Archive for the 'solar' Category
November 29, 2015
COP21:
¶ Can we avoid climate apocalypse? • Nearly every country in the world has agreed that an increase of 2° C in global average temperature since the Industrial Revolution, is too much. World leaders will meet in Paris starting on November 30 at the COP21 meeting of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. [CNN]

A view of Durban, South Africa, if temperatures rise as much as 4° C, according to Climate Central.
¶ COP21: Beginner’s guide to the UN Paris climate summit • World governments have already committed to curbing human activities such as burning fossil fuels that release the gases that interfere with the climate. The difficulty comes when you try to get 195 countries to agree on how to deal with the issue of climate change. [BBC]
Science and Technology:
¶ New onshore wind turbines are coming to market. Senvion’s 3.4M140 is a 3.4-MW example with 140 meter rotor blades. The turbine should be able to generate 12.2 GWh of electricity annually in locations with wind velocities of 6.5 meters per second at hub height, making capacity factor around 41%. [www.renewablesinternational.net]
World:
¶ The Wachau, a picture-postcard river valley in Austria, makes a lot of wine. Soon it could be producing its own electricity too, and in a way that will not spoil the stunning views. People in the valley have found a way to contribute to the fight against global warming by using what is called “river current power.” [CTV News]
¶ In 2010, a farmer in St. David’s, Newfoundland, installed an anaerobic digester that turns the waste from his 1,200 cows into electricity. His farm uses only 24% of the power, and the excess is enough to keep the lights on in 400 homes all year long. He wants to sell the power, but red tape has been holding him up for years. [CBC.ca]
¶ Australian Environment Minister Greg Hunt said new low-emissions coal power plants were unlikely to be built in Australia, despite experts saying they could help coal remain the dominant global fuel. He expects renewable energy, such as wind and solar, would take up the slack as old coal plant close. [The Australian Financial Review]
¶ Israel hopes to highlight its green technology expertise, with an emphasis on solar energy, as a major solution to global warming at the COP21 talks in Paris on November 30, according to a member of the delegation. Israeli innovation is being highlighted for its potential to help countries achieve climate goals. [The Times of Israel]

An aerial view of the 40 megawatt solar field recently built at Kibbutz Ketura, which provides the one third of the daytime electricity for the city of Eilat. (courtesy Gigawatt Global)
¶ When forest fires roared through Siberia this summer, so vast that the smoke blocked vast Lake Baikal from satellite view, Russian officials blamed the blazes on arsonists and disorganized fire crews. There may be another culprit: global warming, but Russia has little interest in reducing greenhouse gases. [The Journal]
US:
¶ Arizona could meet the requirements of the Clean Power Plan with large-scale solar and wind projects already under review in the state, according to a recent analysis released by Arizona State University’s Energy Policy Innovation Council and the Sonoran Institute, a sustainability group based in Tucson. [azcentral.com]
¶ The California birthplace of a machine that could bring clean power to the developing world and knock a tiny dent in global warming looks like a junkyard. But the Power Pallet, which generates electricity from corn cobs, wood chips, coconut shells and other kinds of cheap, dense biomass is “carbon negative.” [San Francisco Chronicle]

Tom Price, director of strategic initiatives, looks over a PP20 Power Pallet while giving a tour at All Power Labs. Photo: Lea Suzuki, The Chronicle
¶ A new solar plant being built near Florence, Arizona, will reduce carbon emissions equal to removing almost 20,000 vehicles from the road each year, company officials say. The Sandstone Solar ranch, currently under construction, will use 182,000 Jinko Solar photovoltaic modules, mounted on trackers. [TriValley Central]
¶ Research has found that an earthquake fault near California’s Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant is linked to another fault farther north, potentially making it capable of stronger shaking. A US Geological Survey scientist says it is not yet known what the implications are for the possibility of earthquake. [KSBY San Luis Obispo News]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 28, 2015
Science and Technology:
¶ Rising levels of carbon dioxide in the oceans are changing the makeup of plankton. While the shift in numbers could certainly be fortunate for animals that eat one type with a burgeoning population, researchers are unsure exactly which animals those are. That is worrisome because it shows just how little is known about the ecosystems. [Science Recorder]

Recent research shows that higher levels of carbon dioxide may be leading to a rise in the numbers of tiny phytoplankton known as coccolithophores.
¶ Canadian researchers say they have developed a power cell that generates electrical energy using the photosynthesis of blue-green algae, generating renewable energy while removing carbon from the atmosphere. During photosynthesis, electrons are released and can be drawn off into an external circuit, producing an electric current. [ABC Online]
World:
¶ The prestigious London School of Economics announced this week that it would divest from its £97.2 million in investments in coal and tar sands companies. Research published by magazine Corporate Knights concluded that the LSE endowment had lost $3 million due to not having divested 3 years ago. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Recently, the US released analysis of the country’s 2014 carbon emissions. It showed that growth in carbon emissions is declining even as economic activity expands. A new report indicates the same held true globally. Even though the global economy expanded by 3% last year, carbon emissions only rose by 0.5%. [Ars Technica]

Emissions trends: China flattening, US flat, and EU dropping. But be very afraid of India’s growth. Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency
¶ Quenching India’s energy demand will take $140 billion a year in new investments, and while India has deregulated much of its energy sector and has recently issued a “historic climate pledge”, growing demand could prompt policymakers to usher in a broader swath of energy investments, especially in renewables. [Rapid News Network]
¶ In the next five years, China would invest 200 billion yuan ($31 billion) in building power grids in its northwest province of Xinjiang to connect the region to the country’s east, Pakistan and central Asian countries. Resources-rich Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region would create “Power Silk Road” transmission lines by 2020. [Daily Times]
¶ Latin America is one of the fastest-growing solar markets worldwide, spurred on by high solar resources and surging electricity demand, resulting in 280% installation growth in 2015 compared to 2014. The Latin American solar market may dip slightly in 2016, but is expected to rebound strongly between 2017–2020. [CleanTechnica]

Visita Planta Abengoa in Chile. Image by Ministerio Bienes Nacionales. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ BP’s CEO Bob Dudley talked about climate change and the role oil and gas companies can play in the transition to a low carbon future. BP management believes the best course of action would be for the parties at the UN conference to reach an agreement on carbon pricing, either with taxes or by cap-and-trade. [Business Finance News]
¶ Japan’s Nuclear Regulation Authority said that it has confirmed active faults at the site of the No 1 reactor at Tohoku Electric Power Co’s Higashidori nuclear plant and will base discussions on the restart of the idled reactor on the assumption that the faults will move. Tohoku Electric denies the existence of such faults. [The Japan Times]
US:
¶ Texas has by far the most potential for solar and wind generation in the United States, which means the Lone Star state might be even more energy-rich in the 21st century than it has been in the past. In addition, the state’s energy sector is trending cleaner due to market forces for a number of important reasons. [Breaking Energy]

Nodding donkey and housing under construction in Texas.
¶ With climate negotiators gathering in Paris, calls are intensifying to make all polluters pay a price for carbon dioxide and other planet-warming emissions. Many economists back the approach as a market-friendly way to cut greenhouse gasses. The US Congress is hostile to the idea, but it’s gaining traction elsewhere. [Voice of America]
¶ For more than three decades, people from the Marshall islands have moved in the thousands to the landlocked Ozark Mountains for better education, jobs and health care, thanks to an agreement that lets them live and work in the US. The connection makes it an obvious destination for those facing a new threat: global warming. [Fox News]

Climate change poses an existential threat to places like the Marshall Islands, which protrude only 6 feet (2 meters) above sea level in most places. (AP Photo/Rob Griffith)
¶ Six years ago, the owner California’s last operating nuclear power plant announced it would seek an extended license for its aging reactors. Now, with a much changed power landscape, it is evaluating whether to meet the costly state environmental requirements it needs. If it decides not to, California’s nuclear power age would end. [Manteca Bulletin]
¶ Officials in Vernon, Vermont, are shooting for a Town Meeting day referendum on the possibility of building a 600-MW, gas-fired power plant somewhere near the Vermont Yankee site. Officials also are asking the project’s lead advocate, a resident of Winhall, Vermont, to narrow in on a site for the plant by early 2016. [The Keene Sentinel]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 27, 2015
World:
¶ China’s emissions tied directly to burning fossil fuels may rise only 0.24% in 2015, the slowest pace in at least 15 years, according to a Bloomberg New Energy Finance preliminary estimate based on coal consumption data drawn from government customs reports, company production filings and port inventories. [Macau Daily Times]

China is boosting renewable energy at a time its coal consumption is dropping.
¶ Pakistan is looking to increase the share of renewable energy in its overall energy mix substantially and has announced a roadmap that will see around 3.5 GW wind energy capacity operational by 2018. Over 40 wind energy projects in various stages of development should contribute around 2,050 MW capacity by 2017-18. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The Government of Bangladesh approved construction of a solar power project that is expected to play a critical role for the country to meet its renewable energy targets. A 200-MW solar power project in the Teknaf sub-district has been given the go ahead by the government to be developed by a SunEdison subsidiary. [CleanTechnica]
¶ CitiPower, via funding provided by the Australian Energy Regulator, is paying for battery storage to be installed in selected houses in Melbourne as a test. Properties with particular characteristics and in specific locations are being selected to see how those households’ reliance on the power grid changes with batteries in place. [The Age]

A solar-powered unit in East Melbourne. Councils are looking for ways to share solar power between residents. Photo: supplied
¶ South Australia has committed to a new target of zero net emissions by 2050, the state’s Premier has revealed. The announcement was made following the release of the recommendations of the South Australian Low Carbon Economy Expert Panel. The panel said 100% renewables could be achieved relatively quickly. [RenewEconomy]
¶ Unilever announced that it would stop using coal energy by 2020, and planned to use only renewable energy by 2030. Paul Polman, Unilever’s CEO, said, “If we don’t tackle climate change we won’t achieve economic growth. This is an issue for all businesses, not just Unilever. We all have to act.” [International Business Times]
¶ Completed only last month and designed to keep contaminated groundwater from seeping into the sea, a 780-meter protective wall built alongside Fukushima Daiichi is already “slightly leaning,” plant operator TEPCO has announced. Pressure from the flow of groundwater has tilted the wall some 20cm towards the sea. [RT]

Fukushima protective wall. © The Japan Times / YouTube
¶ Africa is quickly adapting to modern renewable energy sources, and could more than quadruple renewable energy use to 22% by 2030, up from 5% in 2013, according to a new report. International Renewable Energy Agency says Africa is currently among the leading markets for modern renewable energy sources. [SciDev.Net]
¶ Australia’s Federal Environment Minister has approved a $380 million wind farm on the Atherton Tablelands in far north Queensland, subject to conditions aimed at protecting native species. Developers RATCH Australia and Port Bajool hope to start building the 63-turbine Mt Emerald wind farm, near Walkamin, mid-next year. [ABC Online]
¶ A trial of project of large-scale water-source heat pump technology has been launched in the UK. The Neatpump, by Star Renewable Energy, uses ammonia as a working fluid. The trial will supply heat and hot water to 300 new homes in a project near Exeter for utility E·On. [Cogeneration & On-Site Power Production Magazine]
US:
¶ Enbridge says it has purchased a 103-MW wind farm under development in West Virginia for about $200 million from EverPower Wind Holdings. The Calgary-based pipeline operator, which has been increasing its stake in the clean energy sector, said it is aiming to have the New Wind Creek project in operation by December 2016. [CBC.ca]

Enbridge has been increasingly investing in renewable energy, including two major wind-power purchases in November 2015. (Reuters)
¶ In a report, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory says, “In just four years, thanks to falling renewable energy technology costs, economic potential has more than tripled.” Economic potential is a metric that quantifies the amount of economically viable renewable generation that is available at a specific location. [pv magazine]
¶ The Vermont Yankee nuclear plant stopped producing power last year, but security measures, including heavily armed guards in bulletproof towers, will remain in place for decades to protect hundreds of tons of radioactive waste. The spent fuel will stay here until the federal government can determine where to store it. [The Boston Globe]

Dry cask storage was used to store spent fuel at the Entergy Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant. Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff
¶ Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders calls climate change the greatest threat to national security. Hillary Rodham Clinton promises to install more than 500 million solar panels across the country. Republican Jeb Bush would phase out tax credits for solar power. Rival Marco Rubio wants to cut the federal gas tax by 80%. [ABC News]
¶ Google said it would offset the huge amounts of electricity it needed to run its North Carolina server farm with solar power under a new program that allows corporations to voluntarily pay more for renewable energy. Duke Energy will supply electricity it buys from a new Rutherford County solar farm under a new program. [domain-B]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 26, 2015
Science and Technology:
¶ This year will be the hottest on record and 2016 could be even hotter due to the El Niño weather pattern, the World Meteorological Organization said. WMO director-general Michel Jarraud rejected climate sceptics’ arguments, saying, “It’s not about believing or not. It’s a matter of seeing the facts. The facts are there.” [Free Malaysia Today]

How long will it last?
¶ One significant challenge to lithium-ion EV battery technology is coming from the lithium-sulfur field. A lithium-sulfur battery research project at Oak Ridge National Laboratory has had sufficient success that Oak Ridge announced that it has signed an exclusive lithium-sulfur battery agreement with a startup called Solid Power. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Stanford researcher Mark Jacobson has analyzed what it would take for each of the 50 states to go fully renewable. Normally, intermittency issues are expected to be handled by fossil fuel power and batteries. But the new analysis suggests we don’t need any of that, and we don’t need biofuels or nuclear, either. [Ars Technica UK]
World:
¶ German household-scale battery maker Sonnenbatterie will soon provide buyers of the company’s household-scale electricity storage batteries, most of whom also have solar photovoltaic panels mounted on their rooftops, to automatically buy and sell energy from each other directly through a shared online platform. [Deutsche Welle]

German rooftops.
¶ According to a recent report, soon to be released by Dodge Data & Analytics, green building continues to double every three years, with strongest acceleration in emerging economies, and clients and tenants worldwide are increasingly demanding sustainability, for both energy efficiency and occupant benefit. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Early this year, France’s state energy and environment agency was set to publish a study showing the country could actually abandon nuclear power and rely entirely on renewable power in decades to come. But the presentation was scrapped under political pressure, illustrating tensions surrounding French energy policy. [Reuters]
¶ The UK Department of Energy issued a new analysis of energy and emissions projections in 2015. An analysis of the projections by Carbon Brief, shows that the government now expects 22 GW of new renewable capacity to be installed by 2025, down by more than a third from the 34 GW forecast last year. [SeeNews Renewables]

Wind farm in England. Author: stephen jones. License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic
¶ Renewable energy is rapidly becoming the world’s preferred choice for new electricity generation, according to a Climate Council report. “A Whole New World: Tracking the renewables boom from Copenhagen to Paris” reveals how the world is in the midst of a dramatic energy revolution which could still accelerate. [Climate Control News]
¶ A competition to identify the “best value small modular reactor design for the UK” will be launched next year, to “pave the way towards building one of the world’s first small modular reactors in the UK in the 2020s,” the Treasury said. Support for the technology will come through a £250 million research package. [Yahoo Finance UK]
US:
¶ New rules could make it possible to develop more renewable energy in Alaska, by making it easier for independent projects to sell their power to the grid. After two years of hearings, the Regulatory Commission of Alaska issued new rules saying utilities should buy renewable power if it is least expensive. [Alaska Public Radio Network]

Alaska Environmental Power workers and contractors prepare to hoist the hub of a rotor and the three large blades to a hub. Photo: Tim Ellis/KUAC
¶ The energy storage market is rapidly becoming one of the most exciting spaces in all of renewables. Two major developments highlight this. First, even that the most dysfunctional of American institutions, the Congress, is getting interested in energy storage. Second, Wall Street is putting money into energy storage. [OilPrice.com]
¶ Fred Costello, a free-market Republican member of Florida’s House of Representatives, filed a bill last week to open the state’s energy market to solar energy competition by allowing homeowners and businesses to lease their rooftops to companies that generate solar power and sell it back to the grid. [Government Technology]
¶ North Dakota regulators have approved a 100.4-MW community-initiated wind project in Rolette County. The Public Service Commission voted unanimously to grant a certificate of site compatibility authorizing construction of up to 59 turbines. The project is located on a 14,000-acre site in north-central North Dakota [reNews]

