Archive for the 'solar' Category

March 7 Energy News

March 7, 2015

World:

¶ The UK has spearheaded a return to growth for the utility-scale solar sector in Europe, according to Wiki-Solar.org. The website, which tracks installation of solar projects over 5 MW solar worldwide, says there was a total of 35.9 GW of utility-scale solar capacity at the end of 2014, up 14.2 GW from 2013. [Solar Power Portal]

¶ Around the world there were 51,477 MW of wind capacity installed during the year, a 44% increase over the amount installed in 2013. This brings the total global wind capacity to 369,553 MW, a huge number! Also, growth figures indicate we could double wind capacity during the next 7 years. [Treehugger]

¶ Anyone in Malaysia could be an independent power producer. It doesn’t have to be only large favoured companies making money by selling power. Anyone could do it, once the country adopts net metering. That’s the plan Serdang MP Ong Kian Ming wants the government’s energy authorities to adopt. [Free Malaysia Today]

¶ India will achieve energy independence by 2050 if most households go for rooftop solar power generation under new policy, a leading expert says. The ministry of new and renewable energy is in the process of framing an ambitious policy to generate adequate electricity from non-conventional energy sources. [The Hans India]

¶ Environmental action group World Wide Fund for Nature-Philippines on Friday dismissed fears over the possible negative impact of wind power on the national grid. The group’s Climate Change Unit Head said adding 500 MW of wind power to the national grid will have no negative impact on grid operations. [The Manila Times]

¶ Water at the Takhini, Yukon, hot springs emerges warm enough for bathers to soak outdoors, even in the winter. Now, researchers will study Yukon’s fault lines and hot springs to examine their feasibility as sources of geothermal power. Takhini Hot Pools is one of the sites to be examined as part of the project. [CBC.ca]

US:

¶ Comparing 2014 to 2013 in terms of changes in power produced in the US, windpower increased most. In fact, windpower gained more than all traditional power sources put together. Solar was number two, with 2014’s output more than doubling 2013’s. Output from natural gas fell, despite increased capacity. [CleanTechnica]

¶ According to a new survey conducted by the Morgan Stanley Institute for Sustainable Investing, 71% of individual investors who trade actively on the financial markets were interested in sustainable investing, but 54% believe choosing between sustainable investments and making financial gains is a trade-off. [CleanTechnica]

¶ A California state utilities judge has said that a major new natural gas power plant at Carlsbad should be put on hold until clean energy options are more thoroughly explored. San Diego Gas & Electric is wrestling with how to replace power from the recently retired San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. [U-T San Diego]

¶ A study by GTM Research and the Energy Storage Association says Energy storage in the US will more than triple this year as regulators allow use of the technology by utilities and homeowners. Changes in regulatory policy, especially in California, and the growth of renewable energy are driving demand. [Buffalo News]

¶ Prominent leaders from agriculture’s diverse value chain issued an open letter to policymakers and presidential hopefuls attending the first ever Iowa Ag Summit, urging them to consider Iowa’s renewable energy record in wind, solar and biofuels as an example for clean energy policies for the nation. [KMAland]

March 6 Energy News

March 6, 2015

Science and Technology:

¶ Raytheon Company and its partners, the US Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Primus Power, and Advanced Energy have successfully demonstrated an advanced microgrid system capable of islanded (off-grid) operation using stored and high penetration renewable energy. [Your Defence News]

World:

¶ The European Union and international NGO Adventist Development and Relief Agency announced a three-year program to expand renewable energy access in Somalia. The project will provide affordable and sustainable renewable power to 100,000 homes across Somaliland, Puntland and South Central Somalia. [ESI Africa]

¶ There are more indications that the world is reaching a tipping point, and it is firmly toward renewable energy and away from fossil fuels. A line from a report by the National Bank of Abu Dhabi is illustrative: “Going forward, almost all investments in the power sector will be in renewable energy.” [SustainableBusiness.com]

¶ China, the country that is building the most nuclear reactors, continued to get more electricity from the wind than from nuclear power plants in 2014. This came despite below-average wind speeds for the year. The electricity generated by China’s wind farms in 2014 was 16% more than the year before. [InvestorIdeas.com]

¶ “Lifting India out of poverty and pollution” India’s air is cutting 660 million lives short by about three years, while nearly all of the country’s 1.2 billion citizens are breathing in harmful pollution levels. Coal and nuclear have failed to provide 300 million Indians with electricity. Renewable power is an answer. [SBS]

US:

¶ Despite gas prices at the lowest point in years, new numbers show that using public transportation can be a money saver. The average annual savings for public transit riders in February is $9,238 ($770 per month), according to the American Public Transportation Association’s February Transit Savings Report. [CleanTechnica]

¶ In Texas, where consumers can buy electricity through competitive power plans, renewable energy plans are among the cheapest available. In a review of the state-run website PowertoChoose.org, three of the ten lowest-priced plans offered in Dallas this week were advertised as 100% renewable. [Dallas Morning News]

¶ Buoyed by tens of thousands of petitioners seeking to breathe new life into the Cape wind project, demonstrators took to Boston Common on February 28 to ask utility National Grid to rekindle its financial relationship with the project. Then about 96,000 more people signed online support petitions. [Barnstable Patriot]

¶ Raleigh-based Conservatives for Clean Energy commissioned a poll that shows overwhelming support for renewable and clean-energy sources, even among Republicans and self-described conservatives. Smaller numbers support oil and gas exploration, but a majority of those polled oppose fracking. [Charlotte Business Journal]

¶ Iowa generates 27% of its electricity from wind. It has 4,000 wind-related jobs. And wind companies pay farmers millions each year to host turbines. Now, for this Saturday’s caucus vote, Republican presidential candidates will have to answer for their position on the federal wind production tax credit. [U.S. News & World Report]

¶ New York is seeking to redefine the roles of electric utilities and change the regulatory framework to facilitate much larger use of distributed energy resources, such as energy efficiency, demand response, energy storage, and distributed generation, including on-site wind turbines and rooftop solar. [North American Windpower]

¶ Employment in the solar industry jumped 21.8% in 2014, adding 31,000 new jobs in that time for a total of 174,000 solar workers nationwide, and it is expected to jump by another 36,000 workers this year. Though not requiring special education, the jobs pay well. The average solar installer makes $24 an hour. [The Herald Journal]

¶ Cambridge, Massachusetts, currently purchases the electricity that powers its municipal buildings from TransCanada, Keystone XL’s parent company. But now its city council has passed a unanimous resolution advising the city manager not to do further business with the company and switch to renewable power. [EcoWatch]

¶ Jaffrey, New Hampshire, is pursuing a solar project. If it goes forward, town officials plan to have it built at the closed Jaffrey landfill. The town would use the energy generated to power the municipal wastewater treatment plant, leading to more than $1 million in savings over the course of 20 years. [The Keene Sentinel]

¶ A battle is brewing as Michigan Governor Rick Snyder prepares this month to lay out a new energy plan for the state and appoint Michigan’s first czar to oversee it. Michigan gets 62% of its electricity from coal and 31% from nuclear reactors. Its utility rates are above the Midwest and national averages. [The Detroit News]

March 5 Energy News

March 5, 2015

World:

¶ A recent, widely seen documentary on air pollution in China, “Under the Dome,” appears to have had a strangely pronounced effect on the Chinese government. Rather than stifle those involved, or brush the matter aside, some higher-ups have even praised the documentary. Does it indicate a sea change? [CleanTechnica]

¶ China will boost efforts this year to rid itself of its addiction to coal in a bid to reduce damaging pollution and cut the energy intensity of its economy, which is expected to grow at its lowest rate in 25 years. The National Development and Reform Commission says it will reduce coal consumption in polluted regions. [Reuters]

¶ The City of Oslo, Norway, has committed to divesting its $7 million worth of coal investments from its pension fund. The news comes only weeks after Global Divestment Day. This makes Oslo one of almost 40 cities around the world that have committed to divest from fossil fuels, and the first capital city to do so. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The EU took a step to reduce its energy dependence, especially on Russia, by improving transmission connections between Spain and Portugal, and the rest of Europe. The leaders of Spain, Portugal and France pushed moving spare renewable energy produced south of the Pyrenees to the rest of Europe. [The Local.es]

¶ Italian renewable energy firm Enel Green Power has completed a 102-MW wind farm in Mexico. Located in the state of Oaxaca, the wind farm features 34 3-MW turbines that will generate about 390 GWh of energy per year. Enel Green Power invested about $160 million in the project. [Clean Technology Business Review]

¶ EU State Aid approval for the Hinkley Point nuclear plant will be challenged in court by German green power supply company Greenpeace Energy, in the latest blow to the high-profile project, dubbed by its critics as ‘the world’s most expensive power plant’. Greenpeace Energy is a renewable energy cooperative. [Business Green]

¶ Area members of Renewable Power – the Intelligent Choice are joyfully greeting the news that a nuclear waste site won’t be built in northern Saskatchewan. The Nuclear Waste Management Organization announced on Wednesday that Creighton was no longer under consideration. [Prince Albert Daily Herald]

¶ Court battles are the sole remaining obstacle to nuclear restarts in Japan. The fight in the courts means power companies face the risk of further delays in firing up idled reactors if judges side with local residents worried about nuclear safety. Four reactors owned by two utilities cleared regulatory safety checks. [The Japan Times]

¶ A former UK opencast mine is to be home to a solar and wind energy site after property regeneration company Harworth Estates and RES, a leading renewable energy company, secured planning consent. The 7.5-MW scheme will cover 48 acres and generate enough energy to power 1,500 family homes. [Click Green]

¶ A surprise reduction in the cost of the UK’s offshore wind energy is one of the dominant themes in a new report to be published later today by the Offshore Wind Programme Board, a joint government and industry-backed group tasked with identifying and addressing barriers to the sector’s development. [Business Green]

¶ German Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel has ruled out supporting EU subsidies for nuclear energy projects. His comments came ahead of a meeting of energy ministers. He was adamant on Thursday that atomic energy was the most expensive form of power generation that also bore “significant risks” to people and the environment. [Deutsche Welle]

US:

¶ The US Senate tried, but failed, to override President Barack Obama’s veto of legislation authorizing the Keystone XL pipeline on Wednesday. The measure drew 62 “yes” votes, with 9 Democrats joining Republicans in voting to override the veto. Separate consideration is ongoing, and the issue is not over. [Huffington Post]

¶ Solar (and wind) giant SunEdison announced it was acquiring the project development team, four existing projects, and roughly 100 MW of project pipeline of Solar Grid Storage. The Philadelphia-based startup specializes in packaging lithium-ion batteries and inverters with commercial solar PV projects. [Greentech Media]

¶ To the dismay of many climate activists, a major natural-gas pipeline expansion project that will impact southern New England, New York and New Jersey has been approved. The proposal has drawn grassroots opposition along the pipeline’s 1,127-mile path between New Jersey and Beverly, Massachusetts. [ecoRI news]

March 4 Energy News

March 4, 2015

Science and Technology:

¶ A major new Deutsche Bank report has predicted that energy storage – the “missing link of solar adoption” – will be cheap enough – and technologically ready – to be deployed on a large-scale within the next five years. The report said economically competitive batteries were the “killer app” for solar power. [RenewEconomy]

World:

¶ India has moved forward to double the “clean energy cess” it levies on coal used in the country. While presenting the general budget, the Finance Minister announced a proposal to increase the Clean Energy Cess from ₹100($1.6) to ₹200($3.2) per metric tonne of coal, to finance clean environment initiatives.” [CleanTechnica]

¶ US-based SunEdison, now the largest renewable energy company in the world, says it sees a $4 trillion value opportunity in the global wind and solar markets by 2020. The company argues that the combined capacity for wind and solar will be more than 1,450 GW by 2020, about 2½ times larger than the end of 2014. [RenewEconomy]

¶ Over the last few years, Neste Oil has become the world’s largest producer of renewable fuels from waste and residues. In 2014, the company produced nearly 1.3 million tonnes of renewable fuel from such waste as animal and fish fats, used cooking oil and residues generated during vegetable oil refining. [Your Industry News]

¶ Australian firm Hydro Tasmania is planning a $10 million off-grid hybrid project on Flinders Island combining solar, wind, diesel, and storage and enabling technologies, including flywheels and batteries. This system will help displace 60% of the annual diesel fuel used on the island for power production. [SeeNews Renewables]

¶ The UK government’s electricity capacity market could result in “higher than necessary energy costs and emissions” because its design has been “skewed” in favour of fossil fuel generation, according to the influential parliamentary Energy and Climate Change Committee, in a report released this morning. [reNews]

¶ Solar use in Japan has exploded over the last two years with ambitious national efforts to promote renewable energy. But the technology’s future is now in doubt. Utilities say their infrastructure cannot handle the numbers of solar entrepreneurs intent on selling their power. And government support is unclear. [New York Times]

¶ Around 71% of Fukushima Prefecture residents remain dissatisfied with the central government’s handling of the nuclear disaster four years after the triple meltdown forced hundreds of thousands to flee their homes, a survey showed. Only 14% of respondents were satisfied with the central government’s efforts. [Asahi Shimbun]

US:

¶ Given the extreme hype over shale oil and fracking, one would expect the enthusiasm to translate into above average share performance for shale operators. This has not been the case. Share performance has actually been at best quite mediocre and in most cases just downright poor. [Energy Collective]

¶ The town of Scituate, Massachusetts, has made more than a half-million dollars in less than three years through its agreement with Scituate Wind LLC, owner of a local wind turbine. The town has collected more than $500,000 since the 390-foot-tall wind turbine went online in April of 2012. [The Patriot Ledger]

¶ San Diego Gas & Electric is expanding an experimental micro-grid that is designed to run on renewable energy independently of the regional power grid. The micro-grid pilot is being expanded under a $5 million grant from the California Energy Commission, SDG&E announced in a statement. [U-T San Diego]

¶ A collection of companies recently partnered with a California city on a three-month pilot project that sought to determine the feasibility of effectively collecting plastic products that are difficult to recycle. The project converted plastic packaging products and dinnerware into synthetic crude oil. [Renewable Energy from Waste]

