a 66-MW solar farm in South Africa, one of three projects in the country the utility announced in March. Enel’s South African portfolio is now nearly 160 MW and a further gigawatt of projects has been awarded or is already under construction. [PV-Tech]

A South African PV project by Enel. Image: Enel Green Power.
¶ The new Cốc San power plant in Vietnam’s Lào Cai Province, a run-of-river hydropower facility supplying almost 30 MW of power to regional off taker Northern Power Corporation, opened yesterday. It represents the first foreign direct investment in hydropower in the region. [Viet Nam News]
¶ A gold and copper mine in Western Australia has switched to solar power, with 34,000 PV panels supplying electricity alongside 1.8 MWh of battery storage. The Australian Renewable Energy Agency is supporting the project with $20.9 million recoupable grant funding. [EcoGeneration]

DeGrussa Solar Project.
¶ Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen stressed that the goal of her administration to phase out nuclear power by 2025 “has never changed and will never change.” Tsai, made the statement amid controversy over restarting a reactor at the country’s No. 1 nuclear power plant. [Focus Taiwan News Channel]
¶ Renewables’ portion of the global power generation mix has increased substantially in the last half decade. Particularly in European countries, renewable energy sources contributed more than 26% of overall electricity generation in 2015. This was a rise from nearly 20% in 2011. [Market Realist]

US:
¶ Analysis by the Institute for Energy Economics & Financial Analysis highlights the recent numbers, which showed the amount of electricity generated by hydro, wind, biomass, and geothermal sources together reached 19.2% of all power generation in the United States during March. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Legislation that could make hydro and wind power a bigger part of the state’s overall energy mix passed the Massachusetts House. The bill would require utilities to solicit long-term contracts for importing an additional 1,200 MW each of Canadian hydro-power and offshore wind. [Woonsocket Call]

Windmill Point, Hull, Massachusetts. Photo by Doc Searls from Santa Barbara. CC BY-SA 2.0 generic. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Dairyland Power Cooperative announced an agreement to build the 98-MW Quilt Block Wind Farm in southwestern Wisconsin. They are working with EDP Renewables on the 49-tower wind farm 20 miles southeast of Platteville. It could be operational by the end of next year. [WXOW.com]
¶ DTE Energy Co plans to shut down eight more coal-fired units at three power plants in Michigan within the next seven years. DTE said the plants together generated about 25% of all the electricity produced by the utility in 2015, which is enough to power 900,000 homes. [Crain’s Detroit Business]
Posted in nuclear power, renewable power, solar, wind | 1 Comment »
Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 8, 2016
Opinion:
¶ “Can wind and solar make us rich?” • With low-cost electricity storage, Jamaica could cut electric costs by 60%, while cutting of costs for imported fossil fuels by $100 million each month. Finally, free at last! Economic independence attained after 50 years of political independence. [Jamaica Observer]

Jamaican wind farm.
¶ “Renewables versus climate change – the battle heats up!” • The renewable energy revolution is in full swing, but global warming is also accelerating, with global temperature records broken every month for a year. Will the energy transition happen in time to avert catastrophe? [The Ecologist]
World:
¶ Japanese renewables firm SB Energy Corp will start on June 10 commercial operations at the 48.43-MW Hamada Wind Farm, in Shimane prefecture, Japan. The company expects the new wind power plant to generate some 85 million kWh per year, sufficient for 23,600 local homes. [SeeNews Renewables]

Wind turbine in Japan. Author: Seiichi Ariga.
License: Creative Commons, Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic.
¶ The leaders of India and the United States on Tuesday vowed to ratify the Paris climate accord this year. They also set a one-year deadline for concluding a deal for six commercial nuclear power plants. But the two sides provided few specifics about how they would achieve those goals. [NDTV]
¶ A Lagos-based renewable energy company, Arnergy, announced a pay-as-you-go service for users in communities without a stable power supply, which is pretty much all those in Nigeria. The service lets consumers install affordable solar panels and pay for power as they consume it. [TechCabal]

