Archive for the 'hydro' Category

September 30 Energy News

September 30, 2015

World:

¶ The UK’s South West is self-sufficient and even able to export electricity on sunny summer days, the region’s renewable industry body has revealed. The potential of Solar power in Devon and Cornwall is highlighted as new official figures showed that more than a quarter of the UK’s electricity came from renewables this spring. [Western Morning News]

Cold Northcott wind farm in Cornwall. Photo by Jon Coupland. CC BY-SA 2.0

Cold Northcott wind farm in Cornwall. Photo by Jon Coupland. CC BY-SA 2.0

¶ Speaking in a radio interview on Tuesday morning, Australia’s Energy Minister confirmed that the Liberal Party, under the new leadership of Malcolm Turnbull, its new leader and subsequently Australia’s new Prime Minister, will be supporting the renewable energy sector and opening up support for emerging technologies. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Like the US, China has been slow to adopt fuel cell electric vehicles, but it looks like things are stepping up in a big way. The cities of Foshan and Yunfu are jumping into the lead with a $17 million order for 300 fuel cell electric buses, just announced by the Canadian company Ballard Power Systems through its Chinese licensee. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Western Power, the state-owned company that operates the grid in the south-west corner of Western Australia, may take some communities completely off grid so that it can save money on costly network upgrades and extensions. They are considering up to ten stand-alone systems, using solar, batteries, and back-up diesel. [One Step Off The Grid]

Margaret River, Western Australia. Photo by Rob & Jules. CC BY 2.0.

Margaret River, Western Australia, is one of the communities that may go off-grid. Photo by Rob & Jules. CC BY 2.0.

¶ BHP Billiton, the world’s largest mining company, did an analysis of climate change, and issued the findings in a report. The company says it believes climate change is real and that action will be taken. In fact, the introduction calls for an agreement to restrict global warming to 2 degrees warmer than pre-industrial levels. [Business Insider Australia]

¶ Despite getting 55% of its energy from coal-fired plants, the Alberta premier says the province will drop coal. She said the government is looking for a strategy to phase out the use of coal as quickly as possible, switching to renewables and efficiency without imposing unnecessary price shocks or unnecessarily stranding capital. [MINING.com]

¶ Rosatom initially pledged to have the first of the four reactors in the southern Turkish town of Akkuyu ready by 2019 but regulatory hurdles and Russia’s financial woes have slowed the $20 billion project’s progress. In March, there was talk that it would be delayed until at 2022, at earliest. Now, more delay is expected. [Today’s Zaman]

US:

¶ A newly expanded Nevada plant is providing 16.2 MW of renewable energy, enough for 22,500 Los Angeles households, reducing greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to taking 14,600 cars off the road, officials announced Tuesday. The plant, built as an expansion of an existing facility and completed months ahead of schedule. [MyNewsLA.com]

Don Campbell I geothermal plant in Nevada. Photo courtesy of the Nevada Department of Energy

Don Campbell I geothermal plant in Nevada. Photo courtesy of the Nevada Department of Energy

¶ International credit rating agency Moody’s Investors Service expects battery storage to be economical within 3 to 5 years in the US. The biggest losers will be coal-powered generators and peaking gas plants. Moody’s says battery storage costs have fallen 50% in recent years, and their rapid fall is likely to continue in the next few. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The US House passed the RAPID Act, prohibiting federal agencies from following draft guidance from the White House Council on Environmental Quality for “consideration of greenhouse gas emissions and the effects of climate change” in environmental reviews. Citibank puts the worldwide cost of the emissions at $44 trillion annually. [CleanTechnica]

The Deep Water Wind project will create five turbines off the coast of Block Island. Photo courtesy of Hans Hilewaert

The Deep Water Wind project will create five turbines off the coast of Block Island. Photo by Hans Hilewaert. 

