December 13 Energy News

December 13, 2015

COP21:

¶ A draft of the COP21 agreement was released in the afternoon for delegates to review. Following a break for last-minute corrections from the legal and linguistic group and the Deputy Executive Secretary of the UNFCCC, the body adopted it “with legal force” by acclamation. [CleanTechnica]

Laurence Tubiana, Christiana Figueres, and Laurent Fabius applaud the Paris Agreement

Laurence Tubiana, Christiana Figueres, and Laurent Fabius applaud the Paris Agreement

¶ The climate deal reached in Paris is “the best chance we have to save the one planet we have”, US President Barack Obama has said. He said it could be a “turning point” for the world to take on the challenge of a low-carbon future. China, the world’s biggest polluter, also hailed the deal. [BBC]

¶ Scientists point out that the Paris accord must be stepped up if it is to curb dangerous climate change. Pledges thus far could see global temperatures rise by as much as 2.7° C, but the agreement lays out a roadmap for speeding up progress. This article lists its key points. [BBC]

¶ “This is the end of fossil fuels” • For Selina Leem, an 18-year-old from a tiny part of the Marshall Islands in the middle of the Pacific, the adoption of Saturday’s “Paris Agreement” on climate change wasn’t about wonky diplomacy. It was about the survival of her country. [CNN]

Most of the land in the Marshall Islands is no more than three feet above the high tide mark. Photo by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons

Most of the land in the Marshall Islands is no more than three feet above the high tide mark. Photo by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons

¶ Earlier UN climate summits tried to impose targets on countries. This conference was different because it used “bottom-up” systems that allowed nations to volunteer their targets, reducing the chance any one country would walking out of the process. [The Australian Financial Review]

World:

¶ In a major shift in government policy, Australia’s prime minister lifted a ban on investing public funds in wind power. The sails of the Clean Energy Finance Corporation are back in motion as a new mandate reversed Tony Abbot’s restrictive practices. [9news.com.au]

¶ Plans for a 1.2-GW wind farm have been submitted by ScottishPower Renewables. The project is called East Anglia Three, and it is proposed for a location in the North Sea off the coast of Suffolk. It would have up to 172 turbines with capacities ranging from 7 MW to 12 MW. [CleanTechnica]

Image Credit: ScottishPower Renewables

Image Credit: ScottishPower Renewables

¶ Several Asian nations announced independent measures to curb climate change as 195 countries signed a deal in Paris this weekend that will change the world’s energy policies in a bid to limit fossil-fuel production. Governments in China and India are also taking local action. [Bloomberg]

¶ The chief executive of the Minerals Council of Australia says the COP21 agreement will increase demand for Australian coal, as Australia’s “high energy, low impurity coal” will be considered more desirable, even the renewables sector advances. [The Australian Financial Review]

¶ In India, the energy deficient state of Uttar Pradesh has drafted a solar mini-grid policy to provide electricity to rural areas while reducing burden on the main grid. It has also initiated deliberations on electrification of remote villages through solar-powered mini grids. [Business Standard]

Solar array in India

Solar array in India

¶ Capping years of negotiations, the prime ministers of India and Japan on Saturday sealed a broad agreement for cooperation in civil nuclear energy with the final deal to be signed after certain technical and legal issues are thrashed out. [Financial Express Bangladesh]

US:

¶ With the approval by Illinois regulators for its part of a 780-mile transmission line to carry wind power from the Kansas high plains to Eastern power grids, Missouri farmers are the only ones standing in the way of the $2.2 billion project. The farmers vow to remain steadfast. [Salina Post]

¶ SunEdison announced that it has signed a 20-year power-purchase agreement with the city of San Diego that will see 6.6 MW of solar installed across 25 city-owned sites. The city estimates that over the life of the agreement the solar systems will save its taxpayers $22 million. [AltEnergyMag]

Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research & Development building in San Diego. Photo by SolarWriter. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.

Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research & Development building in San Diego. Photo by SolarWriter. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.

¶ A large number of residents from Porter Ranch and surrounding areas of Los Angeles staged a major protest Saturday. They are angered by a continuing gas leak at Aliso Canyon that has forced many from their homes. The protesters called on SoCal Gas to shut the facility down. [CBS Local]

¶ The DOE’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy today announced $33 million in funding for 12 innovative projects as part of its Network Optimized Distributed Energy Systems program. Teams will develop technologies to match grid generating with demand. [Imperial Valley News]


December 12 Energy News

December 12, 2015

COP21: Agreement!

Adieu Fossil Fuels

Adieu Fossil Fuels

Eiffel Tower light show

Eiffel Tower light show

The world now has its first universally accepted plan to limit climate change! The agreement will reduce greenhouse gas emissions from human activities to curtail dangerous atmospheric warming and related climate changes, BBC News reported at 3:40 am. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Organizers of COP21 say a final draft text has been reached after two weeks of intensive negotiations. An official in the office of French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said the draft would be presented to ministers at 10:30 GMT. No details of the draft have been released so far. [BBC]

¶ Campaigning organization Friends of the Earth Scotland has launched Fossil Free Scotland, a campaign to end the use of fossil fuels, in Paris during the final days of COP21, with a tagline to ensure “A just transition to a 100% renewable, nuclear-free, zero-fossil-fuel Scotland.” [CleanTechnica]

¶ Greenpeace activists poured yellow paint on the Arc de Triomphe’s famous roundabout to turn it into the sun when seen from the sky. At the top of the Champs Elysees, activists used bikes to pour the paint on the cobblestone street. Paris traffic spread it around the monument. [CNN]

Arc de Triomphe

Arc de Triomphe

¶ The Philippines announced at COP21 that it will launch an investigation into whether fossil fuel companies are to be held responsible for the impacts of climate change. This follows a petition was made by Greenpeace Southeast Asia, which had over 100,000 signatures. [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶ The Silicon Valley Toxic Coalition has been grading the solar industry since 2009, and SolarWorld aside, they started with very little disclosure. A lot has changed and the newly released sixth annual solar scorecard shows a marked improvement over last year. [CleanTechnica]

SolarWorld Recycling solar panels in 2009 from Spot Us via Flickr (CC BY SA, 2.0 License)

SolarWorld Recycling solar panels in 2009 from Spot Us via Flickr (CC BY SA, 2.0 License)

¶ SunEdison Inc has signed a 10-year agreement with Ontario’s Independent Electricity System Operator to supply 5-MW/20-MWh of battery storage to the province. In addition to leveraging the battery’s storage capability, the IESO will learn from the project. [North American Windpower]

¶ China’s central government wants to transition away from coal, but local officials are resisting. That’s one reason why heavy smog frequently blankets major cities despite talk of building an “eco-civilization.” This week saw Beijing issue its first-ever red alert for air pollution. [Deutsche Welle]

¶ Already battered by plunging oil prices, Western Canada has another big problem: the collapse of coal. Alberta and British Columbia are suffering from the fallout of a severe downturn in global coal markets, brought on partly by China’s rapidly cooling industrial demand. [The Globe and Mail]

Westshore coal terminal in Delta, BC. Jeff Vinnick / for the Globe and Mail

Coal terminal in Delta, BC. Jeff Vinnick / for the Globe and Mail

US:

¶ Hundreds of members of the Young Conservatives for Energy Reform and the Christian Coalition brought a pro-environmental message to Washington, DC at a summit co-sponsored by the American Wind Energy Association, saying renewable energy resources strengthen US. [CleanTechnica]

Ford Focus charging in Germany. © CEphoto, Uwe Aranas / CC-BY-SA-3.0. Wikimedia Commons.

