Archive for the 'solar' Category

November 14 Energy News

November 14, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “The elephant in the room” There’s an African saying, “How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time.” Here in Vermont, achieving 90% renewable energy by 2050 can be done one house, one business, and one institution at a time. [Commons]

¶   “The six U.S. nuclear power plants most likely to shut down” A report by investment research firm Morningstar in its latest Utilities Observer publication warns about the sector’s risks. The nuclear power industry is melting down financially. [Grist]

Science and Technology:

¶   Eos Energy Storage says it has a breakthrough energy storage systems that could make a huge impact on the energy market. The 1-MW/6-MWh Aurora energy storage system can reportedly achieve 10,000 cycles and costs $160/kWh for a DC system. [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶   Two separate coalitions of green businesses and energy companies representing more than €250 billion of annual revenue and 176,000 jobs have thrown their weight behind the push for a new renewables target for 2030. [Business Green]

¶   Electricity from the Kalkbult solar PV power station flowed into the national grid on Tuesday, making it South Africa’s first solar plant to come online – three months ahead of schedule. The 75 MW plant will generate power for 33,000 households. [South Africa.info]

¶   A remote-controlled robot has succeeded in pinpointing two holes in the containment vessel of the damaged Unit 1 reactor at Fukushima Daiichi. The robot’s camera captured images of water leaking into the building housing the reactor. [RTT News]

¶   The head of the World Energy Council has warned that without governments providing financial support to nuclear power projects, the sector’s share of the power generation market will remain stationary. [PennEnergy]

US:

¶   Facebook says it will begin operating its new data center in Altoona in early 2015 powered entirely by renewable energy that will come from a new wind project in Wellsburg, Iowa. [DesMoinesRegister.com]

¶   By 2015, Nebraska will have the potential to generate more than 1,200 megawatts of electricity from wind farms. Nebraska currently has 459 megawatts of installed wind power capacity but will add 750 megawatts this year and in 2014. [Lincoln Journal Star]

¶   Google and global private equity firm KKR are to make a joint $400m investment into six solar plants – five in California and one in Arizona – with a combined capacity of 106 MW of electricity. [NewNet]

¶   A new report, “The Values of Geothermal Energy: A Discussion of the Benefits Geothermal Power Provides to the Future US Power System,” has been released by the Geothermal Energy Association and the Geothermal Resources Council. [Renewable Energy Magazine]

¶   A report by the Union of Concerned Scientists says that the NRC is ignoring its own safety regulations at Diablo Canyon. They say the plant is located dangerously close to recently discovered fault lines, which could potentially put people living nearby at risk. [KCOY.com]

285

November 13 Energy News

November 13, 2013

World:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

US:

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

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

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

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

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

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

309

November 12 Energy News

November 12, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “The $523 Billion In Fossil Fuel Subsidies Is Money We’re Not Spending On Renewables” One of the hardest problems in halting climate change is the way countries continue to subsidize the problem, and the problem is fossil fuels. [Co.Exist]

¶   “Quebec holds the answer to Ontario’s power problems” A plan to increase nuclear power generation would cost twice as much as what Quebec is selling: clean, renewable power for right now. [Toronto Star]

Science and Technology:

¶   A recent breakthrough from and the DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory could spark U.S. solar manufacturing when the approach hits the assembly line next year. The approach simplifies manufacture and lowers costs. [Energy Tribune]

World:

¶   Nicaragua is what many experts call a paradise of renewable energies. The country has extensive geothermal resources, resulting from its large volcanic chain and seismic activity, with excellent exposure to the wind and sun and a variety of water sources. [Nicaragua Dispatch]

¶   Iceland’s president Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson, says developing geothermal and hydropower resources boosted their economy and slashed carbon dioxide emissions. Iceland now wants to export its clean energy model to Europe, the US and China. [Petroleum Economist]

¶   China will build more renewable power plants through 2035 than the European Union, U.S. and Japan combined, according to the IEA. The share of renewable energy sources in world electricity supply will rise above 30% in that period. [Businessweek]

¶   Japan’s flagging anti-nuclear movement is getting a boost from two former prime ministers, Junichiro Koizumi and Morihiro Hosokawa, who are calling for atomic power to be phased out following the Fukushima disaster. [Richmond Times Dispatch]

¶   Donald Trump’s legal challenge to an offshore wind farm project is expected to get under way on Tuesday. He opposes the 11-turbine project off the Aberdeenshire coast, claiming it will spoil the view from his nearby luxury golf course. [stv.tv]

US:

¶   The Vermont Electric Cooperative hopes to build the state’s largest utility-owned solar power project as part of the effort to reduce dependence on fossil fuels. The 5 MW project would be built in the western part of the co-op’s service territory. [Barre Montpelier Times Argus]

¶   A new power plant that burns wood and sawdust is now producing power at Domtar Corp.’s paper mill in north-central Wisconsin. The biomass plant produces up to 50 MW of electricity, while also supplying steam to the paper mill. [Wisconsin State Journal]

¶   MidAmerican Energy Co. has unveiled additional details about its plan to develop up to 1,050 megawatts of additional wind generation in Iowa by the end of 2015. Construction activity is now underway at each of the five project sites. [RenewablesBiz]

342

November 11 Energy News

November 11, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “3 Ways Superstorm Sandy Could Change Utilities Forever” Half of Manhattan went black after Hurricane Sandy overwhelmed a substation one year ago. But Manhattan was relatively lucky. Most of the lights came on within days. Not so for other places … [theenergycollective]

World:

¶   Japan switched on the first turbine at a 1000 MW wind farm 20 kilometers (12 miles) off the coast of Fukushima on Monday, feeding electricity to the grid tethered to the tsunami-crippled nuclear plant onshore. [Ventura County Star]

¶   Eltek, the world leader in high efficiency power systems for telecommunications, industrial applications and renewable energy projects has more than 430 successfully deployed solar projects in 17 African countries. [Your Renewable News]

¶   The Chief Development Officer of Energy and Climate Change for Sydney, Australia, intends to have the city rely 100% on renewable energy sources for power, heating, cooling, and transport by 2030. [CleanTechnica]

¶    Abundance Generation is in the business of crowdfunding solar and wind projects where everyone benefits.  The company finances clean, renewable energy projects. Individuals can participate in these projects by investing as little as £5. [Crowdfund Insider]

¶   Two Maryland-based companies have  announced they have been awarded a contract to build, operate, and transfer three solar sites, each of 100 MW, in the eastern region of Ethiopia. [Your Renewable News]

¶   Serbian Minister of Energy, Development and Environmental Protection Zorana Mihajlovic says that the construction of a nuclear power plant in Serbia is out of question for environmental reasons and because it would be extremely expensive. [Balkans.com Business News]

¶   Fundy Tidal and Clean Current Power Systems have signed an agreement to test and demonstrate a 3.5 meter diameter Clean Current tidal turbine as part of a Tidal Power System project in Digby County, Nova Scotia. [Energy Business Review]

¶   Officials, experts, and other workers interviewed by the AP say the quality of the tanks at Fukushima Daiichi suffered because of unavoidable haste, because there is so much contaminated water leaking from the wrecked reactors. [Las Vegas Sun]

US:

¶   Starting in 2014, California is implementing a tsunami of building code revisions called Title 24. These revised building codes will move California’s residential and commercial buildings toward Zero Net Energy, making as much energy as they take. [Triple Pundit]

¶   The United States Department of Energy has announced a plan to spur solar power deployment by cutting red tape for residential and small commercial rooftop solar systems. Cutting red tape can cut a large part of the costs of a system. [SmartMeters]

¶   A wind farm just west of Anchorage produced 50,092 megawatt hours of energy at the one-year anniversary September 24. That’s enough power for about 6,422 homes. Now, its owners are planning on doubling the wind farm’s size. [Anchorage Daily News]

¶   Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station officials have announced the pending layoff of seven administrative positions, and no one should be surprised. It is hard for a nuclear plant to make money in the face of cheaper energy alternatives and new regulations. [Wicked Local Kingston]

229

November 10 Energy News

November 10, 2013

A Helping Hand:

¶   After the devastating typhoon, it may be months before power is restored to some parts of the Philippines. A Chicago-area non-profit called Watts of Love hopes to have 10,000 solar lights to the area by Christmas. [CBS2 Chicago]

World:

¶   The Scottish island of Gigha is to be the focus of a £2.5 million experiment aimed at solving a major technological problem: how to store energy generated by wind, tide and wave power plants. [The Guardian]

¶   Ethiopia is planning to multiply its power output by five over the next five years, increasing from 2,000 MW to 10,000 MW. Primary power sources will be wind, hydro, and geothermal. [Tadias Magazine]

¶   The European Commission’s energy chief says a proposal on mandatory disaster insurance for nuclear power plants will be presented in coming weeks. The proposal may be one of the first items on the European Parliament’s agenda after May elections. [Las Vegas Sun]

¶   TEPCO will begin implementing a plan early next month to freeze water in tunnel pipes where they connect with turbine buildings as part of a battle to remove highly radioactive water accumulated in the pipes at Fukushima Daiichi, according to sources.[The Japan News]

¶   Another leakage of water with excessive concentration of radioactive substances has taken place at the Fukushima-1 nuclear power plant in Japan, the Tokyo Electric Power Company, which operates the power plant, says. [The Voice of Russia]

US:

¶   Consumers Energy has broken ground on the 105 MW Cross Winds Energy Park, located in Akron and Columbia townships of Tuscola County, Michigan. The project is scheduled to feature 62 General Electric 1.7 MW turbine units. [SmartMeters]

¶   The USDA has announced it is awarding nearly $10 million to a consortium of academic, industry and government organizations to research using insect-killed trees in the Rockies as a sustainable feedstock for bioenergy. [Prairie Star]

¶   Now is the right time to purchase solar panels for your home or business according to a group of solar panel local experts in Colorado.  They spoke in favor of alternative power and said it is time to ditch your local power company and invest in solar. [Daily Herald]

¶   In 2011 and 2013, Xcel spent more than $2 million telling the citizens of Boulder that the utility knows better than the community when it comes to power production. Now Boulder has voted 2 to 1 in favor of a municipal utility. [CleanTechnica]

¶   Three Rutland residents are forming a group they call “Vermonters for Responsible Solar” to oppose plans for a 2.3 MW solar power installation that would be built in part of a 15-acre field in the Vermont town. [Danbury News Times]

¶   The fire at Unit 1 at the Beaver Valley Nuclear Power Station Tuesday night was caused by degraded electrical cable insulation, NRC officials said Friday. The insulation on the cables was found to have some cracking. [Timesonline.com]

¶   The owner of a North Texas nuclear power plant has tabled its request for federal permission to expand the plant. Luminant Generation had asked the NRC for a license to build two new reactors at Comanche Point, but is putting the request on hold. [CBS Local]