¶ What is likely to become the nation’s first offshore wind farm has closed on more than $290 million in financing, which will allow a five-turbine demo of the renewable energy system to be completed. The Block Island Wind Farm will be a 30-MW offshore facility located in waters about 15 miles off Rhode Island. [Computerworld]

¶ New York regulators published a major order effectively telling traditional utilities that they will not be permitted to own renewable generation sources except in rare cases. This is to enhance competition and create markets that will allow on-site wind and rooftop solar to flourish. [Environment & Energy Publishing]

¶ RES Americas has achieved commercial operation at the 110-MW Keechi wind farm in Texas. Construction on the scheme, which is owned by Enbridge, kicked off in December 2013. The facility features 55 Vestas V100 2-MW turbines. The wind farm has a 20-year power purchase agreement with Microsoft. [reNews]

March 3 Energy News

March 3, 2015

Opinion:

¶ “Renewable energy is conquering quirky nature of Britain’s climate” – Clever engineering is smoothing out the peaks and troughs of renewable power in Britain and having a positive effect on the power supply. It looks like this is making the nuclear industry redundant before a new station can be built. [The Guardian]

Science and Technology:

¶ Conversion of biogas into compressed natural gas (CNG) and liquefied natural gas (LNG) is now frequently considered when penciling out project financials. The US EPA expanded cellulosic fuel pathways to include CNG and LNG from biogas created in landfills and a variety of kinds of bio-digesting systems. [Biomass Magazine]

World:

¶ The news from Kenya about its electricity situation has been quite positive. Electricity costs for both consumer and industrial customers have decreased by about 30%. One estimate says Kenya saves $24 million per month. This favorable shift results from a consistent investment in geothermal energy. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Spain’s Abengoa SA kicked off commercial operations at a 100-MW concentrated solar power plant in South Africa. The parabolic trough plant is expected to generate enough electricity for about 80,000 local households. It has enough molten-salt storage for up to 2.5 hours of power after sunset. [SeeNews Renewables]

¶ Suzlon has announced the commissioning of the 65.1-MW Rouar SA’s wind energy farm at Artilleros in Uruguay. The wind park is 170 kilometers east of capital Montevideo and is the first joint wind venture between Brazil and Uruguay. The project has 31 turbines, each with a rated capacity of 2.1 MW. [Greentech Lead]

¶ A documentary examining the deadly effects of smog on China’s population gripped the country after its release online this weekend. The 104-minute film, Under the Dome, explores how China’s noxious smog problem is harming urban residents. It has already been viewed tens of millions of times online. [Mashable]

¶ Rame Energy Plc, a UK-based energy developer, is planning to build 130 MW of wind and solar projects in Chile over the next 18 months. The projects will require about $300 million in investment, some of which will come from Banco Santander SA. The developer is also pursuing other funding sources. [Bloomberg]

¶ Good news! Not only did China’s coal consumption fall by 2.9% in 2014, Glen Peters of the Global Carbon Project calculates that China’s CO2 emissions have also fallen, by 0.7%. So it’s clear that China’s efforts to cut its coal consumption and carbon emissions are not only real, but are already producing results. [Energy Collective]

¶ The European Union is edging closer to its ambitious target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 20% by 2020. The latest annual Eurostat study of the European Commission’s 2020 strategy, found the Member States had already collectively achieved an 18% reduction from 1990 baseline levels. [Click Green]

¶ Economist Jeremy Rifkin says a Digital Europe transition will revolutionize every commercial sector, disrupt workings of virtually every industry, bring unprecedented new economic opportunities, put millions back to work, and create a more sustainable post-carbon society, mitigating climate change. [Materials Handling World Magazine]

US:

¶ North Carolina is one of North America’s fastest growing markets for clean energy. The state’s cleantech sector grossed $4.8 billion in 2014 and, based on previous experience, most companies expect to grow between 30% and 35% this year. Close to ¾ of this money went to building efficiency and solar. [CleanTechnica]

¶ An effort to roll back Colorado’s renewable energy standard in the state Legislature died Monday in a House of Representatives committee. The bill, which passed the Republican-majority Senate last month, would have cut the standard for utilities from 30% back to 15% by 2020. [Denver Business Journal]

¶ Even though Oregon has an ambitious renewable portfolio standard and ranks second in the US for hydropower generation, it still receives a surprising 33% of its overall electricity from coal, mostly from out-of-state sources. A pair of bills in the state legislature would completely ban coal-fired electricity. [Energy Collective]

¶ A new 4.2-MW solar farm will provide up to 5% of the US Virgin Islands’ power needs during daylight hours. The Estate Donoe solar farm will generate clean electricity under a 25-year power purchase agreement with Main Street Power, which will also manage the operations and maintenance of the facility. [Energy Matters]

¶ Oakland Unified School District is celebrating completion of the new high efficiency solar PV at 16 schools at an event this morning. It reported today that SunPower solar power systems at the schools are expected to significantly reduce the district’s annual electricity costs over at least the next 25 years. [PennEnergy]

March 2 Energy News

March 2, 2015

World:

¶ Spain’s renewable energy plants produced 48% of the country’s power in February. Wind power generation produced 27.6% of the total Spanish electricity production for the month. Hydroelectric produced 15.7%. Solar PV and concentrated solar power accounted for 2.2% and 0.9%, respectively. [SeeNews Renewables]

¶ National Bank of Abu Dhabi, one of the biggest banks in the oil-rich Gulf countries, says fossil fuels can no longer compete with solar technologies on price. The NBAD report says the most recent solar tender showed even at $10/barrel for oil, and $5/mmbtu for gas, solar is still a cheaper option. [RenewEconomy]

¶ According to Bloomberg New Energy Finance, new funds invested into clean energy gained 16% in 2014 to reach $310 billion. The record is still $318 billion, set in 2011, but there was a significant upward trend last year. Overall, the world added about 100 gigawatts of solar- and wind-power capacity in 2014. [Investing.com]

¶ In Australia, talks between the government and Labor toward a compromise on the renewable energy target appear to have again broken down, with the Opposition rejecting a new offer on Monday. The rejected proposal would have set the target at 31,000 GWh of baseline power from renewables by 2020. [Sydney Morning Herald]

¶ Plans for a vast tidal lagoon power plant which could power every home in Wales have been launched. The lagoon, between Cardiff and Newport, would include 90 turbines set in a 14-mile breakwater and could provide enough electricity for 1.5 million homes, 8% of the UK’s electricity, for 120 years. [Sky News]

¶ French power producer Neoen plans to construct a 30-MW solar park in Mexico’s northeastern state of Nuevo Leon. The project calls for an investment of $60 million. The PV facility is to be installed on 227 acres in the town of Galeana and is slated to become the biggest of its kind in Nuevo Leon. [SeeNews Renewables]

¶ A report from the African Development Bank shows that its support to Africa through the Climate Investment Funds increased exponentially in 2014 to include one regional and 25 national investment plans, with an additional nine poor countries being funded for renewable energy solutions. [solarserver.com]

¶ A draft law to reform the European Union’s Emissions Trading System, by cutting the surplus of carbon credits available for trading, has won approval from the European Parliment’s Environment Committee. Emissions Trading System is a cornerstone of EU policy to combat climate change. [Environment News Service]

¶ A sea of glass panels, to be located on Queensland’s Darling Downs, could be capable of cranking out two GW of power within eight years. That is equivalent to one fifth of the current total renewable energy target for the entire country in a single power station, and it is more than any coal station in the state. [The Guardian]

US:

¶ Policy squabbles and a fight over rebates may have clouded Missouri’s once blossoming solar industry, according to new data that shows the state lost 300 solar jobs last year. The latest analysis now ranks the state 16th in the nation for solar industry employment, down from 12th in 2013. [Public News Service]

¶ In Michigan, the Holland Board of Public Works, is replacing a coal-fired plant with a new fuel-efficient modern power plant. The CO2 emissions at the site will be reduced by approximately 50%. The plant’s surplus heat from in the circulating water system will go to expanding a downtown snowmelt system. [Renewable Energy Focus]

¶ New reports show Michigan’s 2008 renewable energy mandate has worked as intended, but lawmakers must now decide what to do next when the policy sunsets at the end of this year. One option is a new “clean-energy standard” that would credit sources like natural gas for lowering greenhouse gas emissions. [MiBiz]

March 1 Energy News

March 1, 2015

Science and Technology:

¶ Water is eating away at the Antarctic ice, melting it where it hits the oceans. As the ice sheets slowly thaw, water pours into the sea — 130 billion tons of ice (118 billion metric tons) per year for the past decade, according to NASA satellite calculations. That’s the weight of more than 356,000 Empire State Buildings. [Huffington Post]

World:

¶ Algeria is the leading natural gas producer in Africa and is the second-largest supplier of gas to Europe, but that is not slowing down the North African country’s plan to ramp up solar power generation. The country’s energy minister has announced a plan to install 13.5 GW of solar PV capacity by 2030. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Presenting the General Budget 2015-16 in the Indian Parliament, the Finance Minister said, “Our de-facto ‘Carbon Tax’ on most petroleum products compares favourably with international norms.” He said with regard to coal, there was a need to find a balance between taxing pollution and the price of power. [Day & Night News]
… It was widely expected that Budget 2015-16 would include a lot of goodies for the renewable energy sector. But apart from a passing mention of the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy’s well-publicised target of 175,000 MW of renewable energy capacity, the Budget had absolutely nothing for the sector. [Hindu Business Line]

¶ The UK’s Liberal Democrats set out plans to double the UK’s production of renewable electricity by the end of the next parliament and make Britain zero carbon by 2050. They say they have already created a low-carbon, pro-renewable, and more energy secure nation less reliant on unstable regimes for energy. [Liberal Democrats]

¶ South Korea’s nuclear commission decided to extend the operations of the country’s second-oldest nuclear reactor till 2022 despite growing concerns over safety. The 679-MW Wolsong-1 reactor completed its 30-year life span in 2012 and was turned off. The decision will extend its life for 10 more years. [EastDay.com]

US:

¶ Although the Eureka, California, City Council voted to participate in the clean-energy financing program known as Property Assessed Clean Energy, or PACE, in January, the council may take a second look after learning that the Federal Housing Financing Agency is actively opposing the measure. [Eureka Times Standard]

¶ A series of bills that would repeal New Hampshire’s Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative and Renewable Portfolio Standard are going before the New Hampshire House and Senate. The Governor Hassan indicated she will likely veto the RGGI bill but has not indicated any executive action on the RPS bills. [Seacoastonline.com]

¶ In an about-face from his first term, the governor of Wisconsin wants to eliminate funding for a University of Wisconsin-Madison renewable energy research center. He proposes cutting $8.1 million from a bioenergy program that was a key in landing one of the university’s biggest government grants ever. [Milwaukee Journal Sentinel]

¶ Colorado rural electric cooperatives want state lawmakers to rewrite parts of a new state law that essentially requires them to produce 20% of their power from renewable sources. The co-ops have drafted Senate Bill 46, which doesn’t attack the 20% requirement, but would change some of the ways co-ops can reach it. [Pueblo Chieftain]

February 28 Energy News

February 28, 2015

Opinion:

¶ “We Could Be Turning the Corner on Climate Change” – Efforts to reduce carbon emissions appear to be starting to work, and the link between economic growth and energy consumption is breaking. For example, last year, coal consumption fell for the first time in China, by 2.9% from 2013. [SustainableBusiness.com]

Science and Technology:

¶ A redox flow battery designed at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory more than doubles the amount of energy this type of cell can pack in a given volume, allowing it to rival lithium-ion batteries. If the device reaches mass production, it could find use in fast-charging transportation and grid storage. [Gizmag]

World:

¶ German’s Federal Network Agency, a government body, announced the country’s first tender for ground-mounted solar PV systems. The full order volume for the solar tender, which will be split into 3 annual rounds will reportedly be 150 MW. The highest bid will be set at 11.29 Euro cents per kWh. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The US-based renewable energy company Pattern Energy is partnering with the Mexican construction company Cemex to form a joint venture for developing projects in Mexico, according to recent reports. The plan is to build up to 1 GW in new project capacity to be developed via the joint venture. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Ireland is aiming at 40% renewable energy by 2020, with most renewable electricity from large-scale wind farms. But some winter nights the Irish grid will have to take 75% of its electricity from renewable sources. A combined ultracapacitor & battery energy storage system could help meet that need. [ECOreport]

¶ Navigant Research has released a report stating that 696.7 MW of global energy storage projects (excluding pumped hydro) were announced in 2014–2015, with much coming in Q3 2014 to Q1 2015. North America had 436.4 MW of the total amount. There were over 800 storage projects reported. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Sweden’s state-owned Vattenfall has won a tender to build a 400-MW wind park off Denmark, with the first turbines scheduled to start supplying power in 2017. The agreed price of power is 10.31 euro cents per kilowatt-hour, 32% cheaper than in Denmark’s latest project, the ministry said. [The Maritime Executive]

¶ China’s coal consumption fell by 2.9% in 2014, according to newly released official Chinese energy data. The data confirm earlier projections of a fall in coal use and 1% reduction in Carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel burning. An initial analysis suggests that equates to a 0.7% drop in overall emissions. [The Ecologist]

¶ A report from the International Renewable Energy Agency published in January confirms that onshore wind-generation costs are competitive with those of the fossil-fuel sources. The latter are in the $45-140/MWh range, wind comes in at an average $55/MWh. Irena also confirms that costs are falling. [Windpower Monthly]

¶ The Japanese nuclear watchdog body slammed TEPCO over its failure to disclose information on the leakage of radioactive rainwater into the sea from the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. TEPCO disclosed high levels of radiation in a drainage ditch many months after they were found. [Asahi Shimbun]

US:

¶ The Vermont House has advanced a wide-ranging bill on a Renewable Energy Standard and Energy Transformation program, or RESET. The requirement would be that utilities get 55% of their power from renewable sources by 2017, ramping up to 75% by 2032. Some have met or exceeded those goals already. [Valley News]

¶ Massachusetts utility companies are preparing to buy enough renewable energy to power 136,000 homes under the major initiative announced for Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island on Tuesday. The companies may buy up to 817 GWh of electricity per year under a request for proposals. [Boston Globe]