Ford Focus charging in Germany. © CEphoto, Uwe Aranas / CC-BY-SA-3.0. Wikimedia Commons.

¶ Just in time to undercut the threat of an “affordable” Tesla EV, the Ford Motor Company has pledged a massive five year, $4.5 billion investment including 13 new EVs and plugin hybrids, bringing its electrified vehicle portfolio up to more than 40% of its global nameplates. [CleanTechnica]

¶ A former coal-burning power plant in western Massachusetts, is being considered as a site to produce renewable energy. A year-long study into redeveloping the Mount Tom Power Station has come up with three reuse options for the 128-acre property. Each includes solar power. [WAMC]

¶ The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission has granted Entergy Corp’s request to change Vermont Yankee’s emergency planning requirements, allowing for the discontinuance of the 10-mile emergency planning zone required of operating nuclear plants. [The Keene Sentinel]


December 11 Energy News

December 11, 2015

COP21:

¶ France and nine other partners renewed commitment to mobilize a cumulative $10 billion between 2015 and 2020 to boost access to energy in Africa. The costs are to be offset by repealing all subsidies for fossil fuels and ending the tax breaks that encourage corporate inversions. [The Election Central]

Wind farm in Tunisia. Photo by Citizen59. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.

Wind farm in Tunisia. Photo by Citizen59. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.

¶ With the deadline for a climate deal at COP21 closing fast, business leaders from around the world have called for a long-term emissions goal. Organized by The Prince of Wales’s Corporate Leaders Group, members of the We Mean Business coalition sent a joint letter to governments. [CleanTechnica]

¶ British Columbia’s Environment Minister announced at COP21 it has become the 14th jurisdiction to sign on to the International Zero-Emission Vehicle Alliance. Members of the alliance will strive to make all new passenger vehicles in their jurisdictions ZEVs by no later than 2050. [Voiceonline.com]

¶ Negotiators at COP21 aim to wrap up a global agreement to curb global warming on Saturday, a day later than expected. “Things are moving in the right direction,” said French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, who is chairing the summit. But more compromise is needed if an agreement is to be reached. [BBC]

The Marshall Islands, where residents say they must move due to climate change. AFP

Climate change will make residents of the Marshall Islands move. AFP

Science and Technology:

¶ In a set of graphics, we can see the increases in the Earth’s temperature over the years, and we can compare it through the years with the seasonal increases in carbon dioxide content of the atmosphere. We can see the changes in the Arctic ice cap over the years and projections for the future of the planet. [BBC]

World:

¶ Air pollution is the single largest environmental health risk in Europe, contributing to heart disease, respiratory problems and cancer. A report from the European Environment Agency estimates that it is responsible for more than 430,000 premature deaths in Europe each year. [Galway Independent]

¶ Oil fell below $37 a barrel, after new data showed OPEC is still pumping like there is no tomorrow. The mighty oil cartel produced 31.7 million barrels a day in November, which has produced a glut. Saudi Arabia, the most powerful member of the cartel, refuses to cut output in order to defend its market share. [CNN]

Commercial oil tanker AbQaiq readies itself to receive oil. US Navy photo by Photographer's Mate 2nd Class Andrew M. Meyers. Public domain. Wikimedia Commons.

Oil tanker AbQaiq readies to receive oil. US Navy photo by Photographer’s Mate 2nd Class Andrew M. Meyers. Public domain. Wikimedia Commons.

¶ With a population of 3.4 million, Uruguay has been cheered for efforts to decarbonize its economy by such organizations as the World Bank and the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean. The WWF named Uruguay among its “Green Energy Leaders.” Its energy is 95% green. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The UK has committed to having 0% emissions from vehicles by 2050. Similar commitments come from the US states of California, New York, Connecticut, Oregon, Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Vermont; as well as from the Canadian province of Quebec. [CleanTechnica]

US:

¶ The first utility scale solar plant in Utah was commissioned on Thursday. The Utah Red Hills Renewable Park operated by Scatec Solar will produce enough power for 18,500 homes. At a cost of $188 million, the 104-MW plant will help get the state to 25% from renewables by 2025. [Deseret News]

Utah’s first utility-scale solar plant. (Mike Saemisch, Scatec)

Utah’s first utility-scale solar plant. (Mike Saemisch, Scatec)

¶ The fourth quarter of 2015 is shaping up to be the United States solar market’s biggest quarter on record, according to a new projection. The current utility-scale solar PV pipeline stands at 18.7 GW. This is greater than all US solar PV installations brought online through to the end of 2014. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Northern Power Systems, based in Barre, Vermont, announced that technology-driven improvements to its flagship Northern Power 100-kW wind turbine have been shown to decrease the delivered Levelized Cost of Energy of wind power produced by its turbines materially, making it very competitive. [Vermont Biz]

¶ Enel Green Power has brought online the 200-MW Goodwell wind farm in Texas County, Oklahoma. The $310 million wind farm is supported by a 20-year power purchase agreement. It is the fifth wind farm EGP has brought into operation since entering the Oklahoma market in 2012. [reNews]

Image: sxc

Image: sxc

¶ General Motors will use renewable energy to manufacture about 125,000 trucks per year. GM will use wind energy to power its truck production operations at Arlington assembly plant in Texas. EDP will supply around 30 MW from its planned 250-MW Hidalgo wind farm in Edinburg. [CleanTechnology News]

¶ Work to add two nuclear reactors to Plant Vogtle is growing further behind schedule, according to experts. A nuclear engineer testified at a hearing that efforts to catch up have failed. Instead delays have gotten worse despite assurances from Georgia Power executives. [Savannah Morning News]


December 10 Energy News

December 10, 2015

COP21:

¶ Laurent Fabius, COP21 president, released version 1 of a draft text on COP21 agenda item 4 (b), the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action (decision 1/CP.17), at 3:00 PM GMT. Fabius said of the current situation, “We’ve made progress but still a lot of work remains to be done. Nothing is agreed until everything is agreed.” [CleanTechnica]

COP21 Facilitators - Meeting go on around the clock.

COP21 Facilitators – Meeting go on around the clock.