Solar technology for people who never had power.
¶ Shell has changed its mind about renewables and how it will make money in future, in a world after the Paris COP 21 climate change deal. The company’s chief executive concedes that the previous team may have got it wrong when it stopped investing in renewables, especially wind power. [ITV News]
¶ So far this year, 98% of Uruguay’s electricity has come from sources of renewable energy, according to the president of the state-run electric company UTE. The announcement came at a meeting of business owners, executives and investors in the energy sector. [Latin American Herald Tribune]

El murallon del dique compensador. Photo by Starbock1948.
CC BY-SA 3.0 unported. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ UK solar developer Hive Energy has won a contract to install a 50-MW PV park for Union Electrica de Cuba in the Caribbean island republic. Under its terms, Hive Energy will build the solar park in the Mariel Free zone. The facility is expected to produce up to 93 GWh per year. [SeeNews Renewables]
¶ Solar power in the UK produced more electricity than coal across the whole of May, the first ever month to pass the milestone, according to research by analysts at Carbon Brief. Solar generated an estimated 1,336 GWh of electricity in May, compared to 893 GWh output from coal. [The Guardian]

The new floating solar farm on Godley reservoir in Hyde, Manchester, UK. Photo: Ashley Cooper/Alamy
¶ As plans emerge for a new “baseload” solar thermal and storage plant to replace coal in South Australia, a new report from WWF Australia questions the very concept of “baseload,” arguing that this model of power generation is made redundant by a 100% renewable energy grid. [RenewEconomy]
¶ Another 30 children in Fukushima have been hit by thyroid cancer, up from 16 in February following the threat of radiation exposure after its nuclear plant exploded in 2011. This brings the total number of Fukushima children diagnosed with thyroid cancer to 131. [AsiaOne]

Checking a child for radiation.
¶ Scottish homes fitted with solar panels would have seen enough sunshine last month to meet their entire electricity consumption, according to the WWF Scotland. A report they issued said wind turbines also produced enough electricity to meet the needs of around 76% of homes in May. [The National]
US:
¶ Hawaiian Electric Company is preparing to issue a Request for Proposals for renewable energy projects on Oahu island that can start power generation by the end of 2020. The utility operates under a state requirement to achieve sourcing from 100% renewables by 2045. [SeeNews Renewables]

Hawaii wind farm. Author: David J Laporte.
License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic.
¶ Two New York State agencies are working with the Electric Power Research Institute and Central Hudson Gas and Electric to install a hybrid solar PV generation and battery storage system at the State University of New York at New Paltz, about 85 miles north of midtown Manhattan. [Solar Industry]
¶ Energy forecaster GTM Research predicted that the price of building big solar-power farms will drop below $1 a watt by 2020. That is a big deal, as it is both a competitive goal for the solar industry and is the target set in 2011 by the US DOE’s SunShot Initiative. [Next Big Future]
Posted in nuclear power, renewable power, solar, wind | 2 Comments »
Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 7, 2016
Opinion:
¶ “French nuclear under pressure – from German renewables” • In late May, strikes reduced nuclear power production in France. Yet even more plants were offline a few weeks earlier without any strikes at all. This was partly because of renewable electricity from Germany. [RenewEconomy]

Nuclear plant Paluel 2 “just barely escaped catastrophe,” Le Parisien said, on March 31. (Photo by Bodoklecksel, modified, CC BY-SA 3.0)
World:
¶ A 20% increase in wind and solar energy generation in 2015 has combined to deliver another annual increase in the amount of Australia’s electricity sourced from renewables, more than compensating for a drop in hydro production, a new report has found. [CleanTechnica]
¶ More detail has come on Solastor’s proposal for a “baseload” solar thermal and storage power plant in Port Augusta, South Australia. The ambitious 170-MW, $1.2 billion project could produce the lowest-price 24/7 solar power in the world, according to the company’s chairman. [RenewEconomy]