¶ Less than a year into providing default electricity service to residents and businesses in Sonoma County, Sonoma Clean Power contracted with Pristine Sun to build up to 12.5 MW of new solar power. The venture represents the largest floating solar project in the US, and the second largest in the world. [Sonoma County Gazette]

¶ Ohio’s clean energy economy celebrated a big win this week. The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio denied American Electric Power Company’s request for guaranteed profits to operate its aging, uneconomic coal power plants. The EDF was one of many parties opposed AEP’s proposal. [Environmental Defense Fund]

¶ NRG, one of the largest owners of fossil-fuel power plants in the US, plans to achieve “transformational growth” in its home solar customer base this year by expanding to between 35,000 and 40,000 customers from 13,390 at the end of 2014. The company had only 4,349 home solar customers in 2013. [pv magazine]

February 27 Energy News

February 27, 2015

World:

¶ The second Global Sustainable Investment Review report confirms that global sustainable investment reached $21.4 trillion by 2014, up from $13.3 trillion at the same time two years earlier. Sustainable investment now accounts for 30.2% of the professionally managed assets in the regions covered. [CleanTechnica]

¶ India’s renewable energy industry is likely to generate business opportunities worth $160 billion in the next five years, the Economic Survey said the day before a budget that is set to boost clean energy funding. The Prime Minister set clean-energy targets that include raising solar capacity to 100 GW by 2022. [Reuters India]

¶ BMW South Africa is considering wind and solar power options to make a production plant near Pretoria energy self-sufficient, hoping the factory will provide between 25% and 30% of its own energy needs by the middle of this year. Wind and solar power are two options for self-sufficiency. [Independent Online]

¶ Irish wind and solar energy company, Mainstream Renewable Power is set to develop a €2 billion windfarm off the Scottish coast. The company secured a 15-year contract for its 450-MW Neart na Gaoithe facility in the North Sea. The windfarm is expected to be commissioned and generating electricity by 2020. [Irish Examiner]

¶ Swift global action is needed to avoid the worst threats from a rapidly changing climate, the disasters brought by storms, floods, extreme temperatures, and their impacts on people and biodiversity, French President Francois Hollande warned during a climate change forum in the Philippines on Thursday. [InterAksyon]

¶ Three wind farms in Wales won financial support from the Government as part of the first auction for contracts for difference under the reform of the electricity market. The three are Clocaenog Forest and Mynydd y Gwair, both being developed by RWE Innogy, and Windpower Wales’ Brenig wind farm. [WalesOnline]

US:

¶ A bill in the Illinois legislature, to make changes to the state’s Renewable Portfolio Standard, might create 32,000 clean energy jobs, its backers say. The bill would support more solar power and improve energy efficiency. It would also increase the renewable energy standard from 25% by 2025 to 35% by 2030. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Energy storage capacity totalling over 1,500 kWh is be installed in intelligent energy storage/electric vehicle charging systems in five California school districts, colleges, and universities. Balancing their electricity supply will save up to $1 million over the life of their projects – with no upfront costs. [CleanTechnica]

¶ California-based Swinerton Renewable Energy is teaming with tracking solutions specialist Array Technologies to build a 104-MW solar park in Utah for Norwegian developer Scatec Solar. Power will be fed into the grid under a 20-year power purchase agreement with PacifiCorp’s Rocky Mountain Power. [pv magazine]

¶ If you haven’t installed solar panels on your roof because it’s too expensive, Google really wants to help. Google is once again boosting its investment in SolarCity’s residential solar power model by $300 million. SolarCity combined this with a new financing structure to produce a new fund worth $750 million. [ThinkProgress]

¶ Two farms, a real-estate office, a jewelry maker and an animal hospital are among the latest recipients of Rhode Island state grants for new solar projects. The funds are awarded by the Rhode Island Renewable Energy Fund and were approved. Eight solar projects have received $1,137,000 in recent awards. [ecoRI news]

¶ Hints are emerging about how California’s investor-owned utilities might meet the governor’s goal of providing 50% renewable power by 2030. The CEO of California’s second largest electric utility says they want to claim rooftop solar, energy efficiencies, and electric vehicle charging stations in their portfolios. [U-T San Diego]

¶ Electricity users would have to pay a little extra to help cover costs of Exelon’s nuclear power plants under Illinois legislation. Exelon maintains the bill would save jobs and keep service steady and reliable. It would also have residential customers pay about $2 more each month to keep the nuclear plants running. [Chicago Tribune]

¶ A $3 billion deal will unite Iberdrola USA with UIL Holdings Co to create a massive power and utility company serving 3.1 million customers in New York, Connecticut, Maine and Massachusetts. Iberdrola USA will pay $52.75 per share of UIL in a deal announced after the close of business Wednesday. [Portland Business Journal]

¶ Hawaiian Electric Co was generating about 21% of its power from renewable energy at the end of 2014. The utility said that it was generating about 39% of its power from a combination of renewable energy and efficiency measures when the year ended, up about 4 percentage points from a year earlier. [Pacific Business News (Honolulu)]

February 26 Energy News

February 26, 2015

World:

¶ The UK’s Department of Energy & Climate Change awarded contracts worth more than £315 million to 27 projects. ScottishPower got one to build a 714-MW offshore wind farm, RWE Innogy GmbH won for three onshore wind projects totaling 166 MW, and Lightsource will build a 14.67-MW solar facility. [Bloomberg]

¶ Ground was broken for the 36.3-MW wind farm at Malvern, St Elizabeth forms part of a concerted push to reduce Jamaica’s $2-billion oil bill through the use of renewable energy. The project, at one of the most windswept points in the Santa Cruz Mountains, is being developed by BMR Jamaica Wind Limited. [Jamaica Observer]

¶ GDF Suez profits dropped last year amid falling oil prices, unusually warm weather in Europe and lower electricity prices, prompting the group to announce short-term restructuring measures. The plunge in oil and gas prices has had significant short term impact and is set to cost them €900m in 2015 profits. [Financial Times]

¶ Germany’s renewable energy production has been steadily growing, with a fourfold increase since 2000. Around 40 terawatt hours were generated with renewables 15 years ago and in 2014, the level was at 157.4 terawatt hours. But a study shows the potential of renewables is far from being fully exploited. [EurActiv]

¶ SunEdison, the world’s largest renewable energy development company, is planning to supply electricity to 20 million unserved people around the world. The initiative will be led by a company group focused on developing sustainable business models and technologies for renewable energy in rural areas. [AltEnergyMag]

¶ The European Commission has leaked a 19-page draft blueprint for an “energy union.” It is a grab bag of policies and proposals designed to transform the 28-member European Union into a more cohesive energy market. Despite its widespread appeal, the initiative shows fractures and double standards. [OilPrice.com]

¶ European transmission system operators have been preparing for an eclipse that will happen in March for several months, evaluating and attempting to mitigate risks. Some 35,000 MW of solar energy, the equivalent of nearly 80 medium size conventional generation units, will stop producing during the event. [Phys.Org]

¶ Fukushima fishermen appear to have finally run out of patience with TEPCO. They lambasted TEPCO at a meeting on February 25 over the utility’s failure for half a year to disclose the flow into the ocean of water contaminated with radioactive materials from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. [Asahi Shimbun]

US:

¶ Under a new plan by governors of Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island, electric distribution companies will collaborate with state agencies on a bidding process for proposals for clean energy resources including wind, solar, small hydro, biomass, fuel cells and other low-carbon sources. [Lexington Herald Leader]

¶ Iberdrola Renewables, the owner and operator of the Blue Creek Wind Farm, along with Ohio State Senator Cliff Hite presented checks to Van Wert County, Ohio for more than $2,070,000, and Paulding County for $666,000. Iberdrola pays the counties $18,000 per year for each Iberdrola turbine they have. [Delphos Herald]

¶ The Department of the Navy announced the signing of a lease with Duke Energy that will allow the development of a large-scale, ground-mounted solar array at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune. The lease grants Duke Energy access to 80.65 acres of land at Camp Lejeune to develop a 17 MW solar PV array. [Camp Lejeune Globe]

¶ In Hawaii, the Big Island’s electric utility has asked Ormat Technologies to supply it with more geothermal power. The additional 25 MW will come from a new power plant at a new location, Hawaii Electric Light Co said Tuesday. The precise location has not yet been announced, under a nondisclosure agreement. [Thegardenisland.com]

February 25 Energy News

February 25, 2015

Science and Technology:

¶ A major new study from Agora Energiewende says the cost reduction potential of large-scale solar is still not understood. It predicts that solar PV will be the cheapest form of power within a decade, and cost less than $0.02/kWh by 2050. The study says the end to cost reductions for solar is “not in sight.” [RenewEconomy]

World:

¶ As part of its first major retrofit in 30 years, two custom-designed wind turbines have started generating power for the Eiffel Tower. Located above the World Heritage Site’s second level, about 400 feet off the ground, the sculptural wind turbines are now producing 10,000 kWh of electricity annually. [ThinkProgress]

¶ Africa’s first grid-connected biogas plant will begin supplying power by March 1. The $6.5 million Gorge Farm Energy Park anaerobic digester in Kenya will consume an annual 50,000 tons of organic waste sourced from a neighboring 1,977-acre farm owned by VegPro Group, one of the plant’s investers. [Starr 103.5 FM]

¶ The European Union will map out a plan for closer energy ties among its 28 nations, seeking to avoid supply risks highlighted by the crisis in Ukraine and to facilitate the planned shift to low-carbon economy. It will also present a plan on a global climate deal and a strategy for improving energy across Europe. [Bloomberg]

¶ The Abbott government’s efforts to scale back Australia’s renewable energy target have set the industry back 12 years in that country, its senators were told by the Clean Energy Finance Corporation in a hearing. And the government has told senators it will still pursue the abolition of the CEFC. [Sydney Morning Herald]

¶ Australia has some of the highest electricity prices in the world due to an overbuild of network infrastructure. Solar power installers there say the cost of batteries is the only thing holding back more widespread consumer grid defection in the residential sector. And household solar installations are booming. [RenewEconomy]

¶ A hydro scheme, the first in Scotland to be financially supported by a community group, has been switched on. The 469 kW development on the remote Abhainn Shalachain river near Lochaline, on the shores of the Sound of Mull, is now generating income for local residents on the Morvern peninsula. [Scotsman]

¶ The UK’s renewable sources of energy like wind turbines could soon generate more electricity than nuclear power stations. Nuclear power is in a slow decline from its peak of 25% in 1995 to its current 19%. The contribution of renewables more than doubled from 6.8% in 2010 to 14.9% in 2013, and it continues to grow. [New Scientist]

US:

¶ According to the Electric Reliability Council of Texas wind energy provided 6.2% of the state’s share of electricity in 2009, a figure which has since grown to 10.6% in 2014. In terms of annal power production, Texas windpower has grown from 19.9 million MWh in 2009 to 36.1 million MWh in 2014. [CleanTechnica]

¶ As Tulare County, California, has grown into the top dairy producing county in the United States, there’s a lot of cow poop to deal with. A new plant in Calgren is now making ethanol for blending with gasoline from all that manure. The plant’s process also extracts water that can be used by local farmers for crops. [Sustainablog]

¶ President Barack Obama, exercising his veto power for the first time in five years, rejected on Tuesday a measure green-lighting the construction of the controversial Keystone XL pipeline. It is unlikely GOP lawmakers will be able to reverse Obama’s veto, as that would require a two-thirds vote in each chamber. [CNN]

¶ Essex Capital Partners, based in Massachusetts, and Sunpreme Inc, a US-based solar cell manufacturer, completed 90 day post commissioning of a 2.6 MW ground mount solar system in Barton, Vermont. The system will generate 3,400,000 kWh of electricity annually, enough to serve over 1,500 homes. [Your Renewable News]

¶ SunEdison Inc, a US solar panel maker and project developer, expects its annual installations to more than double this year. The company intends to complete solar and wind power facilities with 2,100 to 2,300 MW of capacity during 2015. Last year it completed 1,048 megawatts of solar farms. [Bloomberg]

¶ Exelon will ask state lawmakers as soon as this week to approve a new surcharge on electric bills throughout the state to provide more revenue for low-carbon power-generation sources like its six Illinois nuclear plants. Some of its nuclear plants here are in danger of closing without a revenue boost. [Crain’s Chicago Business]

¶ In a rare move, Washington DC’s Federal US Court of Appeals will hear a landmark challenge to the continued operation of California’s two remaining reactors. They are surrounded by more than a dozen seismic fault lines. The Shoreline fault runs within 600-700 yards of the Diablo Canyon reactors. [OpEdNews]

February 24 Energy News

February 24, 2015

Opinion:

¶ “New Coal Plants in China: A (Carbon) Bubble Waiting to Burst” – China’s coal consumption growth has slowed down and fell in 2014. At the same time, coal-fired power generating capacity is growing rapidly. This represents an investment bubble that will burst as overcapacity becomes too large to ignore. [Energy Collective]

World:

¶ Grassroots support for energy reform is substantial in India. This was seen most recently in Aan Adani Party’s win in the Delhi state elections, a jarring reminder that the Indian masses have clout. A central election issue was making electricity both more sustainable and more affordable for the poor. [Solar Novus Today]

¶ The government of the Australian state of Victoria has made good on a pre-election promise to support the state’s first solar-powered town. Energy audits and retrofits to reduce consumption have already begun in Newstead as the first step towards a community micro-grid using 100% renewable power. [The Fifth Estate]

¶ The New South Wales Greens have unveiled a plan for a secure and clean energy future in the state. It has households and small businesses become active participants in the electricity industry. Coal and gas-fired electricity generation in NSW generates over 60 million tons of carbon emissions annually. [Energy Matters]

¶ The Director of Electricity from Panama’s National Energy Secretariat says that the recent solar bid was very successful with more tenders being put forward than ever. He says this means the country will have over 80 MW of installed capacity in solar PV and there are many opportunities for more. [AltEnergyMag]

¶ Senvion is delivering 18 wind turbines for the Nordergründe offshore wind farm in the German North Sea. Each turbine has a rated power of 6.15 MW, enabling it to supply about 4,000 households with energy. The Nordergründe offshore wind farm will be completed in the fall of 2016. [Renewable Energy Magazine]

¶ A Swedish group is building the world’s first ‘climate positive’ data center, in the famous copper mining and snow sports city of Falun. The proposed data center will work in tandem with a local energy system, using its waste heat for a variety of purposes and incorporating various renewable sources. [The Stack]