119

November 9 Energy News

November 9, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “Climate Science, Nuclear Power, and a Renewable Energy Future” The usefulness of nuclear power for avoiding the worst impacts of climate change is limited at best. Renewable energy technologies are cheaper, less risky, and ready for deployment today. [The Equation: Blog of the Union of Concerned Scientists]

¶   “Clean energy in big business: How to make it happen” WWF’s Power Forward report showed 60% of Fortune 100 and Global 100 companies have climate goals, but buying and investing in renewable energy is challenging. [Christian Science Monitor]

¶   “CNN Documentary Propagates 3 Nuclear Power Myths” The pro-nuclear power film “Pandora’s Promise” claims nuclear is less expensive than renewables, downplays nuclear waste issues, and blames anti-nuclear “scare-tactics” for lack of deployment.  [Media Matters for America]

Science and Technology:

¶   According to David Olinger, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, tethered underwater kites could be used to generate large amounts of electricity by harnessing the power of ocean waves and currents. [inhabitat.com]

World:

¶   The UK’s largest offshore facility for wind farm testing has received planning consent. The National Renewable Energy Centre will construct 15 turbines with a total capacity of 99.9 MW off the coast of Blyth, Northumberland, at a cost of £350 million. [BBC News]

¶   German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives and the Social Democrats agreed to retain a moratorium on fracking for gas and cut incentives for wind power in areas where it is abundant, if they form a new coalition government. [Reuters]

¶   Scottish Renewables has published a set of standards which will deliver numerous benefits for local communities including improved financial benefits and a more consistent approach to the development of community benefits packages. [Renewable Energy Magazine]

¶   A floating experimental wind turbine set around 20 kilometers off the coast of the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant is seen to be a huge step toward building the world’s largest offshore wind farm, and possibly replacing nuclear power. [The Japan Daily Press]

US:

¶   Farmers Electric Co-op, the oldest rural electric cooperative in Iowa, has plans to purchase about nine acres of land close to their headquarters near Kalona. The co-op manager says they are about to take solar power to a whole new level. [WRAL.com]

¶   A glitch in the wording of a state law has prevented solar power from being purchased for Illinois electric customers even though they are paying into a fund for that purpose. So far, they have paid $53 million. [Chicago Tribune]

¶   Hoosier Energy and local guests celebrated official start-up of the Livingston Renewable Energy Station just north of Pontiac, Illinois. The newly refurbished adds a 15 MW generating to Hoosier Energy’s clean energy portfolio. [MyWebTimes.com]

¶   California leads the nation in solar installations, with ambitious targets for the percentage of power generated through sustainable means. Examples include the Adobe Star, California Community College, and the San Luis Obispo County PV projects. [GetSolar.com]

¶   Arizona announced that Apple is opening up a new manufacturing facility there. In announcing the new facility Governor Jan Brewer and the Arizona Commerce Authority also said that Apple would power the facility with solar and geothermal power. [Clean Energy Authority]

¶   For the third time in 18 months, inspectors have uncovered missing flood seals at the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant, a problem that could compromise the plant’s ability to operate electrical safety systems. [Barre Montpelier Times Argus]

¶   A string of unplanned shutdowns in the past year at Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station has led the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to downgrade the performance rating of the 41-year-old Plymouth facility and increase scrutiny by regulators. [Boston Globe]

November 8 Energy News

November 8, 2013

World:

¶   A Dutch organization called Better Energy puts some perspective on German power in a new study. Facts: Subsidies for Nuclear and fossil fuels are three times those of renewables; the Leipzig Insurance Forum says a meltdown could cost up to €6 trillion; … [CleanTechnica]

¶   The Federal Government of Nigeria is set to provide more than 420 megawatts of renewable energy for nine states in the northern part of the country, Secretary, National Energy Council, Ibrahim Njiddah, has said. [BusinessDay]

¶   UK renewable energy expert UrbanWind is getting new orders. It believes the government’s price guarantees for the new Hinkley Point nuclear reactor will move companies towards less expensive renewable alternatives and energy independence. [AltEnergyMag]

¶   The UK’s biggest developer of solar farms plans to spend £100 million developing 20 sites in Northern Ireland over the next two years. The same land solar farms occupy could be used for grazing or could greatly enhance biodiversity. [Ulster Star]

¶   Last year Japan became the second largest importer of fossil fuels in the world, second only to China. The main reason for this was the catastrophic failure of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant and the response to it. [Energy Global]

¶   The operator of Japan’s wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant will double the pay of contract workers as part of a revamp of operations at the station, after coming under criticism for its handling of clean-up efforts. [The Malay Mail Online]

US:

¶   Massachusetts is enticing residents, businesses and public agencies to reduce emissions and heating and cooling costs by making $32 million available to seven programs that will fund renewable heating and cooling projects. [Biomass Magazine]

¶   A new paper from two Iowa State University economists concludes that an American Petroleum Institute study predicting higher fuel prices as the result of increased renewable fuel standard ethanol mandates is flawed. [Ethanol Producer Magazine]

¶   Senators Tom Udall (D-N.M.), Mark Udall (D-Colo.), and Ben Cardin (D-Md.) have introduced the Renewable Electricity Standard Act of 2013 (S.1595), which would create a national standard of 25% renewable energy generation by 2025. [POWER magazine]

¶   Zero Waste Energy Development Company is starting the first large-scale dry fermentation anaerobic facility in the United States. It will process up to 90,000 tons per year of organic waste, generating about 1.6MW of clean renewable power. [EON: Enhanced Online News]

¶   First Wind was joined today by state and community leaders and renewable energy and solar industry representatives for a groundbreaking ceremony to mark the start of construction of its 14 MW solar project in Warren, Massachusetts. [AZoCleantech]

¶   The US DOE has unveiled a plan to cut red tape for residential and small commercial rooftop solar systems in an effort to reach the Obama Administration’s goal of doubling renewable electricity generation by 2020. [pv magazine]

¶   On the eve of a visit by NRC chairwoman Allison Macfarlane, the union that represents workers at the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Plant in Plymouth reported Thursday that plant owner Entergy plans to lay off “several” workers there. [The Patriot Ledger]

November 7 Energy News

November 7, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “Is the world’s fossil fuel ‘addiction’ an illusion?” To successfully address climate change, the first thing we need is a positive vision about the future and human ingenuity, and the second is recognition that it will take real effort. [eco-business.com]

¶   “Fossil fuel subsidies equal $112 per adult in rich countries” The world’s richest countries are “shooting themselves in both feet” by providing high subsidies to the fossil fuel industry, according to a report from the Overseas Development Institute. [Responding to Climate Change]

Science and Technology:

¶   Research from Sheffield University’s faculty of engineering shows mixing plutonium-contaminated waste with blast furnace slag and turning it into glass reduces its volume by up to 95 per cent. It also locks in the radioactive plutonium, creating a stable product. [Yorkshire Post]

World:

¶   As Ontario is in the final stages of a decade-long plan to eliminate all coal facilities in the province by the end of 2014, Samsung Renewable Energy and partners expect to invest $5 billion to create a 1,369 MW green energy cluster of wind and solar resources. [POWER magazine]

¶   An innovative project in the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island has been working on the task of matching renewable energy supply to demand on a smart grid by operating a virtual power plant, which can adjust both. [Greentech Media]

¶   A leading German Social Democrat warned on Wednesday that the European Union planned to investigate German renewable energy discounts for industry, a move that could end up hitting a raft of companies operating in Europe’s biggest economy. [Reuters]

¶   TEPCO is preparing to remove 1,533 nuclear fuel assemblies from the spent fuel pool in Fukushima Daiichi’s Unit 4. New equipment has been installed, and the working environment has been cleaned of debris from the explosion the building had in 2011. [Asahi Shimbun]

US:

¶   Voters in three communities in Colorado succeeded in passing fracking moratoriums or outright bans on election night Tuesday. Anti-fracking measures passed handily in the Colorado cities of Lafayette, Boulder and Fort Collins, but may have failed in Broomfield. [Huffington Post]

¶   Westar Energy reached agreement with Apex Clean Energy to purchase 200 megawatts of electricity from a wind farm Apex will build near Arkansas City. Construction is anticipated to begin in 2015, and the wind farm is expected to begin providing electricity in late 2016. [WIBW]

¶   The U.S. Department of Agriculture has awarded nearly $10 million to a consortium of academic, industry and government organizations led by Colorado State University to research using insect-killed trees in the Rockies as a sustainable feedstock for bioenergy. [EIN News]

¶   Xcel Energy has filed a proposal filed with the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission to encourage rooftop solar generation by paying an incentive based on the amount of energy rooftop systems produce, rather than providing an upfront payment. [Fierce Energy]

¶   U.S. motorists will spend $7 billion to $11 billion more on gasoline next year if the government scales back ethanol use requirements, according to the Renewable Fuels Association. [Bloomberg]

¶   A new 1.4 MW utility-owned fuel cell is now in full operation at Cal State San Bernardino. Integrated into the campus’s central plant, the fuel cell is generating electricity to the utility grid with waste heat to the campus at no cost to the university. [InvestorIdeas.com]

November 6 Energy News

November 6, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “Dave’s atomic white elephant: Hinkley Point C is a truly terrible deal for the consumer” Nuclear physics is a mysterious subject to most of us, but not nearly so incomprehensible as nuclear economics. [Conservative Home]

¶   “5 Reasons Solar Is Already Beating Fossil Fuels” The solar industry is growing dramatically every year, while fossil fuels continue to be phased out. Solar is no longer the cottage industry it was decades ago. [Huffington Post]

Economics and Finance:

¶   Wind farms and solar parks are changing hands at record rates, signaling both an increased taste for the assets among pension funds and hard times for utilities that are the biggest sellers. [Bloomberg]

World:

¶   Wind energy giant Vestas recently announced that it is expanding its wind energy education campaign, “Acts on Facts,” to the Swedish, UK, and Irish markets. The campaign was created to educate the general public and counter common misconceptions about wind power. [CleanTechnica]

¶   The European Commission’s energy department published today (5 November) guidance for member states on how to award subsidies for electricity generation. The aim is to bring greater clarity and predictability to processes, particularly in feed-in tariffs for renewable energy. [European Voice]

¶   Spanish wind turbine manufacturer Gamesa has signed a framework agreement for the supply of up to 285 MW in Finland. The deal with TuuliWatti covers up to 57 of the company’s G128 and G132 5 MW machines. [reNews]

¶   Canadian Solar has selected ABB, a world leader in power and automation technologies, and its consortium partner Bondfield Construction Company to supply a 100 MW PV power plant in Ontario. The solar farm will be Canada’s largest PV project. [Your Renewable News]

¶   Kyocera has announced the launch of a 70 MW solar power plant in Kagoshima Prefecture, southern Japan. The Kagoshima Nanatsujima Mega Solar Power Plant went online on November 1. [Your Renewable News]