¶ In the last meeting of December 9, the Comité de Paris of COP21 reconvened to register the reactions of conference parties to the draft agreement. The meeting closed at 11:28 pm. Sub-groups started meeting at midnight. One overnight consultation covers treaty sections on loss and damage, mechanisms, forest, and preamble, but there are others. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The United States has joined with the EU and a range of other countries at COP21 in an effort to secure a final agreement. The so called “high ambition coalition” now comprises well over 100 countries from the rich and developing world. In addition to the US, Norway, Mexico and Colombia have offered their support to the alliance. [BBC]

¶ Dubai is adopting a plan, Clean Energy Strategy 2050, which includes a number of renewable energy targets. One is that all rooftops in the city will have solar PVs by 2030. Another is a goal of solar generating 75% of the city’s energy by 2050. On the way to achieving this goal is the requirement that 25% is generated by solar by 2030. [CleanTechnica]

Image Credit: Imre Solt, Wiki Commons

Image Credit: Imre Solt, Wiki Commons

¶ The launching of renewable energy initiatives became a bright spot at Paris Climate Conference amid the continuing struggle of negotiators to forge a universal and ambitious climate deal by Friday. United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon spearheaded these efforts to urge various stakeholders to scale up, speed up and collaborate. [ABS CBN News]

World:

¶ Hamburg’s new city core responded to the challenge of rising ocean levels with a relatively inexpensive solution; HafenCity is designed to be flood proof. HafenCity is the rebirth of a city center, containing an intricate network of offices, public spaces, commercial spaces, around 2,000 inhabitants. It is built to an environmental Gold standard. [CleanTechnica]

Photo provided by Hamburg Marketing

Photo provided by Hamburg Marketing

¶ A unit of Chinese firm Sinohydro Corp Ltd erected the last turbine at its 80-MW intertidal wind demonstration project near the coastline of Jiangxi province’s Rudong county. The facility uses 32 turbines of 2.5-MW each, manufactured by Siemens. Of these, 12 will be installed near the coast, while 20 will be located on the shore. [SeeNews Renewables]

¶ Renewables are beating fossil fuels on cost in island nations from the Pacific to the Caribbean, where they depend on oil from distant sources. For many of them, obtaining and paying for fuel is a costly struggle that they must manage along with the threat of rising sea levels and more violent storms predicted because of global warming. [Bloomberg]

¶ The majority of the world’s microgrid projects are now remote microgrids, according to a new report from Navigant Research. “Microgrid Deployment Tracker 4Q15” offers data and analysis on the various microgrid projects around the world currently (both remote and grid-tied ones), regardless of development stage (active, planned, proposed, etc). [CleanTechnica]

Image by CleanSpark

Image by CleanSpark

US:

¶ Vermont’s main utility is going to be providing Tesla Powerwall home battery systems to customers who want them. If the utility’s customer agrees to allow the utility to use electricity stored in a Powerwall at home, the customer will also get paid for its use. One of the three ways a customer can pay for the Powerwall is $0 down. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Xcel Energy has taken formal control of the Border and Pleasant Valley wind farms in the US, adding 350 MW to its operational portfolio. The projects boost the utility’s wind capacity by 20%. A 150-MW wind farm is in North Dakota and was transferred to Xcel on 3 December. A 200-MW farm in Minnesota was handed over in November. [reNews]

An Xcel project in Colorado (Xcel)

An Xcel project in Colorado (Xcel)

¶ The Supreme Court may shortly decide an obscure case entitled Federal Energy Regulatory Commission v. Electric Power Supply Association (FERC v EPSA). The issue before the court is whether FERC can compel regional power markets to pay consumers who reduce their electricity usage at critical peak periods. And if so, at what price? [OilPrice.com]

¶ American Electric Power, one of the largest utilities, made waves when it confirmed it has dropped membership from the American Legislative Exchange Council, a prominent climate denial front group. AEP was the chair of ALEC’s environmental task force, which produces all of ALEC’s anti-environmental model bills. [Natural Resources Defense Council ]

¶ Wind power has grown exponentially in New York over the last dozen years, and now supplies enough energy to power over 360,000 homes, a report from Environment New York Research & Policy Center says. Last year alone, wind turbines produced enough energy to reduce carbon pollution equal to 400,000 cars. And growth continues. [LongIsland.com]

Wind turbines producing enough energy can help reduce carbon pollution. Photo by: Wind Energy Foundation on Facebook.

Wind turbines producing enough energy can help reduce carbon pollution. Photo by: Wind Energy Foundation on Facebook.

¶ DOE officials and an energy cooperative with members in eight states are negotiating a plan that could lead to the construction of small commercial nuclear reactors at an eastern Idaho federal nuclear site. Officials with Utah Associated Municipal Power Systems said they prefer an 890-square-mile site containing the Idaho National Laboratory. [The Columbian]


December 9 Energy News

December 9, 2015

COP21:

¶ The European Union has formed an alliance with 79 African, Caribbean and Pacific countries in a final push for agreement at COP21. The new alliance has agreed to a common position on some of the most divisive aspects of the proposed deal. The EU will pay €475 million to support climate action in the partner countries up to 2020. [BBC]

The EU and 79 African, Caribbean and Pacific countries announced a new alliance at climate talks in Paris

The EU and 79 African, Caribbean and Pacific countries announced a new alliance at climate talks in Paris

¶ Some of the best news of 2015 about our ability to resist and adapt to climate change is the powerful increase in numbers of subregional and panregional governments, businesses, and cities taking action. Part of the Lima-Paris Action Agenda, Energy Day at COP21 put the focus squarely on this key to approaching and surviving climate change. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Mainstream Renewable Power chief executive Eddie O’Connor has called for a rethink on how investment for renewable energy projects is funded in growing markets. He said at COP21, “By far the best way to do this is to put a price on carbon. A €30 price per tonne of CO2 would rapidly accelerate the transition to sustainability.” [reNews]

¶ The huge French pavilion that was built for the COP 21 climate conference includes over a dozen spacious stands showcasing France’s leadership in various fields of science, technology, education and ecology. But nowhere does the pavilion mention nuclear energy, completely dismissing this key French sector from the country’s energy landscape. [FRANCE 24]

Archival picture shows the Civaux Nuclear Power Plant in Western France on September 22, 2015 | © Guillaume Souvent, AFP

Archival picture shows the Civaux Nuclear Power Plant in Western France on September 22, 2015 | © Guillaume Souvent, AFP

¶ A coalition of 38 countries and over 20 industry and other partners joined forces at COP21 to lift geothermal energy’s place in the global energy mix. The Global Geothermal Alliance was formed with an aim to achieve a 500% increase in geothermal power generation and a 200% increase in geothermal heating by 2030. [Renewable Energy Magazine]

¶ The United Arab Emirates has delivered its national statement on climate change at COP21 at the United Nations Framework on Climate Change Convention, UNFCCC, in Paris, France, encouraging nations to protect future generations from the impacts of climate change and stressing the economic and social benefits of climate action. [Gulf Today]

¶ Australia’s government is sticking to a familiar theme: it has invested heavily in fossil fuels with long-life assets to retain and, anyway, coal is still good for humanity. Its foreign minister used a forum hosted by Indonesia called “Pathways to a Sustainable Low Carbon and Climate Resilient Economy” to push the case for Australian fossil fuels. [RenewEconomy]