Image: G114 (Gamesa)
¶ Developer Cape Wind has urged a US court to dismiss opponents’ appeal of its 468-MW offshore wind project in Nantucket Sound. The appeal is the latest in the plaintiffs “14-year crusade” against the project, which includes more than 30 administrative and court challenges, Cape Wind told a federal Court of Appeals. [reNews]
¶ Biodico announced its new facility in California’s San Joaquin Valley. The plant is purportedly the world’s first biofuel production facility operating entirely on renewable heat and power generated on-site. It will go online the first week of December, to produce 20 million gallons of biodiesel fuel each year. [Renewable Energy Magazine]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 25, 2015
Opinion:
¶ Australia should back calls to end coal and save its drowning neighbours While all of us of will experience the effects of climate change most are not facing the inevitable disappearance of our country. Yet that is the case for the 92,000 inhabitants of Kiribati, as well as other low-lying island states across the planet. [eco-business.com]

Kiribati, with about 92,000 inhabitants, recently bought land in Fiji to relocate its inhabitants as the sea level rises. Image: Shutterstock
¶ The Climate Talks in Paris Might Actually Work This Time • UN climate talks set to begin in Paris next week promise to produce a landmark deal that has eluded diplomats for more than two decades. All of the G20 nations, including the biggest developing countries, China, India and Brazil, have prepared to limit pollution. [Bloomberg]
Science and Technology:
¶ An accelerated transition to renewable energy could limit the global temperature rise to below 2° C, says an International Renewable Energy Agency report. It says if renewable energy accounted for 36% of the world energy mix by 2030, half the emission reductions needed to limit warming to 2° C would already be met. [CleanTechnica]
World:
¶ US-based Envirofit was one of the first social enterprises to provide clean cookstoves, and it’s just recently sold its millionth unit. Rocket stoves are wonders of sustainability. They address dangers to human health posed by open-fire cooking; they also burn very small amounts of wood fuel, with low emissions. [CleanTechnica]

Image credit: Envirofit International via Picasa. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
¶ Ireland could install nearly 4 GW of solar by 2030, adding more than €2 billion to its economy and creating more than 7,000 jobs, with modest policy support, a new report produced by KPMG has claimed. The report was produced on behalf of the Irish Solar Energy Association and says the technology should be supported. [Solar Power Portal]
¶ The government of South Australia released the final report from its Low Carbon Economy Expert Panel, which recommends the state’s greenhouse gas emissions be cut by more than half by 2030 and the state be a net zero emitter by 2050. The panel also recommends an emissions trading scheme linked to California’s. [InDaily]
¶ The 300-MW Cestas solar photovoltaic project, located in the Bordeaux region of France, has now been fully connected to the electric grid, according to recent reports. Full grid connection was achieved with the connection of the last 12-MW portion of the project, which has a total of 25 different 12 MW project portions. [CleanTechnica]

Cestas solar project
US:
¶ The US DOE announced that a company called Dioxide Materials is getting a slice of the agency’s new $125 million round of funding for “transformational” energy projects. Among its areas of expertise, Dioxide Materials is developing a low cost system that uses renewable energy to produce hydrogen fuel from water. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Vestas is to supply an unnamed client with 200 MW of turbines for a wind farm in Oklahoma. The manufacturer will deliver 61 of its V126 3.3-MW units; it is the first order from the US for that model. Delivery will start in the second quarter of 2016, with completion in the second half of year. Oklahoma has been 2-MW territory. [reNews]
¶ Duke Energy, the largest electric power holding company in the US, has repurposed a retired coal-powered operation in New Richmond, Ohio, in a development partnership with LG Chem, Greensmith, and Parker Hannifin, which provided the 2-MW power conversion inverter. The storage capacity of the unit was not disclosed. [CleanTechnica]

Duke Energy’s Walter C. Beckjord retired coal-powered generating station. Image via Cincinnati Business Courier
¶ Las Vegas is planning to run municipal buildings, fire stations, parks, streetlights and other facilities exclusively with renewable energy, under a deal announced Tuesday with the NV Energy, a utility owned by Berkshire Hathaway. The agreement doesn’t cover the famously bright casinos on the Las Vegas Strip. [Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]
¶ According to the Environmental Defense Fund, 70% of Hoboken’s population lives in flood zones. The city also has a plan to manage flooding and other disasters. Working with EDF’s Climate Corps program, Hoboken is moving toward building a microgrid to keep the power on at 55 buildings during disasters. [Government Technology]
¶ Alaska is a vast wilderness of natural beauty. But it also holds more coal than all the other US states put together. As world leaders prepare to gather for a major climate change summit, plans to build an open coal mine that would cover 78 sq km (30 sq miles) surrounding a valued Alaskan river could be coming to a head. [BBC]

Photo by Pete Niesen
¶ According to the California Air Resources Board, a leak that started October 23 at a Southern California Gas Company well accounted for a quarter of all the methane released by the state since it started. Estimates are that up to 50 metric tons of the potent greenhouse gas leaked into the atmosphere each hour since the leak started. [KCET]
¶ The US is set to become the first nation to decide whether it’s safe to operate nuclear power plants for 80 years, twice as long as initially allowed. The majority of the nation’s 99 reactors already have 20-year extensions to their 40-year operating licenses. Now, operators led by Dominion Resources want even more time. [Bloomberg]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 24, 2015
Opinion:
¶ How Renewable Energy Could Make Climate Treaties Moot • Creating an international agreement is an admirable goal, but notably, countries are not racing to zero emissions on their own. It is amazing that no country has performed a study on the benefits and costs of going to 100% clean, renewable energy. [Scientific American]

©iStock.com
¶ How Virtual Power Plants Can Help Replace Dirty Peaker Plants • A recent Wall Street Journal article highlighted a common problem: How to pay for aging, mostly coal-fired power plants whose only function is as backup for peak demand? One way is to combine distributed power and loads sources in a “virtual” power plant. [CleanTechnica]
Science and Technology:
¶ Sooner than it takes to build a nuclear power station, lithium-air batteries could be helping wind and solar to make coal, oil and nuclear obsolete, according to researchers from the Cambridge University. Five times lighter and five times cheaper than current lithium batteries, Li-air would open the way to our 100% renewable future. [The Ecologist]
World:
¶ A developing country dubbed one of the most vulnerable to climate change has confirmed controversial plans for more coal-fired power stations. The president of the Philippines has told the BBC the new coal plants are needed to meet demands for energy. This comes despite coal’s huge contributions to global warming. [BBC]

The Philippines is regarded as one of the most vulnerable countries to climate change. Kate Stephens/BBC
¶ Richard Branson and other notable business leaders were signatories of a definitive letter of climate action directed to heads of state. Specifically, the letter calls for the Paris (COP21) deal to include a long-term climate goal of net-zero emissions by 2050. Their aim in the process is “the end of business as usual.” [CleanTechnica]
¶ Allianz CEO Oliver Baete said the company will no longer invest in companies if more than 30% of sales come from coal mining or if they generate more than 30% of electricity from the fossil fuel. Allianz manages about €1.8 trillion in assets, focusing on the U.S., Germany, France, Italy, Britain and the Asia-Pacific region. [Newser]
¶ A study concludes that long-term ocean warming worsened deadly floods that hit Australia in 2010/11. During that summer, a series of floods hit Queensland, affecting at least 90 towns, over 200,000 people, killing at least 38 people, causing damage of $2.38 billion (Aus), and reducing Australia’s GDP about $40 billion. [CleanTechnica]

Image Credit: Markus Gebauer / Shutterstock.com
¶ LG Chem has announced it will supply Steag with six 15 MW Li-ion battery systems, while Nidec ASI will provide the necessary PCS and EMS solutions. “With 140 megawatt hours of power, the storage systems will deliver enough energy to supply 10,000 households per day with electricity,” said LG Chem. [pv magazine]
¶ Jordan is set to add 1,600 MW of solar and wind power to the national energy mix by 2016. The renewable energy sector needs an investment of $2.4 billion by 2025, in order to increase the contribution of clean energy sources to the Kingdom’s overall power capacity, says Ibrahim Saif, minister of energy and mineral resources. [AMEinfo]
¶ Investment in renewable sources of energy in Latin America and the Caribbean grew by nearly 50% last year to $23 billion, according to a study released by the Inter-American Development Bank and Bloomberg New Energy Finance. Brazil accounted for $14 billion of that total; Mexico and Chile followed with $2 billion each. [La prensa]
US:
¶ The EU’s renewable energy requirements are forcing coal-based power plants to use biomass fuel. Swaths of woodlands in Southeastern United States are being cut down to fuel the biomass boom across the Atlantic. A report by the Natural Resources Defense Council points out that 15 million acres of unprotected forests are at risk. [Digital Journal]

Europe’s biomass boom is putting American forests at risk. Photo by cuellar.
¶ To bring the benefits of solar energy to more of people, especially those who are not wealthy and who otherwise lack easy access to solar power, the Obama administration rolled out a national solar initiative last July. One of its key components, a private-public community solar partnership, is now starting to really come together. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Nuclear power plant owners are welcoming reports that Gov. Andrew Cuomo wants state regulators to mandate that half of the state’s energy come from renewable energy sources by 2030 while creating incentives for nuclear to remain viable in the interim. The governor wants to keep the Ginna and Fitzpatrick nuclear plants going. [RTO Insider]
¶ Builders seeking a net-zero energy home showcase can look to BuiltGreen’s zHome townhome complex in Issaquah, Washington. Several year’s later, the country’s first Net-Zero Energy townhome complex, meets expectations on reducing energy and water consumption, according this newly released white paper. [CleanTechnica]

zHome townhome complex
¶ A research study has found that using more solar power in Arizona could save 15 billion gallons of water annually. Most of the water used in Arizona is for agriculture, but another common usage is for cooling natural gas, coal, and nuclear power plants. Obviously, operating rooftop solar power does not require such water use. [CleanTechnica]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 23, 2015
World:
¶ Most people know global oil prices have crashed this year. This was caused by a massive supply glut created by ferocious production from OPEC and near-record US output. The oversupply problem is so bad that oil tankers waiting to be offloaded are piling up off the US Gulf Coast because there’s nowhere to put the crude. [CNN]

Tanker loading oil. US Navy photo by Photographer’s Mate 2nd Class Andrew M. Meyers. Public Domain. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ UK-based project developer Lightsource has announced its expansion into the rapidly growing solar power market of India, as it has signed an agreement to invest $3 billion to develop 3 GW solar power capacity in the country. The agreement was signed during Indian Prime Minister Modi’s visit to the United Kingdom. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Wind turbine blade manufacturer LM Wind Power is setting up a blade factory in Vadodara in the Indian state of Gujarat in response to increased domestic demand, the Danish company said. The plant is scheduled to start operations in March 2016 and will supply blades to wind projects in the northern part of India and beyond. [SeeNews Renewables]
¶ An 8.5-MW solar power plant in Rwanda is designed so that, from a bird’s-eye view, it resembles the shape of the African continent. The $23.7 million (£15.6 million) solar field went from contract signing to construction to connection in just a year, defying sceptics of Africa’s ability to realise projects fast. [The Guardian]

The 8.5-MW solar power plant in Rwanda’s famed green hills. Photograph: Cyril Ndegeya / AFP for the Guardian
¶ Battery costs are falling to the point that they are becoming increasingly viable as an option for uses such as supporting the stability of power grids. New electricity storage installed on to the grid to support renewables is likely to grow more than 60-fold from 196 MW of capacity now to 12,700 MW in 2025, according to Navigant. [Irish Times]
¶ For the first time ever, over half of all new annual investment into clean energy power generating projects globally went toward projects in emerging markets, rather than toward wealthier countries. Emerging market investments in renewables hit a record annual high of $126 billion in 2014, up $35.5 billion from 2013 levels. [Jakarta Post]
¶ Alberta will speed up the phase out of coal-fired power and move to more renewable energy by 2030, according to its newly released climate change strategy. The plan suggests that two-thirds of coal-generated electricity will be replaced by renewables, mainly wind power, with natural gas generation for load reliability. [Calgary Herald]

A wind farm near Fort MacLeod, Alberta. Leah Hennel / Calgary Hearald Archives
¶ Just a few weeks after the UK’s Prime Minister announced a deal with the Chinese to build the Hinkley Point nuclear plant, Baroness Jones, a Green party London Assembly member, asked London’s mayor, Boris Johnson, whether he supported it despite the cost. In reply, he said, “It’s a disgrace.” [The London Economic]
US:
¶ In Climate Science, two of the three Democratic presidential candidates are ‘A’ students, while most of the Republican contenders are flunking, according to a panel of scientists who reviewed candidates’ comments. The climate and biological scientists did the rating at the request of The Associated Press. [Watertown Public Opinion]
¶ In the face of growing safety problems, cheap natural gas and the rising use of renewable energy sources, aging nuclear power plants are closing down across the US, raising questions about the future viability of nuclear energy production. Pilgrim and Fitzpatrick are both old and expensive to run, but they typify nuclear problems. [Jefferson Public Radio]

The Entergy Corporation will close Pilgrim Nuclear Generating Station, on Cape Cod Bay, within four years. Entergy Nuclear / Flickr
¶ Danish wind turbine blade maker LM Wind Power is increasing the number of employees at a North Dakota plant by 100 to almost 700 in coming months. The company wants to be competitive in the labor market and lifted its starting wage for production employees. The plant has been retooling for longer blades. [SeeNews Renewables]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 22, 2015
Opinion:
¶ Good news: Big companies are using a record amount of clean energy • In the United States, clean energy is already a booming business. Solar is the fastest-growing energy source in the country, and in 2015, total investment in renewable energy projects here reached nearly $40 billion. And big companies are getting involved. [Grist]

Shutterstock image.
¶ The broken promises, politics of corn ethanol • The federal corn ethanol mandate, also known as the Renewable Fuel Standard, exemplifies how national politics play into an issue that makes absolutely no sense. The case against it is so strong that groups ranging from the Sierra Club to Americans for Tax Reform agree on it. [Modesto Bee]
World:
¶ With just a week to go until a crucial global warming summit begins, 170 countries have submitted pledges for greenhouse gas curbs to underpin a 195-nation climate pact. Those countries account for about 93% of the world population and produce roughly 93% of emissions driving dangerous levels of climate change. [The Japan Times]
¶ Two years ago, a global energy company abandoned plans to build a $120 million pilot wind farm off Maine’s coast following opposition from the Governor Paul LePage. Now it is moving ahead with a similar project in Scotland. The decision is inviting an examination of what Maine may be losing in terms of jobs and investment. [Press Herald]

Floating wind turbines.
¶ Electricity coming to Crimea from Ukraine was cut shortly after midnight on Sunday, local time, according to the Crimean branch of Russia’s Emergency Situations Ministry. The ministry said 1,896,000 people were without power, and that emergency supplies had been turned on for hospitals and other important facilities. [Deutsche Welle]
¶ The government of Bangladesh approved construction of a large-scale solar park in an effort to increase the share of power from renewable sources in this electricity-starved country. The new solar park, which is due to begin generating within the next 18 months, will supply up to 200 MW of electricity to the national grid. [DhakaTribune]
¶ The Greens will seek to build momentum for more ambitious action on climate change by calling for the creation of a new government authority to help Australia reach a 90% target for renewable energy by 2030. The party has already adopted the goal, but the new policy document spells out how this could be achieved. [The Guardian]