¶   On-site renewable energy schemes could save businesses up to £33 billion between 2010 and 2030, according to new calculations from analyst firm Verdantix that suggest distributed generation from renewable technologies could generate significant economic benefits. [Business Green]

¶   In the UK, renewable energy capacity has increased by almost 40% since 2012, with renewables now supplying a record of more than 15% of electricity generation and employing 35,000 people. Businesses have invested £31 billion in renewables over the last three years. [Plastics & Rubber Weekly]

US:

¶   New research released by an independent grid operator confirms that wind energy is drastically decreasing both the price of electricity and emissions of harmful pollutants. The study was led by PJM, which serves all or parts of 13 Mid-Atlantic and Great Lakes states. [CleanTechnica]

¶   In Colorado, Xcel Energy earlier this year set a new record, generating 60.5% of its electricity using the wind, up from its previous 56.7% record. At the time, the wind farms generated 1,874 MW of the total 3,100 MW load (power demand from Xcel’s generator network). [CleanTechnica]

¶   Hawaiian Electric Co. is asking Hawaii regulators to allow it to negotiate with developers of six additional renewable energy projects that could be up and running quickly to provide electricity on Oahu at a lower cost. [Pacific Business News (Honolulu)]

November 5 Energy News

November 5, 2013

World:

¶   The UK’s biggest developer of solar farms has said it wants to spend £100 million developing 20 sites in Northern Ireland over the next two years. Lightsource Renewable Energy is currently considering two large-scale farms in County Antrim and one in County Down. [H&V News]

¶   PetroEnergy Resources Corp. on Tuesday announced the Philippine Electricity Market Corp.’s  approval for MGI’s power facility in Santo Tomas, Batangas, to be a direct trading participant in the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market, effective November 4. [Business Mirror]

¶   Lightsource Renewable Energy is investigating installing a 6.5 MW solar farm at a farm in Devon. A key aspect of the solar farm could be the role solar development could play in boosting local biodiversity, including consideration for hedgerows and a wild flower meadow. [Solar Power Portal]

¶   Researchers in Fukushima on the Pacific coast of Japan are uncovering higher than expected rates of thyroid cancer in children. One prominent former thyroid surgeon – a veteran of the Chernobyl disaster – says that cancer cases in Fukushima are appearing faster than expected. [Radio Australia]

US:

¶   As part of an effort to become carbon neutral, Microsoft Corp. has entered a 20-year deal to buy power from a new wind farm in Texas, the first time the tech giant is directly purchasing electricity from a specific source. [Longview News-Journal]

¶   Existing law in Michigan sets a 10% target for renewable power that must be met in 2015. A report issued Monday to Gov. Rick Snyder says 15% renewable power by 2020 and 30% by 2035 are “achievable.” [Iron Mountain Daily News]

¶   Southern Power, a subsidiary of Southern Company, and Turner Renewable Energy have started commercial operations of the 139 MW Campo Verde solar facility in Imperial County, California. The project includes 2.3 million PV modules, and will power around 48,000 homes. [Energy Business Review]

¶   Michigan is about to become one of only a handful of states to generate more than a gigawatt electricity from wind power. More than 40 companies in the wind industry now employ more than 3,000 Michiganders. [CBS Local]

¶   Many Mainers are surprised to know that nuclear waste is still stored at the former Maine Yankee site in Wiscasset. Even more shocking is that if you use electricity in Maine, you are paying to maintain that waste. [WLBZ-TV]

¶   Entergy Nuclear wants another $790,000 in attorney’s fees on top of its earlier claim of $4.6 million from the state of Vermont over the energy’s company fight with the state over the future operation of the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant. [Barre Montpelier Times Argus]

November 4 Energy News

November 4, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “Nuclear energy verdict: Costly, slow and very high maintenance” An analysis from Deutsche Bank makes some interesting observations about the cost of nuclear, the comparisons with gas, the price of abatement, and the cost of upkeep for France’s existing fleet. [RenewEconomy]

¶   “Australia poised to ride a wave of success” The immense power of Australia’s oceans has the potential to provide huge amounts of clean energy if we can get the technology and the policy settings right. It could also create a major opportunity to create a high-value export industry. [Business Spectator]

Science and Technology:

¶   Four of the world’s leading environmental scientists urged politicians and environmentalists to back the development of ‘safe’ nuclear power plants to stop global warming, instead of planning to rely on solar and wind power, which they said was ‘unrealistic’. [Daily Mail]

World:

¶   Scotland’s Energy Minister has warned that the UK Government’s Electricity Market Reform proposals could undermine Scotland’s renewables sector and supply chain, while threatening security of supply across the UK, and further price increases on consumers bills as a result. [The Edinburgh Reporter]

¶   Azerbaijan’s State Agency for Alternative and Renewable Energy Sources reports that potential capacity of alternative energy sector in Azerbaijan exceeds existing generating capacities of traditional energy sector, and is talking about ending use of oil and gas. [Azerbaijan Business Center]

¶   Wind and solar farms have become an accepted part of the Cornish landscape and can even enhance the visitor experience, according to a major new survey of holidaymakers in Cornwall. Of visitors polled, 94% said they make no difference, and 4% found them an added attraction. [DCA]

¶   Solar power produces electricity at mid-day, when it is most needed, when prices use to be highest. In Germany, peak wholesale electric prices have dropped 30%, and in southern Italy, the wholesale price of electricity at noon is nil, because home-produced solar provides all needs. [The Guardian]

¶   South Africa approved 33.8 billion rand ($3.3 billion) for 17 clean-energy projects in the third of five bidding rounds of a program to cut its reliance on coal. The Department of Energy received bids for 6,023 megawatts of capacity and allocated 1,456 megawatts. [Businessweek]

US:

¶   Vote Solar and the Interstate Renewable Energy Council concluded the policy outlook for distributed generation from solar energy is bright as ever in Freeing the Grid 2013, the 7th annual report card ranking all 50 US states on net metering and interconnection policies. [RenewEconomy]

¶   The city council of Cambridge, Massachusetts has created a “Getting to Net Zero” task force framework as a step to a new building code. The aim is to require that all new large-scale buildings be net-zero producers of carbon emissions. [Cambridge Chronicle]

November 3 Energy News

November 3, 2013

Executive order by President Obama:

¶   “PREPARING THE UNITED STATES FOR THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, and in order to prepare the Nation for the impacts of climate change …” [Newsroom America]

Opinion:

¶   “The Financial Case for Divestment of Fossil Fuel Companies by Endowment Fiduciaries” by Bevis Longstreth, Former SEC Commissioner. Rising global temperatures are a reality, and so too is the primary cause: Energy-related CO2 emissions caused by human-beings. [Huffington Post]

Science and Technology:

¶   New research from the University of Delaware suggests the existing tight grid layouts of offshore wind farms reduce power generation. Spacing turbines farther apart and staggering rows decreased output losses from eddies 14% and improved overall performance by 33%. [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶   In the 1990s, a wave of sell-offs swept away countless publicly owned enterprises. But now the trend is being reversed in Germany. In a referendum in Hamburg a month ago, 51% voted to buy back the energy grid the city sold. [BBC News]

¶   A revolution is under way in personal finance in the UK. Investment in clean energy projects is going retail, as people plough their savings and pension funds into renewable energy ventures offering much greater returns than bank deposits. [The Ecologist]

¶   Recent political messaging risks undermining job creation and investment in the UK’s renewable energy industry, the Renewable Energy Association has warned. recent moves putting energy policy at the center of political electioneering’ are increasing perceived investor risk. [OilFiredUp]

¶   TEPCO has accepted Washington’s offer to help with the cleanup and decommissioning of Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. The move comes as TEPCO prepares for the major operation of removing fuel rods from Unit 4. [RT]

US:

¶   Nebraska ranks 13th in the nation for potential solar production, yet only half a percent of the energy produced in Nebraska is, in fact, solar. That could change if Nebraska would allow residents to join a community solar garden, allowing credit on their electric bills. [Kota]

¶   In just weeks the Texas electrical grid will get another 18,500 MW, all from wind power farms in West Texas, as 3,600 miles of transmission lines come into service. The system also utilizes the best electrical storage technology. [Marshall News Messenger]

¶   A new analysis by an anti-nuclear organization says earthquake risks were seriously underestimated when Washington state’s only commercial nuclear power plant was built about 30 years ago at the Hanford nuclear reservation. [Bend Bulletin]

¶   Scientists at the University of Alaska are concerned about radiation leaking from Japan’s damaged Fukushima nuclear plant, and the lack of a monitoring plan. Some radiation has arrived in northern Alaska and along the west coast. [CBC.ca]

November 2 Energy News

November 2, 2013

Investment and finance:

¶   As renewable energy companies have grown and improved profits, their stocks have outperformed big oil by a wide margin. While ExxonMobil and Chevron showed declines in revenue, earnings from First Solar and SunPower have crushed everyone’s expectations. [DailyFinance]

¶   World demand for electric vehicles is projected to increase 6.5% per year to $122.5 billion in 2017. In the mature motor markets of the US and Western Europe, growth in demand will be driven by rebounding motor vehicle production and a healthier fixed investment environment. [InvestorIdeas.com]

Science and Technology:

¶   Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI), Taiwan’s largest high-tech applied research institution, has introduced the first biochemical technology for bio-butanol transportation-fuel production with a negative carbon footprint. It can achieve a transportation-fuel price of $2.00/gallon. [InvestorIdeas.com]

World:

¶   Irish state-owned utility Bord na Móna has announced plans to establish a new wind energy export business, a clean energy hub which will generate 2 GW when operational and create an export business worth €1 billion in annual revenue. [Renewable Energy Magazine]

¶   Iran plans to widely expand its use of renewable energy, according to Iranian Deputy Energy Minister Houshang Falahatian. Iran’s private sector will build 600 wind power turbines by the end of the current Iranian calendar year (March 20, 2014). [Tehran Times]

¶   Some 300 million manats (about $380 million) have been invested in the development of alternative and renewable energy sources in Azerbaijan. The plan is to achieve 20% renewables by 2020, which will cost about 7 billion manats ($8.9 billion). [AzerNews]

¶   TEPCO President Naomi Hirose said the utility will work with the U.S. Department of Energy in decommissioning the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant and in dealing with radioactive water amassing at the site. [The Japan Times]

US:

¶   The Skylands Sierra Club Group will host a presentation about an initiative called NJ FREE, a renewable energy policy plan for New Jersey, seeking adoption of a state requirement for 80% renewable electricity by 2050, with an intermediate requirement of 30% by 2025. [The Advertiser News South]

¶   A new report from Progress Now says that of the 37 bills introduced in 2013 attacking states’ renewable portfolio standards, which set minimum levels for power from renewable sources like solar and wind, only one had any success, and that was partial. [Huffington Post]