¶ Three miles off the coast of Block Island, Deep Water Wind is overseeing construction of the first offshore wind farm in the United States and is expecting the controversial turbines to begin producing electricity by fall 2016. The project will consist of five turbines connected to the mainland by an underwater cable. [The Brown Daily Herald]

¶ Solar energy pricing is at an all-time low, according to a report from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Driven by lower installed costs, improved project performance, and a race to build projects ahead of a reduction in a key federal incentive, utility-scale solar PV power sales agreements are averaging just 5¢/kWh. [solarserver.com]

¶ North Carolina has surpassed 1 GW of installed solar capacity, the fourth US state to do so, according to the North Carolina Sustainable Energy Association. The state reached 1.04 GW of installed capacity as of September 24. California, Arizona, and New Jersey had already reached the 1-GW milestone. [CleanTechnica]

 

August 14 Energy News

August 14, 2014

Opinion:

¶   “‘Experts’ Have Been Misleading People About Renewable Energy” one of the striking patterns of behaviour in the energy industry over the last decade has been the ability of the “established” energy experts to underestimate growth of renewable energy and to overplay fossil fuels. [CleanTechnica]

Science and Technology:

¶   Morgan Stanley’s report on Solar Power and Energy Storage contains a fascinating comment about the potential ramifications of Tesla’s focus on developing large numbers of electric batteries, indicating that the batteries could be a grid defection tipping point in the US and Europe. [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶   A Western Australian government review has revealed the full catastrophe of the state’s electricity market, highlighting the extraordinary waste and misdirected subsidies that are costing it billions of dollars, much of this spent on fossil fuel plants that have never been used. [RenewEconomy]

¶   RWE, Germany’s second-biggest utility by market value, posted a 62% drop in profit on Thursday and announced plans to shut down more power stations. The utility blamed the expansion of renewable energy in Germany. [Financial Times]

¶   The UK solar power industry accused the government of undermining the development of renewable technologies, after it emerged that a total of £205 million a year will be available for major forms of renewable energy, including wind, solar farms, and biomass power plants. [The Northern Echo]

¶   A British Columbian First Nation Tribal Council signed a partnership agreement this week with the independent power firm Innergex Renewable Energy Inc. with respect to six separate run-of-river power projects, worth up to $720 million, on streams within their territory. [Vancouver Sun]

¶   New Zealand gentailer Contact Energy unveiled its most advanced geothermal power station at the “world-class” Wairākei geothermal resource. The 159 MW Te Mihi station boasts two 83 MW steam turbines. [Business Spectator]

US:

¶   If the controversial northern leg of the Keystone XL pipeline is approved and built, the resulting amount of carbon emitted into earth’s atmosphere could be up to four times greater than the US State Department estimated, a new scientific paper shows. [Resilience]

¶   A grass-roots group based in Portsmouth, New Hampshire is working to “responsibly retire” the Schiller Station power plant in Newington and is increasing pressure on state legislators to force divestiture of the plant. The coal-burning plant is owned by Public Service of New Hampshire. [Seacoastonline.com]

¶   Ford Motor Company is teaming with DTE Energy to build Michigan’s largest solar array at Ford World Headquarters. The project will provide employees with 360 covered parking spaces and 30 charging stations for plug-in electric vehicles. [Stockhouse]

¶   Oklahoma Gas and Electric was ultimately unsuccessful when it took the US EPA to court over the regional haze, mercury, and air toxics rules. Now, the time to start complying with the regulations has come, which the utility says will mean higher electricity bills for customers. [KGOU]

¶   Hoosier Energy has entered into a 15-year power purchase agreement with EDP Renewables North America that will add 25 MW of wind energy from an Illinois wind farm beginning in December of 2014. [Inside Indiana Business]

¶   Former President Jimmy Carter is back, this time proposing a carbon tax to fight global warming and calling out skeptics. Carter said that such a tax was “the only reasonable approach” to fighting global warming. [Daily Caller]

¶   The US DOE issued the final Environmental Impact Statement for the Champlain Hudson Power Express transmission line, clearing it for final permitting. It is expected to bring New York up to 1,000 MW of renewable power, reducing dependency on the Indian Point nuclear plant. [POWER magazine]

June 24 Energy News

June 24, 2014

Science and Technology:

¶   One in five people around the world, approximately 1.3 billion people, lack access to electricity. The Sierra Club is released a new report — “Clean Energy Services For All (CES4All)” — showing that off-grid clean energy is the right tool for the energy access job. [Energy Collective]

World:

¶   East Anglia One Offshore Wind, a 50-50 joint venture between ScottishPower Renewables and Vattenfall, has received consent from the UK Department for Energy & Climate Change. With 1,200 MW capacity, the project will become one of the world’s largest wind sites. [Power Online]