Wind farm near Merredin, Western Australia. Photograph: Calla Wahlquist for the Guardian
¶ Residents of rural China have fears about the proposed expansion of the country’s nuclear program. Ask villagers in the Chinese village of Hubin what they think of proposed nuclear plant, and talk quickly turns to the Communist government’s dismal record of industrial accidents, as well as the Fukushima Disaster of 2011. [New York Times]
US:
¶ Republicans are taking aim at a new “Green Climate Fund,” as they look to weaken President Obama’s hand in global climate talks later this month. The pot of money, a $3 billion climate change pledge the administration made last year, is something officials hope to bring to the negotiating table at United Nations summit in Paris. [The Hill]
¶ A proposed solar energy project in Bethel, Connecticut, that has been entangled in bureaucracy for years could finally get underway early in 2016. Officials expect that a proposal to build a 954-kW solar farm on the site of the town’s old landfill will finally come to a vote soon, allowing construction to begin in the spring. [Danbury News Times]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 21, 2015
Opinion:
¶ Nuking Clean Energy: How Nuclear Power Makes Wind and Solar Harder • Nuclear is a barrier to a clean-energy future, not a piece of it. Nuclear is so expensive that there’s little room left in a utility budget to build wind and solar, but more importantly, it makes high levels of wind and solar become harder to achieve. [Energy Collective]
Science and Technology:
¶ By adopting bicycles and electric bikes for just 10% of urban trips, we would save some $24 trillion between now and 2050, as well as reducing GHG emissions from motor vehicles by about 11%, according to a report from the Institute for Transportation & Development Policy. About 6% of urban trips are already on bicycles. [CleanTechnica]

Commuter bikes at Alewife Station, near Boston, Massachusetts. Photo by agr. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Though many believe the lifetime of a solar panel is twenty-five years, a number of older models have exceeded this. When Kyocera tested a 30-year-old module last year, it discovered it was still operating at 90.4% of capacity. There are 37-year-old Arco Solar (now SolarWorld USA) panels in operation. [CleanTechnica]
¶ After a staggering 90% decline, it is hoped that the population of the iconic monarch butterfly will recover following coordinated efforts of North American governments. The insects have been damaged by illegal logging and pesticide use that have destroyed the milkweed plants they depend on for food and to lay their eggs. [Columbus Dispatch]
World:
¶ Spain has made renewable energy a top priority, and the investment has paid off: 42% of Spain’s electricity came from renewable sources in 2013. The majority comes from wind power, but solar provided 13% of the country’s energy and is growing. Spain is also home to the largest solar farm in the world, Andasol. (Photos) [Tech Insider]

International Energy Agency photo
¶ South African utility Eskom, which is known for regular power outages, has gone 104 days without any load shedding, leading observers to comment that it is now relatively stable. Important among the leading causes of the new stability are various renewable sources of electricity, which have recently gone online. [The Citizen]
¶ Thanks to the abundance of hydropower in Quebec, Manitoba, and British Columbia, Canada already obtains 65% of its electricity from clean energy sources. But a report from the Canadian Council on Renewable Electricity concludes that to meet its climate targets, Canada needs to double its renewable capacity. [CleanTechnica]

Image from Powering Climate Prosperity: Canada’s Renewable Electricity Advantage
¶ Coal plants in Thailand cause an estimated 1,550 premature deaths every year, according to new research by Harvard University and Greenpeace Southeast Asia. That number of could climb to 5,300 per year if plans to expand electricity production by building new coal-fired plants go ahead, the study found. [ThaiVisa News]
¶ Luxembourg will join Austria’s legal challenge to the UK’s support package for the Hinkley C nuclear power station, which totals €108 billion. Meanwhile EDF has laid off 65 engineers working on the project in Paris, and the EU Commission has initiated proceedings against Hungary over its Paks II nuclear project with Rosatom. [The Ecologist]
¶ Irish wind hit a new peak output earlier this week with favourable weather conditions helping wind farms to supply almost 50% of electricity demand. Wind output hit some 2035 MW or enough to meet 46% of the country’s electricity demand. It is the first time that the country has broken the 2-GW barrier. [reNews]

Gaelectric wind farm (Gaelectric)
US:
¶ A smart home service, OhmConnect, launched an online store offering California customers cash back rebates on such products as smart thermostats, smart plugs, home automation, and EV charging brands. OhmConnect can sync with all these products, sending users cash back rebates for automatically using less energy. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The city of Portland, Oregon, has unanimously passed a new resolution to block the expansion of new fossil fuel storage and transport activities in the city. The resolution is the first of its kind to be passed in the US, and represents a pretty big victory for activists concerned about climate change. It can serve as an example. [EV Obsession]
¶ It appears the wind industry is not at a complete standstill in northwestern Ohio. Amazon Web Services announced Thursday it is partnering with EDP Renewables to build and operate a 100-M wind farm in Paulding County. The power would be enough to provide electricity for 29,000 homes in the US in a year. [Times Bulletin]

Ohio wind farm.
¶ Cheaper Canadian power is a myth, according to two former Maine public utilities commissioners who spoke about Maine’s energy future at the University of Southern Maine. The panelists agree that Maine should take another approach for its energy future: invest in energy efficiency and foster offshore wind development. [Maine Public Broadcasting]
¶ The Massachusetts legislature recessed formal sessions for the year earlier this week without renewing a solar power incentive program. It leaves many solar power projects across the state in limbo. Lawmakers were torn between arguments from environmental activists and solar developers and lobbying by utility companies. [WAMC]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 20, 2015
World:
¶ A massive solar farm the size of more than 175 football pitches is to go ahead on farmland in East Cambridgeshire, with the District council’s planning committee approval. The farm’s capacity will be nearly 39.5 MW, enough for 11,000 homes, and its energy will feed directly into the local power grid network. [Newmarket Journal]

Solar farm approved. SUS-150325-142109001
¶ The Clean Energy Finance Commission in Australia has reported that its recently launched solar financing program has attracted a substantial amount of interest; in fact it is enough to boost the country’s large-scale PV capacity 10-fold. The CEFC program will offer loans of AU$15 million and above, for projects over 10 MW. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The world could be powered almost entirely by clean, renewable energy sources in the space of a few decades, and two US engineers say they have figured out exactly how it can be done. One of them, Mark Jacobson, a civil and environmental engineer at Stanford University, has been granted two opportunities to speak at COP21. [ScienceAlert]
¶ ScottishPower Renewables submitted its plan to build a 1,200-MW wind farm off the coast of Suffolk, after UK Government clears that it will provide support to such projects. The project called East Anglia THREE will feature up to 172 wind turbines and generate enough energy to meet the power needs of more than 850,000 homes. [Power Technology]
¶ The Scottish Government refused consent earlier this week for two separate wind farms intended for the county of Sutherland. Specifically, the two wind farms were said to have “an unacceptable impact” on the nearby wild land areas, and that such impact would not be outweighed by any wider policy benefit. [CleanTechnica]

Countryside near a refused wind farm, Head of Loch Long with Beinn Mheadhoin. Photo by Richard Webb. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Russia has signed two agreements with Egypt to build the North African country’s first nuclear power plant in a televised ceremony attended by the Egyptian president. The deals were signed by the Egyptian Electricity and Renewable Energy Minister and the head of Russia’s Rosatom State Atomic Energy Corporation in Cairo. [APA]
¶ In Australia, 1320-MW coal-fired power station has been sold by the NSW Government for just $1 million to a former ERM Power chief and a coal mining executive. As an illustration of how cheap this purchase price is, to replace such a coal power plant with a newly constructed plant would cost well over $2 billion. [Business Spectator]
US:
¶ While many countries continue to drag their feet on reducing emissions, individual cities are taking the lead and setting ambitious renewable energy targets. Some have already made the transition to 100% renewable energy. Here in the US, four cities or population centers stand out as having gone 100% renewable. [EcoWatch]

Burlington, Vermont, runs on a mix of biomass, hydroelectric, solar and wind. Erika J Mitchell / Shutterstock.com
¶ Environmental groups will rally in Hartford, Connecticut, on Saturday, asking the governor to invest in clean energy, not gas pipelines. With the gas boom, major new pipelines are being built in Connecticut to carry gas to consumers and for export. But the groups say getting 100% renewable energy should be the goal. [Public News Service]
¶ EDF Renewable Energy announced that the 175-MW Pilot Hill Wind Project in Illinois has reached commercial operation. The project was made possible through Microsoft Corporation’s commitment to a long-term purchase agreement. The project will power 100% of the energy needs of Microsoft’s data center in Illinois. [AltEnergyMag]
¶ Texas homeowners and business owners can keep more money in their pockets, and Texas ranchers and family farmers can receive millions of dollars more a year in land lease payments by building new wind farms and using more wind resources. That’s according to a new report, “A wind vision for new growth in Texas.” [Windpower Engineering]

Texas already leads the nation in wind energy production.
¶ A Public Citizen report, “Clean Power, Clear Savings,” shows that energy bills will fall in every state by 2030 as a result of the Clean Power Plan compared to a business-as-usual scenario, including the states contesting the plan. The Clean Power Plan, finalized in August, sets targets for reducing carbon pollution in each state. [citizen.org]
¶ The Kauai Island Utility Cooperative has begun a process for a creating community-based renewable energy program to bring the benefits of renewables to more people in Hawaii. The Lihue-based nonprofit co-op submitted its projected rates and guidelines to the Hawaii Public Utilities Commission for commission approval. [Pacific Business News]
¶ Analysts at the DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory devised a method for measuring the economic potential of renewable energy across the US. Using it, NREL has found that renewable generation is economically viable in many parts of the country primarily because of declining technology costs. [Windpower Engineering]
¶ After five years, all preliminary reviews are complete and it is now up to two federal boards whether PSEG Nuclear gets one of the key permits it needs to build a new reactor in Salem County, New Jersey. The NRC and the US Army Corps of Engineers have issued a final Environmental Impact Statements. [NJ.com]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 19, 2015
World:
¶ A report by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, distributed just days before the crucial climate talks in Paris, is directed at policymakers. It shows how keeping global warming to less than 2° C from pre-industrial levels is not only feasible, but also urgently needed and economically viable. [The Climate Group]

Where did it go? McCarty Glacier, in Alaska. These images are in the public domain. For more information, go to Wikimedia Commons.
¶ The Philippines will soon have over 600 renewable energy projects operational, as it significantly expands its clean energy infrastructure. As of 31 October, 2015, the Philippine Department of Energy had approved 616 renewable energy projects with a total capacity for all renewable energy technologies over 12 GW. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Inox Wind, an Indian wind turbine maker, announced that it expanded its turbine manufacturing facility in Madhya Pradesh. The company reported that it commissioned a new production facility in the state. The facility will increase the company’s overall production capacity to 1.6 GW annually of turbine production. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Wind energy could be the largest power source in the EU by 2030 if governments drive ambition in climate and energy policies, according to a European Wind Energy Association report. If European member states stick to the policy framework already set in place, wind could surpass other forms of energy within a decade. [edie.net]

The Aiming High report suggests that wind power has the potential to exceed gas and other forms of energy within the next decade.
¶ Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall says 50% of the province’s power will come from renewable sources by 2030. The announcement is scheduled for Monday, but Wall slipped in the details while answering questions in the legislature about the province’s position on climate change. Wall believes the goal is achievable. [620 CKRM.com]
US:
¶ More than 160 corporate executives gathered at Bloomberg’s New York City headquarters for a meeting of Rocky Mountain Institute’s Business Renewables Center. Through November 17, 2015, their corporations had signed more than 2 GW of power purchase agreements for large-scale, off-site renewable energy in 2015. [CleanTechnica]
¶ US Senators Susan Collins and Angus King announced Monday that the US Department of Energy will award an additional $3.7 million to an offshore wind project designed by a University of Maine-led consortium. The funding builds on the $3 million committed to the project, Maine Aqua Ventus 1, in May 2014. [Mainebiz]

Habib Dagher, director of UMaine’s Advanced Structures and Composites Center, in front of the VolturnUS prototype wind turbine deployed off the shores of Castine in 2014. Mainebiz file photo / James McCarthy
¶ Ten years ago, Walmart made a pledge to become environmentally clean and shift to 100% renewable power. Now, a report, titled Walmart’s Dirty Energy Secret: How the Company’s Slick Greenwashing Hides Its Massive Coal Consumption, found that the company is “one of the nation’s largest users of coal-fired electricity.” [CleanTechnica]
¶ Vermont’s Green Mountain Power announced last week that it reached its 112-MW net metering cap for solar power, 15% of their peak load. Now, it has asked state regulators for permission to buy 7.5 MW more of net metered solar power. The net metering cap does not apply to consumers with home-sized solar installations. [vtdigger.org]

Fuel cell in the FuelCell Energy plant. Photo: Douglas Healey / Bloomberg
¶ The microgrid for municipal buildings in Woodbridge, Connecticut, will have a central plant by FuelCell Energy of Danbury. The contract calls for a 2.2 MW power plant to serve the micro-grid. Buildings in the micro-grid include the police station, fire department, town hall, senior center and Amity Regional High School. [Danbury News Times]
¶ Duke Energy, LG Chem, and Greensmith brought new technology to the site of a 1952 retired coal plant in Ohio with the completion of a 2-MW battery system. The new project is designed to increase reliability and stability for the electric power grid. The fast-response system regulates grid frequency. [Windpower Engineering]
¶ A study commissioned by Massachusetts’ Attorney General concludes that New England does not need additional natural gas pipelines for energy reliability in the coming years. The authors take the recent announcement that the Pilgrim nuclear power plant in Plymouth will close by 2019 into account. [Foster’s Daily Democrat]
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Tags: nuclear, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 18, 2015
World:
¶ Locally-produced renewable power met nearly 30.3% of Italy’s electricity needs in the first 10 months of 2015, according to data by power grid operator Terna SpA. Excluding hydropower, the share of wind, solar and geothermal energy sources was a bit over 15%. Meanwhile, thermal power plants produced 56% of Italy’s power. [SeeNews Renewables]

Solar park in Italy. Author: Solar Farm – Solar energy power plants. License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic
¶ The UK’s remaining coal-fired power stations will be shut by 2025 with their use restricted by 2023, Energy Secretary Amber Rudd announced. Ms Rudd wants more gas-fired stations to be built since relying on “polluting” coal is “perverse.” Additionally, she wants to prioritize nuclear plants. She had little support to offer renewables. [BBC]
¶ Battery storage could be just five years away from being an economic no-brainer for some Australian solar households, according to a new report. It predicts grid-connected battery storage will be economically attractive for many homes from around 2020, though Sydney and Adelaide could be at this point as early as 2018. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Hydro Tasmania is to add 600-kW of solar PV and some smart controls to Rottnest Island, helping the tourism resort supply 45% of its electricity and desalinated water from renewable energy. The new installations will supplement the single 600-kW wind turbine on the island, which Tony Abbot famously complained about. [One Step Off The Grid]

Wind turbine on Rottnest Island.
¶ Skylark Energy filed a planning application to the Scottish government for a 64.6-MW wind farm in Argyll and Bute. Skylark is a joint venture between Ecotricity and Swedish construction company Skanska AB. As the project is larger than 50 MW, it needs to be considered by the Scottish government. [SeeNews Renewables]
¶ Costa Rica is on track to double the amount of wind power it generates in the coming years. The launch of operations in October of the Orosi power plant and the upcoming inauguration of the Vientos del Oeste project in December will soon supply Costa Rica’s electrical grid with an additional 59 MW from wind power. [The Tico Times]
¶ A two-year pilot project will store a tiny bit of Toronto’s excess energy underwater in giant balloons. Local energy firm Hydrostor and Toronto Hydro are partnering on the project. The Hydrostor system is expected to improve power quality for residents of the Toronto Islands while engineers monitor and test its performance. [Toronto Star]

Construction in progress earlier this year of the first Hydrostor station on the Toronto Islands. Hydrostor photo.
¶ After a concerted push from the United States, members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development agreed to cut subsidies aimed at exporting technology for coal-fired power plants. The policy would effectively cut off public financing for 85% of coal plants currently in the pipeline, an official said. [Washington Post]
¶ Brazil’s power sector watchdog Aneel has approved 290.6 MW of winning energy projects from an earlier auction this summer. The projects include eight wind farms with 231.6 MW of combined capacity, two small hydropower plants of 23 MW in total, one 8-MW biomass plant, and one 28-MW natural gas plant. [PennEnergy]
US:
¶ The Republican-run US Senate adopted two resolutions to shoot down key rules Barack Obama’s administration wants to limit greenhouse gas emissions by power plants. The president will veto the move. The 52 to 46 vote was largely meant to draw attention to the hostility of the Republicans to Obama’s efforts on climate change. [Business Recorder]