¶   Duke Energy has established a group that will determine how to develop and operate solar projects at its regulated utilities. The utilities currently purchase some renewable energy, but they own almost no generating capacity of their own. Duke expects that to change. [Charlotte Business Journal]

¶   As part of the international Open Government Partnership, which President Obama formed in 2011, he announced the US will start publishing annual totals of federal subsidies for fossil fuels. There are 60 countries participating in the Open Government Partnership. [SustainableBusiness.com]

November 1 Energy News

November 1, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “Graph of the Day: Nuclear prices itself out of market” The extent to which nuclear is being priced out of electricity markets has finally been revealed by the pricing mechanism unveiled by the British government in the deal to subsidize the Hinkley C nuclear. [RenewEconomy]

Science and Technology:

¶   Increases in global emissions of CO2 slowed to 1.1% in 2012, down from an average annual increase of 2.9% over the last decade. This is remarkable, as the global economy grew by 3.5%. Meanwhile, the share of the ‘new’ renewable energy sources solar, wind and biofuel went from 1.1% in 2006 to 2.4% in 2012. [Business Spectator]

¶   A multi-million Euro project has advanced global progress on capturing tidal and wave energy. Estimates suggest that 0.1% of ocean generated energy could be capable of supplying the entire world’s energy requirements five times over. [Balkans.com Business News]

¶   Lockheed Martin and Beijing-based Reignwood Group are to kick off design work on a 10 MW Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion plant in a drive to commercialize the technology. The companies signed a contract that will see the US giant provide project management, design and systems engineering services. [reNews]

World:

¶   Azerbaijan’s State Agency for Alternative and Renewable Energy Sources is preparing feasibility study for construction of hybrid power stations to work on wind, solar and biogas energy in 10 regions of the country. Each station will make 30 MW. [Azerbaijan Business Center]

¶   German citizens owned 48% of the nation’s solar PV capacity in 2012, or roughly 15 GW. This compares to only 3%, or roughly 1 GW held by utilities. For overall renewable energy including wind and biofuels, citizens held 47%, or 34 GW, as compared to 9 GW (12%) held by utilities. [solarserver.com]

¶   The Areva-Siemens consortium has increased its claim against Finnish utility Teollisuuden Voima Oyj to €2.6 billion ($3.5 billion) in relation to the delay and cost overruns of the Olkiluoto EPR. Areva-Siemens had previously sought damages of €1.9 billion ($2.6 billion) from TVO. [World Nuclear News]

US:

¶   Senator Markey, D-Mass., has introduced his first bill since joining the Senate. It would require utilities to get at least 25% of the power they sell from renewable sources such as wind, solar, hydro, geothermal and biomass, but 2025. The starting requirement would be 6% from such sources in 2015. [The Patriot Ledger]

¶   Xcel Energy customers interested in solar energy will have a redesigned incentive for rooftop solar under a proposal filed today with the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission. The proposed system would provide an incentive based on the amount of energy produced, rather than making an upfront payment. [4-traders]

¶   After Arizona’s largest utility admitted it had been secretly contributing to outside nonprofits running negative ads against solar power in Arizona, a utility commissioner is asking for all the key players in a debate over a solar energy policy in the state to be open about PR campaigns. [Huffington Post]

 

October 31 Energy News

October 31, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “UK Risks Looking ‘Economically Insane’ on EDF Nuclear Deal” At a cost of 16 billion pounds ($26 billion), Hinkley Point C will be the most expensive power plant per megawatt produced. EDF is set for returns of as high as 35% and the contract may create cash dividends of as much as £80 billion at the expense of UK consumers. [Businessweek]

Science and Technology:

¶   Copper foam batteries — a new, cheaper-to-manufacture, faster-to-charge, and longer-lasting alternative to the batteries in common use today — may soon be headed to the commercial market. [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶   The leaders of British Columbia, California, Oregon, and Washington just formally joined forces to reduce emissions and transition toward renewables by signing the Pacific Coast Action Plan on Climate and Energy. [CleanTechnica]

¶   Prime Minister David Cameron’s review of green levies won’t touch renewable subsidies for solar power and wind, a statement from the Department of Energy and Climate Change suggests. The department’s tacit support for the Renewables Obligation and Feed-in Tariff has reassured some green energy trade groups. [Energy Live News]

¶   Three counties in the southwest of England are the top UK domestic solar producers. Devon has 17,564 installations on people’s homes, producing 61,683 kW of energy. Cornwall is second with 9,584 domestic schemes which generate 35,572 kW of electricity. Wiltshire was a distant third with 5,234. [This is Cornwall]

¶   Dutch utility Eneco has been granted the final permit for its 210 MW Q4 West wind farm in the North Sea off Bergen aan Zee. The 70-turbine plan is around 26 kilometers offshore and immediately west of the company’s already consented Q4 project, which totals 78 MW. [reNews]

¶   In Brazil, wind is emerging as a prize for energy planners who see the howling gusts that arrive from the east as a way to offset fresh limits imposed on hydropower. A string of wind-turbine parks is being built in the nation’s windiest stretches, in what planners here see as the beginning of an extraordinary transformation. [Washington Post]

¶   Offshore wind power installations are on track for a seventh consecutive annual record in 2013. Developers added 1,080 MW of generating capacity in the first half of the year. Although still small compared with the roughly 300,000 megawatts of land-based wind power, offshore capacity is growing at close to 40% a year. [Treehugger]

¶   A new update from the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy in India has proclaimed the country has passed the 2 GW landmark for grid-connected solar. The figures showed that, as of September 30, 2013, the total solar installed capacity was just over 2000 MW, while off-grid power amounted to just south of 140 MW. [CleanTechnica]

¶   Anti-nuclear protesters, many wearing business suits, marched in Tokyo district in the evening of Oct. 30. The group started at a park near Shinbashi Station at 7 p.m and marched nearly 2 kilometers in the business district, shouting slogans such as “No to restarts,” “Stop contaminated water” and “Stop export.” [Asahi Shimbun]

¶   South Korea may be thinking about reducing its dependence on nuclear power, but a new report from the International Atomic Energy Agency said the country would struggle to provide enough energy if it did so. South Korea has no natural energy resources to fill the holes left by a declining use of nuclear power, IAEA said. [PennEnergy] (Presumably the IAEA believes that in South Korea the sun never shines, the wind never blows, the tide never changes, the earth has no warmth, rivers do not flow, …)

US:

¶   In an important decision, the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania has found ground mounted solar photovoltaics to be an “accessory use” permitted as of right in all zoning districts. Contrary zoning interpretations had been risking stalling parts of the clean energy sector. [CleanTechnica]

¶   RGS Energy, the commercial and utility division of Real Goods Solar, and St. Albans Solar Partners have completed a new 2.2 MW solar farm ahead of schedule. The energy produced by the PV system in Vermont is expected to generate approximately 3.1 million kWh annually, enough energy to power more than 400 homes. [RenewablesBiz]

¶   New York state Attorney General Schneiderman is criticizing the NRC’s assessment of waste storage risks and calling on the NRC to strengthen its proposed assessment of the environmental, public health and safety risks of storing highly radioactive nuclear wastes on-site at the more than 100 reactors around the country. [Long Island Exchange]

October 30 Energy News

October 30, 2013

From the REV Conference:

¶   The Board of Directors of REV presented a near-term goal of “20 by 2020” at their conference and exposition Tuesday, calling it critical to address climate change, strengthen our local economy and meet the state’s clean energy goal of 90 percent by 2050 goal. [Vermont Biz]

Science and Technology:

¶   Nearly a third of the world’s economic output will come from countries facing “high” to “extreme” risks from the impacts of climate change within 12 years, according to a new report, the Climate Change Vulnerability Index, from UK-based risk analysis firm Maplecroft.[CNN]

¶   Temperature anomalies develop in the earth beneath cities. In the past decades, groundwater in conurbations heated up considerably. This heat can be utilized to produce electricity. [Daily Fusion]

World:

¶   Mainstream Renewable Power Ltd., a Dublin-based renewable-energy developer, will build three wind farms totaling 360 megawatts in South Africa. Mainstream is investing about 9 billion rand ($910 million) in the project. [Businessweek]

¶   Sunlabob Renewable Energy and Fondation Energies pour le Monde have announced the completion of a solar-powered mini-grid that is now delivering reliable, affordable electricity to nearly 500 people in a remote village in Luang Prabang Province, Laos. [pv magazine]

¶   Honda is aiming to be more proactive in using renewable energy to minimize the environmental footprint of its business activities. Honda Energy do Brasil will be the first automaker in Brazil to start wind power generation business. [4-traders]

¶   The £165 million Sleaford Renewable Energy Plant began burning straw on Tuesday, October 22, and is due to be fully operational from January next year. The plant will burn up to 50 bales of straw an hour creating enough electricity to power 65,000 homes [This is Lincolnshire]

¶   On September 1, 2013 Ukrainian renewables produced more than 1 billion kWh. The amount of energy from renewable sources for the first 8 months of this year in the Ukraine is 32% greater than what was produced in the whole entire year of 2012. [Ukrainian Biofuel Portal]

¶   Huge interest in large-scale solar PV and wind energy generation has delayed proceedings in the third round South Africa’s national renewable energy program. Final decisions have not been taken after a total of 93 bids were made. [RenewEconomy]

¶   While nuclear power advocates within the ruling Liberal Democratic Party are unhappy about their former leader Koizumi repeatedly calling for abolishing all nuclear plants, opposition politicians woo him to counterattack the pro-nuclear Abe administration. [Asahi Shimbun]

¶   Switzerland’s state-controlled energy company BKW said its Muehleberg nuclear plant would go offline in 2019, as the country seeks to exit nuclear power in the wake of the Fukushima disaster. [Straits Times]

US:

¶   Two US Senate Democrats, Mark Udall of Colorado and Tom Udall of New Mexico, have unveiled a bill requiring utilities to generate 25% of their electricity from renewable energy sources, including wind and solar, by 2025. [Platts]

¶   The Fort Calhoun nuclear power plant, near Omaha, is being heated up to test its pressurized steam pipes for leaks after an outage that dates to April 2011, federal regulators said Tuesday. [DesMoinesRegister.com]

¶   Nuclear safety experts say there are problems with how employees are screened and trained at the Dresden nuclear plant. Two people are being charged with conspiracy to rob a bank at a time they were employees. Other employees have had troubles with police. [Nuclear Street – Nuclear Power Portal]

October 29 Energy News

October 29, 2013

From the REV Conference

¶   Vermont and Upper Austria have signed an agreement to collaborate on the promotion of biomass heating. Vermont and Upper Austria are both recognized leaders in biomass heat as a local and renewable heating source. Upper Austria has a goal of 100% renewable heat by the year 2030. [vtdigger.org]

¶   Vermont could create thousands of jobs if it used locally produced biomass to heat about 20 percent of the state’s homes and businesses using modern, energy-efficient equipment, an official said Monday. [NewsOK.com]