¶   The Australian federal government’s case to scrap or weaken the Renewable Energy Target has been dealt a blow, with modelling it commissioned for the review showing consumers will be better off if the target is kept. [The Canberra Times]

¶   Strong hydro generation and the opening of the largest wind farm in the country lifted renewable energy’s share of Australia’s power generation to 14.76 per cent in the 2013 calendar year, up from 13.14 per cent in 2012. [Business Spectator]

¶   Huge solar farms are set to transform former UK coal mine sites into green energy powerhouses providing low carbon electricity for around 10,000 homes. Anesco is set to install up to 30 MW of solar energy capacity at three sites in Nottinghamshire. [Business Green]

¶   A study from the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis says Concentrating Solar Power could supply sizable amounts of electric demand. Mediterranean region systems could provide 70% – 80% of demand at no extra cost compared to gas-fired power plants. [Counsel & Heal]

US:

¶   American University, George Washington University and GWU Hospital, all in Washington DC, will buy 52 MW of solar PV power — enough electricity to light up 8,200 homes — from Duke Energy Renewables at a fixed rate over the next two decades. [Washington Post]

¶   Vermont’s clean energy industry is projected to grow 12% during the next 12 months. The Department of Public Service released its “2014 Clean Energy Industry Report,” forecasting approximately 1,800 new jobs in the industry at wages far higher than average. [Rutland Herald]

¶   The Connecticut House gave final passage to a bill to enable the town of Canton to refurbish two dams, one first built for a grist mill in the late 1700s, the other in 1837 to power machinery for making axes. The “renewed” should power more than 1,500 local homes. [CT Post]

¶   Massachusetts’ new food waste ban, which was a decade in the making, puts the commonwealth among leaders in the United States in addressing an indulgence that is unique to our modern existence: throwing away large quantities of food. [Boston Globe]

¶   Renewables have supplied 47.83% of new electrical generation in the U.S. since the start of 2012. The share of clean energy is rising, with non-fossil fuel generation accounting for 54% of new capacity from January to the end of May, according to FERC. [pv magazine]

¶   First Wind celebrated the end of construction of the Warren Solar project and announced that commercial operations have begun. The 14 MW AC Worcester County-based project joins First Wind’s 3 MW AC Millbury, Massachusetts solar power project in commercial operations. [PennEnergy]

¶   At long last, America’s first offshore wind project, Cape Wind, has secured its permits, leases and is finalizing financing. Once turbines are erected, miles off-shore, it will begin producing most of the electricity for Cape Cod, Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket. [The Hill]

December 25 Energy News

December 25, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “Renewable Energy: From Pipe Dream To Mainstream” More and more ordinary businesses and institutions are aiming for 100% renewable energy, challenging conventional thinking that such targets are just pipe dreams. [TFM]

¶   “The nuclear renaissance is stone cold dead” 2013 has been the nuclear power industry’s annus horribilis and the nuclear renaissance can now be pronounced stone cold dead. Dr Jim Green reveals the global unravelling of the nuclear dream … [The Ecologist]

World:

¶   Hydrotec Renewables Inc. says it plans to build hydro power plants on the Philippine island of Leyte. The renewable energy company is currently scouting for potential sites where it can put up mini and micro hydro facilities. [Business Mirror]

¶   The International Finance Corporation, a member of the World Bank, has offered to support the Indian state of Odisha in formulation of a renewable energy policy with focus on solar and small hydro power. [Economic Times]

¶   Renewable Energy Generation Limited, the UK renewable energy group, announced that it has entered into a turbine supply agreement with Vestas Celtic Wind Technology Limited covering the supply of nine turbines for sites in Cornwall and Cambridgeshire. [4-traders]

US:

¶   Napa County may soon be taking another step in joining a Marin County-based energy program that could offer residents of the unincorporated area access to 50% to 100% renewable energy for their domestic use. [Napa Valley Register]

¶   Solar panels have been installed on the rooftops and in the parking lot of the Desert Research Institute in Reno. The solar array will save the facility $80,000 a year in electrical costs and create seven full-time jobs. [Las Vegas Review-Journal]

¶   Kalaeloa Renewable Energy Park, one of Hawaii’s largest solar energy generation facilities at 5 MW, has opened and will begin generating electricity for Hawaiian Electric customers on Oahu, following testing in November. [Solar Industry]