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2015
¶ The United Illuminating Co will start work next spring on a state-of-the art micro-grid supplying key town buildings in Woodbridge, Connecticut. The system would keep power on during grid outages. The utility has finalized an agreement with the town to build the micro-grid and it should be completed next year. [New Haven Register]
¶ At a National Community Solar Summit at the White House, the Administration announced 68 cities, states, and businesses are joining together to promote community solar. Community solar allows multiple households and businesses to pool their resources and invest in shared solar systems to reduce costs. [Newsroom America]
¶ The Massachusetts House has passed a bill to boost the state’s reliance on solar energy. The measure increases the cap on the state’s net metering program, which allows homeowners, businesses and local governments to sell excess solar power they generate back to the electrical grid in exchange for credit. [wwlp.com]

AP Photo/Stephan Savoia, File
¶ The Mississippi Public Service Commission approved the largest solar installations in Mississippi, making Mississippi Power the largest partner in renewable energy in the state. Strata Solar is collaborating with Mississippi Power and the US Navy to build a 450-acre 50-MW solar project in Hattiesburg. [Your Renewable News]
¶ Governor Cuomo’s office has sent a letter to the NRC about the dangers of allowing the reactors at the Indian Point nuclear power facility to continue operating. One of several concerns raised in the letter was metal fatigue and the safety of non-replaceable metal components that might have grown brittle with age. [NewsLI]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 17, 2015
World:
¶ The task of electrifying Sarawak is no mean feat. Hampered by a lack of infrastructure, Malaysia’s largest state by land mass remains without constant supply of power in rural areas with a reported 33% of the state remaining off the grid. Now, one village will have a solar microgrid, the first of its kind in the state. [The Malaysian Insider]

Solar panels being installed in Sarawak. Malaysian Insider pic by Renai Mattu.
¶ New fast-charging lithium-in batteries were recently unveiled by workers from Watt Lab, an arm of the Central Research Institute at Huawei Technology Corporation, at the recent 56th Battery Symposium in Japan. The newly unveiled batteries reportedly charge ~10 times faster than conventional lithium-ion batteries do. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Indian solar could scale up substantially to be a significant energy source by 2025, with the market penetration of solar power expected to be 5.7% (54 GW) by 2020 and 12.5% (166 GW) by 2025. Solar power prices are expected to be approximately 10% lower than coal power prices by 2020, and rooftop solar is already competitive. [Indiainfoline]
¶ Despite the general public impression of Russia as being relatively opposed to renewable energy and electric vehicles, the city of Moscow will actually be getting a fleet of electric buses in 2016, according to the head of the Department of Transportation and Development of road transport infrastructure, and the deputy mayor. [CleanTechnica]

Russian electric bus
¶ A record $391 billion flowed into low carbon and climate-resilient growth in 2014, according to a report released today by Climate Policy Initiative. The fresh figures come just two weeks before the COP21 climate talks begin in Paris, where finance is expected to play a pivotal role in scoring a robust global deal for a safe climate. [The Climate Group]
¶ The C20 Sustainability Working Group is asking the G20 to stop fossil fuel subsidies. The G20 promised to phase them out in 2009, but they still pump $452 billion annually into exploration for and production of fossil fuels, according to a report from the Overseas Development Institute released last week. [Blue & Green Tomorrow]
US:
¶ French renewable energy producer Akuo Energy has wrapped up the development stage for a 30-MW first phase of its 300-MW Sterling wind power project in Tatum, New Mexico, and plans to start construction in 2016. Akuo Energy USA has secured all the key elements to develop the 30-MW first phase. [SeeNews Renewables]

Wind park in the US. Author: CGP Grey. License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic.
¶ Changes to solar net metering policies are being studied or have been enacted in over half of the states, the North Carolina Clean Energy Technology Center’s latest “50 States of Solar” report says. The NC Clean Energy Technology Center is administered by the College of Engineering at North Carolina State University. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The city of Lebanon, Tennessee, has broken ground for a new waste-to-energy gasification plant at the city’s waste water treatment facility that will be capable of processing 64 tons per day of sewer sludge, used tires and industrial wood waste. The facility is being designed and built by PHG Energy. [Renewable Energy from Waste]
¶ Tesla Motors CTO JB Straubel told engineering students at the University of Nevada that the gigafactory is designed to be a net-zero building with zero carbon emissions. What’s makes this statement more special is that this building will reportedly be one of the largest manmade structures on Earth when it is completed. [ValueWalk]

Tesla Gigafactory under construction.
¶ Under current Wisconsin law, state regulators can’t grant permission for a new nuclear power plant unless a federal storage facility for the waste from nuclear plants across the country exists and the plant wouldn’t burden state ratepayers. Now, a Republican legislator is renewing a push to lift the state’s moratorium. [seattlepi.com]
¶ Clean Line Energy will focus again on persuading Missouri’s utility regulators to approve the $2 billion, 780-mile Grain Belt Express transmission line that would carry wind-generated electricity from Kansas through Missouri and Illinois to Indiana. Missouri landowners are the only remaining group in the way. [Columbia Daily Tribune]
¶ Halfway into the University of Iowa’s 10-year sustainability initiative, officials say it has reached its progress target and remains on track to achieve 40% renewable energy consumption by 2020. Part of the success comes from the growing use of giant miscanthus grass. [The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines]

The University of Iowa and Iowa State University are partnering to grow giant Miscanthus. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)
¶ News of yet more microgrid activity in Pennsylvania came today with the announcement of an urban microgrid planned by Duquesne Light and the University of Pittsburgh. Their project will be to design and install the urban microgrid at its Woods Run Facility, a six-building campus in Pittsburgh’s North Shore. [Microgrid Knowledge]
¶ Deepwater Wind and GE are establishing a new temporary facility at the Port of Providence for the assembly of turbine components for the Block Island wind farm. GE, which recently joined forces with Alstom’s offshore wind unit, is supplying the 6-MW Haliade 150 offshore turbines for the Block Island wind farm. [reNews]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 16, 2015
Science and Technology:
¶ Human societies will soon start to experience adverse effects from manmade climate change, economist Richard Tol warned. He predicts the downsides of warming will outweigh the advantages at a 1.1° C increase, which we have nearly reached already. He had previously commented on positive effects of climate change. [BBC]

AFP photo
World:
¶ Apple announced a deal that will see its Singapore operations fully powered by solar energy, expanding on similar efforts in countries like the US and China, and also confirmed an upcoming local Apple Store that will be the first in Southeast Asia. Developer Sunseap Group will supply Apple from panels on 800 roof tops. [Apple Insider]
¶ Automotive giant Daimler announced that it plans to connect the old lithium-ion cells to the grid in Lünen, Germany, building the world’s largest stationary storage facility made out of re-used electric vehicle batteries. The system will allow excess renewable energy from the area to be stored and returned to the grid later. [Ars Technica UK]
¶ Iran has a package for $25 billion of investment in its booming power industry, the head of Iran Power Transmission, Generation and Distribution Company says. It is a key to the country’s economic recovery. Iran needs to invest $7-8 billion a year in its power generation and distribution sector to keep pace with demand. [Payvand]

Wind turbines in Manjil, Iran
¶ As Germany executes what may be Europe’s most ambitious transition to clean energy, the dirtiest form of coal-fired power has held fast to a major share of the country’s power supply. Meanwhile, some of the most efficient gas plants in Europe are shutting down. New legislation aims to correct the situation. [Big News Network.com]
¶ Six large LG Chem lithium-ion battery storage units will be put into service at Steag power plants in Germany. The €100-million project will see 15-MW energy storage systems installed in power stations at Herne, Lünen and Duisburg-Walsum, Bexbach, Fenne and Weiher. The batteries will be used for grid stabilization. [Energy Matters]
¶ India announced conclusion of a civil nuclear deal for buying uranium from Australia to increase conventional fuel supplies to overcome chronic shortages. The announcement came after Prime Minister Narendra Modi met his Australian counterpart Malcolm Turnbull on the sidelines of the G20 Summit in Antalya, Turkey. [Livemint]
US:
¶ A joint project of Roeslein Alternative Energy and Smithfield Food Hogs Production will convert manure from hogs on nine farms into renewable natural gas. Gas sales should start in 2016. A second phase would add native prairie grasses planted on erodible or marginal farm land to the manure to increase the biomass. [The Rakyat Post]

Bio-gas storage.
¶ Findings from real estate appraisal experts and a researcher at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory suggest that adding a photovoltaic solar power system to a home increases the home’s value across six states. The study looked at markets in California, Oregon, Florida, Maryland, North Carolina and Pennsylvania. [Daily Californian]
¶ Green Cow Power, a large digester facility, is now converting off-farm organic wastes and dairy manure into energy with two Two-Stage Mixed Plug Flow digesters from DVO Inc. The Goshen, Indiana plant it is the largest waste-to-energy facility in Elkhart County and the eighth largest digester operation in Indiana. [Renewable Energy from Waste]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 15, 2015
World:
¶ Sri Lanka will build a final large scale hydro power plant at an estimated cost of $60 million, the Minister of Power and Renewable Energy said. The proposed hydro power plant will be constructed on the Seethawaka River and will add 20 MW to the national grid. The project will be developed as a mini-hydro plant. [Colombo Page]

View of the Randenigala Dam and its spillways from downstream. Rantembe, Sri Lanka. Photo by Rehman Abubakr. CC BY-SA 4.0. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Portugal’s EDP and Spain’s Gestamp Wind were among the companies awarded contracts to build and operate wind farms in Brazil. The contracts were for 20 wind farms with a combined capacity of 929.3 MW, and 33 solar plants with a combined capacity of 548.2 MW. All must be operational within two years. [Latin American Herald Tribune]
¶ Britain will no longer pursue green energy at all costs and will instead make keeping the lights on the top priority, energy secretary Amber Rudd, will vow this week. The energy department is understood to be considering announcing a closure date for Britain’s remaining coal plants, replacing them with gas and nuclear. [Telegraph.co.uk]
¶ It has been revealed that Coal India, which is state-run, would invest ₹60 billion ($910 million) to set up 1,000 MW of solar power units over the next five to six years, according to the Economic Times, an Indian business newspaper. The government has set a target of generating 100 GW of solar power by 2022. [The National]

A solar power microgrid in the village of Dharnai in Bihar. Prashanth Vishwanathan / Bloomberg
¶ A record oil glut is set to continue into next year, maintaining pressure on prices. According to the International Energy, stockpiles stand at a record three billion. The report follows disappointing eurozone growth figures and a slump in commodity prices on the back of weaker demand from China, all of which sent stock prices lower. [BBC]
¶ France plans to go ahead with a global climate change summit in Paris at the end of the month, Prime Minister Manuel Valls said Saturday, despite a wave of deadly attacks on Friday night that killed nearly 130 people in the capital. The conference “will be held because it’s an essential meeting for humanity,” Valls explained. [The Japan Times]
US:
¶ A new $25 million plant under construction in North Carolina will convert turkey waste into industrial steam for energy. Prestage AgEnergy is being built off NC 24 in the rural community of Moltonville. It will use 55,000 tons of turkey litter a year to produce the equivalent of 95 million kilowatt hours of electricity. [Fayetteville Observer]
¶ Connecticut’s push to bring more natural gas into the state to heat homes and produce electricity is drawing fire from environmentalists, who say an expansion in pipeline construction means declining focus on renewable energy. The Algonquin pipeline, which runs from Danbury to Putnam, is a target of their protests. [CT Post]
¶ Bernie Sanders opened Saturday night’s Democratic debate by vowing to rid the world of ISIS. Following up, the moderator pointed out that during a debate last month, Sanders had identified “climate change” as the greatest threat to national security and asked whether he still believed that. “Absolutely,” replied Sanders. [Grist]
¶ A warming Arctic climate and lengthening summer growing season in recent decades have led to changes in vegetation on Alaska’s North Slope, extending the habitat of wildlife like snowshoe hares and moose farther north than they were seen previously, according to a study in Global Change Biology. [Fairbanks Daily News-Miner]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 14, 2015
Opinion:
¶ Danish wind farm company could change game in N.E. • The Danish executives entered the US market relatively quietly in April with a deal to acquire development rights for 187,500 acres 15 miles south of Martha’s Vineyard. That is enough for a wind farm of over 100 turbines, powering up to 500,000 homes. [The Boston Globe]

Dong’s Avedore power plant in Copenhagen.
¶ What One Conservative Texas Think Tank Doesn’t Want You to Know about the Clean Power Plan • Texas Public Policy Foundation, a conservative think tank, claims it is trying to protect people’s wallets – which is true if by ‘people,’ you mean its members. But what they push has costs for everyone else. [Environmental Defense Fund]
Science and Technology:
¶ One way to keep global average temperatures from warming beyond a catastrophic 2°-C tipping point may be to suck massive amounts of CO2 out of the atmosphere. Scientists say it’s theoretically possible (though expensive) to extract CO2 from the air and turn it into materials for buildings and clothes and other everyday stuff. [CNN]
¶ Commissioned by SolarCity, the report Getting to 100 discusses what is driving the transition to increasing levels of renewable energy consumption. It identifies the successes and challenges of both governments and companies in targeting, and achieving, 100% renewable energy goals. The report focuses on five developments. [PennEnergy]
World:
¶ High-level representatives of 70 countries worked at a pre-COP21 meeting this week. They continued the work of surmounting obstacles and reinforcing their commitment “to succeed in reaching a universal agreement in December in Paris,” according to French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, the chair of upcoming COP21. [CleanTechnica]

The pre-COP21 meeting, November 9-10, 2015 (ultimahoradigital.com)
¶ The international network of scientists and parliamentarians Energy Watch Group has called on the International Energy Agency to release realistic energy projections. They say the World Energy Outlook 2015 misleadingly underestimates potentials of renewables and emphasizes the conventional energy sources. [Greentech Lead]
¶ German weekend power prices plunged Friday as wind power output was forecast to rise again towards 30 GW with the approach of a storm system. Baseload power for weekend delivery was assessed at €15/MWh (US 1.6¢/kWh). The week-ahead baseload rate was €28.75/MWh. (The week-ahead rate is closer to average.) [Platts]
¶ EDF staff have warned their employer’s plans to build the £18-billion Hinkley Point C nuclear power plant in Somerset could put the company’s future at risk. An EDF employee ownership association, which owns a 1.7% stake in the French energy giant, said the plant’s financial risks could “threaten the survival” of the company. [Building.co.uk]
US:
¶ Texas wind farms are generating so much energy that some utilities are giving power away. One example is TXU Energy, which offers a free overnight plan to encourage customers to use less energy when wholesale prices are highest and use more when prices are lowest, 9 pm to 6 am. The plan has slightly higher daytime rates. [HPPR]

Part of the Desert Sky Wind Farm in Texas. Photo by Pismo. Placed in the public domain by the author. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ US developer Invenergy has signed a 125-MW wind power purchase agreement with insulation, roofing, and fibreglass manufacturer Owens Corning. When completed, Invenergy’s Wake Wind facility in Texas will provide Owens Corning with power sufficient to supply the annual needs of 32,000 homes. [reNews]
¶ The California Public Utilities Commission reports it has received a signature-heavy petition calling on it not to enact controversial proposals to reform net metering in the state. Vote Solar, which works to fight climate change and foster economic opportunity by promoting solar energy, organized the petition. [CleanTechnica]
¶ North Carolina reached a milestone this year as a national and regional leader in solar energy. Solar power installations in the state surpassed a combined 1 GW in capacity, putting North Carolina behind only California, Arizona and New Jersey. But the a key state tax credit behind growth will expire at the end of this year. [Mountain Xpress]