Science and Technology:

¶   The Australian Renewable Energy Agency late last week announced “the launch of the world’s first one megawatt wave-energy-to-electricity unit.” The unit derives power indirectly from passing waves, as the changes in height of a water column cause changes in air pressure to turn turbines. [EarthTechling]

¶   Twenty one Nobel prize winners-including South African anti-apartheid campaigner Desmond Tutu-are calling on the EU to immediately implement the Fuel Quality Directive (FQD) which would see tar sands labelled as dirtier than conventional fossil fuels. [TheGreenCarWebsite.co.uk]

World:

¶   According to the International Energy Agency, power generation from non-hydro renewable sources including solar, wind, and bioenergy will exceed gas and nuclear by 2016, and renewable power is expected to increase by 40% in the next five years. Bioenergy has an advantage of creating useful heat.[EP Magazine]

¶   Analysis from BCCONSULT says that at one point in early October, high renewable production drove the electricity price index covering Germany, Austria, France and Switzerland to 2.75¢/kWh at 2:00 pm. Renewable power produced nearly 60% of German grid demand and the grid did not explode. [Greentech Media]

¶   According to the Ontario Public Health Association, coal-fired power plants in Ontario accounted for 15% to 25% of the province’s a decade ago. By the end of next year, that figure will be zero, as renewable energy production and demand reduction allow the last coal plant to close. [Chatham Daily News]

¶   The first Spanish offshore wind turbine has been erected in the Canary Islands despite an industry lacking in state support. The 5 MW turbine is located at the end of a dyke and stands 154 metres (505 feet) tall with 62.5-metre (205-feet) long blades. It will be able to supply electricity to 7,500 homes. [Renewable Energy Magazine]

¶   The governor of Niigata Prefecture, says TEPCO’s processing and distribution of information on Fukushima Daiichi is “institutionalized lying.” His prefecture is the home of Kashiwazaki Kariwa, the world’s biggest nuclear complex, and he wants the company to come clean before restarting the plant. [The Japan Daily Press]

US:

¶   A1 Organics in Eaton, Colorado, the region’s largest commercial composting and organic recycling company, announced it has entered an agreement, worth tens of millions of dollars, with a renewable energy business to develop what could be the largest anaerobic digester project in the US. [Greeley Tribune]

¶   A federal complaint, filed at the U.S. District Court in Pittsburgh, alleges that the plaintiffs were diagnosed with some form of cancer as a result of the negligent and reckless operation, remediation and/or decommissioning of two nuclear materials processing facilities in western Pennsylvania. [The Pennsylvania Record]

¶   Federal regulators plan to take public comment at a Nov. 6 meeting in Orlando, Florida on a proposed rule and an environmental study on the effects of extended storage of spent fuel after nuclear plants close. At issue is the federal “waste confidence” policy. [Tampabay.com]

October 28 Energy News

October 28, 2013

Finance:

¶   The upgrades to the outlook for the solar PV market continue, with analysts at Deutsche Bank now suggesting that some module manufacturers expect the global market to rise as high as 50 GW in 2014. [reneweconomy]

World:

¶   The first Energy Efficiency Market Report was just released by the International Energy Agency. In 2010, the most recent data year, savings from energy efficiency was greater than the output from any fuel source, including coal, oil, nuclear and gas. [theenergycollective]

¶   According to latest energy statistics, Britain is more than halfway to hitting its 2020 renewable-generated electricity targets. Figures for the second quarter of 2013 show that 15.5% of Britain’s generated electricity came from renewables, and offshore windpower increased 50% from 2012. [Seawork International]

¶   Scotland’s renewable energy sector has received a further boost, after the government late last week approved an extension to one of the country’s largest onshore wind farms. Nine wind turbines will be added to the Mid Hill wind farm, bringing the total to 34 and the capacity to 102 MW. [Business Green]

¶   In terms of purchasing power, Berlin has the most expensive electricity in Europe. But steep electricity prices have not dampened Germany’s support for the policies driving high prices. Distributed power is mostly owned by local people and organizations who benefit from the policies. [Forbes]

¶   A vast program of financing solar, wind and other renewable electricity technologies for developing countries using the UN’s new Green Climate Fund is being proposed. A report by the World Future Council suggests feed-in tariffs in developing countries as an effective financial tool. [Responding to Climate Change]

¶   It started with a few bogus safety certificates for cables shutting a handful of South Korean nuclear reactors. Now, the scandal has snowballed, with 100 people indicted and Seoul under pressure to rethink its reliance on nuclear power. [Reuters India]

¶   Attempts by TEPCO to restart reactors in another nuclear power complex was blocked on Monday by Japan’s nuclear regulator which suggested TEPCO to improve its management in crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant first. [Xinhua]

¶   Nuclear Regulation Authority Chairman Shunichi Tanaka held a rare meeting Monday with Tokyo Electric Power Co. President Naomi Hirose to discuss ways to get a grip on the radioactive water spilling from the crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant. [The Japan Times]

US:

¶   This summer, there were waiting lists for bus tours of the Lake Winds Energy Park in Ludington, in Michigan. The tour was created in response to the sheer number of people who would stop their cars and take pictures of the energy park’s 56 industrial sized pinwheels. [CleanTechnica]

October 27 Energy News

October 27, 2013

Finance:

¶   Al Gore has spent most of this week flooding the media with the idea that oil and gas stocks are sub-prime investments, saying the are absurdly overvalued and encouraging investors to dump their holdings in fossil fuel companies. Some investment managers agree. [Motley Fool]

World:

¶   Challenged by the surge in distributed renewables and a strong decline in revenues, one of Europe’s largest utilities, RWE, is reportedly planning to transform itself completely from a traditional electricity provider into a renewable energy service provider. [theenergycollective]

¶   The market for renewable chemical ingredients, replacing petrochemicals, is booming. The overall renewable chemical ingredient market is expected to top $83 billion by 2018, compared with $57 billion this year, according to the research firm Markets and Markets. [DesMoinesRegister.com]

¶   The first phase of Dubai’s $3.3 billion Mohammed Bin Rashid Solar Park has gone live as part of a push to diversify energy supplies in the UAE. The initial 13 MW photovoltaic plant is the biggest of its type in the Middle East and North Africa. [Utilities-ME.com]

¶   Africa’s biggest wind farm, at Ashegoda in Tigray, Ethiopia, has been inaugurated after a three-year construction period. The 120 MW wind farm is expected to produce a total of 400,000 MWh per year. [The Ecologist]

¶   Starting early November, TEPCO engineers will remove 1,533 rods of highly irradiated spent fuel from the damaged storage pool alongside the Number 4 reactor and move them, without exposing them to air, to safer longer-term storage. The project will take 18 months. [South China Morning Post]

US:

¶   2013 has been slower for the wind industry in Kansas than last year, its backers say, but they pointed to signs it will improve in 2014. Records were set in 2012, when capacity increased to 2,713 megawatts, a gain of more than 1,441 megawatts. [Topeka Capital Journal]

¶   Connecticut’s Public Utilities Regulatory Authority has approved a plan for UIL Holdings, parent company for United Illuminating, to install solar panels on nine acres at an old landfill in Bridgeport. The plan is to use approximately 1000 solar panels for about 5 MW of power. [Ct Post]

¶   A 15 MW solar to be built by SolarCity for Hawaiian Electric, will be the state’s largest utility-scale solar project and will trim annual oil use by 1.8 gallons while saving $64 million over its lifetime. The fact that Hawaii uses oil for power is why power is so expensive there. [EarthTechling]

¶   Aroostook County, Maine is becoming a major hub for wind power development. Two companies are installing major wind farm. One, at 250 MW, will be New England’s largest, but the other, of 150 MW, is not far behind. [Kennebec Journal]

¶   Entergy, Pilgrim’s owner and operator, has poured $500 million into the 41-year-old plant since buying it in 1999, yet various problems have forced the operation to shut down six times this year, making it No. 1 in the U.S. fleet of 100 commercial nuclear reactors for shutdowns. [Capecodonline]

October 26 Energy News

October 26, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “Solar expert tells Cameron – UK solar can build Hinkley Point C in two years” A leading UK solar energy generator has written an open letter to David Cameron, urging the government toward immediate deployment of sustainable energy technologies. [Energy and Environmental Management Magazine]

World:

¶   Chinese wind turbine manufacturer Goldwind has orders for 4.2 GW, including overseas orders of 151.75 MW, with a further 3.62 GW of deals waiting to be inked. The company has also had a marked increase in profits. [reNews]

¶   Senior officials of the UK’s Department of Energy and Climate Change are seeking to exploit a loophole that will allow the UK Government to extend the legally binding renewable energy targets for 2020 by a further two years. [Click Green]

¶   Poland could halve its demand for coal by 2030 with a shift to renewable energies that would end its image as a laggard in European Union efforts to slow climate change, according to a study by researchers in Germany and Poland and environmental groups. [Reuters]

¶   A 7.3 magnitude earthquake hit the Pacific Ocean about 200 miles east of Japan’s main island, the US Geological Survey reported. The Japanese Meteorological Agency issued and then cancelled a tsunami advisory for the area around Fukushima Daiichi. [CNN]

US:

¶   The Energy Information Administration issued a report that shows continued declines in America’s carbon intensity. It says US cut carbon dioxide emissions by 3.8% last year – a decline that came even as population and economic productivity increased. [theenergycollective]

¶   The US DOE’s Advanced Research Projects Agency – Energy has a new program aiming to accelerate widespread EV adoption by improving driving range and reliability. Some research will be done by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. [Today’s Energy Solutions]

¶   In California, Imperial County officials have approved a deal that aims to restore the declining Salton Sea. The deal hinges on generating $3 billion in revenue from selling renewable geothermal energy. This may have risks of causing earthquakes. [Neon Tommy]

¶   Carrying colorful signs, chanting songs and faking their own deaths, dozens of members of the University’s Student Climate Culture club and other participants rallied for divestment at the board of trustees’ October meeting this afternoon. [Vermont Cynic]

¶   In the race for commercial solar power, Wal-Mart is way out ahead. The company now has almost twice as much capacity as second-place Costco. A better comparison: Wal-Mart is converting more sun into energy than 38 US states. [Bloomberg]

¶   The GAO has concluded that no one has taken responsibility for assessing and managing risks to the US lithium-7 supply. The isotope is needed to run 65 US nuclear power plants, and the only current sources are Russia and China. [Chemistry World]

¶   In Vermont, the Shumlin administration is recommending that Vermont Yankee be allowed to continue operating through the end of next year, but with conditions that include setting aside at least $60 million for a site restoration fund. [BurlingtonFreePress.com]

October 25 Energy News

October 25, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “New nuclear is a lose-lose situation for Britain” Looking at the numbers closely reveals that the Hinkley nuclear deal is a public confession of the failure of a technology that was never and probably will never be built and operated at competitive cost. [The Conversation]