¶ Hawkins Group, of New Zealand, is developing the two new geothermal plans as part of a joint venture with Indonesian partner Banguan Cipta Kontractor. Hawkins has experience in delivering geothermal projects in New Zealand having recently successfully completed three power stations in that country. [Renewable Energy Focus]

¶ March will mark the fourth year since the crisis began at TEPCO’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, where decommissioning work continues. About 6,000 to 7,000 workers are working every day to try to bring the situation under control at the buildings and facilities still scarred by the accident. [The Japan News]

US:

¶ The US installed some 470 MW of wind and 70 MW of solar parks in January 2015, according to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. This compares to 235 MW of wind and 343 MW of solar deployed a year earlier. Total installed wind power capacity reached 65.66 GW, 5.61% of total capacity. [SeeNews Renewables]

¶ A new Massachusetts state Senate report on climate change is a call for the state to set policies in the face of deepening environmental impacts. Its title is its bottom line: “No Time to Waste: Our climate clock is ticking and our natural resources, public health and the future of our economy are at stake.” [The Recorder]

¶ Gulf Power has submitted four petitions this year to the Florida Public Service Commission for solar and wind projects that could potentially power more than 68,700 homes in Northwest Florida. Three are solar energy farms at military bases, and one would purchase power from wind-rich Oklahoma. [Pensacola News Journal]

¶ Ameren Corp. has proposed an alternative to the EPA’s Clean Power Plan. The company says its proposal would achieve the same final CO2 emission reduction goals as the EPA’s own plan, while saving $4 billion in costs and avoiding grid reliability problems related to closing key coal-fired plants. [PennEnergy]

¶ In the latest sign that a Bay Area renewable energy trend is picking up steam, San Mateo County, California is taking a close look at buying its own power on the open market, instead of relying on PG&E, in a bid to lower its greenhouse gas emissions. The county is considering a community choice aggregation program. [Chico Enterprise-Record]

February 23 Energy News

February 23, 2015

World:

¶ Apple plans on investing €1.7 billion (£1.3 billion) into Europe, which is the biggest investment the American company has ever made on European soil. The plan is to create two new data centres in County Galway, Ireland, and Denmark’s central Jutland. The facilities will run on 100% renewable energy. [ITProPortal]

¶ An initiative to integrate more renewable energy into the Central America power system took one step forward last week as regional vice-ministers, directors of energy, and directors of climate change met in El Salvador to discuss the region’s energy future, the International Renewable Energy Agency reports. [solarserver.com]

¶ Dong Energy’s 400-MW Anholt offshore wind farm in Denmark will be offline for at last three weeks following a fault with the subsea cable connecting the project’s 111 wind turbines to land. The project’s transmission operator, Energinet.dk, said it is too early to say what the cause of the problem on the line is. [reNews]

¶ SunEdison, a US-based company, has announced it will set up 15.2 GW of solar and wind energy capacity in India over the next 5 years. India has an ambitious target of adding 100 GW renewable capacity by 2022. India’s installed renewable energy capacity currently stands at just above 32 GW. [CleanTechnica]

¶ A 12-MW biomass power plant with a dedicated plantation will rise in Bataan after Filipino-owned Cleangreen Energy Corp received its operating contract from the Department of Energy. The power plant, targeted for completion in October 2017, is expected to commence construction this year. [eco-business.com]

¶ Engineers in Norway and Sweden, two of the countries trying hardest to develop wave power technology, have announced “breakthroughs” in their methods, which the inventors believe will make wave power competitive. The latest Norwegian experiment has been installed in a redundant fishing vessel. [eco-business.com]

¶ Alternergy Wind One Corp, a company led by former Philippine Energy Secretary Vince Perez, is expected to complete a 67.5-MW wind farm project there in May. The $177.9-million project is due for completion in July 2015, Energy Department records showed, but it is likely to be completed early. [Manila Standard Today]

¶ Sensors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant have detected a fresh leak of highly radioactive water to the sea, TEPCO announced Sunday. The sensors detected contamination levels, up to 70 times greater than the already-high radioactive status seen on the plant grounds, in water draining to the sea. [The Japan Times]

US:

¶ Floridians for Solar Choice has secured 100,000 petition signatures to obtain a place on the 2016 ballot after only one month of collecting signatures. Should the campaign secure enough signatures, Florida voters would be able to vote in 2016 to expand solar choice. (The petition needs 700,00 signatures.) [CleanTechnica]

¶ Wei-Hock “Willie” Soon, a prominent climate change denier and researcher, quietly took more than $1.2 million in payouts from the energy industry, including the Koch brothers and other oil lobbyists, for the past 14 years, newly released documents obtained by Greenpeace have shown. [eNews Park Forest]

February 22 Energy News

February 22, 2015

World:

¶ Electric car sales (including plug-in hybrid electric cars) in the UK surged over 300% in 2014, as compared year-on-year against 2013, according to the most recent figures from the European Automobile Manufacturers Association. EV sales in the UK rose from just 3,833 units in 2013 to 15,361 units in 2014. [CleanTechnica]

¶ In the UK, National Grid is announcing the results of a sealed-bid auction for the new Contracts for Difference mechanism to subsidise low carbon energy generation projects in the years ahead. CfDs provide a different structure than the subsidies that have moved the UK so far, and some say they are not as good. [Scotsman]

¶ The city of Munich is claiming that a giant wind farm being built off the coast of North Wales will contribute to its renewable energy targets, after it acquired a £660 million stake in the scheme. This leaves the UK with the question of how it can apply power from Gwynt y Môr to its own renewable targets. [Business Green]

¶ The IKEA Group is continuing to make progress on its path to receiving 100% of its energy needs via renewable energy sources by the year 2020, as the recent announcement that it had acquired a new wind energy project in Poland demonstrates. The specifics of the deal haven’t yet been publicly revealed. [CleanTechnica]

US:

¶ The oil and gas industry sponsors and spins research to shape the scientific debate over horizontal hydraulic fracturing, or fracking. That’s the conclusion of analysis by the non-partisan group, Public Accountability Initiative, of more than 130 documents distributed to policymakers by industry representatives. [Huffington Post]

¶ Federal regulators are close to approving construction of Michigan’s first new nuclear power reactor in more than a quarter century, although it’s an open question if it will ever get built. Changes in the energy market over the past 6½ years have dimmed the possibility of a nuclear power revival. [Detroit Free Press]

¶ A broad political coalition, from liberal environmentalists to tea-party conservatives, has banded together in Florida to press for something that ironically is in short supply in the Sunshine State: solar power. The group launched a campaign to place a pro-solar initiative on the state’s 2016 ballot. [Fox News]

¶ A new report produced by the Wind Energy Foundation, Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska, and Washington-based consultants David Gardiner and Associates said “significant cost declines” for electricity generated by wind and solar power is spurring development in Nebraska and nationwide. [Grand Island Independent]

¶ Illinois legislators introduced a bill to spur new growth in the clean energy industry, creating an estimated 32,000 jobs annually, once proposed clean energy standards are implemented. Illinois already has 100,000 clean energy jobs. The bill is endorsed by the recently-formed Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition. [Energy Collective]

¶ In 2013, solar installations accounted for 31% of all US electric power installations, and 2014 was a breakthrough year for utility-scale solar. Growing advantages in pricing and purchase agreements have been cited. Among area projects are several in conjunction with Oneida County, New York government. [Rome Sentinel]

¶ Southern Company subsidiary Southern Power today announced the acquisition of two solar PV projects totaling 99 MW in Georgia. They are the 80-MW Decatur Parkway Solar Project and the 19-MW Decatur County Solar Project. Southern Power is acquiring them from Tradewind Energy, Inc. [Sowega Live]

February 21 Energy News

February 21, 2015

Opinion:

¶ “We Don’t Need New Energy Storage Innovations” – There’s been a lot of talk about energy storage being a “holy grail” for solving the problems of deeper renewables saturation in the US power grid. But it’s time to start pushing back on the rhetoric. The solutions we have now for storage are sufficient to the task. [Greentech Media]

Science and Technology:

¶ One of the biggest statements on Tesla’s last quarterly conference call was that it would be unveiling a battery storage system for home use within 1–2 months. Several competing energy storage companies are watching closely to see what the details end up being, while a bit envious of the media attention Tesla gets. [CleanTechnica]

¶ It’s been frigid in much of the US this week, and in New England for weeks on end. But nationally, the country has been going through a surprisingly warm winter. According to the National Climatic Data Center, the December 2014 to January 2015 period has been the sixth warmest on record in the contiguous US. [Huffington Post]

World:

¶ Much has been made of the competition between the United States and China for the title of world’s leading wind energy country, with the former the leading generator and the latter the leading installer. However, according to GlobalData analyst Pranav Srivastava, both titles are to be China’s as soon as 2016. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Vestas has entered into a deal with OX2 to supply 10 turbines for the 33 MW Maevaara 2 wind power plant in northern Sweden. Under the contract, Vestas will supply, install and commission the V126, 3.3 MW turbines with de-icing system. The project is the second in Sweden to feature the V126 3.3 MW. [Greentech Lead]

¶ New statistics released by the UK’s Department of Energy and Climate Change has revealed that close to 22,000 households have received support under the Renewable Heat Incentive scheme, a program of grants to support domestic low-carbon heating installations. [Cogeneration & On-Site Power Production Magazine]

US:

¶ The US Navy Task Force Energy is now drawing our attention to an op-ed by a former Navy commander outlining the risks of continued oil dependency. Like another recent piece, it pulls no punches, drawing attention to the thousands of American deaths attributed to petroleum transportation in Iraq and Afghanistan. [CleanTechnica]

¶ NextEra Energy is planning to build Hawaii’s largest wind farm on the southern coast of Maui. Before the construction of the 120-MW project, NextEra will complete the acquisition of Hawaiian Electric for $4.3 billion. In addition, the wind project will also be owned and operated by NextEra Energy. [Greentech Lead]

¶ Maine’s reshaped Public Utilities Commission wants to reconsider two proposed wind projects it approved two months ago, a move critics say would damage the integrity of the regulatory process and scare off future renewable-energy investors. The commission will decide on reassessment on Wednesday. [Nashua Telegraph]

¶ More than a dozen, mostly coal-dependent, states are already raising hell about the EPA’s Clean Power Plan. The latest battle is currently playing out in Virginia, where a state representative with ties to the coal industry wants to make it more difficult for the state’s Department of Environmental Quality to comply. [Grist]

¶ Pittsfield officials have started negotiating with Ameresco a long-term solar lease and power/net metering purchase agreement. The global alternative energy company has offered to install a solar array of up to 2.9 MW of electric generating capacity that provide more than 3.86 million kWh annually. [Berkshire Eagle]

¶ A bipartisan group of almost three dozen Illinois lawmakers yesterday proposed measures that would expand the state’s energy efficiency and renewable energy requirements and establish a carbon market to help the state comply with US EPA’s Clean Power Plan to limit GHG emissions. [Environment & Energy Publishing]

¶ Two Minnesota legislators have penned energy bills this session that would lift the state’s moratorium on Xcel Energy building another reactor at the Monticello nuclear plant. Both bills are site-specific to Monticello for the construction of a single, new nuclear-powered electric generating unit on the current plant site. [Monticello Times]

February 20 Energy News

February 20, 2015

Science and Technology:

¶ Nuclear power plants increasingly face a new enemy: the jellyfish. Screens prevent aquatic life and debris from being drawn into the power plants’ cooling systems, but more and more often, they get blocked by large volumes of jellyfish or other aquatic life, forcing reactors to shut down. Climate change is a suspected cause. [Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists]

¶ No matter how fast the cost of oil drops, it just can’t keep up with the pace of improvements in electric vehicle batteries. In the latest development, a team of researchers at the University of California, Riverside, has come up with a paper-like material that could bring in a new generation of high-range batteries. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Pumped storage has been around a long time, much longer than renewables’ intermittent nature required it. In July 1930, the magazine Popular Science ran an article announcing start of operations at the first US “ten-mile storage battery,” or pumped-hydro energy storage plant, in Connecticut. [Scientific American]

World:

¶ Private sector developers in India’s rapidly growing renewable energy will be happy to have the backing of the country’s largest bank as they get ready for competitive bidding. The State Bank of India has committed to provide $12.5 billion in debt funding to renewable energy projects over the next few years. [CleanTechnica]

¶ GTM Research has released some key findings pertaining to the PV inverter industry. One is that global shipments could reach 50.6 GW in 2015. Reaching this amount means an increase of about 30% over the previous year. The global market for inverters will increase to about $7.1 billion, despite falling prices. [CleanTechnica]

¶ In Australia, Origin Energy warned that major electric retailers were likely to choose paying a penalty price, the equivalent of a fine, rather than contracting to new renewable energy projects, now that it is apparent that the renewable energy target would not be cut as much as the power companies had wanted. [RenewEconomy]

US:

¶ Citigroup Inc said it would set aside $100 billion to fund environmental projects over the next decade, doubling the amount it had earmarked for such projects in 2007. Citigroup said it would fund projects related to renewable energy, greenhouse gas reductions and sustainable transportation. [eco-business.com]

¶ A bill before the Illinois legislature creates new standards for the state’s utilities to use efficiency measures to reduce electricity demand 20% by 2025. It also sets a higher figure for renewable energy purchased by updating the state’s regulation for the production of energy from renewables, such as wind and solar. [Northwest Herald]

¶ Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack has announced that rural agricultural producers and small business owners can now apply for resources to purchase and install renewable energy systems or make energy efficiency improvements. The resources announced today are made possible by the 2014 Farm Bill. [Imperial Valley News]

¶ The second study in a few days has been released that finds that implementing the EPA’s Clean Power Plan will not negatively affect grid reliability. The report from Analysis Group addresses the impact of ongoing changes in the energy industry for stakeholders and offers recommendations to ensure reliability. [Domestic Fuel]

¶ Environmental Working Group Executive Director Heather White said today that Monday’s West Virginia oil spill and explosion, following derailment of a train load of shale oil, shows that it’s absolutely critical for the US to reduce its dependence on oil and base our future economy on clean energy. [Environmental Working Group]