Char Colwell of Sundance Power Systems, installing a solar array in North Carolina. Photo courtesy of Sundance Power Systems
¶ Hawaiian Electric, Maui Electric, and Hawaii Electric Light Company proposed new voluntary time-of-use rates for residential customers that encourage the use of power during mid-day and off-peak hours, or times when solar and wind resources are most productive. Special rates also support the growing EV market. [KHON2]
¶ The Northwest’s only commercial nuclear plant, just north of Richland, Washington, had a fuel leak in the reactor core that has led engineers to take four of its 764 fuel assemblies out of service. A spokesman for Energy Northwest confirmed there was a “fuel defect” at the plant but said it posed no safety risk to workers or the public. [OregonLive.com]
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Tags: climate change, nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 9, 2015
World:
¶ Coal consumption is poised for its biggest decline in history, driven by China’s battle against pollution, economic reforms and its efforts to promote renewable energy. Global use of the most polluting fuel fell 2.3% to 4.6% in the first nine months of 2015 from the same period last year, according to a report released by Greenpeace. [The Australian Financial Review]

A woman in China wears a mask to counter pollution. Getty Images
¶ As Zimbabwe seeks to boost power generation, it finds the option of hydro-power provides little guarantee for power now and in the future. The 750-MW-capacity Kariba Hydro Power Station is an example, falling to 63% of capacity following just two consecutive drought seasons. Climate change is making hydro power unreliable. [AllAfrica.com]
¶ The first turbine at Zuidwester wind farm in the Netherlands started operation. Along the shore of the IJsselmeer, RWE Innogy replaced 50 older models with 12 of the world’s largest onshore wind turbines with a capacity of 7.5 MW each. Each of the new turbines can generate as much electricity as all 50 turbines of the old ones combined. [Sun & Wind Energy]
¶ South Korea’s leading battery-maker LG Chem said it has secured a deal worth millions of dollars to supply its batteries for a project to build the world’s largest energy storage system for frequency regulation in Germany. The company’s lithium-ion batteries will be used for frequency regulation in Nordrhein-Westfalen and Saaerland in 2016. [The Korea Herald]
¶ China has changed course and emerged as a leader in curbing greenhouse gas emissions six years after it was accused of obstructing the last high-level climate talks in Copenhagen. Beijing “recognizes it should take a different responsibility than a few years ago,” said Li Shuo, senior climate officer for Greenpeace East Asia. [Himalayan Times]

Wind turbines are built on a hill along a highway near Jiamusi, in northeastern China’s Heilongjiang province on July 30, 2015. Photo: AP
¶ A majority of the UK public backs subsidies for renewable energy, according to a report. It says around 83% of over 2,000 people surveyed support subsidies for wind and solar. The support for coal is at 23%, and for nuclear power it is 33%. The UK Government is planning to scrap support for renewables. [Energy Live News – Energy Made Easy]
¶ Vestas has won a firm and unconditional order for turbines totaling 200-MW from Inner Mongolia Hanas Wind Power for two Chinese wind power projects. Under the deal, the Danish power equipment manufacturer will deliver 75 of its V110-2.0 MW and 25 of its V100-2.0 MW models. Commissioning is to be in the second quarter of 2016. [Power Technology]
¶ Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power held a ceremony Monday to mark the official operation of two reactors at its New Wolseong Nuclear Power Plant in Gyeongju. The New Wolseong No 1 and No 2 reactors are each capable of generating 7.9 billion kWh of electricity annually. The No 1 reactor began producing power in 2012, and the No 2 in July. [Korea Times]
US:
¶ More Wisconsin farmers are letting the sun shine in – by bringing solar photovoltaic systems into their farming operations. Incentives and the falling prices of hardware have helped shorten return on investment periods for solar installations. Still, changes in net metering policies could reduce payouts to producers for the excess power they create. [Agri-View]

A 20 kWh solar panel system is installed on the south side of Han Breitenmoser’s free-stall barn.
¶ Legal professionals are warning that ongoing investigations of ExxonMobil practices could drag other oil businesses. The firm is the subject of controversy over allegations it mislead the public about climate change. But prosecutors are thinking about investigating all businesses that chose to fund organizations that promoted climate change denial. [California Turkish Times]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 2, 2015
Opinion:
¶ “Renewables key in race against climate change clock” • Humanity has dithered for so long in the fight against global warming that the window of opportunity for decarbonizing the global economy fast enough to avoid devastating climate change is barely ajar. And fossil fuels get four times the subsidies of renewables. [The Nation]

Wind turbines and sustainable transportation
World:
¶ Figures from China’s National Energy Administration proclaim that the country installed 9.9 GW of new solar PV capacity in the first nine months of 2015. The National Energy Administration says China new solar PV capacity so far this year included 8.32 GW in solar PV power stations and 1.58 GW of distributed PVs. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Around 8.5 million diesel vehicles sold by Volkswagen over the past few years in Europe will be recalled, following the testing scandal of a few weeks ago, according to reports. A recall timeline has bee approved. The company is apparently currently considering the option of simply buying back affected vehicles in the US. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The Scottish government has approved Statoil plans for the 30-MW Hywind 2 floating offshore wind project some 25 km off Peterhead. The Norwegian company was issued with a marine licence to build five Siemens 6-MW turbines on spar foundations. Statoil plans for final commissioning of the project before end-2017. [reNews]

Hywind 1 off Norway. Statoil Image.
¶ Bio2Watt is producing power from its first plant at a Beefcor feedlot in Bronkhorstspruit, South Africa, making it the country’s first viable commercial biogas project. The plant produces 4.4 MW, but that could be increased to 10 MW in the future. Most of the power it produces is going to a BMW plant in Rosslyn, Pretoria. [Independent Online]
¶ The Australian Financial Review told readers that South Australia’s large renewables share could cause blackouts. There were blackouts. They blamed renewable energy for volatile power prices that were spiking to A$13,800/MWh (A$1.38/kWh). As it turns out, the problems were caused by aging equipment. [Business Spectator]
¶ Africa’s largest solar car park opened recently at the Garden City Mall in Nairobi. It aims to cut carbon emissions by 745 tonnes annually from non-renewable energy sources. The car park has a total of 3,300 solar panels, which are capable of generating 1,256 MWh of electricity annually. It also provides shade to the cars. [The Straits Times]

Photo: Agence France-Presse
¶ The UK’s climate change credentials are under fire again after it emerged it had spent £2.2 billion in poor countries to help build coal power plants and other fossil fuel energy projects responsible for global warming. That is more than double the £1 billion spent on cleaner, renewable sources of power in developing countries. [Financial Times]
¶ Kyushu Electric Power Co said the No 2 reactor of its Sendai nuclear plant began full-capacity operation on Sunday, with its thermal output reaching the maximum level, about two weeks after it was reactivated. The reactor will be in commercial operation after examinations by the Nuclear Regulation Authority. [The Japan News]
US:
¶ Public Service Electric and Gas Company is halfway through the construction of a 12.93-MW community solar farm at the closed L&D Landfill in Burlington County, New Jersey. The facility is on property of over 50 acres in three communities. It will be made up of 41,720 solar panels and will become operational later this year. [reNews]

PSE&G’s Jacksonville solar facility (PSE&G image)
¶ Hanwha Q Cells USA Corp said start construction of a new 170-MW solar plant in the US after sealing a power purchase agreement with Austin Energy. The company says the solar plant will be built on roughly 580,000 square meters of land in western Texas to generate enough electricity to supply around 1 million people. [The Korea Herald]
¶ While New Jersey is stepping up its reliance on natural gas, most residents would instead prefer it ramp up its use of renewable energy, such as solar and wind, according to a recent poll. More than three-quarters of those responding said they favor a pending bill that would require a target of 80% renewables by 2050. [NJ Spotlight]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 31, 2015
Science and Technology:
¶ Fitch Ratings says utility-scale solar PV projects often outperform expectations. On average, projects assessed made 9% more electricity than projected. Factors include higher than expected solar irradiance and lower than expected grid curtailments. With limited downtimes, arrays were available over 98.5% of the time. [CleanTechnica]

Topaz Solar Farm, a 550-MW photovoltaic power station in San Luis Obispo County, California. Image by First Solar
¶ The UN released its assessment of national plans to limit climate change, submitted by 146 countries. Officials say the submissions, in their current form, won’t keep global temperatures from rising by more than the 2° C danger threshold. However the UN report says the plans are a major step and the 2° C goal is “within reach.” [BBC]
World:
¶ Green energy is benefiting from the downturn in the oil sector, with more cash available for investments and more skilled manpower at hand, the CEO of Norway’s Statkraft, Europe’s largest producer of renewable power, told Reuters. Statkraft sees growth opportunities in South America, and it has been active in Peru and Brazil. [Prairie Business]
¶ The Chinese government announced that fourteen provinces will be required to develop 5.3 GW of further solar PV projects, in addition to the earlier determined 2015 goals. Plans for the new projects are expected to be submitted within the next month, and they have to be finished and grid-connected by the end of 2016. [CleanTechnica]

Solar panels at new Zhongshan TCM Hospital Image by 罗伯特 (some rights reserved)
¶ Caribbean Utilities Company, Ltd and the Electricity Regulatory Authority of the Cayman Islands announced that a power purchase agreement had been approved for a proposed 5-MW solar project. The project will provide energy to power 800 homes, reduce electric rates for customers, and significantly reduce carbon emissions. [Stockhouse]
¶ Spanish manufacturer Acciona posted a net profit of €166 million in the first nine months of 2015, an 11.6% increase over the same period in 2014, mainly due to the growth in renewable power generation and the sales of wind turbines manufactured by Acciona Windpower. Before tax earnings grew 69.5% to €248 million. [Windtech International]
US:
¶ An independent examination of two struggling coal-burning power plants in western New York has found that neither is needed to maintain reliability of the electrical grid, which could pave the way for their closure. The state’s Independent System Operator said the plants can be replaced by transmission system upgrades. [Capital New York]

The Dunkirk power plant. (Tim Lenz)
¶ The United States Department of Agriculture has announced a round of funding, in the form of loans and grants, to more than 1100 rural renewable energy and energy efficiency projects nationwide. These are aimed at helping small businesses and agricultural producers reduce both their energy use and costs. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Xcel Energy Inc is asking Colorado state regulators to approve a test of adding massive batteries to its system to store renewable energy and send the power to customers when they need it. Xcel is proposing to add the batteries to its grid system for commercial customers in a development near Denver International Airport. [9NEWS.com]
¶ US utility Exelon will defer decisions about the future of its Clinton nuclear power plant after the Midcontinent Independent System Operator acknowledged the need for changes to the design of the southern Illinois electricity market. Other factors, such as new requirements for decreased carbon emissions, influenced the utility. [World Nuclear News]
¶ DuPont has celebrated the opening of its cellulosic biofuel facility in Nevada, Iowa, with a ceremony including Iowa Gov. Terry Brandstad and many other dignitaries. The biorefinery is the world’s largest cellulosic ethanol plant, with the capacity to produce 30 million gallons per year of ethanol from agricultural waste. [Hydrocarbon Processing]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 30, 2015
World:
¶ The preferential tariffs for wind and solar power in China may be cut in 2016 by 5.8% and 5.6%, respectively, under a plan by the National Development and Reform Commission. According to reports, by 2020, wind power rates could be cut by 19% from 2016 levels, while for solar the planned reduction is 15%. [SeeNews Renewables]

Wind farm in China. Author: David Schroeter. License: Creative Commons, Attribution-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic
¶ 114,723 gigawatt hours of electricity in Germany came from renewable sources in the first nine months of 2015, which was almost double the amount produced from nuclear sources. Additionally, some electricity prices have decreased from the previous year. For example, the cost of peak load power is nearly at 2002 levels. [CleanTechnica]
¶ In a Chilean auction to procure 1200 GWh of power, wind and solar projects took 100% of the contracts even though there were no renewable energy subsidies. In the prior tender 80% went to fossil fuels. Two thirds of the power under the latest auction will come from two wind farms, and the rest will come from three solar projects. [Courier Mail]
¶ Lord Deben has defended a raft of green policy rollbacks by the new Conservative government, admitting the Climate Change Committee that he chairs greatly underestimated improvements in offshore wind farms and the subsidies they would use up. More efficient equipment had made subsidies more attractive than expected. [Business Green]
¶ Construction of a £1.5 billion windfarm off the Suffolk coast is to go ahead with the creation of nearly 800 jobs, after three new partners were found to back the project. The future of the Galloper windfarm had been left in doubt last year when energy company SSE pulled out of the project, blaming the cost and the subsidy regime. [The Guardian]

A windfarm off Sylt in Germany, which is outstripping the UK. Photograph: Daniel Reinhardt/EPA
¶ In further signs of the staggering pace of transformation in global energy markets, Indian power behemoth Reliance Power is urgently seeking a new business strategy. Analysis of public statements, annual reports and press reports relating to the company all point to a major strategic refocus away from thermal and to renewables. [Business Spectator]
¶ Alberta is pushing ahead with a plan to phase out coal power plants, support renewable energy and improve energy efficiency. Premier Rachel Notley is pledging to seek a leading role on climate change while promoting investment in the energy industry as the province grapples with an oil rout and opposition to its oil sands. [PennEnergy]
¶ The UK’s first new nuclear power station for a generation will cost electricity customers at least £4.4 billion and the subsidy bill could reach £20 billion, the government has revealed. The new Hinkley Point C operators will get £92.50 for every unit of electricity – more than double the current market price. [The Guardian]
US:
¶ Tacoma Power has begun offering its customers a way to invest in solar energy by starting Pierce County’s first community solar project. Tacoma Power customers simply purchase solar units for $100 each and receive an annual incentive payment and payments for the electricity produced from a 75-kW Tacoma Power project. [Tacoma Weekly]

Tacoma Public Utilities has started a program for customers to invest in solar power projects. Photo courtesy of Tacoma Power / The Tacoma Weekly
¶ TDI-New England, which is financing the New England Power Link, received a favorable assessment from federal regulators in their final environmental impact statement. About 98 miles of the power line will run under Lake Champlain and 56 miles will extend overland to grid connections in Ludlow, Vermont. [The Boston Globe]
¶ US energy provider Exelon Corporation has entered into a 153-MW wind power purchase agreement with Wolverine Power Supply Cooperative Inc, a Michigan-based not-for-profit generation and transmission cooperative. The agreement will boost Wolverine’s own wind generation portfolio to over 350 MW. [SeeNews Renewables]
¶ After tropical storm Sandy, Hoboken, New Jersey, examined grid security issues. The result was the Resilient Microgrids Toolkit, which provides stakeholders with the resources necessary to establish and maintain a clean and resilient microgrid. The toolkit can be used by any city looking to establish a clean microgrid. [Microgrid Knowledge]
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Tags: coal, energy, fossil fuels, nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 29, 2015
World:
¶ UK Prime Minister David Cameron is poised to launch an ambitious project that could see Britain harnessing the power of Iceland’s volcanoes within the next 10 years. The plan would involve the construction of 750 miles of undersea cabling, allowing the UK to exploit Iceland’s long-term, renewable geothermal energy. [The Independent]

Krafla geothermal power plant in Iceland. Photo by Hansueli Krapf. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Published by the International Renewable Energy Agency, a new report concluded that Poland could increase its share of renewable energy in the country’s power generation mix from 7% in 2010 to nearly 38% in 2030, as well as increasing its total final energy consumption more than double to nearly 25% by 2030. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Royal Dutch Shell reported a loss for the third quarter of the year, after taking a big charge to reflect the cost of halting major projects. The oil company reported a loss of $6.1 billion in the quarter, compared with a $5.3 billion profit last year. It has taken an $8.6 billion charge to cover the cost of halting projects, such as Alaskan drilling. [BBC]
¶ An energy company in Western Australia is about to trial the world’s first renewable microgrid power station using wave energy as one of its sources. Perth-based Carnegie Wave Energy will build the pilot project on Garden Island, using wave and solar energy to supply power to the Defence Department and a desalination plant. [ABC Online]
¶ China, the world’s biggest user of coal, is suddenly burning less of it, a change with enormous implications for the state of the atmosphere and the potential course of global climate change. Moving away from its old image, China is setting itself up to play a leading role at the next round of discussions, in Paris later this year. [Washington Post]