Solastor system for 24/7 solar power.
¶ Last year was a huge 12 months for renewable energy, with a new global status report on clean energy highlighting how 2015 was a record year for the industry – including the revelation that renewable energy can now satisfy nearly a quarter of the world’s power demands. [ScienceAlert]
¶ Disappointed by hydroelectric power reduced by drought, Zambia is turning to the sun. The landlocked country plans to build two solar projects that will charge the lowest tariffs in sub-Saharan Africa, according to the Zambian Industrial Development Corporation. [Quartz]

Lake Kariba is drying up, and so is Zambia’s electricity supply. (Reuters/Philimon Bulawayo)
¶ Norway’s four major political parties agreed last week to ban the sale of cars powered by gas or diesel by 2025, according to Electrek, citing a story in Norwegian paper Dagens Næringsliv. There is, however, some question about how much all parties actually support the proposal. [Huffington Post]
¶ A group of Norwegian companies has sent the government proposals for an offshore wind demonstration project off the coast of Norway to help boost the country’s export potential in the sector. The Offshore 2025 proposals have been put together by Norwea, which has 130 members. [reNews]

Offshore wind farm. Credit: reNews.
¶ Origin Energy’s managing director says it is unlikely any more coal-fired power stations will be built in Australia, as the renewable energy target helps force coal power out of the market. But there still may be the need for more gas-fired power stations if coal-fired power comes off quickly. [The Australian]
US:
¶ The governor of Vermont vetoed a bill supporters hoped would give communities more say over siting renewable energy projects and bring new sound limits on wind turbines. He said last-minute amendments to the bill would unacceptably slow or halt renewable energy development. [vtdigger.org]

Wind energy in Vermont. File photo by Roger Crowley / VTDigger
¶ A microgrid at Miramar Marine Corps Air Station in California helps show the potential of net-zero green projects to aid military installations reduce reliance on fossil fuels and expand the use of green energy. Net-zero systems generate as much energy as is used. [SEAPOWER Magazine Online]
¶ In the next 15 years, Texas expects to add somewhere between 14 GW and 27 GW of solar capacity, according to a new long-term system assessment from the state’s grid operator, ERCOT. Meanwhile, over 5 GW of coal are expected to go offline in the next five years. [Breaking Energy]
¶ Minnesota Power’s first community solar garden got the go-ahead from the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission. It will be constructed in two locations in Duluth, one being a 40-kW array and the other a 1-MW array. Both locations will be available for subscribers. [Mesabi Daily News]
Posted in nuclear power, renewable power, solar, wind | 2 Comments »
Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 6, 2016
Science and Technology:
¶ Using data from satellites, scientists at NASA, Environment and Climate Change Canada, and two universities have found 39 unreported and significant human-made sources of emission of toxic sulfur dioxide. Sulfur Dioxide is a known health hazard and acid rain contributor. [Maine News Online]

Scientists located 39 unreported sources of sulfur dioxide emissions.
World:
¶ RedT Energy plc will install a power storage system at a 1-MW wind farm on the Scottish Isle of Gigha. The 1.68-MW vanadium flow system was chosen for this remote location, which has limited grid connection, for their ability to balance variable renewable generation. [reNews]
¶ Global electric vehicle sales figures for the first quarter of 2016 were recently released by EV-Volumes, revealing that plug-in sales in 2016 to date totaled 180,500 units, including cars and light commercial vehicles. That is an increase year-on-year increase of roughly 42%. [CleanTechnica]

EV sales by region.
¶ The Pact of Amsterdam has been released, seeking collaboration from EU cities concerning pressing challenges such as air pollution, climate adaptation, transportation, and energy transition. European cities are set to benefit from greater involvement in EU legislation. [CleanTechnica]
¶ A new 4.75-MW solar energy installation was recently brought online by Nissan outside of the company’s Sunderland production plant in the UK. The new PV plant adds to 6.6 MW of wind capacity at the manufacturing plant, helping power manufacture of the Nissan LEAF EVs. [evObsession]