¶ BlackRock Inc closed its acquisition of half of the 200-MW Hereford project in Deaf Smith County and agreed to buy the stakes in the 200-MW Longhorn and 194-MW Spinning Spur 3 wind farms after they’re completed later this year, the New York-based firm said Thursday in an e-mailed statement. [Bloomberg]

¶ The House Energy and Power Subcommittee heard testimony from Secretary Moniz on the DOE FY 2016 budget request, which outlined over $1 billion in renewable energy program funding increases but a decrease to fossil energy research and development. (The decrease for fossil fuels, however, is tiny.) [Breaking Energy]

February 19 Energy News

February 19, 2015

Science and Technology:

¶ Imergy Power Systems announced a new, mega-sized version of their vanadium flow battery technology. The EPS250 series will deliver up to 250 kW of power with a 1 MWh capacity. The company claims it can deliver power for a levelized cost as low as $300 per kWh, making it competitive with lithium-ion. [ExtremeTech]

World:

¶ Turkey is now aiming to get at least 30% of its electricity requirements via renewable energy sources by the year 2023, based on figures put forward in the country’s National Renewable Energy Action Plan. Of this target, the country is reportedly aiming for at least 5 GW worth to be via solar PV projects. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The UAE has inaugurated a solar photovoltaic micro grid project to bring clean energy to some of Fiji’s outer islands. Built by Masdar, Abu Dhabi’s renewable energy company, the clean energy project is the third financed by the UAE’s $50 million Pacific Partnership Fund, through the Abu Dhabi Fund for Development. [Trade Arabia]

¶ Egypt is looking to add 4.3 GW of solar capacity as it targets a total boost of 8-GW in the next 10 years. The government said the extra power is needed to meet the needs of the nation’s expanding economy and it expects to start signing deals for PV projects at the Egypt Economic Development Conference in March. [reNews]

¶ ITM Power PLC on Wednesday said it has successfully delivered the power-to-gas PEM electrolyser system it sold to German power company RWE Deutschland AG within ten weeks of receiving the order. The system is the third rapid-response power-to-gas energy storage system ITM installed in Germany. [London South East]

¶ A new hydroelectric dam, set to be built on the River Allt Coire Chaorach, near Crianlarich, is set to be yet another instalment that will help push Scotland to the 100% renewable energy mark by 2020. The £8.5 million investment is set to generate up to eight GWh of electricity per year, also creating jobs and growth. [Click Green]

¶ Japan has relied heavily on fossil fuels since shutdown of the country’s nuclear fleet following the Fukushima Disaster. In 2013, more than 86% of Japan’s generation mix was composed of fossil fuels. With no nuclear plants online since 2013, the Japanese government anticipates starting a few up in 2015. [PennEnergy]

¶ The UK’s Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs was informed by the CAP Direct Payments Team that solar farms do not have a “serious” impact on the UK’s agricultural output. This information came ahead of its controversial decision to remove CAP payments for solar farms. [Greentech Media]

¶ Jordan’s Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources is collaborating with the Ministry of Islamic Affairs to implement plans to power all of the country’s mosques with solar energy by the end of 2015. Mosques currently pay as much as $1,400 a month for the air-conditioning and lighting. [Global Construction Review]

US:

¶ An NRG Energy subsidiary, NRG Renew, will join Kaiser Permanente, a major US health provider serving over 9 million people, in creating one of the top three on-site commercial solar portfolios among all US companies. The California project will also be one of the world’s largest vehicle-parking solar projects. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Last week, Rolling Stone published a blockbuster climate change article complete with the incendiary title, “The Pentagon & Climate Change: How Deniers Put National Security at Risk.” Now, the US Navy has posted a response with a forceful declaration of support for the Rolling Stone article. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Origin Energy provided further details of its impending major push into the domestic solar market. It expects rooftop solar to grow five-fold over the next 15 years, with battery storage coming also. It will install and maintain rooftop solar systems, and charge the homeowner a fee to use the solar electricity. [RenewEconomy]

¶ SunEdison Inc, the world’s largest renewable energy development company, announced the successful start of operation of the Regulus solar facility in Kern County, California. The 81.6 MW(DC) facility expected to provide almost $184 million in revenue to local businesses, governments and households. [SCVNEWS.com]

¶ PSEG Solar Source joined with El Paso Electric and juwi solar to formally dedicate the PSEG El Paso Solar Center. The 13-MW facility is El Paso’s largest, producing enough renewable energy to power more than 3,800 homes. PSEG Solar Source currently has 10 facilities in operation, totaling 109.7 MW. [PennEnergy]

¶ Green Mountain Power announced that for a third year, thanks to power generation at its Kingdom Community Wind Farm, five Northeast Kingdom Towns will receive Good Neighbor Fund payments. This year, GMP will distribute more than $188,000, an increase of $62,000 over last year. [vtdigger.org]

February 18 Energy News

February 18, 2015

World:

¶ Australian firm Carnegie Wave Energy Ltd announced it has officially put on stream its Perth wave power station at Garden Island. The plant has three 240-kW CETO 5 wave energy devices. It is the world’s first multiple wave unit power station. Its output is going to the Western Australia grid. [SeeNews Renewables]

¶ US carmaker General Motors said on Tuesday it has signed a deal with Enel Green Power to purchase 34 MW of wind power for its production facilities in Mexico. The power purchase agreement is tied to 17 wind turbines the Italian company will be erecting in Palo Alto, starting in the second quarter of 2015. [SeeNews Renewables]

¶ The first renewable energy tender issued by Jordan had encouraging results, with a total of 200 MW awarded to project developers, including a 52.5-MW solar PV project. The tender is the first among several that the government plans to conduct to set up 1.8 GW renewable energy capacity by 2020. [CleanTechnica]

¶ EDF Energies Nouvelles has confirmed that it will use 68 Vestas 3.3-MW turbines at its 224.4-MW Nicolas-Riou wind farm in Quebec. The company got a 25-year power purchase agreement with Hydro-Quebec last year following a competition tender. The plant is expected to be commissioned by mid-2017. [reNews]

¶ The three-day ‘First Renewable Energy Global Investors Meet and Expo (Re-Invest)’ concluded in India on Tuesday with commitments of 266,000 MW of renewable power, including 10,000 MW from state-run NTPC. This makes it the “take off” conference towards revolutionising India’s energy sector. [Web India]

¶ As an island nation, Japan controls large swaths of ocean territory, about the sixth-greatest expanse of any country in the world. So it makes sense for Japan to look to the seas for renewable energy. The government is teaming up with two major industrial companies to start field testing marine power generation. [Wall Street Journal]

¶ Canadian Solar has secured six solar power projects worth 46 MW in the United Kingdom. They will together generate around 50,183 kWh of electricity annually. Four projects, totaling 40.5 MW, are under construction and should be connected to the grid in March, with the others following in the second quarter. [Greentech Lead]

¶ Taking a cue from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s vision, Union Minister Piyush Goyal today said efforts will work to create a federation of 50 solar power-rich nations and also make India the world’s renewable energy capital. They plan to work with the World Economic Forum in the near future. [Economic Times]

¶ Mainstream Renewable Power announced the launch of a pan-African renewable energy generation platform, Lekela Power, which it has formed along with Actis, a global pan-emerging market private equity firm. Lekela Power will provide between 700 and 900 MW of wind and solar power in Africa by 2018. [Your Industry News]

¶ Siemens announced it has secured a contract in South Africa with an order for 157 wind turbines for three projects in the South Africa province of Northern Cape. The 2.3-MW machines of the Siemens G2 platform will be installed at the wind power plants Khobab, Loeriesfontein 2 and Noupoort. [Windtech International]

US:

¶ Fires continued to burn for hours Tuesday after a train carrying 109 tankers of crude oil derailed in a snowstorm alongside a West Virginia creek, threatening the nearby water supply. Cars carrying volatile Bakken crude from North Dakota’s shale fields had left the tracks Monday afternoon, and 19 caught fire. [AOL]

¶ Duke Energy, which already owns or purchases 600 MW of solar capacity in North Carolina, announced that it is seeking to acquire up to an additional 50 MW. Duke has solar and wind facilities in 12 states, and expects to increase its solar generating capacity to 110 MW over the next six years in South Carolina. [Politic365]

¶ Donald Moul, vice president of commodity operations for FirstEnergy Solutions, says distortions in the energy market are hurting FirstEnergy’s fleet of nuclear reactors, making it hard to compete. He places the blame on policies that have eaten away at the value of its coal and nuclear fleet. [Pittsburgh Post Gazette]

¶ In Vermont, after three weeks of deliberation, the House Natural Resources and Energy Committee voted 10-1 to pass H.40, a bill requiring utilities to sell renewable power. According to the bill, 55% of a utility’s electricity must come from renewables such as wind, solar or hydro power by 2017, and 75% by 2032. [vtdigger.org]

February 17 Energy News

February 17, 2015

Science and Technology:

¶ A number of studies investigating the effect of wind turbines on birds have found that the actual impact wind turbines have on avians is relatively low. However, according to this new research, published in the European Journal of Wildlife Research, wind turbines’ effects on bats cannot be ignored. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Israeli alternative energy company Brenmiller Energy has solved one of the biggest issues with solar technology: how to generate electricity when the sun sets. The company says it will build a 10-MW solar facility that will generate electricity 20 hours per day through a proprietary energy storage technology. [Inhabitat]

World:

¶ In Geneva, Switzerland just three weeks after the US Senate’s 98-1 vote that climate change is not a hoax, the first round of the 2015 United Nations talks among 194 nations produced the first-ever universally agreed negotiating text on how to limit global warming to 2°C (3.6°F) above preindustrial temperatures. [CleanTechnica]

¶ If you hate that persistent smell of diesel fumes and you live in France, you’ll probably be happy to learn that the government has begun an aggressive initiative to get older, heavily polluting diesel cars off the road, by offering owners up to €10,000 to switch to a plug-in hybrid electric or 100% electric car. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The Philippines is one of the world’s leading producers of geothermal energy. Located atop the Pacific Ocean’s so-called Ring of Fire, the country has used volcanic heat to produce electricity for decades. Now there is a new project underway to use this renewable resource to power an entire island. [Voice of America]

¶ Indian Prime Minister Modi’s 100 GW solar energy goal by 2022 could create as many as one million jobs, says the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Council on Energy, Environment and Water. Additionally, a proposed target of 60 GW of wind energy could generate another 180,000 jobs in the country. [Energy Matters]

¶ Romania installed 363 MW of new solar PV in 2014, according to the country’s transmission company and electricity system operator. Wind power systems added 346 MW of new capacity in 2014. Cumulative capacities for solar PV and wind technologies stand now at 1223 MW and 2953 MW respectively. [pv magazine]

¶ The UK Green Investment Bank and the Strathclyde Pension Fund are to plow £60 million into community-scale renewable energy projects through Albion Community Power. ACP builds, controls and operates community-scale schemes and has identified a project pipeline in which it will invest capital for the duo. [reNews]

¶ US power companies struggling with the escalating costs of building nuclear plants are closely watching similar efforts with similar problems in China. The first plants using Westinghouse Electric Co’s AP1000 reactor design are having problems there, and US executives and safety regulators are learning what they can. [PennEnergy]

US:

¶ The sun is shining on solar power in Illinois. A new report ranks the state 12th nationally for the number of people employed in the solar industry, up from 20th in 2013. According to The Solar Foundation, 1,700 solar jobs were added last year, bringing the total to 3,800 in Illinois, up over 80% in one year. [Public News Service]

¶ To store power from Washington State solar and wind generators, the Klickitat PUD has begun applying for a license from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to pursue a pumped storage project, which will cost an estimated $2.5 billion. When completed, the project would have a capacity of 1200 MW. [Yakima Herald-Republic]

¶ Solar power brought 3,500 new jobs to Nevada in 2014, a 146% increase over 2013 that pushed the state to number 1 in the nation in solar jobs per capita, according to a report released Thursday by the Solar Foundation. It ranked Nevada seventh nationally with 5,900 total jobs in the solar industry. [Las Vegas Review-Journal]

¶ The cities of San Mateo County, California would have the option of banding together to sell cleaner energy to their ratepayers under a community-choice aggregation plan advocated by two county supervisors. The program could put power costs from renewable sources such as wind and solar below utility rates. [San Francisco Examiner]

February 16 Energy News

February 16, 2015

Opinion:

¶ “Neil Sheehan: Decommissioning Vermont Yankee” We have seen the end of an era for Vermont Yankee’s workforce and for the surrounding community as power production halted. But now another phase in the facility’s life will begin as the first steps in what will be a lengthy decommissioning process get under way. [vtdigger.org]

World:

¶ Nippon Paper Industries and Mitsubishi have started operation of a 21-MW solar power plant in Japan. The plant is located in Komatsushima-shi, Tokushima Prefecture, which is claimed to have the country’s highest annual sunshine hours. It is Nippon Paper’s second solar project. [Clean Technology Business Review]

¶ Some of the world’s most environmentally efficient and profitable green energy technologies are being specifically tailored to the needs of the beef, poultry, pork, rendering, and stock feed industries. The high-temperature thermophilic anaerobic digestion technologies typically operate at 55° C. [Impeller.net]

¶ Chinese and Indian Solar Energy industry recently met under the aegis of FICCI for a business roundtable to explore partnerships between the companies of both the countries on the eve of the upcoming RE-INVEST. The Chinese delegation was led by the China Photovoltaic Industry Association. [Moneycontrol.com]

¶ China raised its total grid-connected solar power capacity to 28.05 GW in 2014, up 60% on the year, and aims to raise the total by more than half this year. The figure is equivalent to about 2.1% of China’s total power capacity of 1,360 GW at end 2014, while wind power is about 7% of the total. [Business Recorder]

¶ India is all set to have world’s largest solar power plant in Rewa district of Madhya Pradesh. It will be completed next year on Independence Day. The 750 MW will be constructed and operated as a joint venture of the state government and Solar Energy Corporation of India. It will occupy 1,500 hectares of land. [indiatvnews.com]

¶ The Durham York Energy Centre in Clarington, Ontario began burning its first haul of curbside garbage as part of a month-long testing phase before the facility opens for good. The facility will generate about 17.5 MW of renewable energy, but has faced opposition from locals. The final price tag is $286.56 million. [Toronto Star]