Charging coal at the Lao Ye Temple Mine. Photo by Peter Van den Bossche from Mechelen, Belgium. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Dong Energy is planning to build the world’s biggest offshore wind farm in the Irish Sea, to power almost half a million homes. The 660-MW Walney Extension project will use turbines from Vestas and Siemens AG. It’s expected to be complete in 2018 and surpass the current record-holder, the 630-megawatt London Array. [Bloomberg]
US:
¶ In the first three quarters of 2015, the US wind energy industry has installed more than double the capacity it did in the first three quarters of 2014. There is now over 69,470 MW of installed wind capacity across the US. A near-record of more than 13,250 MW of wind capacity is under construction, with more coming. [Sun & Wind Energy]
¶ LG Chem has announced that it will be ramping up lithium-ion battery production at its facility in Michigan, according to recent reports. The move follows closely on an announcement that GM will be expanding its business partnership with LG Chem in anticipation of Chevy Bolt production beginning next year. [CleanTechnica]

Chevy Bolt EV.
¶ The utility that heats and cools downtown St Paul is phasing out coal, a move that will greatly reduce its carbon emissions. But District Energy St. Paul isn’t ditching coal under government pressure or for sentimental reasons. It comes down to dollars and cents: other power sources are becoming cheaper than coal. [Grand Forks Herald]
¶ The Pew Charitable Trusts has released a report, “Distributed Generation: Cleaner, Cheaper, Stronger Industrial Efficiency in the Changing Landscape.” It shows how an array of technological, competitive and market forces are changing how the US generates power and the ways that Americans interact with the electric grid. [Biomass Magazine]
¶ A 137-MW photovoltaic solar power plant is scheduled to begin construction in the eastern Kern County town of Cantil, California. The 700-acre Springbok 1 Solar Farm is being developed by 8minutenergy Renewables LLC. Power will be sold to Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. [The Bakersfield Californian]

Nodding donkeys in Kern County, California. Photo by Antandrus at English Wikipedia. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ In Fairfield, Connecticut, town and state officials gathered at Police Department headquarters Wednesday morning for a ribbon-cutting to mark the installation of a microgrid, the first of its kind in a state municipality. The system will provide power to the police and fire buildings and Operation Hope in the event of an outage. [Fairfield Citizen]
¶ Billionaire Tom Steyer’s super PAC NextGen Climate launched an aggressive campaign against Republican presidential candidates who deny the existence of man-made climate change. Steyer, who spent $70 million on 2014 elections, has pledged to spend “what it takes” to elect candidates that will act on climate issues in 2016. [Greentech Media]
¶ The presidential election of 2016 will determine the United States’ role in confronting and managing the impacts of climate change for years to come. A new University of Texas poll found that 76% of Americans now believe climate change is occurring. Candidates are listed, together with what they believe on the issue. [Scientific American]
¶ The owners of Plant Vogtle announced that a different company will complete the construction of two nuclear reactors at the electricity-generating plant near Waynesboro. Westinghouse Electrical Company will complete the contract, taking over for CB&I, the original contractor. So far, construction has suffered delays. [Online Athens]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 28, 2015
World:
¶ A new report says “time is rapidly running out” for the UK to ensure a decarbonized energy system to meet emissions targets. The report, by the UK Prime Minister’s own Council for Science and Technology, outlines the actions necessary to “create a secure and affordable low carbon energy system for 2030 and beyond.” [CleanTechnica]

Another proof of climate change? Clump of bamboo growing at about 1000 feet in England’s Peak District. Peter Barr. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ FTI Consulting has revised its forecasts for the global wind market for 2015, which is now expected to reach 59 GW. The global business advisory firm updated its forecast as part of FTI Intelligence’s latest renewable energy publication, Global Wind Market Update – H2 2015 Briefing, published on Monday. [CleanTechnica]
¶ If oil stays around $50 a barrel, most Middle Eastern oil producing countries will run out of cash within five years, warned a dire report from the International Monetary Fund this week. That includes OPEC leader Saudi Arabia as well as Oman and Bahrain. Low oil prices will wipe out an estimated $360 billion from the region this year alone. [CNN]
¶ Aela Energia, a 60/40 joint venture between private equity firm Actis and Ireland’s Mainstream Renewable Power has won contracts to build and operate two wind farms in Chile with a combined capacity of 265 MW. The Irish firm noted that Aela Energia won 65% of the auction in which a total of 31 companies participated. [SeeNews Renewables]

Wind farm in Chile. Featured Image: Pablo Rogat/Shutterstock.com
¶ Less than two years ago, the German government called lignite East Germany’s “black gold.” Last week, it reached a deal with utilities that analysts see as the start of the phase-out for the dirtiest power-plant fuel. Producers agreed to close plants corresponding to 12% of the nation’s total lignite generation capacity. [Bloomberg]
¶ This year, China will become the world’s biggest installer of solar panels, but as companies increasingly struggle to secure the vast land banks they need for solar farms, they face greater needs to get around restrictions on converting agricultural land. So they grow everything from plants to hairy crabs beneath the solar cells. [Financial Times]
¶ Enel Green Power SpA has initiated construction of a 126-MW wind park in Mexico, which will boost the Italian firm’s wind capacity in the country to over 570 MW. The company will invest about $250 million (€226.6 million) in the Palo Alto wind farm in the state of Jalisc. The funds will come from group resources. [SeeNews Renewables]

Wind turbines. Author: Vik Walker. License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic.
US:
¶ Austin, Texas just might become the most solar powered city in America. It has approved an additional 162 MW of solar capacity, adding to 288 MW already in the works and 220 MW installed, bringing the total to 670 MW. In case you wonder about costs, the 162 MW round of project set of contracts were at $38/MWh to $40/MWh. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The American energy boom is finally showing some cracks from the crash in oil prices. U.S. oil production decreased by 120,000 barrels per day in September from August, according to a report released by the Energy Information Administration on Tuesday. It marks the lowest monthly output in the last 12 months. [CNN]
¶ Selectmen in Andover, Massachusetts, approved increasing a solar power purchase made earlier this year. They had earlier agreed to buy about 4 million kWh of solar power but increased it to 6.2 million kWh, for a savings of about $300,000 per year. A cap on net metering could prevent the intended array from being built, however. [RenewablesBiz]
¶ A study produced by the Union of Concerned Scientists found that storm surge from a Category 3 hurricane could knock out a sixth of Southeast Florida’s electrical substations. Factor in sea level rise projections and the number doubles. By 2070, with sea rise fueling storm surges that spread farther inland, the number could triple. [Miami Herald]

Florida Power and Light workers replaced wood poles with sturdier concrete poles after a record number of hurricanes hit South Florida between 2004 and 2005. J. Albert Diaz Miami Herald Staff
¶ The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission released the month’s “Energy Infrastructure Update.” It says renewable sources (biomass, geothermal, hydropower, solar, wind) accounted for more than 60% of the 7,276 MW of new electrical generation placed in service in the US during the first nine months of 2015. [Biomass Magazine]
¶ Calling for more stringent limits on methane emissions, Babcock & Wilcox formally commented on the EPA’s proposed emissions rules for municipal solid waste landfills. As a greenhouse gas, methane is much worse than carbon dioxide. Landfills are responsible for 18% of manmade methane emissions in the US. [Environmental Leader]
¶ The USDA provided $102 million in loan guarantees and $71 million in grants to 1,114 projects financed through the latest round of Rural Energy for America Program. REAP projects will generate or save an estimated 8.4 million MWh of electricity and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by almost 5 million metric tonnes. [Energy Matters]
¶ The NRC announced it will give Pacific Gas and Electric Company two extra months to reevaluate Diablo Canyon’s vulnerability to earthquakes. The agency is moving up the dates when most other plants must complete their seismic safety findings, but studies for Diablo and other West-Coast plants are being pushed back. [KCBX]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 27, 2015
World:
¶ Australian coal and gas industry representatives have seized on the long-term nature of Chief Scientist-designate Alan Finkel’s vision of a fossil fuel-free future for Australia to insist their products will live on when renewable energy is predominant. Dr Finkel had acknowledged the industry could not be “arbitrarily” turned off. [Sydney Morning Herald]

It will take many, many years to phase out use of fossil fuels globally. Photo: Michael Kamber/New York Times
¶ According to The Maritime Executive, Norway is moving ahead with plans to construct a fleet of plug-in hybrid ships to service its marine industries. The ships will use LNG and batteries as energy sources. By some metrics, one large container ship creates as much atmospheric pollution as 50 million cars each year. [CleanTechnica]
¶ After many months of bad news for the country’s renewable energy industry, the UK House of Lords delivered some unexpected good news. In deliberations on Wednesday, the House of Lords voted to remove a section of the country’s Energy Bill that would end subsidies for onshore wind from 31 March, 2016. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Work has started on a £3.5 million floating solar power farm at Godley reservoir near Manchester, England. Around 12,000 individual panels will cover an area of 45,500 square metres on the reservoir. Engineers hope to install, test and launch the operation before Christmas.The project may generate 2.7 GWh per year. [Manchester Evening News]

The floating solar panel reservoir
¶ South Australian power provider ZEN Energy announced Tuesday it would become the nation’s first “dedicated community renewable energy provider.” Using solar energy as well as wind, hydro and biomass combined with battery storage, homes and businesses will be able to end their reliance on conventional electricity providers. [Mashable]
¶ Sixty-one prominent Australians, from a Wallaby Rugby star, David Pocock, to the Anglican bishop of Canberra, George Browning, have signed an open letter calling on world leaders to discuss a ban on new coal mines and coal mine expansions at the United Nations climate change meeting in Paris in December. [The Guardian]
US:
¶ Senator Kelly Ayotte (R-NH) announced her support for the Clean Power Plan yesterday evening, making her the first Republican Senator to support the landmark policy to curb carbon pollution from power plants, protect vulnerable communities, and galvanize America’s transition to a clean energy economy. [eNews Park Forest]
¶ A growing number of Nebraska farmers, home owners, and business people have sharpened their pencils, done the math, and found small-scale solar arrays will save money while reducing carbon footprints. Solar panels are powering water pumps for livestock, power irrigation systems for row crops, and have economic benefits. [Columbus Telegram]

Rick Hammond stands next to his new 25-kilowatt solar array, which will power his farming operation west of Benedict. Matt Ryerson/Lincoln Journal Star
¶ The Florida Supreme Court approved a new ballot initiative that aims to expand the state’s use of solar energy. The ballot is backed by Floridians for Solar Choice, a solar energy advocacy group. The group now has to get 683,149 petition signatures before February 1, 2016, for the initiative to qualify for the November 2016 ballot. [Hydrogen Fuel News]
¶ Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper said he will seek the state Supreme Court’s opinion on the legality of Attorney General Cynthia Coffman’s lawsuit to stop implementation of the Clean Power Plan. Coffman’s office has joined 23 other states filing a lawsuit together against the EPA’s plan to reduce carbon emissions. [The Denver Post]
¶ Vermont’s first “ePark,” in the state’s southwest, will be created with a combination of solar power and Tesla Powerwall batteries. Pika Energy has been chosen by Green Mountain Power to plan and design Emerald Lake State Park so it will be powered by sunlight, with the Tesla batteries providing backup electricity. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Southern California Edison is facing a $16.7 million penalty for holding improper talks with utility regulators related to the now-closed San Onofre nuclear power plant.The proposed penalty is the latest development tied to a dispute over a $4.7 billion settlement related to the shutdown of the San Onofre plant, in January, 2012. [KQED]

San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station 2013 photo D Ramey Logan, by WPPilot – Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. Wikimedia Commons
¶ Rocky Mountain Power, Utah’s largest electric utility, is launching a new sustainable energy program aimed at meeting a growing demand for alternative sources of power. The utility announced that the Utah Public Service Commission has approved a pilot program that allows customers to sign up to get their power from solar. [RenewablesBiz]
¶ A Democrat running for governor of New Hampshire called on the state to quickly raise, and possibly eliminate, the limit on how much renewable power consumers can sell back to the state’s utilities under net metering. New Hampshire’s current law limits net metering to 50 MW, and the state’s utilities are closing in on that figure. [Valley News]
¶ New York’s Ginna nuclear plant’s owners appear to have struck a deal to continue generating power through at least next year. The deal will still need approval from the Public Service Commission and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. It would mean consumers pay about $2 more each month. The plant is currently refueling. [Utility Dive]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 26, 2015
Photos Some People May Need to See:
¶ Almost 100% of climate scientists now agree that global climate change is caused by humans. If you believe this is not a serious problem, you owe it to yourself to look at the the pictures with this article. They show how climate-change-related events have affected regions around the world, whether directly or indirectly. [Businessinsider India]

Click on image to View Slide Show
World:
¶ Coal is becoming obsolete. For the first time, the UK renewable energy market has moved ahead of coal for a whole quarter. In the period of April to June, renewable energy was responsible for supplying 25% of the UK’s energy needs. Meanwhile coal, a traditional mainstay of the British electricity market, fell to just 17%. [Pollution Solutions]
¶ The renewable energy offshoot of Toyota Corp has taken a 50% stake in a ground-breaking wind and solar hybrid energy park that could deliver “base load” energy to northern Queensland. Windlab and Eurus Energy says it will begin construction of the Kennedy wind park within 12 months. Eventually, capacity could be 1200 MW. [RenewEconomy]

Hybrid wind and solar plant in the US
¶ Investors around the world no longer see renewable energy as a risky or low-yield investment sector, a report by the UN on private sector climate finance has revealed. Trends in private sector climate finance shows that the renewable energy sector has matured significantly over the last few years as a safe investment avenue. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The African Development Bank’s new president wants to bring electricity to the poorest parts of the continent within a decade and says he can mobilize $55 billion a year to make it happen. At least 620-million people have no access to power, including those in war-torn countries such as South Sudan, Somalia and the Congo. [BDlive]
¶ A complex of four linked solar mega-plants, along with hydro and wind, will help provide nearly half of Morocco’s electricity from renewables by 2020. When they are finished, the four plants at Ouarzazate will generate 580-MW of electricity, enough to power a million homes. The first, Noor 1, has a generating capacity of 160-MW. [The Guardian]

Ouarzazate solar plant will create enough electricity to power a million homes once it is finished. Photograph: Graeme Robertson for the Guardian
¶ While plummeting oil and coal prices make fossil-fuel power projects more attractive, aggressive government support is making sure the renewable sector is still staying in the picture. While alternative energy sources are competing with cheap coal prices, new government policies are giving renewables extra market leverage. [CNBC]
¶ UK green energy company Ecotricity has announced plans to add sun parks to two existing wind parks in Devon and Lincolnshire, and add a third to a wind park currently being built in Leicestershire. Hybrid renewable energy parks combine wind and sun generation in the same project, in the same place, using the same grid connection. [H&V News]
US:
¶ After dropping to a 20-year low last year, Colorado coal production is still falling, state data shows. Statewide, 2015 production through August totaled 13.9 million tons, down from 15.5 million tons for the same period of last year. Production totaled nearly 40 million tons in 2004 and under 23 million tons last year. [Grand Junction Daily Sentinel]

Coal miner in Colorado completing paperwork for black lung screening. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health photo. Public Domain. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ A Chinese investment firm is shelling out $1.3 billion to buy giant oil fields in Howard and Borden counties, Texas, reflecting growing interest from China in US energy resources. Yantai Xinchao will acquire oil assets in the western Texas Permian Basin that are currently owned by Tall City Exploration and Plymouth Petroleum. [CNN]
¶ It is a violation of NRC rules for nuclear power plants to take money from their decommissioning trust funds to pay for building the concrete pads and rows of concrete and steel casks where waste is stored after it is cooled in special storage pools. But the NRC grants exemptions from those rules every time it is asked. [Valley News]
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October 25, 2015
World:
¶ In Norway they use Teslas as taxis. Norwegians have the highest per capita ownership of the prestige plug-in. Taxi driver Trond Gustav Somme has owned his Tesla for the past two years, trading up from a Nissan Leaf. Mums and dads are also opting for a Tesla instead of a big Volvo; not only is it cooler, it’s cheaper. [New Zealand Herald]