Nissan solar and wind farm in the UK.
¶ Leading players in the offshore wind industry pledged to reduce costs to €80 per megawatt-hour by the middle of the next decade. Eleven companies signed a declaration ahead of today’s meeting of the Energy Council outlining the “crucial role” that offshore can play and its competitiveness. [reNews]
¶ Wärtsilä announced that it is to enter the solar energy business and begin to offer utility-scale solar PV solutions. Wärtsilä’s new solutions include solar PV power plants of 10 MW and above, as well as hybrid power plants combining PV plants and internal combustion engines. [Industrial PRIME]

Solar panels on trackers. iStock image.
US:
¶ Last month, Massachusetts’ highest court ruled the state needed to act on greenhouse gas limits. Lawmakers are considering a carbon tax, which would start at $10 per ton of CO2 and rise $5 per year. Collections would be used for rebates on utility bills. [The Daily News of Newburyport]
¶ SunPower is planning to start construction on a 10-MW solar PV power plant in Alabama this month. The plant is expected to generate up to 18,000 MWh per year for the Redstone Arsenal US Army post. SunPower is delivering the energy from the plant under a power purchase agreement. [Greentech Lead]

SunPower Solar Project South Africa.
¶ A federal appeals court ruled that the US NRC’s generic environmental impact statement on the continued storage of utility spent nuclear fuel meets federal National Environmental Policy Act requirements. It said the petitioners in the case could take their concerns to Congress. [Platts]
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June 5, 2016
Science and Technology:
¶ While Alaska’s boreal forest region is expected to see bigger wildfires that send up large amounts of carbon, and while permafrost will certainly degrade to some extent, other parts of Alaska are simultaneously expected to green up. This could make Alaska into a net carbon sink. [NDTV]

Alaska has 18% of the area of the US and 53% of the carbon.
World:
¶ Lord Mark Malloch-Brown, a former UK Minister and United Nations ambassador, urged companies of all sizes to take account of green issues. Speaking ahead of the Global Green Growth Forum in Copenhagen, he said businesses that fail to do so will face going out of business. [The Independent]
¶ A pioneering new green power device is set to be launched in the Firth of Forth this week. The tidal stream turbine is the brainchild of two Scottish engineers who believe it can offer an affordable and efficient way of harnessing the marine power to provide reliable energy. [Scotsman]

Capricorn Turbine prototype. Renewable Devices photo.
¶ India’s Ministry of New and Renewable Energy announced plans to set up 10 GW of renewable energy capacity through micro-grids of less than 10 kw, and mini-grids of larger size. The proposed plan will call for setting up small-scale solar, wind, hydro and biomass projects. [PlanetSave.com]
¶ Over the last two years, considerable impetus has been given to reduce the overall carbon footprint of the Indian Navy. The focus has not only been on correcting its impact on the environmental footprint, but also to address the fundamental problems of efficiency and resilience. [New Kerala]

Indian Navy aircraft carrier INS Viraat.
US Navy photo. Public domain. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ About 293 hectares within the 625-hectare site of Ayala’s wind farm in the Philippines will once more grow lush. This is expected as AC Energy Holdings’ wind unit, North Luzon Renewables, enters the third year of its reforestation program in Barangay Caparispisan this year. [The Standard]
¶ Ireland is one of the few countries in the EU with no commercial solar industry, but this looks set to change in the very near future. ESB Networks, which connects power generators to the national grid, received two solar applications in 2014. Last year there were 329. [thejournal.ie]

Ireland has no commercial solar farms yet. Source: Flickr.
¶ Environmentalists blasted the first reactor of Taiwan’s Number 1 nuclear power plant Sunday as a very dangerous facility, and said they will sue the premier for an offense against public safety after he revealed that he might allow the reactivation of the reactor. [Focus Taiwan News Channel]
US:
¶ Vast amounts of trash have been washing ashore on Hawaii’s once-pristine beaches. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has been trying to keep critical parts of the ocean clear of marine debris, but more keeps coming, much of it plastic, most carelessly tossed away. [CNN]