¶   The US Army has successfully flown the Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter on Gevo’s ATJ-8 (alcohol-to-jet). Gevo hopes isobutanol will be used as a blendstock for the Farm-to-Fleet program that aims to produce renewable fuels in the US. [Hydrocarbon Processing]

¶   An initial funding of $210 million is being put into renewables financing by the New York Green Bank. Gov. Cuomo says the funding represents a new market-oriented approach to accelerate clean energy deployment and create jobs. [Solar Industry]

November 20 Energy News

November 20, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “Charging Ahead Towards Dollar-a-Gallon Clean Fuel” The average household spends $2,756 on gasoline and motor oil annually. Driving a car on electricity costs a third as much, and electricity prices are also much more stable. [Energy Collective]

¶   “Invest, Divest: Renewable Investment To Hit $630 Billion A Year In 2030, Fossil Fuel Stocks At Risk Today” Struggle as it may to maintain profits, the fossil fuel industry is essentially doomed. Divesting from fossil fuels isn’t risky. Not divesting is. [ThinkProgress]

Science and Technology:

¶   The world weather patterns are literally moving off the charts. With the global average temperature up over half a degree Celsius since the 1970s, we are starting to witness weather anomalies so severe we need to update our metrics and extend our graphs. [Grist]

World:

¶   Renewable energy crowdfunding platform Abundance Generation has successfully reached its £500,000 target to fund the installation of solar panels on 20 community buildings in Nottingham. [Blue & Green Tomorrow]

¶   There were 39 wind projects totaling 868 MW awarded in Brazil’s A-3 renewable energy auction on November 18th, 2013. No solar projects were awarded despite a large number of solar submissions, apparently because of higher prices. [solarserver.com]

¶   Innergex Renewable Energy Inc. and the Rivière-du-Loup Regional County Municipality announce the commissioning of the 24.6 MW Viger-Denonville wind farm located in Quebec, Canada. [Wall Street Journal]

¶   Hopes of harnessing the rise and fall of the Bay of Fundy’s waters to generate renewable energy are gaining momentum. Fundy Tidal Inc. has joined forces with local governments in Digby County to support development of tidal power in the region. [TheChronicleHerald.ca]

¶   The Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) will invest $530,000 through a partnership involving CSIRO and US company Boulder Ionics to help commercialize a unique ionic liquid production method for use as battery electrolyte. [Business Spectator]

¶   Siemens Wind Power has received the Provisional Type Certificate from GL Renewables Certification for its 6 MW offshore wind turbine. They developed the turbine SWT-6.0 especially for the demanding conditions in offshore locations. [Renewable Energy Magazine]

¶   Fossil fuel companies are being targeted by a growing group of investors concerned with greenhouse gases. Storebrand ASA, which manages $74 billion of assets from Norway, has sold out of 24 coal and oil-sands companies since July. [Businessweek]

¶   TEPCO’s president said the lessons they learned from the 2011 meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi plant and its subsequent ongoing clean-up should serve as a warning to the world that nuclear energy is not fully safe. [The Japan Daily Press]

US:

¶   Half Moon Ventures has begun installation of Wisconsin’s first stand-alone utility-scale solar energy project in Jefferson. The project is scheduled to be completed by the end of 2013 and will generate more than 1.5 million kWh of clean energy annually. [PennEnergy]

¶   Social media strategies may have been decisive when voters in Colorado and Ohio communities approved anti-fracking ballot initiatives in early November. The pro-fracking ads cost nearly $900,000, but lost to a $26,000 anti-fracking campaign. [theenergycollective.com]

¶   The nuclear industry won a victory when a federal appeals court said the US should stop collecting $750 million a year for a spent-fuel repository. The question of where to put the waste is still not settled. [Businessweek]

307

November 17 Energy News

November 17, 2013

World:

¶   The new hydropower systems recently installed on the River Thames are now generating enough power for Windsor Castle, and more according to the director. They are producing 200 kW, and sometimes running some electricity onto the grid. [Royal Central]

¶   Ontario will achieve its goal to eliminate coal-fired generation before the end of 2014. Over the next year, the Thunder Bay Generating Station will stop burning coal and be converted to use advanced biomass as fuel for electricity generation. [4-traders]

¶   Power station Drax said full year earnings will be “materially ahead” of market forecasts following a better than expected performance from its first biomass unit in Yorkshire. [Yorkshire Post]