¶   A decade ago, nuclear and renewable energy each provided some 15% of global electricity. Last year renewable energy provided more than 20% and nuclear only around 10%. But utility company resistance has derailed reform in Japan. [GlobalPost]

Finance:

¶   A coalition of 70 investors, collectively worth $3 trillion, have launched the first-ever coordinated effort to spur the world’s top fossil fuel companies to assess the financial risks that climate change poses to their business. [Responding to Climate Change]

World:

¶   Network operators TenneT and TransnetBW have teamed up to build Germany’s longest power line to transport surplus wind power from northern regions into the south, a key step in the country’s effort to move away from nuclear power. [Business Spectator]

¶   Twelve miles out to sea from  Fukushima Daiichi, a giant floating wind turbine signals the start of Japan’s most ambitious bet yet on clean energy. Japan has space to install many such turbines, and each can provide power for 1400 homes. [NEWS.GNOM.ES]

¶   A coalition of business groups and unions this week jointly warned that German political leaders must unite to keep the country’s energy transition plans alive. They say the new government needs to speak with one voice on the energy transition. [iStockAnalyst]

¶   Work on a 40 MW wind farm has been started by Bord na Móna at Bruckhana, Co. Tipperary. Ireland has a renewable energy target to meet 40% of electricity demand from renewable sources by 2020 and is making progress towards it. [Build.ie]

¶   John Ferneley College, in the UK has drastically cut its demand for electricity from the National Grid with a 50 kW solar PV system, a wind turbine, and a biomass boiler. Much of its needs are met on a cloudy day, and when the sun shines they are all met. [Leicester Mercury]

¶   A new record was set for wind power in Portugal when it briefly supplied 84% of the nation’s needs. So far this year, renewable energy – wind power, hydro power, biomass and photovoltaic plants have supplied 58% of Portugal’s domestic consumption. [The Portugal News]

¶   According to Frost & Sullivan, South Africa is on track to becoming one of the fastest growing renewable energy markets in the world. The country’s procurement program aims to generate 3,725 MW of the country’s total electricity from renewable sources. [Fierce Energy]

¶   Many issues of national importance to Japan, probably including the state of the Fukushima power plant, may be designated state secrets under a new draft law. Once signed, it could see whistleblowers jailed for up to 10 years. [RT]

¶   For months, it has been hard to escape the continuing deluge of bad news from the devastated Fukushima nuclear power plant. Tons of contaminated groundwater leak into the Pacific Ocean every day, and new accidents add yet more radioactive materials. [New York Times]

US:

¶   Scaled-back renewable-fuels targets leaked from the Environmental Protection Agency are still excessive, according to the American Petroleum Institute in a Thursday press call. [National Journal]

¶   DTE Energy announced that the first 13 wind turbines at Echo Wind Park, in Huron County, Michigan, have been commissioned. The 70-turbine wind farm is scheduled to commence commercial operation by the end of November. It will produce 112 MW. [EnergyOnline]

¶   Dairyland Power Cooperative will  suspend indefinitely operations at the last two Alma Station coal-based units in Wisconsin by the first-quarter of 2015. The board is looking to diversify its energy resources, including growth of its renewables. [Electric Co-op Today]

October 24 Energy News

October 24, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “The dark forces lined up against renewables in Australia” The Australian renewables industry is under no illusion about the extent of the forces lined up against it following the election of a highly conservative Coalition government in Canberra. [RenewEconomy]

¶   “Divest From Fossil Fuel Stocks Before ‘Carbon Bubble’ Bursts” Al Gore has warned that individuals, investment funds, and institutions should divest from fossil fuel companies before the great “carbon bubble” bursts in world financial markets. [The9Billion]

World:

¶   The UK’s Treasury announced on Monday that it would be looking at renewable energy as part of a series of infrastructure development projects worth £33 billion. Pre-qualified biomass, wind, and waste-to-energy projects are already on the list. [Blue & Green Tomorrow]

¶   The Danish island of Samsø went from being fossil fuel dependent to operating 100% on renewables in eight years. Power producers include farmers and co-ops of residents. They export enough electricity from wind to compensate for their fuel for vehicles. [RenewEconomy]

¶   UK Prime Minister Cameron’s pledge to roll back some green levies has already run into staunch opposition within the coalition. Deputy Prime Minister Clegg may not support cuts to environmental schemes that create green jobs, and reduce fuel bills. [Business Green]

¶   Radiation level of water from a drainage channel at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in Japan has more than doubled, the plant’s operator, the TEPCO said Thursday. It is at 140,000 becquerels per liter of beta radiation at a tank that leaked. [CRIENGLISH.com]

US:

¶   Western Massachusetts Electric Company has commenced construction on a new solar plant in Springfield, Massachusetts, on the site of a former landfill facility. The 3.9 MW PV plant will produce enough power for 600 local homes. [pv magazine]

¶   Chicago-based New Generation Power has been awarded a Multiple Award Task Order Contract by the US Army to develop geothermal and solar power generation projects for Department of Defense installations. [IT Business Net]

¶   NJR Clean Energy Ventures, a subsidiary of New Jersey Resources, has announced acquisition of its first onshore wind project. The Two Dot wind farm will be located in Montana and have a total capacity of 9.72 megawatts. [Your Industry News]

¶   Businesses that use renewable natural gas, or RNG, created from food and yard waste can reduce greenhouse gas emissions as much as 90% by switching away from diesel, according to a guide produced by Energy Vision and funded by the US DOE. [Environmental Leader]

¶   Duke Energy plans to increase how much it relies on renewable energy only modestly, from 1% next year to just 2% in 2028. The utility is concentrating on natural gas. [WFAE]

¶   The US Army aims to replace old generators with hydrogen fuel cells. Army scientists have been working to cut down on the fuel consumption of forward operating bases in order to lower the costs associated with such bases. [Hydrogen Fuel News]

¶   The Vermont State Nuclear Advisory Panel, which advises state government on nuclear issues, passed a resolution saying the Vermont Yankee plant should be dismantled promptly after it shuts down next year. [Vermont Public Radio]

October 23 Energy News

October 23, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “3 Reasons Germans Are Kicking Ass & Taking Names With Renewable Energy” Germany is racing past 20% renewable energy on its electricity grid, but what news stories often leave out is the overwhelming popularity of the Energiewende and why it so prevalent. [CleanTechnica]

¶   “UK Nuclear Future Relies on Reactor Plagued by Delays” To ensure the future of its nuclear power industry, the UK is relying on an unproven reactor design plagued by delays and billions in budget overruns. [Bloomberg]

World:

¶   German scientists estimate that out of a total of 30 million tons of cereal straw produced annually in Germany, 8 to 13 million could be used for energy or fuel. This would provide 1.7 to 2.8 million average households with electricity and 2.8 to 4.5 million with heating. [inhabitat]

¶   Revised statistics on the small wind industry indicates that the UK surpassed 100 MW of installed small wind capacity in 2012. Total installed small wind capacity will approach 200 MW this year. By comparison, at the end of 2012, the US had an installed small wind capacity of 216 MW. [RenewEconomy]

¶   With the Coalition government set to review Australia’s 2020 Renewable Energy Target early next year, Australia’s biggest utility, Origin Energy, has declared that the nation has already nearly met its 20% goal, and that further mandatory target would only drive up the cost of electricity. [RenewEconomy]

¶   Greenpeace Australia Pacific and 100% Renewable have released a report, Strangling Renewables: Origin Energy’s campaign against renewable energy, which accuses Origin Energy of strangling renewables as part of a strategy to prolong the dominance of gas and fossil fuels. [Business Spectator]

¶   The European Commission said Tuesday it would examine British government support for a massive €19 billion nuclear plant to be built by French and Chinese firms. The deal guarantees the price for electricity produced over 35 years at about double the prevailing rate. [AFP]

¶   A Japanese government committee is now looking into a drastic overhaul of the nuclear industry, which would include building a single entity to manage the 50 reactors which are all currently offline for maintenance and security checks. [The Japan Daily Press]

¶   After years of delays, Kerala received its first allocation of power from the Koodankulam Nuclear Power Project early Tuesday morning as part of a test run. Regular supply is expected to begin soon, officials said. [The New Indian Express]

US:

¶   In yet another demonstration of the US military’s transition to renewable energy, the Air Force Research Laboratory is eyeballing a computer center in Hawaii to demonstrate an advanced system for collecting, storing and using solar power. [CleanTechnica]

¶   Three US offshore wind projects are advancing. The 468 MW Cape Wind in Nantucket Sound, Deepwater Wind’s 30 MW Block Island project in Rhode Island and Fishermen’s Energy’s 25 MW scheme off New Jersey aim to wrap up final permitting and financing in the coming months. [reNews]

¶   Washington state law requires utilities to have 3% of the electricity from renewables by the end of this year. Critics of the law had forecast high customer costs. Now, the agency responsible is certifying that the law has been complied with, and the cost turns out to be very low. [The Seattle Times]

¶   The National Grid opened its Sustainability Hub to provide consumers with hands-on education about energy efficiency and emerging energy technologies. The facility, located in Worcester, Massachusetts and is a part of National Grid’s Smart Energy Solutions Program. [SmartMeters]

¶   EDF Renewable Energy has started construction of the Lepomis Solar Project, located in Plymouth, Massachusetts. The 5.96 MW ground-mounted fixed-tilt solar PV project will deliver power to the Town of Wareham, under a long-term power purchase agreement. [Solar Industry]

¶   Utilities in western states are required to buy a specific amount of renewable energy under state laws, but they are purchasing more than required in order to reduce their use of fossil fuels, because it will save them and their customers money. [Natural Resources Defense Council]

October 22 Energy News

October 22, 2013

Science and Technology:

¶   A new report explains how ‘wrong time’ renewable energy generated by solar or wind could be used to liquefy air as a means of storing energy, which could then be used to generate electricity when needed, and provide a convenient and low-cost fuel for vehicles. [Click Green]

World:

¶   Aquamarine Power, based in Edinburgh, is currently testing their second full-scale prototype, the Oyster 800, at the European Marine Energy Centre in Orkney. It is planning to put up to 50 such machines off the island of Lewis, as part of a 40 MW system. [Your Renewable News]

¶   The world’s largest and most powerful offshore wind turbine is now standing at Energy Park Fife in Scotland and is due to become operational later this year. The 7 MW Fife turbine will deliver enough electricity to power 4,800 homes. [Your Renewable News]

¶   Citing the nation’s renewable energy solicitations, Frost & Sullivan (Mountain View, California, U.S.) forecasts that renewable energy will grow from 1% of South Africa’s energy supply in 2012 to 12% in 2020. [solarserver.com]