Trond Gustav Somme with his Tesla taxi. Photo / Grant Bradley
¶ The Kyoto Prefectural Government signed an agreement with Alaska to explore the possibility of importing liquid natural gas. While there are financial and bureaucratic challenges to face before Alaskan LNG flows to Kyoto, the agreement is a step to achieve a larger goal: ending prefectural dependence on nuclear power by 2040. [The Japan Times]
¶ The government of Pakistan is taking necessary measures to develop renewable energy and a number of projects involve collaboration of the private sector. There are 30 wind power projects with 1760 MW capacity being developed, along with 31 solar projects with 999.6 MW and over 1500 MW of biomass power in the works. [Radio Pakistan]
¶ The UAE and New Zealand signed an agreement to develop a jointly-funded 1-MW solar PV power plant in the Solomon Islands. The power plant will meet seven percent of the Solomon Islands’ energy needs and reduce CO2 emissions by over 1,200 tons while saving over approximately 450,000 litres of diesel annually. [ArabianBusiness.com]

King Solomon Hotel in Honiara, capital of the Solomon Islands. Photo by Phenss. CC BY-SA 4.0. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ At least 12 cities in five countries have pledged in their Intended Nationally Determined Contributions to shift to 100% renewable-power sources to help fight climate change as early as this year. Four of the cities are in the US, one is in Canada, five are in Sweden, one is in Denmark, and one is in Norway. [Business Mirror]
US:
¶ A planned 400-MW pumped hydro storage project in Montana could provide electricity when there are lulls in solar and wind power production. The project might be completed in 2017, and has support from Montana’s governor. Montana has wind resources to be the number three state for wind generating in the US. [CleanTechnica]

Image Credit: PD-US Gov-Interior-FWS
¶ Less than two years after Vermont almost quadrupled the amount of renewable power that customers could sell back to their electric utilities, at least one utility has reached the cap. Vermont’s largest utility, Green Mountain Power expects to reach the net-metering cap of 15% of their peak load by early next year. [Rutland Herald]
¶ An ordinary looking irrigation canal in west-central Colorado has become a small pivot in the great national debate about what our future energy system should look like. What it should be is small, decentralized power production from primarily renewable sources such as is proposed for the South Canal near Montrose. [The Denver Post]

A power developer proposes to harness the power of tumbling water in a canal, to produce 990 kWh of electricity, or enough for 1,445 people. (Allen Best, Special to The Denver Post)
¶ Local farmers in California may have to return to the polluting practice of burning their agricultural waste in the open air unless the state Legislature acts soon to subsidize struggling biomass power plants that run on such material, the executive director of the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District warns. [The Bakersfield Californian]
¶ Forty-two years and counting. That is how long it has taken to get America’s latest nuclear reactor up and running. The stop-start saga behind Unit 2 at the Watts Bar complex near Knoxville, Tennessee, moved a step closer to its conclusion on Thursday when the NRC granted the plant a 40-year operating license. [BDlive]
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October 24, 2015
World:
¶ Typical industry scenarios see coal, oil and gas use growing by 30% to 50% and still making up 75% of the global energy supply mix in 2040, but none take into account the potential for reducing fossil fuel demand as ever-more countries seek to ‘decarbonize’ their economies, according to a new Carbon Tracker Initiative report. [National Observer]

Two of the oil pumps at the well head near Glentworth, Lincolnshire, UK. Photo by Richard Croft. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Climate change and the risk of stranded assets are of growing concern for investors. Ernst & Young’s second annual survey of over 200 global institutional investors finds that 63.6% of respondents believe companies do not adequately disclose the environmental, social and governance risks that could affect their business models. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Nigerian Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has promised a solar power revolution in his country in the next one year. He made the promise after inspecting solar power stands mounted at a trade fair by the Department of International Development as a follow up to the agreement signed between Nigeria and the UK. [The Eagle Online]

50% of roofs in London are suitable for solar PV panels
¶ London Mayor Boris Johnson has called for a gradual reduction of solar subsidies rather than the ‘cliff edge’ cuts suggested by the UK Government. Johnson said that the current proposals created great uncertainty in the industry, threatening more than 3,000 jobs in London and affecting his energy efficiency programmes. [edie.net]
¶ This year marks the 70th anniversary of the nuclear industry in Russia, which is the world’s third-largest generator of nuclear power. The country never had a “nuclear pause” even after the Chernobyl Disaster in 1986. Russia’s current target program envisions a 25% to 30% nuclear power share of total generation by 2030. [EJ Insight]
US:
¶ The EPA officially issued the Clean Power Plan, regulations on power plants to cut carbon emissions part of the Obama administration’s plan to cut carbon emissions by more than 30% by 2030. The plan requires each state to create an effective plan to meet emissions cuts at power plants, but 24 states will fight the new rules in court. [Voice of America]

Steam billows from a coal-fired station in Bow, N.H., Jan. 20, 2015. VOA file
¶ California Governor Edmund G Brown Jr today issued a statement after numerous states took legal action to block the Obama Administration’s Clean Power Plan, which sets nationwide limits on greenhouse gas emissions from power plants. He said he will do everything in his power to fight “this pernicious lawsuit.” [Imperial Valley News]
¶ Friday’s 24-state lawsuit seeking to block the EPA’s Clean Power Plan showed a rift between Colorado’s governor and attorney general. Governor Hickenlooper supports the EPA plan, but Attorney General Cynthia Coffman will fight it. Some accuse her of being unduly influenced by the fossil fuel industry. [The Colorado Statesman]
¶ The US wind energy industry installed over 1,600 MW in the third quarter, and nearly 3,600 MW for the whole year, but still faces policy uncertainty. The American Wind Energy Association’s most recent market report, highlights the more than 1,600 MW of new wind energy capacity, but also examines policy uncertainties. [CleanTechnica]

US annual and cumulative wind power capacity growth
¶ Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin has been a forceful proponent of renewable energy during his three terms in office. But a recent proposal by Ranger Solar LLC to construct 20-MW solar arrays in six Vermont communities, Ludlow, Brandon, Highgate, Randolph Center, Irasburg, and Sheldon, is going too far, he said. [Barre Montpelier Times Argus]
¶ Xcel, the Minneapolis-based utility that serves eight states, is receiving bids for 20-year power-purchase agreements at about $25/MWh for wind energy, according to its CEO. While gas prices are close to historic lows, he doesn’t see them remaining there forever, and expects prices for gas-generated electricity to be closer to $32/MWh. [Bloomberg]
¶ Analysis by the American Council of Energy-Efficiency Economy reviewed a sweeping array of factors in each of the 50 states. It rated the top ten states, in order, as Massachusetts, California, Vermont, Rhode Island, Oregon, Connecticut, Maryland, Washington, and New York, with Minnesota and Illinois tied for 10th. [GoLocalPDX]
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October 23, 2015
World:
¶ Major cuts to a scheme supporting small-scale renewable energy are the latest blow to UK farmers already hit by low prices. The warning comes ahead of the end of a consultation on changes to the feed-in tariff scheme, which could see funding for solar cut by 87% and wind down 58%, or the end of support altogether. [The Galloway Gazette]

Wind turbine on a farm near to Dirleton Castle
¶ IEA estimates that in order to implement the climate investment pledges made to the UN by world leaders, the global energy industry must invest $13.5 trillion through 2030 in efficiency measures and low-carbon technologies. IEA’s analysis includes deployment of nuclear, wind, and solar power plus carbon capture and storage. [CleanTechnica]
¶ By population, Ontario would be the 5th largest state if it were in the US, but its installed solar capacity, 1,500 MW would rank it 3rd. The province has also shut down all its coal-fired power plants. How does a northern province become a solar and climate leader, despite one of the poorest solar resources in North America? Smart policy. [CleanTechnica]
¶ In East Africa, Kenya is currently utilizing temporary geothermal wellheads as another source of clean energy, which feeds an extra 56 MW to the national grid. Engineers at Kenya Electricity Generation Company are taking advantage of single wells to generate power using the steam while the main plant is being constructed. [ESI Africa]

Wellheads produces clean energy and has yet again placed Kenya in map. Pic credit: Thinkgeoenergy
¶ All 80 turbines at E.ON’s Amrumbank West offshore wind farm in the North Sea are connected to the grid. With 80 turbines working at full capacity, the 288-MW facility could produce enough energy to meet the demands of 300,000 average households and offset more than 740,000 tons of carbon emissions each year. [UPI.com]
¶ Turkey’s dash for coal puts it on course to breach a climate target analysts say is already inadequate. The country has pledged to cut greenhouse gas emissions up to 21% from business as usual by 2030. Yet it is reportedly planning to build 80 coal-fired power stations. Climate Action Tracker says something has to give. [Climate Home]
¶ The UK’s plans for a new series of interconnectors to link the power grid to the continent that would make it easier to share renewable energy across northern Europe have today taken a “major step forward”, after National Grid and its Danish counterpart Energinet.dk kicked off the tendering process for a new 1,400-MW link. [Business Green]
¶ ESB’s new €33 million Woodhouse Wind Farm in County Waterford, Ireland, has been completed. It is one of 15 wind farms ESB has in operation in Ireland, bringing the company’s installed wind capacity across the island to almost 300 MW. The new 20-MW Waterford wind farm will provide enough power 10,000 homes. [Irish Building Magazine]

ESB opens new €33m Woodhouse Wind Farm in County Waterford
US:
¶ At 12:30 am Thursday, the main Texas grid operator reported that nearly 37% of demand was met with wind power. The Electricity Reliability Council of Texas, which manages nearly 90% of the state’s electric needs, said it used 12,237.6 MW of wind power at the time. That bested a previous record of 11,467 MW. [mySanAntonio.com]
¶ Opponents of the US carbon pollution regulation, the Clean Power Plan rule, will soon be able to take legal action against it, according to the president of American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity. On Friday, the US EPA is expected to publish the text of the Clean Power Plan rule in the Federal Register. [Sputnik International]
¶ Farmers RECC will have its own local renewable energy source and help out a city when the Glasgow, Kentucky, landfill-gas-to-energy plant begins producing power later this year. The 1-MW power plant will be the sixth such landfill methane-fueled unit owned and operated by Winchester-based East Kentucky Power Cooperative. [Electric Co-op Today]

The Caterpillar generator to convert methane gas to electricity was delivered at the Glasgow landfill on Oct. 12. (Photo By: Farmers RECC)
¶ A new report out this week finds the US leads the industrialized nations of the world in shifting away from coal, a feat even more remarkable because we are home to the world’s biggest fleet of coal plants. The report says the US is positioned to lead at the climate talks in Paris this fall, thanks to its progress on coal and clean energy. [Huffington Post]
¶ The US approved a request to begin generating electricity at a nuclear reactor, the first time in almost 20 years that federal regulators have given a new nuclear power plant such a license. The NRC gave approval to the Tennessee Valley Authority to load uranium fuel into the Watts Bar Unit 2 reactor in Spring City, Tennessee. [Wall Street Journal]
¶ The owners of the shuttered San Onofre nuclear power plant have been awarded $400 million in insurance money for the outages caused by the plant’s failed replacement steam generators. Customers, including those with Southern California Edison, will get 95% of the net insurance proceeds, Edison said in an announcement. [OCRegister]
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October 22, 2015
Noteworthy:

Mealworms munch on Styrofoam, a hopeful sign that solutions to plastics pollution exist. (Photo: Yu Yang)
¶ Mealworms can subsist on a diet of Styrofoam and other polystyrene, according to two companion studies co-authored by Wei-Min Wu, a senior research engineer in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Stanford. Microorganisms in the worms’ guts biodegrade the plastic in the process. [Stanford University News]
Opinion:
¶ Hinkley point: UK energy policy is now hunkering in a nuclear bunker • The UK government’s official admission that new nuclear power stations will be subsidised blows a hole in already bewildering energy plans, which once said nothing should be subsidized but now back the failed and expensive over the cheap and successful. [The Guardian]
Science and Technology:
¶ One of the world’s leading experts on permafrost told BBC News the recent rate of warming of permafrost is “unbelievable,” about one-tenth of a degree C per year in northern Alaska since the mid 2000s. He says the current permafrost evidence has convinced him that global warming is real and not just a product of natural variation. [BBC]

This “drunken forest” of collapsed black spruce is also a sign of the melting permafrost. Science Photo Library
World:
¶ Apple announced plans to build solar energy projects with a capacity of 200 MW in the northern, eastern and southern regions of China, while iPhone supplier Hon Hai Precision, also know as Foxconn, said it will add solar power plants with a capacity of 400 MW, supplying the Zhengzhou factory in Henan province, by 2018. [Mobile World Live]
¶ It was announced that a strategic investment agreement has been signed for the planned Hinkley Point C nuclear power plant in the UK. The Renewable Energy Association said it is struggling to see the larger joined-up vision of a national energy strategy. The strike price for nuclear power is about double that of solar. [SeeNews Renewables]
¶ By the end of 2012, at the peak of the recent mining boom, the Australian coal industry had announced plans to triple or even quadruple black coal production on 2010 levels by 2030. Less than three years after such announcements were made, however, a number of the relevant projects have become financially unviable. [The Conversation AU]
¶ Globally, coal mining companies are on the edge of the financial abyss. More planned coal plants are being cancelled than built, as renewable energy is attracting more investment than coal, a WWF report says. In 2014, 59% of net additions to global power capacity were from renewable energy, nearly 80% in Europe. [Blue & Green Tomorrow]
¶ Green energy provider Ecotricity has announced plans to build three new ‘hybrid’ renewable energy parks, combining wind and solar power generation in the same project. Hybrid renewable energy parks combine wind and solar power generation using the same grid connection to maximise efficiency and reduce initial costs. [edie.net]
¶ Mexico is planning to quadruple its wind-power capacity as part of its president’s efforts to transform its energy industry. The country expects to have about 10 GW of turbines in operation within three years spread across almost every region, up from 2.5 GW in 2014. The government plans for 20 GW of clean energy by 2030. [Bloomberg]
¶ Origin Energy, Australia’s biggest electricity retailer, says it will embrace new products such as rooftop solar, batteries for storage and smart meters. It is making a major pitch to shareholders and consumers that it is shifting its focus from fossil fuels to disruptive new technologies, and it intends to be a leader in Australian solar power. [RenewEconomy]
¶ The No 2 reactor at Kyushu Electric Power Co’s Sendai nuclear power plant here in the southwestern city of Satsumasendai started generating and transmitting electricity on Wednesday. Kyushu Electric will raise the reactor’s output to 30% of capacity later on Wednesday and to full capacity in about 10 days, if no trouble emerges. [The Japan News]
US:
¶ GTM Research identifies community solar as the next largest solar growth market in the United States. Over the next two years, community solar in the US is poised to see its market share increase sevenfold, and by 2020 GTM Research expects US community solar to be a half-gigawatt annual market. [Green Building Elements]

The 550 kW Harvard Community Solar Garden is the first shareholder-owned solar garden in Massachusetts. Photo courtesy of Steven Strong, president of Solar Design Associates.
¶ Once the 3,088 panels of the solar array are turned on, the former sewage lagoon in Peterborough, New Hampshire, will be transformed into a golden, sunlit field. The 944-kW solar array will be the largest in New Hampshire. The town will celebrate the event by holding a ribbon-cutting ceremony in November. [Monadnock Ledger Transcript]
¶ Currently, about 200 Arctic Alaskan communities use diesel fuel as their primary source of electricity and heat. The costs to transport diesel to the Far North are significant, and these rural villages pay more for power than people do anywhere else in the US. One community, however, has turned to wind power, and it’s working. [Grist]
¶ New studies, using state-of-the-art seismic mapping technology, show that fault lines threatening the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant are more complex and interconnected than Diablo’s designers could have known. This complexity implies that the seismic predictions used to justify the plant’s location were wrong. [Santa Barbara Independent]
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October 21, 2015
World:
¶ Australia has not just reached socket parity, it has smashed it, according to a report from Beyond Zero Emissions. In most cities in Australia, the cost of rooftop solar is now less than half the price of grid-based power. Indeed, even some utilities offer to install rooftop solar on your roof for free, and charge only 11¢/kWh for the output. [One Step Off The Grid]