¶   Tokyo Electric Power Co. is looking to shed 1,000 jobs through a voluntary redundancy program to boost efficiency and improve earnings, sources revealed Saturday. [The Japan Times]

¶   A 20-year program to convert highly enriched uranium from dismantled Russian nuclear weapons into fuel for U.S. power plants has ended, with the final shipment loaded onto a vessel in St. Petersburg’s port. [Las Vegas Sun]

US:

¶   Lawmakers on Maine’s Legislature’s Energy, Utilities and Technology Committee are working on bills to be held over from 2013. They include bills on renewable energy, wind power, and the state’s renewable energy standard. [Lewiston Sun Journal]

¶   Maine’s Meadowmere Resort is adding solar PV to generate electricity. The solar field will feature over 70 panels and generate 18 kW for roughly 20,000-25,000 kWh annually. This will supply power to 36 of its 144 total rooms, with a 3-4-year payback. [Foster’s Daily Democrat]

¶   The Arizona Corporation Commission is meeting to decide whether to allow the state’s largest utility to charge more to customers with rooftop solar panels. The solar industry believes the proposal would decimate the industry. [Las Vegas Sun]

¶   A total of 42 landfill renewable energy projects have received approval through a Massachusetts program that started two years ago, according to Ed Coletta, spokesman for the state’s Department of Environmental Protection. [Boston Globe]

¶   Golden West Power Partners LLC of Moline, Illinois, is planing for a $400 million wind farm having 147 turbines with 425-foot towers on nearly 25,000 acres about 34 miles northeast of Colorado Springs, Colorado. [Pueblo Chieftain]

¶   All the stuff folks in Gresham, Fairview, and Wood Village, Oregon put down their toilets and other drains is being harnessed to slash energy costs for sewer system customers. Eight years ago it cost $40,000 per month; soon it will be $0. [Portland Tribune]

¶   The nation’s largest facility for turning food scraps into biogas is about to go online in north San Jose, California. Food waste from restaurants and commercial businesses, will be processed in 16 massive digestion chambers, each holding 350 tons of waste. [Contra Costa Times]

¶   Exelon CEO Christopher Crane has acknowledged that the Quad Cities and Clinton nuclear plants are in financial trouble. He says both plants could stay open if they can get long-term contracts at prices above current market rates. [Crain’s Chicago Business]

345

November 13 Energy News

November 13, 2013

World:

¶   The International Energy Agency says the world will likely need to have around 48% of total electricity generation produced by renewable energy sources by 2035, if it is to meet the stated climate change goals of international governments. [RenewEconomy]
… World Energy Outlook 2013 expects renewables to represent 31% of the global electricity supply in 2035, and warns that the path which we are currently on will not come close to limiting warning to two degrees centigrade. [solarserver.com]

¶   The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) solar energy sector is gearing up for significant growth with the regional market for photovoltaics and solar thermal power plants expected to reach 3.5 gigawatts by 2015, an expert has said today. [Middle East Events]

¶   The Australian federal government said it will cut funding from the Australian Renewable Energy Agency by $435 million. A bill to defer a further $370 million to nearly a decade hence is also enacted in proposed new legislation. [RenewEconomy]

¶   A Minesto “Deep Green” ocean energy generating unit is now producing power in the waters off Northern Ireland, marking the first time a system designed for low velocity currents has produced electricity at sea, the company said. [HydroWorld]

¶   Gaelectric and Dresser-Rand will work together on a compressed air energy storage project near Larne, Northern Ireland. When completed the project will comprise a 268 MW twin power-train storage and electricity generation facility. [Electric Light & Power]

¶   Japan’s lawmakers approved a first step to weakening the monopolies of regional power utilities by setting up an independent body to coordinate supply and demand across the nation’s electricity grids. [Businessweek]

¶   Ontario Power Generation wants a 30% increase in the rate it is paid for electricity generated by nuclear power. The rate increase, if approved by the Ontario Energy Board, could add about $5.36 each month to the bill for typical residential customers. [Waterloo Record]

¶   Japanese officials have admitted for the first time that thousands of people evacuated from areas near the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant may never be able to return home. [The Guardian]

US:

¶   GE has announced a contract with E.ON for GE’s PowerUp, is a customized software-enabled platform that increases a wind farm’s output by up to 5%. E.ON will enhance 469 of its North American GE wind turbines with PowerUp. [Your Renewable News]