¶ South Korea’s LG Chem Inc says it will supply energy storage systems for four solar plants under construction in Japan in a deal worth over $272.7 million. The battery maker said it won a contract to supply storage systems, each with a capacity of 31 MW, to the Green Power Development Corporation of Japan. [The Korea Bizwire]

US:

¶ California’s Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León proposed legislation last week to increase the amount of electricity California derives from renewable sources, excluding from what counts as “renewable” any power generated from burning household trash, with the exception of one specific plant. [Sacramento Bee]

¶ SunEdison completed a 677-kW ground-mount solar PV system, providing energy for the AT&T materials distribution facility in Lancaster, Texas. It is not the first plant SunEdison worked on with AT&T. Their solar power arrays have generated over 8.6 GWh of power, cutting CO2 emissions by 13 million pounds. [AZoCleantech]

¶ Imergy Power Systems and Growing Energy Labs Inc are collaborating on a microgrid project for Chabot-Las Positas Community College District in Livermore, California. The project will add renewable energy sources, reduce peak power, and allow the district to be more energy independent.[CleanTechnica]

February 15 Energy News

February 15, 2015

Opinion:

¶ “Arthur Berman: Why Today’s Shale Era Is The Retirement Party For Oil Production” – Podcast guest Arthur Berman, a geological consultant with 34 years of experience in petroleum exploration and production, sees the recent US oil production boost from shale drilling as short-lived and somewhat desperate. [peakprosperity.com]

¶ “Did Obama Just Waste $907 Million Trying to Save Nuclear Power?” – The power of the atom has started to give way to cheaper energy sources with more favorable public opinion. But President Obama’s proposed budget for 2016 set aside $907 million for the US DOE to invest in nuclear energy technologies. [Motley Fool]

World:

¶ A contract for two offshore wind parks in Japan has been won by Marubeni Corporation. The site is off the coast of Akita Prefecture, in the northern part of Honshu, Japan’s largest island. The turbines will be 5 MW. One site will have 13, and the other will have 16. Both parks should be operating in 2021. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Indian prime minister Modi inaugurated the first Renewable Energy Global Investors Meet. On the first day of the three-day event, 293 companies committed to set up plants to generate 266 GW of renewable energy in 5 years, while banking major SBI said it will finance 15,000 MW renewable energy. [India.com]

¶ Mr Piyush Goyal, Union Minister for Power, Coal and Renewable Energy, told a group of industry executives, “India will be power surplus in 2019, and we are taking all necessary steps. From the current one trillion units of energy generation, we can double the power generation and become power surplus.” [SteelGuru]

¶ A report due out in Scotland this month aims to identify the ways to jump-start the stalled maritime wind sector, by enabling price cuts of a third, to £100 per MW/h. Power from less productive onshore wind farms costs £85 per MW/h average. This means offshore wind can be competitive with onshore. [Herald Scotland]

¶ Renewable energy firm Welspun Renewables today said it will set up 11 GW solar and wind projects across India. The 11 GW capacity will be developed as 8,660 MW of solar and 2,341 MW of wind power projects, the company said in a statement. It will commission over 1 GW of solar and wind this year. [Business Standard]

¶ US-based SunEdison and First Solar committed to build more than 20,000 MW of renewable capacity in India, boosting India’s renewable energy targets. SunEdison will build 15,200 MW of solar and wind power capacity by 2022, while First Solar made a commitment to develop 5,000 MW of solar by 2019. [Times of India]

US:

¶ The White House has backed solar and wind power projects and touted the benefits of the country’s surging production of natural gas, which burns about 50% cleaner than coal, still the largest source of electricity in the US. It had backed clean coal, but now, the US DOE is beginning to withdraw that support. [Bloomberg]

¶ One thing energy companies leave out of their talking points for expanding pipelines in New England is an effort to deliver natural gas to Canada for export. Developers are already moving to send natural gas through Massachusetts to Nova Scotia, where it would be converted to liquefied natural gas and exported. [ecoRI news]

February 14 Energy News

February 14, 2015

Opinion:

¶ “What Snow and the US Army Tell Us About Coal vs Renewable Energy” Coal vs renewable energy is central to two current debates about energy in official arenas. Interestingly, one very important supporter of renewable energy in the debate is the US Army. [The Equation: Blog of the Union of Concerned Scientists]

Science and Technology:

¶ As bad as recent droughts in California, the Southwest and the Midwest have been, scientists say far worse “megadroughts” are coming, lasting for decades. Unprecedented drought conditions, the worst in more than 1,000 years, are likely to come to the Southwest and Central Plains after 2050. [Huffington Post]

World:

¶ A 42-MW geothermal power station is being planned by Electric Power Development Co for a site in northern Japan. It should be operational by May 2019. Financing for about $221 million will come from a number of banks and 80% is guaranteed by Japan Oil, Gas & Metals National Corporation. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Leaders of the UK’s three main political parties pledged a cross-party fight against climate change. David Cameron of the Conservatives, Ed Miliband of Labour and Nick Clegg of the Liberal Democrats agreed to “seek a fair, strong, legally-binding global climate deal which limits temperature rises to below two degrees celsius”. [reNews]

¶ Pattern Energy has entered into a 25-year power purchase agreement with Hydro-Québec for the 147-MW Mont Sainte-Marguerite wind project. The facility will have 46 of Siemens 3.2 MW wind turbines. Construction is expected to begin in the third quarter of 2016, and commercial operation in December 2017. [Greentech Lead]

¶ French and Spanish power grid operators have completed a long-awaited power line across the Pyrenees that will allow export of excess Spanish renewable energy and ease one of the worst network bottlenecks in Europe. They will inaugurate a 1,400-MW cable that will double French-Spanish interconnection capacity. [Reuters]

¶ Interest in building a 100-MW plus solar thermal plant in Western Australia’s Goldfields region has been revived, as more miners turn their interest to solar and other renewables as a means to deflect volatile diesel costs. Two solar developers are considering plans for large solar thermal plant near Kalgoorlie. [RenewEconomy]

¶ Ontario has issued the all clear to NextEra Energy Canada’s 102-MW Goshen wind farm, the seventh project in an eight-part 615-MW feed-in tariff portfolio in the province. The municipality of Bluewater, a host community, and a local resident failed to prove the wind farm would cause serious harm to human health. [reNews]

US:

¶ The American Wind Energy Association released a new report, “Wind energy helps build a more reliable and balanced electricity portfolio,” answering 15 frequently asked questions, basing answers upon lessons learned from grid operators’ experiences reliably integrating wind energy into the existing grid. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Procter & Gamble and Constellation Energy announced this week that they are moving ahead with the development of a biomass-fueled plant that will generate up to 50 MW and provide power to P&G’s Albany plant, one of its largest US facilities. The plant is expected to begin commercial operation in June 2017. [The Albany Herald]

¶ Inverter load rejection overvoltage tests completed by the US DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory as part of a cooperative research agreement with SolarCity have proven so successful that a testing partner, Hawaiian Electric Companies, has proposed to double its hosting capacity for solar energy. [Phys.Org]

¶ New York ratepayers will subsidize operation of the Ginna nuclear facility near Rochester, under terms of an agreement with the plant’s operators, Exelon. The Ginna Nuclear Generating Station will be allowed to charge customers above-market rates until 2018, because the plant has been losing money. [Capital New York]

February 13 Energy News

February 13, 2015

Opinion:

¶ “Energy innovation for Vermont” by Peter Shumlin – Pursuing clean energy policies in Vermont isn’t just about doing what is right for our environment and protecting our unrivaled quality of life. A thriving clean energy sector is also integral to our economy, keeping young people in Vermont … [BurlingtonFreePress.com]

Science and Technology:

¶ Tesla’s crusade against fossil fuels could soon hit home with a battery-powered energy pack. The company plans to start producing a home battery within six months, Bloomberg reports, and will reveal more details in the next month or two. Backup power is one application, but there are a number of others. [TechHive]

World:

¶ South Africa’s government is forging ahead with plans to spend as much as 1 trillion rand ($85 billion) on new nuclear plants, ignoring objections from environmental activists, opposition parties, unions and even its own advisers. Bids will be sought to add 9,600 MW of atomic power to the national grid. [Bloomberg]
…Greenpeace anti-nuclear activists unfurled a banner saying “nuclear investments cost the Earth,” at the 2nd Nuclear Industry Congress Africa 2015 in Sea Point on Thursday. “Not only is nuclear power controversial, but it would never be ready to alleviate this crisis,” Melita Steele of Greenpeace pointed out. [Independent Online]

¶ Belectric UK is collaborating in a project led by National Grid to show how solar PV and other renewable energy operators can help stabilize the frequency and voltage of distribution networks, protecting the UK from power blackouts and instability, and thus reduce grid reliance on spinning reserve. [solarserver.com]

¶ China boosted its installed wind energy capacity last year to a record 19.81 million kW as the world’s biggest greenhouse gas emitter pushes its power grid to cleaner energy sources. The National Energy Administration says that wind farms produced 153.4 billion kWh in 2014, 2.8% of total generated electricity. [The Denver Post]

¶ In an initiative of New Zealand company solarcity, customers have panels installed on their roofs but, rather than buying those panels, they instead buy the power produced from them at a rate lower than they can buy it from power companies. Furthermore, that rate is locked down for 20 years. [New Zealand Herald]

¶ An Irish renewable energy company has raised $760 million to build three wind farms in South Africa. Mainstream Renewable Power was awarded contracts for the wind farms totaling 360 MW by the Department of Energy under the third round of its Renewable Energy Procurement Programme. [Energy Live News]

¶ Lucky Electric Power Company Limited has finally got a green signal from the federal government for the setting up of $1 billion coal-based power plant in energy-scarce Pakistan. The LEPCL would be setting up the 660 MW power generation facility here at Port Qasim within the next five years. [Business Recorder]

¶ European utilities shut more coal and natural gas power plants in 2014 than in any year since at least 2009 amid falling demand for electricity and tougher pollution curbs. European Union power companies turned off 63% more coal- and gas-fed generation than they started; net decommissioning was 5 GW. [Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide]

¶ In Belgium, GDF Suez subsidiary Electrabel announced that the operation to shut down the 433 MW Doel 1 nuclear reactor will begin on 14 February, with the unit scheduled to cease operating on the following day. The 121 fuel assemblies in its core will then be removed and transferred to storage pools. [World Nuclear News]

US:

¶ An analysis of concerns raised by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation about the impact on grid reliability of the US Environmental Protection Agency’s Clean Power Plan for reducing carbon emissions from the electric power sector finds that reliability is unlikely to be materially affected. [IT Business Net]

¶ State utility regulators on Thursday unanimously directed Xcel Energy to go ahead with three large solar projects that will mean a tenfold increase in the amount of electricity generated from the sun in Minnesota. The projects are expected to be completed in 2016 to qualify for solar power tax credit. [Duluth News Tribune]

¶ The first utility-scale solar farm will be built to power the Tennessee Valley Authority in Alabama. TVA directors Thursday approved a 20-year lease with Next Era Energy Resources to buy the power generated by an 80-MW solar farm planned on nearly 600 acres in Northern Alabama. [Chattanooga Times Free Press]

¶ Google is partnering with NextEra Energy to power its Googleplex headquarters in Mountain View at California. Beginning from 2016, Google will receive approximately 43 MW of wind energy from plants at Altamont Pass. As part of the deal, 370 old turbines will be replaced with 24 advanced ones. [Greentech Lead]

February 12 Energy News

February 12, 2015

Science and Technology:

¶ The last time we checked into the “bionic leaf,” it involved making hydrogen fuel from sunlight and water. Now a team of Harvard researchers have come up with a new twist: a bionic leaf that throws bacteria into the mix. The result goes one step beyond hydrogen to produce a steady stream of… rubbing alcohol! [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶ Electric vehicle registrations in Europe rose by more than 60.9% in 2014, as compared to 2013, according to recent figures. Overall, 65,199 electric cars and commercial vehicles were registered in Europe during 2014, representing a significant increase over the previous year, which saw 42,194 EVs sold. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The quarterly solar PV module revenue made by the 20 leading global suppliers reached $5.9 billion in the fourth quarter of 2014, an increase of 12% over the year prior, according to the latest report from IHS. The report showed a combination of sharp decline in solar PV module prices and higher revenues. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Reliance Power today inked a pact with government of the Indian state of Rajasthan government to develop a 6,000 MW solar park in the state over the next 10 years. A memorandum of understanding in this regard was signed by the state’s Chief Minister and Reliance Power’s CEO here today. [The Hans India]

¶ Japan’s atomic regulator on Thursday cleared two more of reactors for restart, another step towards returning the country to nuclear power after the Fukushima disaster of 2011 led to the shutdown of all units. The two reactors are at the Takahama nuclear station operated by Kansai Electric Power. [The Straits Times]

¶ Plans for Britain’s first new nuclear plant in a generation at Hinkley Point face fresh delays after French developer EDF warned a decision on building the reactors may still be a “considerable” time off. The decision from EDF was to be by the end of March 2015 but now looks unlikely to meet that deadline. [Telegraph.co.uk]

US:

¶ An Arizona energy company has inaugurated a solar array at Fort Huachuca that will provide about one-quarter of the Army base’s energy needs. The array produces 17.2 MW of power, making it one of the largest arrays on a US military facility, and will offset about 58,000 tons of carbon emissions annually. [UPI.com]

¶ Two West Virginia power companies are attempting to eliminate competition from rooftop solar by misleading legislators about the language in House Bill 2201. Most recently, an industry lobbyist repeatedly misled the Senate Judiciary Committee about what the new bill language would do. [Your Renewable News]

¶ New York is looking at new energy laws, and might consider emulating Vermont’s Cow Power program. The manure from half the cows in New York could power about 45,000 homes. Capturing and utilizing this methane is equivalent to eliminating the carbon dioxide emissions from about 120,000 cars. [Albany Times Union]

¶ Apple Inc will buy about $850 million of power from a new California solar farm to cut its energy bill. The First Solar Inc plant, with the capacity to power the equivalent of 60,000 homes, will be used to supply electricity for Apple’s new campus in Silicon Valley and all offices and stores in the state. [Christian Science Monitor]