Hawaii’s shorelines are littered with marine debris.
¶ Falling commodity prices and slowing developing world economies have been hitting equipment manufacturer Caterpillar, resulting in three years of dropping sales, to $47.01 billion last year. For Caterpillar, microgrids now represent a needed avenue for growth. [Crain’s Chicago Business]
¶ The TVA’s Watts Bar nuclear Unit 2 generated electricity onto its power grid for the first time. Watts Bar Unit 2 is officially synced to the grid on June 3, and operators have begun an initial test run of generation equipment. Continuous full-power operation will come summer. [WATE 6 On Your Side]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, renewable power, solar power, wind power
June 4, 2016
Science and Technology:
¶ Scientists say climate change is causing Himalayan glaciers to melt at an alarming rate, creating huge glacial lakes which could burst their banks and devastate mountain communities. The surface area of one lake grew from 0.4 to 1.01 square kilometres between 1984 and 2009. [Deccan Chronicle]

Glaciers in the Everest region could shrink by 70%
or even disappear. (Representational Image)
¶ Swedish researchers, whose study was reported in Science, found exposure to high concentrations of polystyrene makes perch larvae favor the particles over more natural foods. As a result of exposure to plastic, the young perch are smaller, slower and more susceptible to predators. [BBC]
World:
¶ Much of Europe prides itself on its determination to act resolutely on climate change, but in at least one key respect it has failed to back its rhetoric with action. Its investment in renewable energy showed a significant drop in 2015, falling to its lowest level in almost a decade. [Truthdig]

The decline in investment has cast a cloud over Europe’s
renewable energy efforts. (kismihok via Flickr)
¶ Solar thermal technology developer Solastor, based in New South Wales, is set to launch a proposal for the development of a solar thermal and storage plant of up to 170 MW in Port Augusta, South Australia, that it says will provide the state with 24/7 base load and peak load generation. [RenewEconomy]
¶ M+W group has selected Jenbacher gas engines and a Monsal anaerobic digestion system, both supplied by GE, for Surrey County Council’s new Eco Park waste treatment and biogas facility being built by SUEZ Recycling and Recovery UK in Shepperton, UK. [Waste Management World]

M+W anaerobic plant. Image ©
¶ The International Energy Agency published a paper, “Next Generation Wind and Solar Power: From cost to value,” which argues that we are approaching a new phase of deployment of wind and solar PV in which the two technologies are both technologically mature and affordable. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The Dubai Electricity and Water Authority announced plans to build the world’s largest concentrated solar project. The site, about 50 km outside the city center, already houses PV technology. The first 200-MW project phase is scheduled to be completed by 2021. [CanadianManufacturing.com]

The Ivanpah Solar Power Facility, currently the world’s largest.
Photo by Jllm06, via Wikimedia Commons.
¶ EDF and China General Nuclear Corporation, the same two companies that are set to build the UK’s Hinkley C nuclear power station, have just ‘sealed’ their twin reactors at Taishan, China, disregarding widespread fears that they are unsafe and may crack in operation. [The Ecologist]
¶ French energy group Engie has lined up ZAR 9.2 billion ($602 million / €532 million) in financing for its 100-MW Kathu concentrating solar power plant in South Africa, Agence Ecofin reports today, citing information from a legal adviser of Engie for the project. [SeeNews Renewables]

CSP plant in the US. Image: Mike Flippo / Shutterstock.com
US:
¶ A new report provides insights on solar power and energy storage. One of the more stunning of these is in its Executive Summary, “The addition of storage technologies has the potential to nearly double stand-alone solar electricity bill savings at about a third of the cost of solar. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Microgrid capacity in the US will reach 3.71 GW by 2020, an increase over GTM Research’s predictions last year which called for 2.85 GW in a base-case scenario. The new estimates, however, exceed even last year’s high-end predictions, Greentech Media reports. [Utility Dive]