World:

¶ Tidal company Atlantis is “on target” to deliver power to the grid in 2016 from its 6-MW Meygen project off the Scottish coast. The developer said it has completed a “very successful construction campaign” in 2015 and that 2016 will be a “watershed year.” An onshore power distribution center should be weather-tight by Christmas. [reNews]

Onshore works for Meygen (Atlantis)

Onshore works for Meygen (Atlantis)

¶ New figures from researchers at the University of East Anglia and the Global Carbon Project suggest that global carbon emissions would stall in 2015. The researchers predict that not only might the growth of CO2 emissions slow or stall this year, but that there might even be a chance emissions growth would decline by 0.6% in 2015. [CleanTechnica]

US:

¶ Alaska is suffering significant climate impacts from rising seas forcing the relocation of remote villages. Governor Bill Walker says that coping with these changes is hugely expensive. He wants to “urgently” drill in the protected lands of the Arctic National Wilderness Refuge to fund them. The state gets 90% of its revenues from oil and gas. [BBC]

¶ Rising global temperatures are helping to speed up slow moving landslides across Alaska. Known as frozen debris lobes, they are threatening a major highway. The warming climate is said to have hastened some of them to a heady speed of five meters a year. Engineers believe that they must either keep the ground frozen or move the roadway. [BBC]

Alaska's famous Dalton Highway runs through the valley of the slow moving landslides. UAF

Alaska’s famous Dalton Highway runs through the valley of the slow moving landslides. UAF

¶ The Korea Midland Power Corporation announced on December 8 that it kicked off a PV project in Boulder City, Nevada with the completion of the project scheduled for October next year. The 100-MW plant, which can supply electricity to 15,000 households, constitutes the first phase of the 200-MW solar power project of the city. [BusinessKorea]

¶ Marketing by some solar businesses in Vermont wrongly leads customers to believe they are using locally sourced solar power or are contributing to the state’s renewable energy capacity, the state’s Attorney General and the Department of Public Services say. Developers of community-scale projects must make credits clear to customers. [BurlingtonFreePress.com]

¶ Deepwater Wind is proposing to build a 90-MW offshore wind farm combined with 15 MW of storage capacity by General Electric to serve the South Fork peninsula in New York state. The US company said its plan involves the 15-turbine Deepwater ONE – South Fork project for a lease area it won on the Outer Continental Shelf. [SeeNews Renewables]

Offshore wind farm. Author: Beverley Goodwin. License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic

Offshore wind farm. Author: Beverley Goodwin. License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic

¶ A study from the University of Michigan, released during COP21 negotiations on the globe’s first internationally binding climate agreement, found that most economic analysis of carbon capture and storage technology for coal-fired power plants severely underestimates the technique’s costs and overestimates its energy efficiency. [Space Daily]


December 8 Energy News

December 8, 2015

COP21:

¶ After lower-level negotiators at the Paris climate talks delivered a drafted agreement that left all crunch issues unsolved, foreign and environmental ministers stepped in. Warning that “the clock is ticking towards climate catastrophe,” UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon told ministers the world expects more than “half-measures.” [The Weather Channel]

Demonstrator at the Global Climate March on Nov. 29, 2015 in Berlin, Germany. John MacDougall/AFP/Getty Images)

Demonstrator at the Global Climate March on Nov. 29, 2015 in Berlin, Germany. John MacDougall/AFP/Getty Images)

¶ A group of mayors from cities around the world have published a letter calling on other mayors and cities to follow suit in divesting from fossil fuel investments. The letter was signed in conjunction with the COP21 Climate Summit for Local Leaders, which is being held in Paris alongside the United Nations climate negotiations. [CleanTechnica]

¶ A group of 44 individual states and regions took the COP21 spotlight with an announcement pledging their own carbon goals through The Compact of States and Regions. This is regardless of what their home countries settle on. Later this week, more than 200 US legislators will launch a climate pledge of their own. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Plans submitted ahead of the COP 21 climate talks indicate that the US, China, India, the EU, Brazil, Indonesia, Mexico and Japan will double their renewable energy supply by 2030, according to an analysis by World Resources Institute. Renewable generation will grow from a total 9,000 TWh (in 2009), to 20,000 TWh by 2030. [EarthTechling]

Image Credit: Oimheidi via Pixabay under Creative Commons Licence

Credit: Oimheidi via Pixabay under Creative Commons Licence

¶ The renewable energy industry can stand on its own without subsidies, providing other power companies also forego their own support, the chief executive the world’s largest wind turbine company has told CNBC. Anders Runevad, CEO and president of Vestas criticised the subsidies the fossil fuels industry continued to garner. [Yahoo7 News]

¶ Carmaker BMW and soft drinks producer Coca Cola Enterprises are among the latest companies pledging to source all of their electricity from renewable energy sources as they join The Climate Group’s RE100 initiative. The pledges were announced during the COP21 climate talks, where IKEA is showcasing the campaign’s success story. [edie.net]

¶ An African initiative should see the continent greatly increase its renewable energy over the next 15 years. The African Renewable Energy Initiative plans to develop at least 10 GW of new renewable energy generation capacity by 2020, and at least 300 GW by 2030, potentially making Africa the cleanest continent. [The Guardian]

Solar panels on sale in a market in the northern Malian city of Gao, 2013. Photograph: John Macdougall/AFP/Getty Images

Solar panels on sale in a market in the northern Malian city of Gao, 2013. Photograph: John Macdougall/AFP/Getty Images

World:

¶ Officials of the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy recently revealed that the Indian Government is considering increasing the solar Renewable Purchase Obligation target of 3% by 2022 to 10%. Currently, the RPO target is 15% by 2022, including at least 3% from solar power, with the balance contribution from non-solar sources. [CleanTechnica]

¶ European coal emissions must fall three times faster than they are if the region is to meet its climate goals, according to a new report. Models created by the International Energy Agency suggest that European coal emissions must fall on average by 8% annually until 2040. They have fallen by 2.3% each year over the last nine years. [CleanTechnica]

¶ MHI Vestas Offshore Wind has signed a contract with offshore operator Esvagt to use a new purpose-built service vessel for maintenance of more than 100 MHI Vestas turbines off the Belgian coast. With the upcoming construction of the 165-MW Nobelwind project, a new vessel was needed, in addition to one already in service. [SeeNews Renewables]

New vessel to support MHI Vestas projects. Source: ESVAGT

New vessel to support MHI Vestas projects. Source: ESVAGT

¶ UK owners of polluting diesel generators stand to make “sky-high” profits under a government energy regime that slashed subsidies for wind and solar. They could be awarded subsidies of up to £434 million in the capacity market, up from £109 million last year, and this could trigger a “rapid proliferation” of diesel farms. [The Guardian]

US:

¶ Appalachian Power plans to add up to 150 MW of wind power to its renewable energy portfolio. In a regulatory filing, the company says it plans to issue a request for proposals from bidders in February 2016. The company will seek proposals to purchase wind power assets or to buy electricity generated by wind power projects. [Parkersburg News]