¶ Gulf Power filed a petition asking the Florida Public Service Commission to approve an agreement that would make the utility a leading purchaser of wind generation among Florida utilities. The project, called Kingfisher Wind, would be sited in Oklahoma, where conditions are favorable for wind energy. [NorthEscambia.com]

¶ A measure that would see decreased taxes for businesses utilizing renewable energy was passed by the Virginia House of Delegates this week with broad bipartisan support. The bill allows lower tax rates for machinery and tools businesses use for renewable energy, including solar, wind, and other forms. [Augusta Free Press]

¶ Innovative Solar Systems, LLC has received all approvals and is ready to break ground on a 75-MW Solar Farm in Fayetteville. North Carolina. It will generate enough electricity to power approximately 15,000 to 20,000 average size homes, according to John E. Green, the CEO of Innovative Solar. [RenewablesBiz]

¶ Governor Dannel Malloy wants to provide new incentives for solar power in the state. His office is crafting new legislation that would let homeowners trade in renewable energy credits for the first time. People or companies that install solar arrays on houses could receive 15-year contracts for their energy credits.
[WNPR News]

¶ Texas’ only radioactive waste dump wants to open its gates to tens of thousands of metric tons of spent nuclear reactor fuel now scattered across the country. Waste Control Specialists is seeking federal approval to temporarily store highly radioactive waste at its complex northwest of Midland. [KERA News]

February 11 Energy News

February 11, 2015

World:

¶ In Australia, the Bulli Creek solar project received approval from the Toowoomba Regional Council for building up to 2,000 MW over the next eight years across 13,000 acres of cattle grazing land. It has the option of building out the site in manageable stages of 100 MW to 500 MW or more per stage. [Renew Economy]

¶ A report by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives questions the economic cost and environmental benefits of SaskPower’s $1.5-billion Boundary Dam Carbon Capture and Storage project, claiming there are cheaper, more sustainable options to reduce the province’s greenhouse gas emissions. [Regina Leader-Post]

¶ New figures released by the Global Wind Energy Council show that the global wind industry grew by 44% in 2014, installing over 51 GW. The figure indicates a “solid sign of the recovery of the industry after a rough patch in the past few years.” The cumulative total worldwide was about 369,500 GW at year’s end. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Some communities in Abuja, the Nigerian the Federal Capital Territory, have marked one year of steady power supply, following the implementation of the Light up Rural Nigeria project, National Mirror reports. The project uses renewable power generation to supply electricity to the communities. [Nigerian Bulletin]

¶ Sandfire Resources has signed an agreement with juwi, a renewable energy company, which will see the construction of a 10.6-MW solar power station at its DeGrussa copper mine in Western Australia. The $40 million project will involve the construction of the largest integrated off-grid solar array in Australia. [Australian Mining]

¶ In Pakistan, there are over 1.1 million agriculture tube wells, with only 30% of them operated by electricity. With the country’s growing energy crisis, farmers are left with no option but to switch from diesel to solar energy to irrigate their crops. Tube wells consume around 2,000 million liters of oil per year. [eco-business.com]

¶ Some 77% of people in the UK think the nation should generate more electricity from renewable sources, a study reveals. Solar energy had 78% backing rooftop solar for new houses. Some 51% of consumers identified nuclear power as the least desirable plant to have nearby, followed by coal-fired (21%). [reNews]

¶ At a joint press conference following a meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Egyptian counterpart, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, in Egypt’s capital of Cairo, the Egyptian head of state said a nuclear power plant would be constructed in Dabaa in northwest Egypt on the Mediterranean coast. [Press TV]

US:

¶ Elon Musk believes solar and utilities can exist together, despite uneasy feelings of many within the utility sector. Speaking at the Detroit Auto Show, Musk said that expanding electric vehicle markets, along with businesses and homes as solar power generators, will change how we view electricity demand. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Vermont Gas Systems has abandoned its plan to bring natural gas under Lake Champlain to a New York paper mill after the plant withdrew its financial support. The pipeline, proposed to go from Middlebury under the lake to the International Paper facility in Ticonderoga, New York, proved too expensive. [vtdigger.org]

¶ Congressional attention on the Keystone XL pipeline detracts from a number of other significant developments in our quest for a better economy. Three significant moves by state officials in the last month show that clean energy’s importance to America is swelling, much to the benefit of the economy. [Triple Pundit]

¶ In what may be the largest commercial power agreement in the clean energy industry to date, First Solar just announced that it will supply Apple 130 MW of power for 25 years from its California Flats Solar Project. The deal reportedly is worth a total of $848 million. The project should be completed in 2016. [CleanTechnica]

¶ A consortium of US companies joined with California energy officials to launch of the Calgren Ethanol Biodigester in Pixley, California. The project utilizes waste from dairy farms to power the production of tens of millions of gallons of ethanol. The project is 100% American made and constructed. [Dairy Herd Management]

¶ California lawmakers on Tuesday unveiled a package of bills to significantly expand renewable energy use in California, cut gasoline use by 50% and require the state’s major government pension funds to sell off investments in coal companies. The bills support environmental goals of the state’s governor. [Santa Cruz Sentinel]

¶ Siemens has been awarded another order from Pattern Energy Group LP to supply and install 87 SWT-2.3-108 2.3-MW wind turbines for the Logan’s Gap Wind project. The 200-MW project, located in Comanche County, Texas, will create enough clean energy to power 50,000 homes in Texas annually. [PennEnergy]

February 10 Energy News

February 10, 2015

Opinion:

¶ “Why nuclear industry needs to be paid $500/MWh” – South Australian Premier Jay Weatherill raised a few eyebrows about his plans for a “royal commission” looking into nuclear energy. But he is right about one thing: Nuclear energy would be economically viable in South Australia, or indeed the nation. [RenewEconomy]

World:

¶ The European wind sector installed more new capacity than gas and coal combined in 2014. The industry connected a total of 11,791 MW to the grid while coal and gas added 3305 MW and 2338 MW respectively. The coal and gas industries retired more capacity than they commissioned last year. [reNews]

¶ In the build-up to the Indian government-sponsored renewable energy investment summit, RE-Invest 2015, the participating companies have provided non-binding investment indication of 166 GW solar power generation capacity and 5 GW per year of solar manufacturing capacity. [Business Standard]

¶ Eskom, which provides about 95% of South Africa’s electricity, says there is a high probability of almost daily controlled power cuts for the next few months. Frustrated with epileptic power supply, South Africans are considering alternative power sources to reduce their dependence on the ailing grid. [Voice of America]

¶ Two new wind farms in the Philippines have added 303 MW of clean energy to the country’s power supply. The wind farms, which are located in Ilocos Norte and Panay, buffer the country’s expected power shortage in the coming month of March. Around 70% of Philippines’ electricity is generated from fossil fuels. [EcoSeed]

¶ Germany is not expanding power transport networks quickly enough and may need to extend a back-up power scheme beyond its planned expiry in 2017, the country’s energy regulator said on Monday. The scheme became necessary after Germany shut 40% of its nuclear capacity in 2011 after the Fukushima Disaster. [Reuters]

¶ The Japanese government is discussing setting a target of supplying 50% of Japan’s energy with a combination of nuclear and renewable power by 2030, increasing the ratio of renewable energy resources to nuclear power. It intends to show a positive attitude toward minimizing reliance on nuclear power. [The Japan News]

¶ Germany boosted its wind and solar capacity by 10% in 2014, adding a combined 6,800 MW of newly installed wind turbines and solar panels, putting further downward pressure on power prices, which already dropped to their lowest level in over ten years. The solar and wind capacity is now 77,400 MW. [Platts]

¶ Firms in Norway and Germany on Tuesday signed an agreement to build an over 600-km long power cable linking the electricity networks of the two countries, with 500 km under water. The Nordlink project is estimated to cost up to €2 billion ($2.2 billion) and is expected to go online in 2020. [Europe Online Magazine]

US:

¶ Desert Sunlight Solar Farm, a 550-MW farm that is the largest on public lands managed by the federal Bureau of Land Management, has begun operating and will provide enough energy to power more than 160,000 average California homes annually, according to the CEO of the farm’s developer. [Los Angeles Times]

¶ Solar power is really growing in Hawaii, according to the Energy Information Administration. Over the last five years, solar power has grown exponentially, particularly in Oahu where most of the state’s population lives: About 12% of Oahu residents have rooftop solar, compared to the US average of 0.5%. [Triple Pundit]

¶ The Federal Trade Commission will not investigate Green Mountain Power’s marketing of renewable energy, but cautioned the power company to be clear in its communications. A complaint had been lodged that GMP was claiming its power was renewable while selling renewable credits out of state. [Barre Montpelier Times Argus]

¶ A new UC Berkeley study shows that if biomass electricity production is combined with carbon capture and sequestration in the western US, power generators could store more carbon than they emit and make a critical contribution to an overall zero-carbon future by the second half of the 21st century. [AZoCleantech]

¶ In their fight against Wisconsin utilities, solar advocates haven’t had the state Public Service Commission on their side. But for the second time in less than a year, a judge has sided with Renew Wisconsin in a suit challenging changes in the way solar power customers are compensated. [Milwaukee Journal Sentinel]

February 9 Energy News

February 9, 2015

World:

¶ According to Frost & Sullivan, with no impending change in Saudi Arabia’s energy policy, the oil price could temporarily hit low $40 levels, or even lower for a brief period in 2015. However, they also say they expect tumbling oil prices will have little impact on renewable energy including solar power. [solarserver.com]

¶ Gamesa has signed two new wind turbine supply agreements in India totalling 260 MW. One contract is for160 MW, 80 G97 2-MW machines for developer and independent power producer Greenko. The other, with developer CLP India, is for construction of a 100-MW wind farm in Madhya Pradesh. [reNews]

¶ After decades of studies and field surveys, India has finally decided to focus on tapping clean and renewable geothermal energy. The Union Ministry of New and Renewable Energy has drafted a national policy, which would make India a global leader in the sector, generating 1,000 MW in phase one, by 2022. [Daily News & Analysis]

¶ The Spanish Ministry of Industry intends to add 8,537 MW of renewable energy capacity between 2015 and 2020, local news agency Europa Press said Thursday. The government’s plan calls for the construction of 1,370 MW of solar PVs, 211 MW of solar thermal power plants, and 6,473 MW of wind farms. [SeeNews Renewables]

¶ Since 1903, Fortum Oyj’s Vaerta harbor site has generated power using coal, oil, natural gas and even considered nuclear. Now it’s phasing out the last coal furnace and replacing it with the world’s largest combined heat and power generator that will burn just wood chips and timber scraps by next year.[Bloomberg]

¶ The prospect of a nuclear industry in South Australia has been embraced by the state’s peak business group as a multi-million-dollar industry. Business SA chief executive Nigel McBride said it would be good for the state and could result in reduced carbon emissions. SA has one of the world’s biggest uranium deposits. [ABC Online]

¶ A planned Ararat wind farm will go ahead after the Australian Capital Territory government announced it would power Canberra from the Wimmera. The 20-year feed-in tariff will mean a significant portion of the wind farm’s total output will be contracted to the ACT, which will get 33% of its power from wind. [Stock & Land]

¶ India has resolved US concerns about its existing nuclear liability regime, setting the stage for commercial negotiations to generate atomic power. However, the foreign ministry categorically stated that India’s nuclear liability law and its associated rules would not be changed, maintaining liability for reactor builders. [Economic Times]

US:

¶ A report by international energy research company Wood Mackenzie says solar PV has the capacity to disrupt the US energy landscape with speed and tumult similar to the shale industry. It may even directly impact natural gas markets in the near future, as it has already begun to in California. [pv magazine]

¶ Swinerton Renewable Energy and Scatec Solar have started construction on a 104 MW photovoltaic solar plant in Iron County, Utah. When operational by the end of 2015, the plant will be Utah’s largest solar energy generation facility, generating enough energy to power approximately 18,500 homes annually. [AZoBuild]

¶ North Carolina’s Roanoke Electric Cooperative recently dedicated a 100-kW community solar farm developed with the help of its Raleigh-based North Carolina Electric Membership Corp. Individual panels are now being sold to Roanoke EC consumer-members at an initial sale price of $480 each. [Electric Co-op Today]

Februayr 8 Energy News

February 8, 2015

Power Investments:

¶ “Will This Ruin $124 Billion in Natural Gas Investments? (Hint: It’s Not OPEC)” – A new process for manufacturing ethylene developed by Brazilian chemical leader Braskem could be the biggest global threat to the natural gas industry. It’s secret ingredient? That would be bio-ethanol derived from sugar cane. [Motley Fool]

¶ “Nuclear Energy Renaissance Takes Another Blow and May Never Recover” – Setbacks like the Vogtle Nuclear Plant faced this week have become all too predictable in the nuclear industry, and they’re the reason a nuclear renaissance is unlikely in the US. Costs are simply too high, and competition too strong. [Motley Fool]

World:

¶ The premier of South Australia revived the nuclear debate when he announced a Royal Commission to investigate the costs and benefits of involvement in the nuclear industry. The commission would consider nuclear power stations, uranium enrichment plants, and a nuclear waste dump in the state. [The New Daily]

¶ There has been a surge in renewable energy uptake in the UK since the introduction of Feed-in Tariffs almost five years ago. Industry estimates suggest there is still as much as 20 GW of untapped generating potential on UK farms. But changing government support requires careful planning. [FarmersWeekly]

¶ Punjab is expected to achieve 2,500 MW renewable power generation with France pledging to become a partner in solar and biomass power sector in the State providing technologies along with investment by major French renewable energy companies. Special emphasis will be on Solar and Biomass projects. [NYOOOZ]

¶ Two Egyptian banks are moving into green lending with an initiative to finance rooftop solar power systems for residential consumers. National Bank of Egypt and Banque Misr are offering loans within specific areas of Cairo, with plans to expand into Egypt’s other governorates. Interest range from 4% to 8%. [Green Prophet]

US:

¶ The Columbia, Missouri Water and Light Department generated 7.22% of its energy for utility customers using renewable sources, exceeding the 5% goal for 2014 and nearly halfway to the 15% objective by 2018. At the end of 2014, the city had spent $1.12 million of the $3.29 million allotted. [Columbus Telegram]