Microgrid. Image Credit: Wiki.floksociety.org
¶ Italian firm Building Energy’s US subsidiary has signed two agreements with Capital One Bank to build and operate the first distributed generation windfarm in Iowa. With a total equity investment of about $56 million, it will add up to 30 MW of wind generation capacity. [Power Technology]
¶ The Sierra Club and its Beyond Coal Campaign released an economic analysis they say shows NV Energy ratepayers would save hundreds of millions of dollars if the scheduled closure of the North Valmy coal plant in northern Nevada was moved up from 2025 to 2019. [KNPR]
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June 3, 2016
World:
¶ The first large-scale ground based solar electricity generation park on the island of Ireland has opened in County Antrim. The 30-acre solar farm at Crookedstone Road, which cost £5 million ($7.21 million) to build, produces up to 5 MW from 20,000 photo-voltaic panels. [RTE.ie]

The 30-acre solar farm cost £5 million to build.
¶ Chile’s solar industry has expanded so quickly that it’s giving electricity away for free. Spot prices reached zero in parts of the country on 113 days up until April this year, a number that is already on track to beat last year’s total of 192 days, according to Chile’s central grid operator. [The Independent]
¶ Principle Power’s 2-MW WindFloat prototype floating turbine, installed 5 km off Portugal, completed five years of testing. The company said the prototype has met or exceeded all design expectations. Despite high waves and winds, WindFloat delivered 17 GWh of electricity. [reNews]

Windfloat turbine. Principle Power image.
¶ A raft of new companies have pledged to source 100% renewable energy as part of a RE100 initiative that will be galvanised by a government-led push to promote the renewables revolution to 1,000 businesses. The new campaign is led by Denmark and Germany. [edie.net]
¶ Northland Power and Giiwedin Noodin FN Energy Corp have brought online the 100-MW Grand Bend wind farm near Lake Huron in Ontario. It was created to hold the equity interest of the Aamjiwnaang First Nation and Bkejwanong Territory (Walpole Island First Nation) in the project. [reNews]

Northland Power wind farm in Quebec (Northland Power image)
¶ According to analysis published this week by Australia’s Clean Energy Council, momentum is building for the country’s renewable energy sector. To meet the 2020 target, approximately 6000 MW of new capacity must be installed; 10,600 MW of projects have been approved, and more is coming. [CleanTechnica]
US:
¶ The US plans to auction a 33,000-hectare offshore wind lease area off New York State with a sale possible by the end of the year. The proposed lease area starts about 11 miles south of Long Island and is based on a 700-MW proposal by the New York Power Authority in 2011. [reNews]

Offshore wind. Credit Sif.
¶ The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority announced today it will participate in the US Department of Interior’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management’s auction for a commercial offshore wind energy lease off the coast of Long Island. [Long Island Exchange]
¶ Appalachian Power announced an agreement to buy of 120 MW of new wind generation. The 20-year purchased power agreement will bring its total wind generation to 495 MW. A subsidiary of NextEra Energy Resources will provide the power from a planned Indiana wind farm. [WCYB]

Wind turbines in Indiana. Photo by Mattchobbs, released to the public domain. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Maryland’s Republican Governor, Larry Hogan, stunned the state’s solar industry with his recent unexpected veto of a bill that would increase the state’s Renewable Portfolio Standard to 25% by 2020. The veto may bring about the loss of numerous solar jobs in Maryland. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Exelon Corp announced that it will shut two Illinois nuclear power plants after the Legislature failed to approve a financial-support plan. An email obtained by The Associated Press, however, indicates the company is enlisting employees in an ongoing, full-steam lobbying effort. [SaukValley.com]
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June 2, 2016
Science and Technology:
¶ One potential power source covers 71% of the Earth. Startup Columbia Power is the latest company to dream of harnessing the ocean for electricity. It’s building a wave generator called StingRAY that will float on the ocean’s surface, turning each passing wave to usable power. [CNN]