¶   TEPCO said Monday that rainwater from a weekend storm became contaminated as it collected behind barriers meant to stop radiation leaks. The toxic water overflowed those barriers at several locations, with some of it possibly spilling into the Pacific Ocean. [New York Times]

¶   Radiation cleanup in some of the most contaminated towns around the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant is far behind schedule, so residents will have to wait a few more years before returning, officials said Monday. [The Japan Times]

¶   Taxpayers will underwrite the Hinkley Point nuclear generator to the tune of up to £1 billion a year – with no guarantee of lower power bills. Energy Secretary Ed Davey also failed to say how many people would get work from the construction of the £16 billion plant. [Mirror.co.uk]

¶   A backlash was growing yesterday over the agreement with French-owned energy giant EDF to build a nuclear power plant which could put British electricity bills up for 35 years, with a £1billion per year subsidy going to French and Chinese companies. [Express.co.uk]

¶   Energy Minister  Fergus Ewing responded today to the UK Government’s announcement about the nuclear plant, saying “Nuclear energy cannot be relied on for our energy needs,” and pointing out that UK subjects will be paying for the plant past mid-century. [The Edinburgh Reporter]

¶   The UK nuclear deal sets the wholesale price of power from the plant at £92.50/MWh for 35 years. Solar providers anticipate solar is set to require around £86/MWh for 15 years in the year 2019/20, with the price going down from there. [Click Green]

US:

¶   Suniva, Inc., a metro-Atlanta based manufacturer of high-efficiency crystalline silicon solar cells and modules, is celebrating six years as America’s leading U.S.-based solar manufacturer. [Your Renewable News]

¶   Some low-income neighborhoods across the US are getting a helping hand from a nonprofit solar installer, which leads teams of volunteers and green job trainees in installing solar PV systems exclusively for low-income homeowners. [CleanTechnica]

¶   Three coastal nuclear power plant sites in the path of Sandy — Millstone Power Station in Connecticut and the Salem and Hope Creek nuclear plants in New Jersey — were identified as being the country’s most vulnerable nuclear plants to storm surge in a research paper. [The Rushville Republican]

 

October 21 Energy News

October 21, 2013

Travel:

¶   The Thumb of Michigan, where the wind is strongest and most consistent, offers a scenic drive that can be a jaw-dropping experience. It has 618 wind turbines already operating or scheduled to go into service by next year. [Livingston Daily]

World:

¶   JinkoSolar, a global leader in the solar PV industry, has announced signing a strategic agreement with a local authority in Jiangsu Province, to develop 120 MW distributed PV power plant within 3 years. Once built, it will be the largest distributed PV power plant in China. [Your Renewable News]

¶   London-based Albion Ventures is pumping £9.3m into a 2 MW hydropower scheme on the Allt A’Chonais in the Scottish Highlands. The project will be developed by Perth-based Green Highland Renewables, and is projected to produce an average 7 GWh of electricity per year. [reNews]

¶   A 900 kW wind turbine is being installed at Gòb Sgùrabhal, on the Isle of Barra. The island now joins the group of islands with wholly community-owned wind turbines from Gigha in the south, through Tiree, South Uist, Lewis to the Orkney Isles. [Stornoway Gazette]

¶   The largest producer of resins in the Americas, Brazilian petrochemical company Braskem, has announced the launch of a new line of green low density polyethylene, completing its line-up of polyethylene made from renewable sources. [Packaging Europe]

¶   Spanish multinational electric utility company Iberdrola has signed a $116 million-turnkey agreement for the construction of a wind farm in Kenya. The wind farm will have a power capacity of 61 megawatts and will be located 40 kilometers northwest of Nairobi. [EcoSeed]

¶   Highly radioactive water has leaked from the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan after unexpectedly heavy rain on Sunday, its operator said. Water with high levels of the toxic isotope Strontium-90 overflowed containment barriers around water tanks. [BBC News]

¶   French power utility Electricite de France SA confirmed Monday it has reached an agreement with the U.K. government to build a new nuclear power plant, the first in the country in almost 30 years, for a total cost of £16 billion ($25.88 billion). [4-traders]

US:

¶   Illinois Governor Pat Quinn and Shedd Aquarium kicked off the institution’s clean-energy initiative, beginning installation of 913 PV panels on the aquarium’s marine mammal pavilion. Shedd’s Master Energy Roadmap aims to cut energy consumption in half by 2020. [AZoCleantech]

¶   In Colorado, Fort Collins Utilities’ Solar Power Purchase Pilot Program, or SP3, will add approximately five megawatts of solar PV systems, quadrupling the amount of solar capacity in the community. [The Coloradoan]

¶   Xcel Energy has received approval from the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission to add 750 MW from its four wind power projects including Courtenay wind farm, Odell wind farm, Pleasant Valley project and Border winds project on its Upper Midwest grid. [Energy Business Review]

 

October 20 Energy News

October 20, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “Transformative Solar Energy Storage Policy for California” This week the California Public Utilities Commission will vote on a far-sighted proposal that would require the incumbent  utilities to collectively buy more than 1.3 GW of energy storage by 2020. [Energy Collective]

¶   “Thoughts on the Required Power Storage in California” California utilities will have to invest in at least 1.3 GW of storage. Actually, 1.3 GW of storage is not much problem. A 1 GW storage plant was built in Massachusetts forty years ago and is still making money. [geoharvey]

Science and Technology:

¶   A new report from the World Health Organization’s cancer research agency announced the classification of outdoor air pollution and particulate matter (commonly known as soot pollution) as known human carcinogens. [Energy Collective]

World:

¶   Sweden now imports about 700,000 tons of garbage per year to help produce electricity and heating for cities such as Helsingborg, a historic coastal hub of about 100,000 people in southwestern Sweden. But is it green to burn garbage? [The Climate Network]

¶   Generating electricity from the burning of straw, the 38 MW Sleaford Renewable Energy Plant is one of the very first of its type to be built in the UK. It will generate electricity for 65,000 homes and support employment of up to 80 people when it becomes operational. [Sleaford Today]

¶   Leave it to British wits to put to rest any notion that the world’s winter energy woes have been eliminated by the North American natural gas boom. Great Britain’s largest energy supplier, British Gas, announced a 10% price hike just before the cold season. [National Geographic]

¶   An Taisce will go to the High Court in London in December to seek a judicial review challenging the legality of the decision by Ed Davey, the British energy minister, to grant permission to build the Hinkley Point C plant, which will be 150 miles from the Irish coast. [Irish Independent]

US:

¶   The Long Island Power Authority has issued a competitive procurement call for up to 280 MW of “on island” renewable energy capacity including offshore wind, solar and fuel cells by 2018, along with a request for 1630 MW for new peaking resources by 2019. [reNews]

¶   Microgrids are emerging as a credible threat to the dominance of America’s 100-year-old-plus utility monopoly, possibly making these electricity power transmission lines obsolete. NRG Energy Inc. CEO David Crane calls a “mortal threat” to the industry. [Women Citizen]

¶   All Power Labs makes machines that use gasification to turn out carbon-negative energy, with a carbon-rich charcoal by-product that just happens to be an extremely efficient fertilizer. [CNET] (Pictures of the equipment: [CNET])

¶   Westinghouse, developer of the AP1000 power plant, and Georgia Power, which commissioned two units for Vogtle Power Station, have been at odds over costs for two years. The project is now at least 18 months behind schedule and $900 million over budget. [Pittsburgh Post Gazette]

October 19 Energy News

October 19, 2013

Opinion:

¶   “Finally, someone must pay the price for nuclear energy” The great hoax of nuclear power, an endless supply of cheap electricity, is now before us. Someone has to pay both for decommissioning and the ultimate disposal of the nuclear waste. [The Desert Sun]

Science and Technology:

¶   Superconductors could cut carbon emissions by boosting power transmission, transforming wind energy, creating more efficient supercomputers for climate models, enabling renewable energy storage, aiding train travel, and more. [environmentalresearchweb]

Investment and Finance:

¶   Alternative energy is a long-term investment, but returns are already rolling in, says Edward Guinness, co-manager of the Guinness Atkinson Alternative Energy Fund, which is up a whopping 67% year to date. [Resource Investor]

World:

¶   Two of Germany’s big four utilities expect a stabilization of retail power prices over the coming years as falling wholesale prices for electricity will finally feed through after the boom in renewables added additional costs to household power bills over recent years. [Platts]

¶   The Chief Executive Officer of Pakistan’s Alternative Energy Development Board has said about 5,000 MW of electric capacity will be added to the national grid through renewable sources including wind‚ solar and biomass during the next three years. [The Nation]

¶   The high cost of electricity is undermining economic growth in the Caribbean region says OAS Assistant Secretary General, Albert Ramdin. He advised the Caribbean officials to explore renewable energy sources in order to address high energy costs. [The St. Kitts-Nevis Observer]

¶   Coal may still be king – but not for long. Fast-changing economics mean renewables worldwide will represent 34% of all installed capacity by 2030, according to a report from the World Energy Council and Bloomberg New Energy Finance. [CleanTechnica]

¶   Energy bills would be even higher than at present without renewables, Scotland’s energy minister has warned. Bills would be £166 a year higher by the end of this decade without energy such as wind, wave and tidal, according to figures from the UK’s DECC. [The Blairgowrie Advertiser]

¶   An overwhelming majority of Germans polled after the election, some 84%, said the new government should push for a quick switch to an energy system powered 100 percent by renewable sources of energy. [Deutsche Welle]

US:

¶   In light of the devastating impacts of superstorm Sandy, a broad coalition of environmental and renewable energy groups is calling on the Governor to fight climate disruption by making significant commitments to advance wind power for New York. [Long Island Exchange]

¶   Waste Management of Illinois broke ground on a new renewable natural gas facility in East St. Louis. The plant will create high purity methane from decomposing trash in a landfill, which will be used to power vehicles that run on compressed natural gas. [kplr11.com]

¶   A new report from the SUN DAY Campaign citing federal government data says new solar capacity in 2013 is 77.36% higher than that for the same period in 2012. Renewable sources now account for 15.68% of total installed U.S. operating generating capacity. [North American Windpower]

¶   Officials in Ridgewood, New Jersey celebrated a switch to less-expensive power to run the village’s water-pollution control plant on Friday. The plant will be powered with biogas and is expected to significantly reduce the village’s demand on the electric-power grid. [NorthJersey.com]

¶   For more than a decade, nuclear engineer Dr. Walter Tamosaitis has spoken out about the potentially catastrophic hazards at the nuclear waste treatment plant at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in southeastern Washington state. Now he is out of a job. [WTSP]

 

October 18 Energy News

October 18, 2013

Science and Technology:

¶   According to Jacques Amouroux, a chemical engineer at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris, carbon dioxide recaptured could be set to work again. It can be turned back into fuel, used in the manufacture of plastics, or otherwise reused. [Responding to Climate Change]

World:

¶   China State Grid Corp., the nation’s largest power distributor, is boosting efforts to build more electricity networks to enhance the grid’s ability to handle power from new sources such as wind. [Businessweek]

¶   An increasing number of Croatian Adriatic islands want to be independent in terms of energy and are turning towards renewable energy sources which, when owned by citizens, are becoming a strong lever for local sustainable development. [Dalje.com]

¶   A 140 MW wind farm in Germany has come online with a 1 MW electrolysis system to make hydrogen. The hydrogen system stores up to 27 MWh of energy, and increases the efficiency of the wind park by using wind energy that otherwise would be wasted. [Renewable Energy Focus]

¶   TEPCO revealed on Friday that their monitoring instruments at Fukushima Daiichi detected 400,000 becquerels per liter of beta-emitting radioactive substances, including strontium. This level is 6,500 times higher than readings taken a day earlier. [The Japan Daily Press]

US:

¶   Energy efficiency has contributed more to meeting US energy demand than all other resources combined over the past 40 years – more than coal, oil, or nuclear, concludes a report from the Natural Resources Defense Council. [SustainableBusiness.com]

¶   In a decision unprecedented in the United States, on October 17, 2013 the California Public Utilities Commission voted unanimously to adopt an energy storage requirement for the state’s investor-owned utilities. [The National Law Review]

¶   The Omaha Public Power District has approved a plan to buy 400 megawatts of wind power from a proposed wind farm near O’Neill, Nebraska. If all works out, the project would more than double OPPD’s portfolio of renewable energy sources. [Omaha World-Herald]

¶   If you build transmission lines, wind projects will come. Pattern Energy Group announced it has broken ground on its Panhandle Wind project, one of the first wind farms in the region to use Texas’ new Competitive Renewable Energy Zone transmission lines. [FuelFix]

¶   D. E. Shaw Renewable Investments and Bright Plain Renewable Energy have announced the completion of construction of two solar power arrays in Lake County, Indiana. Both are 2.7 MWdc projects. [PennEnergy]

¶   The New York Public Service Commission approved several projects to keep the electricity flowing should the Indian Point nuclear plant shut down, including building and upgrading transmission and power lines between the region and areas farther upstate. [The Journal News | LoHud.com]

¶   Two authors of a 2003 report that found densely packed spent fuel pools like the one at Vermont Yankee create an increased risk of catastrophic release of radioactivity are calling on the NRC to speed up transfer of the plant’s spent fuel back to dry casks. [The Recorder]

¶   Florida State regulators have approved a controversial settlement over who pays for Duke Energy’s $5 billion in nuclear failures. Customers will pay up to $3.2 billion of the costs related to the shuttered Crystal River nuclear plant and the canceled Levy County project.  [Tampabay.com]

October 17 Energy News

October 17, 2013

World:

¶   A former chairman of the Australian Coal Association, who has accused the fossil fuel industry of “stuffing up” effective action on climate change, is fighting an insurgent battle to gain a seat on the board of the mining giant BHP Billiton. [The Guardian]

¶   The world invested $300 billion in energy efficiency in 2011, the most recent year for which the report provides information. That’s about the same amount funneled into renewable energy or fossil-fuel power generation. [FuelFix]

¶   Research done by the World Energy Council finds onshore wind and hydro are already competitive with coal and gas and expects solar to follow suit as deployment increases. The cost of onshore wind and hydroelectricity is already matching coal and gas. [Business Green]

¶   Wednesday brought word that First Solar would install 250-megawatts worth of solar PV in the California desert. But the more interesting solar energy announcement on the day might have been that construction had started on a 100 MW plant in Canada. [EarthTechling]

¶   Scotland’s renewable energy sources are now producing 40% of the country’s electrical demand. This is not insignificant, as Scotland’s latitude places northern parts of the country closer to the Arctic Circle than to London. [OilPrice.com]

¶   Britain will welcome Chinese companies taking stakes, including potentially majority ones, in British nuclear-power projects, U.K. treasury chief George Osborne said Thursday. Mr. Osborne is in China this week as part of a five-day visit. [Wall Street Journal]

¶   A typhoon that swept through Japan has caused more radioactive leaks at the troubled Fukushima plant. Workers there say they have detected high levels of radiation in a ditch leading to the Pacific Ocean and suspect heavy rains lifted contaminated soil. [Yahoo News Canada]

¶   US and European diplomats said discussions on nuclear matters with Iran, the first since Hassan Rouhani was elected president and pledged to repair Iran’s global standing, went into more detail than previous rounds and took place in a better atmosphere. [Businessweek]

US:

¶   The US biodiesel industry is on pace to produce more than the 1.28 billion gallons set under the Renewable Fuels Standard for this year, says a new report from research and consulting firm GlobalData. [Oil & Gas Financial Journal]

¶   As the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has proposed lower targets for the 2014 Renewable Fuel Standard, proponents of biodiesel are wondering why their green fuel is targeted a 20% reduction. [Domestic Fuel]

October 16 Energy News

October 16, 2013

Analysis:

¶   “Why Are IEA Renewables Growth Projections So Much Lower Than the Out-Turn?” The International Energy Agency has had an extraordinarily poor track record in projecting the growth of solar and wind power in recent years. [Energy Collective]

¶   “The future cost of nuclear: expert views differ” In a poll of experts on future costs of nuclear power, it was found the average expected cost of nuclear technologies in 2030 was around $4800 per kW, with estimates ranging from $506 to $14,156 per kW. [environmentalresearchweb]

Science and Technology:

¶   The next generation of energy storage has been developed using graphene to create supercapacitors that could be used for renewable energy storage. Graphene, a one atom thick layer of graphite has high conductivity, and is also strong and flexible. [AZoNano.com]

¶   Researchers at the Technical University of Madrid (UPM) have found that real contribution to emissions targets is positive even in energy markets with high penetration of wind energy. [The Almagest]

World:

¶   France’s ban on fracking is complete, as its constitutional court upheld a 2011 law prohibiting the practice and canceling all exploration permits. The decision effectively protects the ban from any future legal challenge. [CleanTechnica]

¶   Renewable Energy Generation Limited, a UK-focused renewable energy group, has become profitable. The company posted a pretax profit of £5.8 million for the twelve months ended June 30 compared to a pretax loss of £2.0 million the previous year. [London South East]

¶   GE is supplying eight of its 1.4 MW Jenbacher J420 biogas engines for a new cogeneration plant that will generate 11.2 MW of renewable on-site power at the Dan Region Wastewater Treatment Plant, the largest of its kind in Israel. [Your Renewable News]

¶   Construction of what will be Australia’s largest PV power project officially commenced today, with a turning of the sod at the site of the 20 MW Royalla Solar Farm in Canberra by the ACT’s minister for environment, Simon Corbell. [RenewEconomy]

¶   The 20 biggest power companies in Europe had a collective value of $1 trillion at their peak in 2008, and they are worth “only” $500 billion now. Germany’s biggest utility E-On has managed to decline a full three quarters in value. Renewable energy is partly to blame. [RenewEconomy]

US:

¶   Ohio’s clean energy law has come under attack by a lawmaker affiliated with the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). Now, a group of 2,000 veterans, military family members and supporters is pushing back in favor of clean energy. [ThinkProgress]

¶   The Top 25 companies for solar investment, ranked by installed capacity, are Walmart, Costco, Kohl’s, Apple, IKEA, Macy’s, Johnson & Johnson, McGraw Hill, Staples, Campbell’s Soup, U.S. Foods, Bed Bath & Beyond, Kaiser Permanente, Volkswagen, Walgreens, … [PR Web]

¶   The number of safety violations at US nuclear plants varies dramatically by region, pointing to inconsistent enforcement in an industry now operating mostly beyond its original 40-year licenses, according to a congressional study awaiting release. [Omaha World-Herald]

¶   The federal Government Accountability Office says the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant had the second fewest number of safety violations in the Northeast from 2000 to 2012 among facilities with only one reactor. [BurlingtonFreePress.com]

¶   The Indian Point power plant in Buchanan has been cited for more violations than any other nuclear site in the country, although 99 percent were low-risk violations, according to a federal report awaiting release. [The Journal News | LoHud.com]

 

October 15 Energy News

October 15, 2013

World:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

US:

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

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

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

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

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

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

October 14 Energy News

October 14, 2013

Science and Technology:

¶   Hydropower can dramatically alter rivers and destroy the habitat of migratory species such as salmon, but now scientists have shown that it is perfectly possible for rivers to produce more fish and more electricity at the same time. [eco-business.com]

World:

¶   Siemens has installed a “market-ready” version of its 6 MW gearless wind turbine at SSE’s test site in Hunterston, Scotland. They will carry out final testing of the turbine, which uses direct drive technology, before it goes into production. [reNews]

¶   India’s Welspun Energy, which will commission the world’s second-largest solar power plant and two other projects by December, will invest an additional $1.6 billion in new solar and wind projects over three years. [Business Spectator]

¶   Global investment in clean energy fell to roughly $46 billion to $47 billion in the third quarter of this year as project finance for renewables stalled owing to policy uncertainty, overcapacity and cheap natural gas. [South China Morning Post]

¶   The CEOs of Europe’s ten biggest energy companies called for the European Union and member states to stop subsidizing the renewable energy sector, saying the priority access given to the sector could cause widespread blackouts over the winter. [European Voice]

¶   Tens of thousands of people rallied against nuclear power Sunday, marching in front of government offices in Tokyo, in what appeared to be the largest demonstration since Japan’s last active reactor went offline for maintenance on September 15. [The Japan Times]

¶   The U.K. is “extremely close” to announcing a deal with Electricite de France SA to build Britain’s first nuclear power station since 1995, Energy Secretary Ed Davey said. There are only two or three remaining issues are resolved. [Bloomberg]

¶   South Korea intends to scale back plans to increase its reliance on nuclear energy amid growing public opposition to atomic power after the Fukushima disaster and a domestic scandal over faked safety documents. [South China Morning Post]

US:

¶   Oklahoma utility company PSO has signed a trio of long-term power purchase agreements with wind farms totalling nearly 600 MW. The power will be generated in three wind farms in the northwestern part of the state. [reNews]

¶   With little fanfare, Texas is just weeks away from wrapping up a nearly $7 billion effort to add vast amounts of wind power to its energy grid. Once finished, the build-out will stretch nearly 3,600 miles and will carry up to 18,500 MW of wind power. [Texas Tribune]

¶   Maine Governor Dannel P. Malloy has announced two major clean-energy projects that he said will lower rates for state residents. One is a 250 MW wind farm, and the other is a 20 MW solar farm. Power is expected to be sold wholesale at about 8¢/kWh. [Patch.com]

¶   Bowdoin College is hoping to build the largest solar power complex in Maine. The 1300 kW solar power complex would generate much of the energy used to provide power for the school’s largest athletic facilities. [Daily Journal]