¶ Senator Bernie Sanders released his ambitious plan for climate change, a problem he pointedly says is being perpetuated by the “billionaire fossil fuel lobby.” The plan reads like an ecological wish list. It would US carbon pollution by 40% by 2030 by such measures as putting a tax on carbon and cutting subsidies for fossil fuels. [Washington Post]

Bernie Sanders. Photo by Gage Skidmore. Public Domain Pictures

Bernie Sanders. Photo by Gage Skidmore. Public Domain Pictures

¶ Michigan’s two biggest power companies are up against both lliberal Democrats and conservative Republicans over what they pay customers for electricity from solar panels. Environmental Democrats and Tea Party Republicans have joined forces to promote choices for customers and alternative energy. [The Detroit News]

¶ Every year, Lazard Associates publishes its Levelized Cost of Energy Analysis on different types of power plants including wind, solar, natural gas, coal, nuclear and other technologies. Their analysis shows wind energy and solar power are more affordable than ever. In fact, they beat fossil fuels, even without federal incentives. [Clean Energy News]


December 7 Energy News

December 7, 2015

COP21:

¶ Ministers at COP21 will today begin discussions on an approved draft deal that was drawn up over the weekend. The 48-page document is to be debated by ministers, with a comprehensive and binding settlement hoped for by the week close. Delegates from 195 UN countries worked through the night on Friday to come up with the draft paper. [reNews]

Image: United Nations

Image: United Nations

¶ At COP21 heads of some of the planet’s biggest brands – Unilever, Google, IKEA, Philips, and Marks & Spencer – along with policymakers from around the world, shared their commitments to decarbonizing. Collectively they send a clear message that business is expecting a long-term goal from the global climate talks in Paris next week. [LEDinside]

¶ Australia agreed to support the push to lower the global warming goal to 1.5° in a Paris deal in exchange for more favorable carbon emissions rules. With this, the New Zealand Youth Delegation dared Prime Minister John Key to follow Canberra’s example and also for Wellington to back a more ambitious global climate target. [International Business Times AU]

Indonesia could lose about 2,000 islands by 2030 due to climate change, the country's environment minister said on Monday. Reuters/Beaawiharta

Indonesia could lose about 2,000 islands by 2030 due to climate change, the country’s environment minister said on Monday. Reuters/Beaawiharta

¶ Richard Branson has renewed a call by business leaders for climate leaders to include a goal of reducing global emissions to “net zero” by 2050, meaning no more than the planet can absorb. The Virgin Group CEO said a failure to include such a commitment in COP21 would result in “an alternative too horrible to contemplate.” [The Advocate]

¶ Nicaragua burst onto the world stage at this week’s climate change conference in Paris when it became the first nation to declare it had no intention of publishing a national plan to combat global warming. The country’s chief negotiator told reporters the voluntary nature of the pledges meant global temperatures were bound to rise. [Financial Times]

¶ Indigenous leaders from around the world gathered near the COP21 climate summit in Paris to demand world leaders heed the warnings of social movements and take definitive action on climate change with respect to indigenous peoples’ rights. Leaders from “the Arctic to the Amazon” floated down the Seine on boats in a demonstration. [teleSUR English]

IndigenousEnviroNet @IENearth

IndigenousEnviroNet @IENearth

World:

¶ The company responsible for more than one-third of Germany’s electricity grid says there is no issue absorbing high levels of variable renewable energy such as wind and solar, and grids could absorb up to 70% penetration without the need for storage. The CEO of 50Hertz says industry views on renewable energy integration have evolved. [RenewEconomy]

¶ As coal prices continue to fall, financing for projects involving coal are also falling out of favor with big banking. Bank of America, BNP Paribas, Credit Agricole, Citigroup, ING, Société Générale, Morgan Stanley, and Wells Fargo have each amended coal financing policies, largely in recognition of the risks of carbon emissions and climate change. [Mineweb]

¶ As the Indian city of Chennai still struggles to cope after floods that have cost hundreds of lives and left thousands homeless, India says climate change is to blame. In 2012, it was Haiti and the Philippines that were affected, and a super-cyclone hit the Philippines again in 2013. Nevertheless, COP21 climate delegates have not taken much notice. [eco-business.com]

Parts of Southern India have been inundated for weeks, leaving more than three million people without basic services. Image: Destination8Infinity, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Parts of Southern India have been inundated for weeks, leaving more than three million people without basic services. Image: Destination8Infinity, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

¶ The Asian Development Bank announced a $6-million loan for the off-grid solar home system service of Simpa Energy India Private Ltd. The money will help the company to finance about 75,000 solar systems for households and micro-enterprises in India next year. Simpa Energy aims to install 225,000 systems by the end of 2018. [SeeNews Renewables]

¶ Kenya Tea Development Agency, a marketing agency for small-scale tea growers, has signed a $55 million loan agreement with International Finance Corporation to fund the construction of seven small hydropower projects across tea growing regions. The projects are intended to reduce the cost of energy for each tea factory,. [Coastweek]

¶ China’s capital issued its first ever “red alert” for pollution, the Beijing city government said on Monday, warning that the city would be shrouded in heavy smog from Tuesday until Thursday. China’s leadership has vowed to crack down on environmental degradation, including the air pollution now covering many major cities. [Thomson Reuters Foundation]

US:

¶ Infratech Industries, the company behind Australia’s first floating solar plant has sold its flagship technology to the City of Holtville, in California, marking the first export of the world-leading renewable energy system. The company completed the first installation of a $12 million, 4-MW PV system in April to serve as its showcase project. [CleanTechnica]

Floating solar plant by Infratech Industries

Floating solar plant by Infratech Industries

¶ Bernie Sanders will unveil a sweeping new plan to fight climate change, calling for a carbon tax and an ambitious 40% cut in carbon emissions by 2030 to speed the transition to a greener economy. The Democratic presidential candidate will use the crunch week of COP21 to release a 16-page plan aimed dealing with climate change. [The Guardian]

¶ Officials say one of the Indian Point nuclear power plant’s reactors in suburban NY has been shut down because several control rods lost power. Entergy, the plant’s owner, said no radioactivity was released during the shutdown. A team from the New York Department of Public Service will be among those that investigate the incident. [TV Newsroom]


December 6 Energy News

December 6, 2015

COP21:

¶ Delegates at a UN climate conference in Paris have approved a draft text they hope will form the basis of an agreement to curb global carbon emissions. The 48-page document will be discussed by ministers on Monday. They will try to arrive at a comprehensive settlement by the end of next week. [BBC News]

BBC News

BBC News

¶ The Paris climate conference today published a draft treaty that sets out a warming limit of 1.5° C above pre-industrial levels as its long term temperature goal. Seen as a victory for poor countries, it reduces limit of 2° C warming that had previosly been agreed to as a safe level warming. [The Ecologist]