Columbia wave power.
World:
¶ The latest news from VW is that the company is now considering investing $11 billion into the development of a dedicated battery factory in Salzgitter – which would presumably support the production of the company’s previously hinted at future electric vehicle offerings. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Rongke Power, an affiliate of UniEnergy Technologies, will deploy the world’s largest battery, rated at 800 MWh. The vanadium flow battery will provide peak-shaving and enhance grid stabilization in northern China. More large batteries will no doubt be installed to support renewables. [PennEnergy]

UniEnergy Technologies vanadium flow battery.
¶ Pakistan’s Alternative Energy Development Board reported that 35 solar PV power projects are currently at various stages of development. These projects will have a total installed capacity of 1,111 MW. The Quaid-e-Azam solar power park is expected to grow 300 MW this year. [CleanTechnica]
¶ In South Africa, renewable energy production has stabilized electricity supply in the Eastern Cape and will, for the first time, keep the lights on throughout winter. The province was one of the worst-hit by power outages nationally because of load shedding schedules. [News24]

Wind turbine, Coega Industrial Development Zone, Eastern Cape.
Photo by NJR ZA. CC BY-SA 3.0 unported. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Queensland’s Government has announced it will provide long-term financial support for up to 120 MW of installed large-scale solar generation. Last year, the Government upped its election commitment from 40 MW to 60 MW and yesterday it announced it would double that. [Energy Matters]
¶ Developing nations invested $156 billion in renewables in 2015, a 19% increase on the year before, and more than all richer nations combined. China was top, investing more in the sector than any other country, and building more wind, hydropower, and solar than anywhere else. [Quartz]

Wind turbines in Changling, China. Photo by 大漠1208.
CC BY-SA 3.0 unported. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Ontario Power Generation has applied for a 69% increase in what it is paid for nuclear power over the next five years. OPG says it needs the increase to help pay for the $12.8-billion refit of the Darlington nuclear station to extend the life of the reactors 30 years. [BlackburnNews.com]
US:
¶ Georgia Power, the US Army, the Army Office of Energy Initiatives, the General Services Administration and the Georgia Public Service Commission have marked the start of operations of a new 30-MW solar project at Fort Benning, near Columbus, Georgia. [Proud Green Building]

The Fort Benning solar site uses nearly 134,000 PV panels.
Photo courtesy of Georgia Power
¶ The New York State Assembly approved the nation’s most ambitious climate change bill. Under the bill, New York would have to generate 27% from renewable sources next year. While that might sound high, New York got about 28% of its electricity from renewables in February. [InsideClimate News]
¶ The easing of California’s drought has boosted the state’s early spring hydropower generation to its highest level since 2011, helping it to recover from a 15-year low reached last year. But hydroelectricity production is not expected to improve much overall this year. [Bonner County Daily Bee]

San Gabriel Dam in Los Angeles County, 2013.
Photo by Shannon1. CC BY SA. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Minnesota Power will triple the size of rebates available to its customers who install solar panels at home by adding an extra $1 million annually to the program for the next three years. A typical residential customer installing a 5-kW solar system could receive roughly $6,000. [Duluth News Tribune]
¶ After failing to sell its power at auction, the possibility looms that the Three Mile Island nuclear plant could close. If its owner is unable to operate the plant profitably, it may face closure in 2018. There are other ways to sell power, but the auction is a guaranteed source of revenue. [LancasterOnline]

Three mile island nuclear plant. LNP file photo.
¶ The unprecedented degradation of critical baffle bolts in the Indian Point 2 nuclear reactor has triggered an extensive investigation by federal officials seeking to learn why the problem was so severe and why systems designed to detect loose metal objects failed. [Huffington Post]
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June 1, 2016
Science and Technology:
¶ If you thought the upper limit of solar cell efficiency was 32%, think again. MIT News reported on a research team that showed how a silicon solar cell could top the theoretical limit of 32%. See you later, Shockley-Queisser Limit, and don’t let the door hit you on the way out. [CleanTechnica]