Australia at grid parity.
¶ An unprecedented alliance of heads of state, city, and state leaders, has called for countries around the world to put a price on carbon. The call comes by way of the Carbon Pricing Panel, a group of world leaders convened by World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim and IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde. [CleanTechnica]
¶ China’s leader is expected to put the seal later on its contribution to what will be the first UK nuclear power plant built in a generation. The Hinkley C plant could be opened by 2025, with China likely to cover about 30% of the cost. President Xi Jinping is meeting Prime Minister David Cameron on the second day of his UK state visit. [BBC]
¶ The Solar Trade Association claims solar could provide as much power as Hinkley Point C at half the cost. The plant was ridiculed as a white elephant in the House of Lords. Criticism of an expected nuclear deal with China is still growing. At current price estimates of £24.5 billion, it will be the world’s most expensive power plant. [Solar Power Portal]
¶ Eight months after becoming the first capital city to divest from coal, Oslo has announced it intends to divest its pension fund from all fossil fuels. According to Fossil Free Europe, which reported the news Monday, the City of Oslo announced that it intends to divest its $9 billion pension fund from coal, oil, and gas companies. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Cars remained in the news over the past week, with VW facing further consequences of the diesel emissions scandal – while other car manufacturers are considering the effects of the scandal for each of them. The new emphasis on EVs by Volvo and Toyota is being mirrored by such car makers as Aston Martin Lagonda. [Business Spectator]
¶ China added 9.9 GW of PV power-generation capacity in the first nine months of 2015, the National Energy Administration said. The amount includes 8.32 GW from PV power stations and 1.58 GW from distributed PV power projects, according to NEA figures. China’s cumulative-installed capacity for solar PV power hit 37.95 GW. [China Daily]
¶ Google will buy out Vestas’ 12.5% stake in the Lake Turkana Wind Project in Kenya after it is up and running. Vestas said Google would purchase the stake for an undisclosed amount once the project was completed in 2017. The Lake Turkana wind project will have a capacity of 310 MW and will cost about $700 million. [TV Newsroom]

Google will invest in the Lake Turkana Wind Project
US:
¶ The Eastern Navajo Nation Agency is exploring the possibility of building a solar farm as part of efforts to chart a “new path,” according to a tribal official. The proposed project would deliver 2,100 MW of PV power at the Paragon-Bisti Energy Renewable Ranch, a 22,000-acre parcel south of Farmington, New Mexico. [Farmington Daily Times]
¶ Yuba County, California, supervisors authorized the sale of bonds for installation of a $5.8 million solar project at the county airport. Combined with projects that power the County Government Center in Marysville and Health and Human Services in Linda, the new array will result in all 13 county facilities being solar powered. [Appeal-Democrat]
¶ Microgrids work for utilities. During California’s Butte Fire, PG&E asked Jackson Rancheria’s microgrid to stay off-grid for two days. Then it turned out to be a week. And then things didn’t work out for them, so the rancheria stayed off the grid for 10 days. It marked the 14th time this year the rancheria was asked to go off grid. [Government Technology]

In September, the Butte fire killed two people, burned 475 homes and charred nearly 71,000 acres, mainly in California’s Calaveras County. Flickr/Eileen McFall
¶ As the fate of a nuclear plant in New York’s Oswego County hangs in the balance, tensions are rising between Governor Andrew Cuomo and the plant’s operators. On Monday, Cuomo released a statement accusing Entergy of using its employees as pawns in an attempt to win financial incentives for the FitzPatrick nuclear. [Capital New York]
¶ The EPA has announced its annual Green Power Leadership Awards recognizing 22 Green Power Partners and three renewable energy suppliers across the country. All three winners in the onsite generation category use of landfill gas or biogas. The awards were presented at the annual Renewable Energy Markets Conference. [Biomass Magazine]
¶ Last week, Lander-Grinspoon Academy, in Northampton, Massachusetts, turned on 147 solar panels that were installed on its roof over the summer. The panels were installed by Greenfield-based Pioneer Valley Photovoltaics, or PV Squared, over the course of two weeks, and are now providing power for the whole building. [GazetteNET]
¶ Two representatives in the Michigan legislature from different political points of view are uniting on renewable energy. Jeff Irwin is a proud progressive, and Gary Glenn is widely considered one of the most conservative Republicans. But they’re working together on an energy package to encourage renewable energy in Michigan. [MLive.com]
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October 20, 2015
World:
¶ China is urging its top wind and solar power production provinces to prioritize transmission of renewable energy over conventional energy sources as it seeks to get more clean power onto the grid. More than 15% of energy generated by wind power in the first half of this year suffered from curtailment, according to official data. [Reuters]

A security guard stands in front of windmills used to generate energy in Shanghai November 28, 2011. REUTERS/Aly Song
¶ In Canada, the Liberal party, under the leadership of 43-year old Justin Trudeau, swept to victory in the Canadian federal elections. The Liberals have won at least 184 seats, 14 seats more than needed to form a majority government. The Trudeau government is pledged to “Make critical investments” in the clean energy industry. [Biobased Digest]
¶ Australian electricity retailers continue to sit on their hands, refusing to sign power purchase agreements for new large scale renewable energy projects. Some 3,800 MW of capacity will need to be committed within the next twelve months if a shortfall in the renewable energy target is to be avoided, but current penalties appear ineffectual. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Renewables are reducing the wholesale price of energy and as a result offsetting a large part of the impact of subsidies on bill payers, according to a report by UK power supplier Good Energy Group. The report responds to government announcements in recent months that it will cut renewables support control costs for consumers. [SeeNews Renewables]

An Impressive Bank of Solar Panels St Marks Close, Bramley Green. Photo by Sebastian Ballard. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ One of India’s largest private power generation companies, Reliance Power, has decided to make a major transition to solar generation. Work on a 3,960-MW power plant has now stopped as the company expressed its inability to low-priced power from it. With India’s push to solar power, the company is looking to make a switch. [CleanTechnica]
¶ French renewables firm Vergnet will add 13 MW of PV capacity in Nigeria’s southwestern Osun state for a total cost of €35 million ($39.6 million). Apart from the facility itself, the deal also covers certain training activities aimed at paving the way for future technology transfers between the two countries. [SeeNews Renewables]
¶ German industrial group Siemens AG unveiled a new DC solution for connecting offshore wind turbines to the grid which can lower costs by as much as 30%. The platform involves a DC cable that can connect several of these platforms sequentially in a wind farm and then route them to an onshore transformer substation. [SeeNews Renewables]

Gwynt y Mor offshore wind farm. Source: Siemens AG.
¶ Assuming a return of between 3% and 7% for financing the construction of reactors, and fossil-fuel generators will have to pay $30 per ton for their carbon emissions, nuclear power is cheaper than coal and natural gas, the International Atomic Energy Agency said in a report. The agency’s mission is to promote the use of atomic energy. [Bloomberg]
¶ The first UK nuclear power plant in a generation will be 33.5% owned by China, with EDF set to announce a landmark deal on Hinkley Point on Wednesday. Bosses at the French energy giant, which is building the £24.5 billion station in Somerset, reportedly have sealed an agreement with executives from China’s state-owned CGN. [Telegraph.co.uk]
¶ Japan has acknowledged a possible first casualty from radiation at the wrecked Fukushima nuclear power plant, a worker who was diagnosed with cancer after the crisis broke out in 2011. [NBCNews.com] (The Fukushima plant manager died of cancer after the meltdowns, but those in charge decided that it had nothing to do with radiation.)
US:
¶ A ten-year review of the Renewable Fuel Standard by researchers at the University of Tennessee found that the RFS is “too reliant” on corn ethanol and is not a “bridge” to renewables. It says that the production of this biofuel is resulting in additional water and soil problems, as well as “hampering advancements” in other biofuels. [CleanTechnica]

Archer Daniels Midland corn-processing plant near Columbus, Nebraska. Photo by Ammodramus. Placed in the public domain by author. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ A report from Navigant Consulting finds significant economic benefits take place in Illinois and Massachusetts while curbing energy use during peak demand periods. By using demand response systems to compensate customers for curbing their electricity use during times of peak demand, significant economic savings are achieved. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Canadian firm Algonquin Power & Utilities Corp said it will jointly build the 150-MW Deerfield wind project in Michigan with its developer, Renewable Energy Systems Americas. The $303 million project has a power purchase agreement in place with Wolverine Power Supply Cooperative and has already started construction. [SeeNews Renewables]
¶ The Vermont Public Service Board held a public hearing to allow area residents to comment or ask questions about a proposed Green Mountain Power solar array in Hartford. The company would buy 47-acres just west of the Quechee Gorge off of Quechee-Hartland Road to build a 4.99-MW solar array. There was no reported opposition. [Valley News]
¶ San Diego-based EDF Renewable Energy will build a 123-MW wind farm north of Dallas to power Procter & Gamble plants, P&G announced at the White House. P&G was one of eighty companies signing the “American Business Act on Climate Pledge” to achieve 30% renewable energy power to its plants globally by 2020. [Chron.com]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 19, 2015
World:
¶ Small and medium-sized hydro projects are being abandoned across Scotland following controversial changes in subsidy arrangements made by the government at Whitehall since the General Election. It will mean many millions of pounds of investment being lost and the potential for much-needed jobs in rural communities. [Herald Scotland]

A small hydro turbine building in a Scottish wilderness.
¶ Dutch company Seawind is developing an offshore wind system integrating a 6.2-MW wind turbine with self-installing support structures for water depths over ten meters. The aim of the system is to reduce the Levelized Cost of Energy from its current level of up to €0.20 per kWh to below €0.09 within five years. [Renewable Energy Magazine]
¶ Xinhua News Agency says China’s solar PV power capacity will hit 150 GW by 2020. The agency referenced information from the National Energy Administration, which said country’s total solar PV power capacity standing at 35.8 GW at the end of June, and that China will attempt to increase PV capacity by 20 GW each year. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Envision Energy, a Chinese manufacturer of low-speed wind energy turbines, has acquired a majority stake in a portfolio of Mexican wind energy projects with total capacity of 600 MW. The construction of the projects is yet to start, and is expected for 2016, with operations scheduled to begin by the end of the same year. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Protesters opposing Hinkley C have set up camp on a roundabout at the gates of the UK’s proposed nuclear site. They erected a compound in the early hours of Monday, October 19. They have written banners in Chinese telling the visiting Chinese President that EDF’s Hinkley C would be “a bad investment” for the Chinese state. [Western Gazette]

Artist’s rendering of the Hinkley C nuclear power plant
¶ The UN’s chief environment scientist has attacked the UK government over its stance on renewable energy subsidies. She told the BBC the UK was sending “a very serious signal – a very perverse signal” by cutting support for renewable energy while appearing to continue heavily subsidising fossil fuels. [Solar Power Portal]
¶ The UK Government says is necessary to stop spiralling renewables support costs. The Solar Trade Association, warning the move could cost up to 27,000 jobs, has launched a £1 solar rescue plan, which it says would add just £1 to consumer bills by 2019, on top of the £9 a year that clean technology currently cost ratepayers. [Energy Voice]
¶ Wind and solar farms brought down the wholesale cost of electricity by £1.55 billion in 2014, a study shows. The research comes as 30 community energy groups across the South West united to warn that subsidy cuts will cost jobs. The collective is calling on MPs as 3,000 of the 3,800 solar jobs in the region could be at risk. [Western Morning News]
¶ Minister for the Environment, Simon Corbell, told a Canberra tech conference that the country needs an ‘orderly exit plan’ from a dependency on coal-fired energy. He said that the solution for Australia’s electricity needs is a responsible policy that encourages long-term investment in emerging microgrid technologies. [OmniChannel Media]

Wind turbines in an Australian desert.
US:
¶ New York’s Westchester County will soon procure clean energy for around 75,000 residents. Over 15 municipalities are banding together to aggregate their demand for cleaner power sources and lower their energy bills through competitive bidding. The project is New York’s first implementation of community choice aggregation. [GreenBiz]
¶ The city of Bakersfield, California, has passed a resolution urging Congress to extend the federal Investment Tax Credit for solar energy. Bakersfield may be the first city in America to officially pass such a resolution supporting the solar tax credit. One reason is that solar power contributes billions to the California economy. [CleanTechnica]
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October 18, 2015
World:
¶ The Adani-owned Carmichael mine in central Queensland was approved last week by Environment Minister Greg Hunt. He said the mine would have “strictest conditions in Australian history” but environment groups say the mine, which will produce up to 60 million tonnes of coal for export a year, will be “a disaster.” [Sydney Morning Herald]

Queensland’s Abbot Point, surrounded by wetlands and coral reefs, is set to become the worlds largest coal port.
¶ According to the French Minister of Ecology and Energy, Segolene Royal, the government in the country is going to be extending the current program – which rewards a €10,000 bonus to those switching to an electric vehicle from a 15-year-old diesel car – to encompass diesel cars that are “only” 10 years old as well. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The Indian state of Odisha has unveiled an ambitious plan to set up a 1,000-MW solar park. The park will need about 5,000 acres, but might be developed in clusters. It is to be developed as a public-private partnership and has been approved by the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy. It will cost ₹6500 crore ($1.2 billion). [Business Standard]

Odisha bets big on solar power, plans to set up 1,000-Mw park
¶ Oil and gas industry bosses pledged to curb gas flaring as they sought to boost their image ahead of a United Nations summit later this year. The leaders of ten companies that produce 20% of the world’s oil and gas recognised that current greenhouse gas levels were inconsistent with a global warming limit of 2° Celsius. [MENAFN.COM]
¶ Construction of the Lake Turkana Wind Power project in Kenya celebrated a long journey’s success and groundbreaking in July. Officially launched with an inauguration by President Uhuru Kenyatta in July, the project has a max capacity of 310 megawatts of sustainable power. Now, it is being built and changing people’s lives. [CleanTechnica]

Lake Turkana, in Kenya.
¶ A new plan currently under development by Dumfries and Galloway Council, Scottish Enterprise and the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority could see the site of a former nuclear power station being converted to Scotland’s first experimental “green energy park”, bringing scores of jobs to an economically fragile area. [Herald Scotland]
¶ Phoenix Solar and its partner Millennium Energy Industries, have been jointly awarded an order to build a series of three photovoltaic power plants with a total capacity of 11 MW in Jordan. The project aims at providing three hotels in Jordan with the capability to generate 100% of their power needs from solar energy. [Utilities-ME.com]
US:
¶ Nebraska’s Pine Ridge is down to its last big stands of ponderosa pine. Most of the state’s elms are gone, the cottonwood is in decline and the ash, beloved for its brilliant autumnal yellow, will disappear soon. Trees are under assault through the combined effects of climate change, invasive species and changes in land use. [Omaha World-Herald]

Forested Hills in the Pine Ridge region of Nebraska. Photo by Spencer. CC BY-SA 2.5. Wikimedia Commons.
¶ Even before Entergy announced that the Pilgrim nuclear plant would close, Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker had two filed bills ready. One would encourage Massachusetts utilities to enter into long-term contracts with renewable energy producers. The other would raise existing caps on the state’s net metering program. [Valley News]
¶ Washington County, Maryland, entered a public-private partnership with EPG Solar in 2012 to develop solar farms. They should produce a peak capacity of about 8 MW by the end of the year. A report last month from Environment Maryland Research & Policy Center found Maryland’s solar capacity grew 50% last year. [Herald-Mail Media]
¶ The National Wildlife Federation issued a report outlining the many ways that climate change is affecting wetlands, rivers and lakes and the fish and wildlife that inhabit them. The report was released just weeks after the US EPA unveiled its Clean Power Plan, an effort to reduce carbon pollution from the nation’s power plants. [Montana Standard]
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