¶ Dubai’s practices in energy efficiency and water desalination was showcased during the panel discussion held at COP 21 in Paris. UAE Minister of State and Special Envoy for Energy and Climate Change said Dubai aims to produce 75% of its energy using clean sources. [Emirates 24|7]

¶ At the Paris Climate Summit (COP21), the global nuclear lobby is in overdrive. The Breakthrough Energy Coalition, led by Bill Gates, was made public at the start of the conference. And the nuclear lobby is out in force, handing out thousands of copies of its propaganda book, Climate Gamble. [Independent Australia]

¶ United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced that a broad group of organizations and individuals, ranging from financial institutions to municipal mayors and business leaders, will continue momentum on multi-stakeholder climate on May 5 and 6 in Washington, DC. [Big News Network.com]

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon

¶ The US, Japan, European and other developed nations are poised to consider boosting their annual financial assistance for developing nations to over $100 billion in 2020 and beyond in a bid to break a COP21 deadlock. The money would include both public and private-sector funds. [Nikkei Asian Review]

¶ Allegations of hypocrisy will be levelled at the UK when the Climate Secretary Amber Rudd appears at COP21. Prime Minister David Cameron impressed summit delegates with his passionate call to action, but his government’s changes may actually increase emissions of greenhouse gases. [BBC]

World:

¶ In less than 10 years, Uruguay has cut its carbon footprint without government subsidies or higher consumer costs, according to its head of climate change policy. In fact, he says now that renewables provide 94.5% of the country’s electricity, prices have gone down, relative to inflation. [Kitsap Sun]

¶ As renewable technologies become more cost-effective, investors are now waking up to opportunities in the previously unattractive green sector. Climate change is a reality and we appear to be in the middle of an energy revolution. Environmental investments are both right and smart. [Irish Independent]

Climate change is a reality, and so is the revolution that has emerged to tackle it.

Climate change is real, and so is the revolution that has emerged to tackle it.

¶ After four years of relative stability, crude oil prices have fallen dramatically over the past eighteen months. The decline in oil prices and certainty that they will not increase soon, have triggered discussions on the impact on Azerbaijan’s alternative and renewable energy industry. [Eurasia Review]

¶ In Japan, it was recently revealed that safety cables at nuclear facilities, including TEPCO’s Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant, were not separated from other cables, a violation of the country’s new nuclear safety standards. It was also revealed that regulatory authorities had failed to inspect them. [The Japan Times]

US:

¶ Instead of showing the benefits of carbon capture, a coal plant towering over pine trees and meadows in rural Mississippi is looking like another monument to an unfulfilled promise of carbon capture technology. Costs for construction have grown to $6.5 billion, over three times the original estimate. [Valley News]

Mississippi Power spokesman Lee Youngblood, talks about the carbon capture power plant in DeKalb. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

Mississippi Power spokesman Lee Youngblood, talks about the carbon capture power plant in DeKalb. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

¶ Renewable energy accounted for 100% of new US electricity generation capacity additions in October. Wind and solar made up 98% and the other 2% was biomass. For the year through October, solar and wind accounted for over 63% of all new US power capacity, according to FERC. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The recent closure of two cogeneration plants near Bakersfield, California, illustrates the regulatory, policy and market-based challenges facing small facilities selling electricity to the state’s grid. The plants, each of 35-MW plus heat, were commissioned in 1989. [The Bakersfield Californian]

Rio Bravo Jasmin

Rio Bravo Jasmin

¶ Congress could be close to phasing out the tax credits that have, for years, supported the booming wind and solar energy industries. The wind and solar industry have allies among Democrats and others concerned about climate change, but many conservatives want to phase them out. [The Hill]


December 5 Energy News

December 5, 2015

COP21:

¶ If coal is good for humanity, then someone has forgotten to tell the world’s poorest countries. In a strongly worded statement that came out on the first day of talks at COP21, the leaders of 30 of the world’s poorest countries said they wanted the world to be 100% renewable by 2050. [CleanTechnica]

Shanghai boom and gloom. Author Peter Dowley. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons.

Shanghai boom and gloom. Author Peter Dowley. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons.

¶ One event in Paris, a Climate Summit for Local Leaders will commit 1000 mayors and local leaders to “support ambitious long-term climate goals such as a transition to 100% renewable energy in our communities, or a 80% greenhouse gas emissions reduction by 2050”. [Blue & Green Tomorrow]

¶ As governments continue negotiations to hammer out a global climate deal at COP21, institutional investors assemble to highlight their contributions, reinforcing calls for robust Paris climate agreement to enable rapid scale up of investment in low-carbon transition. [Blue & Green Tomorrow]

¶ A senior Indian negotiator says his country will cut back its use of coal, if it gets sufficient cash from a Paris deal. The country believes rich nations responsible for the bulk greenhouse gas emissions released so far must provide cash if they want developing countries to cut their emissions. [TV Newsroom]

PM meets Heads of Delegations of Like-Minded Developing Countries, in the run-up to COP-21 in Paris. Author Narendra Modi. CC BY-SA 2.0 Wikimedia Commons.

PM meets Heads of Delegations of Like-Minded Developing Countries, in the run-up to COP-21 in Paris. Author Narendra Modi. CC BY-SA 2.0 Wikimedia Commons.

World:

¶ With nearly 3.1 GW of offshore wind capacity connections expected for 2015, Europe is driving the industry’s expected 3.6 GW of new capacity. Analysis from MAKE Consulting concludes that 2015 is likely to see 3.6 GW of new offshore wind capacity connected to local European grids. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The launch of the Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition was the first time in UN climate talk history that heads of state have agreed to sit at same table as the leadership of nongovernment agencies and businesses to decide how to deploy carbon-pricing solutions across the world by 2020. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Google’s current renewable energy portfolio, worth approximately $3 billion, makes it one of the largest renewable energy owning utilities in the world. Google has invested in an array of renewable energy companies and runs several locations on hundreds of megawatts of clean energy. [Huffington Post]

Middelgrunden offshore wind farm observed in Øresund. Photo by Kim Hansen. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.

Middelgrunden offshore wind farm observed in Øresund. Photo by Kim Hansen. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.

¶ Norwegian oil and gas company Statoil has made the final investment decision to build the 30-MW Hywind floating wind farm offshore Peterhead in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. The developer has tapped Siemens to supply five of its SWT-6.0-154 direct-drive offshore wind turbines for the project. [North American Windpower]

¶ A study released by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis showed that worldwide coal consumption is likely to decline between 2% and 4% in 2015, despite near decade-low coal prices. That’s on top of a 0.7% decline a BP study said happened in 2014. [Audubon Magazine Blog]

¶ In an announcement made at the United Nations Conference on Climate Change in Paris, Monsanto will stand trial for ecocide and crimes against humanity and nature at the International Court of Justice. An umbrella group of over 800 organizations in 100 countries is involved in the action. [Care2.com]

March Against Monsanto in Eugene, Oregon, 2014. Photo by Visitor7. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.