Photo via MIT News, courtesy of the researchers.
World:
¶ Solar, wind and hydropower sources were added in 2015 at the fastest rate the world has yet seen, according to the Renewables Global Status Report. Investments in renewables during the year were more than double the amount spent on new coal and gas-fired power plants. [BBC]
¶ Australia installed almost 1 GW of new solar capacity last year but that was easily eclipsed by rather cloudy nations such as the United Kingdom, which installed about four times as much, according to the REN21 Global Status report on renewable energy. [The Sydney Morning Herald]

Solar PV capacity in Australia lags that of less
sunny nations such as the UK and South Korea.
¶ The German Chancellor hammered out a deal with state premiers on the latest reform to Germany’s renewable energy law, with a view to lower costs and controlling renewable additions. They agreed to cap the expansion of onshore wind power at 2.8 GW in capacity per year. [The Guardian]
¶ Some Fort McMurray residents are to return home for the first time since a huge wildfire displaced 90,000 people. Alberta’s Premier Rachel Notley said the conditions needed for the return of the residents had been met. Three neighbourhoods, however, are to remain off-limits. [BBC]

Residents from the neighbourhood of Abasand
are not able to return yet. Reuters photo.
¶ A poll indicates 71% of Australian voters would consider voting for a party that supported distributed small-scale solar and storage. The Australia Institute’s report into battery storage also states 1 in 4 Australians want to generate their own power and store it, to go off-grid. [Energy Matters]
¶ In coming years, Canada can expect a switch from oil and gas to renewables, according to a draft policy report from Policy Horizons Canada, a government group. Even more importantly, the report notes, Canada should expect some of its oil to likely “remain in the ground.” [Grist]

Canadian tar sands. Flickr / howlcollective.
¶ In Canada, some Nunavut communities could cut their fossil fuel use by up to half with renewable energy that wouldn’t cost any more than the aging diesel generators they now use, a new study has concluded. Most of the territory’s generators are over 35 years old. [TheChronicleHerald.ca]
¶ According to a GlobalData report, China installed 30.5 GW of wind power in 2015 – which accounts for nearly half of all new global wind energy installations. The US installed 8.6 GW, while third place Germany installed 6.1 GW. Brazil and India each installed 2.6 GW. [Inhabitat]

Windpower in China. Image from Wikipedia.
¶ Japan is missing its own deadline to find a new operator for the Monju fast-breeder reactor, a prototype nuclear power program that’s failed to succeed in the two decades since it was built, threatening the resource-poor country’s support of a technology other nations have abandoned. [Bloomberg]
US:
¶ What state officials say will be Nebraska’s largest solar energy project is expected to begin tracking the sun and delivering some of its power by June 20. The 46-acre Enerparc project will be able to output about 3.6 megawatts, enough to power around 900 Lincoln homes. [Sioux City Journal]

Lincoln Electric System’s community solar project.
Eric Gregory, The Journal Star via AP
¶ In Michigan, Indiana Michigan Power is breaking ground Wednesday on its Berrien County solar power installation. The project will include about 50,000 solar panels on 35 acres near Watervliet and will generate enough electricity for annual needs of 700 homes. [South Bend Tribune]
¶ In New Jersey, the Atlantic County Utilities Authority is considering using its landfill to create fuel. According to the report from the Press of Atlantic City, the landfill will hit its capacity in around 2026. Another option is to pay to truck the trash to other states. [Renewable Energy from Waste]
¶ Clean energy activists in New York say the state should not subsidize the nuclear energy industry. The activists spoke at a Public Service Commission hearing last week on the governor’s proposed energy plan, which would half the state’s energy from renewable sources by 2030. [WSHU]
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