¶ New York state is encouraging community-based microgrids through NY Prize, a $40 million first-of-its-kind competition announced by Governor Andrew Cuomo. The competition was discussed before an audience of a hundred at the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering at SUNY Poly last week. [Troy Record]

¶ Wyoming and Montana are among the country’s top coal producers, and both rely on coal for most of their electricity generation, but they have opposite approaches to the Clean Power Plan. Wyoming intends to fight the plan. Montana will comply with it. There are implications for the states’ economies. [Flathead Beacon]

¶ Solar power in Arkansas received a boost this week with the announcement of an agreement between a new Arkansas Electric Cooperatives subsidiary and an innovative Minneapolis solar panel company called tenKsolar to create the largest solar initiative for the electric company, which has 100,000 customers. [Times Record]

February 7 Energy News

February 7, 2015

Opinion:

¶ “Nuclear Power Counts As A Renewable? Arizona Senate Committee Says So…” – Committee approval of a bill saying nuclear was renewable is especially funny considering the fact that Arizona is fast approaching some serious water-sourcing issues, and nuclear power plants require huge quantities of water. [CleanTechnica]

Science and Technology:

¶ An engineer has devised a system to convert the power of the wind directly into heat in an invention which could rid Scottish roads of frost in the winter and allow certain crops to be grown for 365 days a year. He believes one of the systems could heat up to 250 acres of farmland and also generate electricity. [Herald Scotland]

World:

¶ India could start installing 20,000 MW of solar power capacity as early as April after companies pledged to support the government’s drive for clean energy, an official told Reuters. Details of the plan, which has commitments from US, German and Chinese companies, will be announced on Friday. [Economic Times]

¶ A rebound in demand for Victorian brown coal since the end of the carbon tax continues to drive up the carbon emissions intensity of the National Electricity Market, which supplies power to about 80% of Australia’s population across the eastern states. It is up 3.3% since the carbon price was scrapped in July. [SteelGuru]

¶ A new study released by the International Renewable Energy Agency says renewable power generation technologies reached a historical level of competitiveness between 2013 and 2014. Power from geothermal, hydro and onshore wind are in the same competitive price range as traditional fossil fuels. [The Weather Channel]

¶ Siemens has handed over the first of five North Sea grid connections, the BorWin2 offshore platform, to its customer TenneT, a German-Dutch transmission grid operator, for immediate commercial operation. It is important as the first offshore grid connection for efficient high-voltage DC power. [Breaking Energy]

¶ A leaky roof at the Kingspan Environmental factory was costing the company up to £15,000 annually. Now the company has transformed that roof into a major power plant, installing 4,900 solar panels to create Ireland’s biggest rooftop solar PV installation. The company is now saving £40,000 a year. [Belfast Telegraph]

¶ Northern Ireland has one of the best wind resources in Europe. Nevertheless, until now they haven’t been able to make full use of them. That’s all about to change with AES’ plans to install Europe’s biggest electricity storage battery, a 10-MW lithium-ion battery array, at a site next to Kilroot power station. [Belfast Telegraph]

US:

¶ Aerojet Rocketdyne and Arkansas Electric Cooperative Corporation have signed agreements with Silicon Ranch Corporation to build and manage what will be the largest solar field in Arkansas. The 12-MW project will occupy approximately 100 acres. It is valued for its predictable energy costs. [MyArkLaMiss]

¶ The National Hockey League today announced that it is ranked Number 17 on the US EPA’s National Top 100 list of the largest users of green power, making it the first professional sports league ever to achieve the distinction. The league has a number of significant green power achievements that it can point to. [NHL.com]

¶ A Massachusetts lawmaker is proposing sweeping changes to the state’s energy strategy, including measures to help fund a gas pipeline, more efficiently site electric transmission and expand the use of offshore wind generation. The state is expecting to retire 8,000 MW of existing generation in coming years. [Utility Dive]

¶ Over a hundred representatives of energy efficiency and renewable energy businesses went to Richmond, Virginia for Clean Energy Lobby Day. They met legislators, witnessed a critical subcommittee meeting, and came away with a powerful impression: the only bills utility-backed bills made it out of committee. [Energy Collective]

¶ The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is taking a closer look at the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station after the plant shut down unexpectedly during last week’s blizzard, the NRC announced Monday. The special inspection at the plant is to review problems that led to the shutdown on January 27. [Barnstable Patriot]

February 6 Energy News

February 6, 2015

Opinion:

¶ “Putting renewable energy costs in perspective” Anti-renewable people consistently cite ‘increased’ rates due to renewable energy, without comparing what the rates would have been if there were no renewables. They speak as if oil, coal and natural gas prices never go up, despite their history. [New Hampshire Business Review]

World:

¶ The Australian Capital Territory (ACT) has awarded power purchase agreements (PPAs) to almost 200 MW of projects following a large-scale reverse wind energy auction. The PPAs will be signed for a term of 20 years and are planned to meet some 33% of the ACT power demand in 2020. [SeeNews Renewables]

¶ Siemens Canada is a leading company in the Canadian wind market, contributing to more than half of the 1.9 GW of new capacity installed in 2014. That momentum is reinforced today with the completion of the 1,000th blade at Siemens’ wind turbine blade manufacturing facility in Tillsonburg, Ontario. [Your Renewable News]

¶ An investment management firm, InfraRed, has announced its agreement to invest in the £1 billion Swansea Bay Tidal Lagoon in Wales. The project is designed to generate around 500 GWh of electricity every year for 120 years, enough to provide nearly all of the domestic electricity for the Swansea region. [ITV News]

¶ On Wednesday new figures showing the “incredible strength” of Scotland’s renewable energy industry were announced by World Wildlife Fund Scotland. In January 2015, wind turbines alone produced enough average daily electricity to meet the needs of 146% of Scottish households, a 27% increase from 2014. [Blouin News Blogs]

US:

¶ The city council of Hillsboro, Oregon unanimously endorsed a plan to have the city recognized as a member of “Northwest Solar Communities” by the US DOE. The designation will help to promote increased use of solar power, resulting in reduced costs for installation of solar rooftop panels on community homes. [Hillsboro Tribune]

¶ The demand for renewable power resources such as wind and solar is not only holding steady, but growing. CCTV America’s Jessica Stone reported the story from Albany. People want solar panels in the American snow belt. Hudson Solar is paneling more than a dozen houses a month in the state of New York. [CCTV-America]

¶ In a breakthrough proposal, Dominion Virginia Power is planning to build solar power plants generating 400 MW of electricity in the state, with the energy coming online by 2020. The Richmond-based utility expects to invest $700 million in the large-scale solar photovoltaic projects in a number of locations. [Richmond.com]

¶ Representatives from 20 different groups are getting together to block the proposed Bakken oil pipeline’s path across Iowa. The pipeline would carry oil across 18 Iowa counties on its way to the Gulf coast. A legal battle can be launched now that a permit application was filed with the Iowa Utilities Board. [KIWARadio.com]

¶ The probability of saving money by using solar energy rather than standard grid electricity is 92% for Indiana farm businesses and about 50% for homes, Purdue University energy economists find. Unlike homes, businesses can deduct their investment in solar systems from their revenues. [Purdue Agricultural Communications]

¶ Washington state Senate Republicans want to revise the state’s renewable energy standard to encourage utilities to pay for carbon reductions in the transportation sector. Other proposed amendments for SB 7535 include tax incentives for alternative fuel vehicles and small modular nuclear reactors. [Argus Media]

¶ The governor of West Virginia has approved a law repealing the state’s controversial 2009 Alternative and Renewable Energy Portfolio Act, which required the state to generate 25% of its electricity from renewables or alternative energy sources (including some coal-based technologies) by 2025. [World Coal]

February 5 Energy News

February 5, 2015

World:

¶ North Eastern Electric Power Corporation has commissioned a 5-MW solar power plant at Monarchak in Tripura, which will be the biggest and the first of its kind in northeast India. NEEPCO will set up a 50-MW solar power plant in Madhya Pradesh and a 2-MW plant in Lanka in Nagaon district of Assam. [The Week]

¶ Developer and operator WPD has exported first power from its 288 MW Butendiek offshore wind farm some 32 km west of the island of Sylt in the German North Sea. The first of 80 Siemens SWT 3.6-120 wind turbines to be installed has commenced trial operations and is feeding electricity into the grid. [reNews]

¶ Welspun Renewables Energy Limited has signed an agreement to build a 100-MW solar photovoltaic power project in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. This follows other agreements by other companies to set up solar projects in Gujarat, Rajasthan and, Karnataka to totalling over 13 GW. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Tohoku Electric Power Company found more than 4,000 improper entries in its inspection records for one of the reactors at its Onagawa nuclear power plant. Japan’s Nuclear Regulation Authority had said company inspections were lax, and the firm was re-examining its records. [Citizens for Legitimate Government]

US:

¶ The electric power industry is turning away from coal, and clean energy is growing again in the US as investments in renewables increased in 2014 after a three-year decline. The 2015 Sustainable Energy in America Factbook report says US as second in the world behind China for clean energy investments. [Climate Central]

¶ In the current legislative session, Republicans who control the Washington state senate jumped into the discussion of how to reduce emissions of heat-trapping gases. Senators from both parties outlined a plan for promoting such “carbon reduction investments” as electric-vehicle chargers and efficiency. [Bellingham Herald]

¶ The San Diego County Board of Supervisors voted Wednesday to give tentative approval to a pair of proposed solar projects in Boulevard that are expected to generate enough energy to power around 46,000 homes. They are the 420-acre Tierra Del Sol Solar project and the 765-acre Rugged Solar project. [KUSI]

¶ Labor, business, and environmental leaders have formed a unique coalition that will urge Illinois lawmakers to pass new standards for energy efficiency and renewable energy, leading to tens of thousands of new, local jobs. More than 100,000 individuals across the state already work in the clean energy industry. [Forbes]

¶ Energy use in federal post offices, court houses and military bases has dropped to its lowest level on record. The sharp decline is largely thanks to a Bush-era push to slash electricity and fuel consumption in thousands of facilities and vehicles. The total was the lowest since record keeping began in 1975. [Investing.com]

¶ The US National Renewable Energy Laboratory has joined the Electric Power Research Institute to launch the Clean Energy Incubator Network to improve the performance of clean energy business incubators, connect potential partners, and advance new clean energy technologies from researchers. [Renewable Energy Magazine]

¶ Southern Co expects the firms building its new nuclear plant in Georgia will pay $240 million in damages if the construction schedule slips another year-and-a-half, power company CEO Thomas Fanning said Wednesday. The payments would offset a portion of the extra costs associated with late completion. [Access North Georgia]

February 4 Energy News

February 4, 2015

Science and Technology:

¶ Siemens introduced Spectrum Power 7 Microgrid Management System, the company’s first advanced microgrid management software. It allows microgrid operators to manage and control distributed energy resources dynamically with integrated weather and load forecasting, based on the microgrid’s goals. [PennEnergy]

World:

¶ European day-ahead electricity prices went sharply lower in January as wind power generation posted new records in Germany and the UK. The Platts Continental Power Index fell 7.44% in January to €35.81/MWh compared to December’s €38.69/MWh. The Index was down 11.12% from January 2014. [Your Renewable News]

¶ SunEdison, Inc and Brakes India Limited announced that they have installed a solar power plant to generate 7.72 MW at Brake India’s facilities in Munanjipatti in the state of Tamil Nadu. A Solar Purchase Requirement states that high tension wire customers must source 6% of their energy use from solar. [Your Renewable News]

¶ Renewable energy accounted for 14.8% of Estonia’s total electricity consumption in 2014, 2.2% more than in the year 2013, LETA/Public Broadcasting reports. Estonia has taken a commitment to bring the share of renewable energy in the total consumption to 17.6% by the year 2020. [The Baltic Course]

¶ The installation of a solar power station which could provide enough electricity to serve 4,500 homes is getting underway near the UK town of Tring. The proposals involve the construction of a solar park capable of generating up to 15 MW of electricity. The park will be on farmland, which can remain productive. [Hemel Gazette]

¶ Africa’s first grid-connected biogas plant will begin supplying power by March 1. The $6.5 million anaerobic digester in Kenya will consume an annual 50,000 tons of organic waste. The power that the 2.8-MW will put on the grid will cost $0.10/kWh compared with $0.38/kWh for diesel-generated power. [Bloomberg]

¶ Indian wind power capacity additions are expected to go up 10% to 2300 MW during the current financial year 2014-15. As on December 31, 2014, the total installed wind power capacity was 22,465 MW, constituting 9% of the overall installed capacity in the country and 66% of the renewable energy segment.
[Times of India]

US:

¶ According to a recent US Forest Service study, current policies in the European Union and elsewhere requiring the use of renewable and low greenhouse gas emitting energy are driving demand for wood pellets used for bioenergy. Such a demand could provide new markets for US timber exports. [CleanTechnica]

¶ A major Midwest utility holding company is teaming up with a Massachusetts equipment maker to create a statewide series of microgrids, including one in the Albany, New York Region. Microgrids using locally supplied power, including from renewable sources, can operate even during overall grid disruptions. [Albany Times Union]

¶ LaCrosse, Wisconsin-based Gundersen Health System has gone off the grid. As of October 14, 2014, the nonprofit healthcare network became the first hospital to offset all of its fossil fuel use with locally produced, green energy. After an energy audit, Gundersen turned to efficiency and renewable power. [Healthcare Finance News]

¶ For those focused on our transition to renewable energy, the general takeaway from the monthly US electricity generation report is that renewables had increased to 14.8% of US electricity generation in November 2014, and 13.5% for the year through November. This is despite a decline in hydropower due to weather. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Frustrated by its lack of influence in the siting of solar projects in town, the Rutland Town Select Board is distributing a resolution asking all Vermont municipalities to call for more municipal involvement in the Certificate of Public Good process required in permitting renewable energy projects in the state. [Vermont Public Radio]

¶ Arizona is one step closer to officially declaring nuclear power a renewable-energy source. (Yes, you read that correctly.) The Senate Committee on Water and Energy narrowly passed SB 1134, a bill that classifies nuclear power from recycled fuel or naturally occurring thorium to be a renewable-energy source. [Phoenix New Times]