March Against Monsanto in Eugene, Oregon, 2014. Photo by Visitor7. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.

US:

¶ The United States deployed 60.3 MW of energy storage during the third quarter of the year, bringing the year’s cumulative total up over 100 MW. The figures come by way of GTM Research’s US Energy Storage Monitor, and represent a 46% increase from the second quarter of 2015. [CleanTechnica]

¶ According to a new study released earlier this week by the US Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA), growth in the use of solar energy among America’s top companies has skyrocketed 183% over the last four years since the first Solar Means Business report was published. [CleanTechnica]

12-5 graph

¶ While 150 world leaders are negotiating a climate deal in Paris, nine Northeastern states in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative are sharing $115 million from the latest auction under a regional pact that limits power plant emissions while supporting renewable energy and efficiency projects. [Rutland Herald]

¶ Vermont’s largest electric utility is getting ready to offer customers in-home batteries made by Tesla, best known for making electric cars. In a letter Thursday to the Public Service Board, Green Mountain Power said it would become the first US utility to offer the Tesla Powerwall. [Idaho Statesman]

¶ Scientists from the Woods Hole Oceanographics Institution have found signs of nuclear contamination from Fukushima at an increased number of sites off the US West Coast, including the highest detected level to date from a sample collected about 1,600 miles west of San Francisco. [ObserverVoice.com]


December 4 Energy News

December 4, 2015

COP21:

¶ Following three days of hectic parleys over a complex 54-page draft pact, negotiators released a draft document, though there was reportedly no agreement on about 250 undecided options across the text. India has expressed satisfaction with the first draft, saying progress had been made. [Daily News & Analysis]

Photo by Presidencia de la República Mexicana. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons.

Photo by Presidencia de la República Mexicana. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons.

¶ A new report, Transformational INDCs: how new renewables pledges could transform the economics of wind and solar, says national climate change plans submitted prior to COP21 have placed the world on the brink of a renewable energy revolution. INDCs are Intended Nationally Determined Contributions. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The once black-and-white world of climate negotiations for poorer countries has shifted at talks this week in Paris. For years, many have said richer countries created the global warming, so it is up to them to clean it up, but it is clear that developing nations have to be part of the solution. [San Angelo Standard Times]

¶ COP21 is expected to draw 750 stakeholders to Paris this week to address critical climate change issues. And hundreds of charged activists are taking to the streets to ensure that their voices and concerns are also heard. As the World Health Organization pointed out, the “stakes are high.” [Huffington Post]

Hundreds of pairs of shoes are displayed at the place de la Republique, in Paris, as part of a rally. Laurent Cipriani/AP

Hundreds of pairs of shoes are displayed at the place de la Republique, in Paris, as part of a rally. Laurent Cipriani/AP

¶ Former US Vice President Al Gore took to the stage at COP21 in a side-event focused on stranded fossil fuel assets. The crowd expected the longtime climate activist to come prepared with a compelling narrative that made the case for strong action coming out of the conference, and Gore did not disappoint. [Triple Pundit]

World:

¶ The Egyptian Ministry of Electricity this week took a major step towards the development of one of the largest solar power parks in the world. A total of 11 project developers have signed agreements to develop projects that will form a part of the 1.8 GW solar power park planned for Benban, Aswan. [CleanTechnica]

¶ China has started construction on the country’s biggest wind power project on an island off Fujian Province. The wind farm on Nanri Island, Putian City, will have a capacity of 400 MW. The project should yield 1400 GWh of electricity each year, replacing energy from burning 450,000 tonnes of coal. [CRIENGLISH.com]

Nanri Island Wind Farm in Putian City, south China's Fujian Province. Photo: xjny.ts.cn

Nanri Island Wind Farm in Putian City, south China’s Fujian Province. Photo: xjny.ts.cn

¶ Google has purchased the output of renewable energy generation facilities around the world totalling 841 MW. The company has to date invested in more than 2 GW of renewable energy facilities and claimed the 841 MW of deals is the “biggest ever non-utility purchase” of renewable energy. [PV-Tech]

¶ Privately owned Bruce Power will invest $13 billion to refurbish the world’s largest nuclear station on Lake Huron. The company will as‎sume all financial risk of cost overruns from the overhaul of six of Bruce’s eight reactors that is to begin in 2020. The work was to begin in 2016, but has been delayed. [Hamilton Spectator]

¶ The sustained rise in power bills over the past several years has prompted a surge in Australian households wanting to “do-it-yourself” by unplugging from the power grid, which may result in further declines in carbon emissions. As much as 90% of households are looking to renewable energy. [Sydney Morning Herald]

Ninety percent of households are looking to solar panels. Photo: Matt Bedford

Ninety percent of households are looking to solar panels. Photo: Matt Bedford

US:

¶ US solar manufacturer and developer SunPower Corp announced the start of construction on its 100-MW Boulder Solar project in Nevada. Utility NV Energy will buy the power generated at the plant under a 20-year power purchase agreement. The solar park is expected to be operational in 2016. [SeeNews Renewables]

¶ Carbon pollution equal to 384,097 cars could be eliminated by 2020 with a moderate growth in wind power off the Rhode Island coast, a report from Environment Rhode Island Research and Policy Center says. Enough wind power for 344,566 homes could be built there over the next five years. [GoLocalProv]

¶ In the first 10 months of 2015 the US installed 4.18 GW of wind and 1.4 GW of solar power generation capacity. Renewables accounted for 63% of all the new power capacity. In October, 200 MW of wind, 33 MW of solar and 10 MW of biomass power generation capacity went online. [SeeNews Renewables]

Wind farm in New Jersey, US. Author: nosha. License: Creative Commons, Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic.

Wind farm in New Jersey, US. Author: nosha. License: Creative Commons, Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic.

¶ A unit of a North Carolina utility and Google Inc. announced separate deals Thursday for more than 600 MW of electricity from three new wind farms to be built in Oklahoma. Duke Energy Renewables said it will build a 200-MW wind farm in Kay County and sell the power to a utility in Missouri. [NewsOK.com]

¶ Exelon said Thursday it has embraced New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s plan to support three upstate nuclear units to make them economically viable enough to continue operating. Entergy, however, has rejected the plan. The governor’s plan does not count nuclear power toward the 50% clean power goal. [Platts]


December 3 Energy News

December 3, 2015

COP21:

¶ With COP21 underway in Paris, a conference in Rome on Thursday reflected on Pope Francis’s social encyclical Laudato Si’: On Care For Our Common Home. Hosted by the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty, the meeting examined what role free markets can play in helping to protect the environment. [Vatican Radio]

A power-generating wind turbine is seen on the Champs Elysees avenue with the Arc de Triomphe in background as part of COP21. - AP

A power-generating wind turbine is seen on the Champs Elysees avenue with the Arc de Triomphe in background as part of COP21. – AP