¶   An Associated Press has put the ethanol industry and the Obama administration on the defensive at a critical time for the government’s biofuels mandate, claiming that millions of acres of wildlife habitat has been converted to corn production for ethanol. [National Journal]

¶   Green Mountain Energy Company announced today that its headquarters in the heart of downtown Austin, Texas, is the city’s first commercial interior to be awarded LEED Platinum certification by the U.S. Green Business Council. [Newswire Today]

¶   CleanWorld received the highly sought “International Bioenergy Project of the Year” award for its Sacramento BioDigester facility. The facility converts 25 tons of food waste per day into heat, electricity, and natural gas. [MRO]

¶   Eon has hailed renewables as “a mainstay of our earnings” as it confirmed its outlook for the financial year. The German utility saw dips in earnings for the first nine months in a performance that “continues to be in line with its expectations”. [reNews]

¶   The catastrophe at the Fukushima nuclear power plant appears to be ongoing, and Alaska now has become part of the story. Some radiation has arrived in northern Alaska and along the west coast, raising concern over contamination of fish and wildlife. [Esquire]

309

October 15 Energy News

October 15, 2013

World:

¶   Solar and wind energy production accounted for nearly 60% of Germany’s electricity use on October 3rd. At peak production, at noon, wind energy and solar energy were producing about 59.1% of the northern country’s power. [CleanTechnica]

¶   Norway has more money than it knows what to do with. While leaders figure out how they want to manage the nation’s $790 billion public pension fund going forward, there’s real potential for an “unprecedented shift” in renewable energy investment. [Grist]

¶   Chile doubled its renewable-energy target to 20% and may solicit competitive bids in 2015 for contracts to sell electricity as the South American nation seeks to spur investment in new power plants and curb its reliance on imported fossil fuels. [Businessweek]

¶   Vestas has received an unconditional order for 108 MW of wind turbines for the Crucea North wind power plant, in the province of Dobrogea, Romania. The Crucea North wind power plant is one of the largest in Romania. [Renewable Energy Focus]

¶   Germany’s green energy surcharge will rise 18% in 2014, from 5.277 euro cents per kWh this year to 6.240 euro cents in 2014. Chancellor Merkel is looking for ways to reduce the cost of renewable-energy subsidies. [Businessweek]

¶   At least 40% of nuclear reactor parts exported from Japan have failed to undergo safety inspections before getting shipped out of the country. The practice affects more than 17 countries, including Taiwan. [The Japan Daily Press]

¶   The strongest typhoon to reach Tokyo in 10 years was expected to slam into the region with full force Wednesday morning. TEPCO said it was bracing for the storm to hit the crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant. [The Japan Times]

¶   China has a new kind of trade deal that throws in loans to zoos. It works like this: Agree to export key energy technology to China; get a panda. Supply Beijing with the uranium it needs to power nuclear reactors; get a panda. [CNN]

US:

¶   The Colorado Highlands Wind project, Colorado’s newest renewable energy facility, has increased output by 36% and is now capable of generating 91 MWs of electricity following expansion. [Renewable Energy Focus]

¶   Utility company Kentucky Power Co.  will buy renewable electricity from the 58.8MW ecoPower Generation-Hazard biomass plant, construction on which will take about two years. Kentucky Public Service Commission approved a 20-year purchase agreement. [BioEnergy News]

¶   State officials are looking to modernize Connecticut’s portfolio of biomass and landfill gas projects and later this month. The state will issue a request for proposals for electric power produced by those methods as well as by small hydropower facilities. [New Haven Register]

¶   Hawaii regulators have approved a new 20-year fuel contract between Hawaiian Electric Co. and Hawaii BioEnergy, which calls for the utility to purchase about 10 million gallons a year of locally produced biofuels. [Pacific Business News (Honolulu)]

¶   E.ON Climate & Renewables Solar has dedicated its first solar projects in the US at a ceremony today. The projects  are in the Tucson, Arizona area and have a combined total of 15 MW of solar capacity. Tucson Electric Power is purchasing the power. [Sacramento Bee]

¶   The 280 MW Solana solar station in the Arizona desert is one of the first large-scale solar plants with thermal storage that allows it to keep producing power as much as 6 hours after sundown, allowing it to better match output to peak demand. [Treehugger]