¶ The total contributions of national carbon reduction plans at COP21 now reaches approximately 90% of what is needed prevent dangerous climate change. This is cause for some cautious optimism. However, the reality of how these reductions will be implemented will probably be a significant challenge over the next two weeks. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The International Chamber of Shipping said that, as a representative of the international shipping industry at COP21, it “fully supports” a global climate change deal, adding that the ambitious CO2 reductions aimed for by the industry will be best achieved if regulation is led by the International Maritime Organization. [Ship & Bunker]

¶ Addressing students at the Sorbonne University on the sidelines of the Paris climate summit, Elon Musk, the renowned Tesla innovator, believes the widespread introduction of a carbon price could halve the time it takes the world to transition to clean energy and make a huge difference to the impact of climate change. [The Guardian]

Tesla Motors chief executive Elon Musk. Photograph: Francois Mori/AP

Tesla Motors chief executive Elon Musk. Photograph: Francois Mori/AP

¶ France has offered provide $2 billion to help develop renewable energy in Africa. French President Francois Hollande disclosed at COP21 that the country has earmarked about $6.4 billion, over the next four years to help with electrification in Africa. Of that, one third is to help develop renewable energy. [Leadership Newspapers]

¶ In the wake of yet another bout of devastating smog, China announced today that it plans cut its power sector emissions 60% by 2020, a promise that puts the US Clean Power Plan to shame. If fulfilled, the pledge would make a major dent in global carbon pollution. China’s cabinet made the announcement at COP21. [Gizmodo India]

World:

¶ Nineteen French cities and the French Parliament announced a commitment to divest from fossil fuels, joining more than 500 institutions holding $3.4 trillion in assets. The number has jumped from 181 institutions representing $50 billion who agreed to divest oil, gas or coal companies from their portfolios in 2014. [eco-business.com]

Protestors campaigning against the further use of fossil fuels hold a demonstration at COP21. Image: IISD Reporting Services

Protestors campaigning against the further use of fossil fuels hold a demonstration at COP21. Image: IISD Reporting Services

¶ Silicor Materials, which makes silicon for solar PVs, announced its plans to be carbon-neutral at its facility in Iceland. Silicor will fund planting over 26,000 trees to offset the yearly production of 2,800 tons of CO2. As it is, Silicor’s current process uses no toxic chemicals, and produces no waste that winds up in landfills. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Bahamas’ Prime Minister says urgent actions are needed to reverse climate change, or The Bahamas might be no more: “With 80 percent of our land within one metre or five feet of mean sea level, business as usual with regard to climate change threatens the very existence of the Bahamas as we know it.” [St. Lucia Times Online News]

¶ In Ottawa, on Parliament Hill, on November 29, a festive crowd of 25,000 held up white bristol boards spelling out “100% possible,” as in a 100% renewable energy economy by 2050. For planet lovers it was heart-warming sight. Canada’s environmental movement was brimming with an optimism it hadn’t felt in a decade. [NOW Magazine]

Demonstration in Ottawa

Demonstration in Ottawa

¶ While countries consider their climate change options at COP21, forest fires and the ensuing pollution have been growing problems in Indonesia. The scorched forest issue was largely isolated in the western Indonesian islands. However, this year, the issue has plagued both Papua and West Papua, raising concerns among activists. [Scoop.co.nz]

US:

¶ 21st Century Fox, the parent company of Fox News Channel, is first on the list of 73 major companies that have just signed on to President Obama’s “American Business Act on Climate Pledge.” A total of 154 major US and global companies have signed in support of a strong outcome for this week’s COP21 Paris climate talks. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The DOE’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory announced success with a new method for fabricating “virtually perfect” single layers of so-called white graphene for use in next-generation solar cells, fuel cells, and other clean tech devices. White graphene is a form of boron nitride, which has a distinctive hexagonal lattice structure. [CleanTechnica]

3-D structure of hexagonal boron nitride sheets and boron nitride nanotubes, courtesy of the Shahsavari Group via Rice University.

3-D structure of hexagonal boron nitride sheets and boron nitride nanotubes, courtesy of the Shahsavari Group via Rice University.

¶ New York Governor Cuomo sent a letter to the state’s Department of Public Service create a program for 50% renewable energy by 2030. Significantly, the letter includes a timeline: DPS must create this policy by July 2016. The governor also says he believes upstate nuclear facilities must continue operating. [pv magazine]

¶ World leaders are gathering this week in Paris at the COP21 talks in an effort to hammer out a global agreement to combat climate change. But in Ohio, a bill crafted by the American Legislative Exchange Council and backed by the fossil fuel industry is preemptively trying to dismantle the work underway. [Natural Resources Defense Council]


December 2 Energy News

December 2, 2015

COP21:

¶ The bosses have come and gone, and many negotiators will have breathed a big sigh of relief. Everyone said the right things. The prospects of a deal, haven’t been harmed, even if they weren’t hugely advanced. On Tuesday the more regular routines of COP life kicked in. The day started with a plenary session of the parties. [BBC]

Deforestation and forest degradation

Deforestation and forest degradation

¶ The impacts of climate change on forests and agriculture were in the spotlight on Tuesday at COP21, as new alliances among organizations and stakeholders were announced aiming to eliminate natural deforestation and forest degradation, and to prevent threats to sustainable farming and people’s livelihoods. [Sify News]

¶ President Barack Obama said that parts of the global warming deal being negotiated in Paris should be legally binding on the countries that sign on, setting up a potential fight with Republicans at home. Obama’s stand won praise at the COP21 conference from those who want a strong agreement to reduce carbon emissions. [Leader-Telegram]

¶ UK-based activist group Brandalism has peppered the streets of Paris with 600 fake outdoor ads meant to expose the hypocrisy of COP21 Climate Conference corporate sponsors. The fake, unauthorized outdoor ads were strategically placed around Paris this past weekend, and were made to look nearly identical to the originals. [Gizmodo Australia]

Credit: Brandalism

Credit: Brandalism

Science and Technology:

¶ Stanford engineers have created underwater solar cells that could play a key role in fighting climate change. They provided design principles to build energy efficient, corrosion-protected solar cells. The impacts of this research are far-reaching for the solar industry and the battle against climate change. [CleanTechnica]

¶ In a paper in the November 27 online edition of the journal Science Advances scientists in Singapore say they have developed new redox flow lithium batteries whose energy densities match those of their lithium-ion counterparts. This means they are about eight to 10 times as high as conventional redox flow batteries. [IEEE Spectrum]

¶ The first sodium-ion (Na-ion) battery in an 18650 format was recently developed by researchers in France. The prototype possesses an energy density of 90 Wh/kilogram, putting it on roughly equal ground with early lithium-ion batteries. It has a lifespan of over 2,000 charge-discharge cycles. [CleanTechnica]

sodium-ion battery © Vincent GUILLY/CEA

sodium-ion battery © Vincent GUILLY/CEA

World:

¶ SaskPower, Saskatchewan’s public utility, has said it has set a goal to generate 50% of its electricity from renewable energy sources by 2030. Installing about 60 MW of utility-scale solar power will help achieve it, but the overall strategy will include geothermal, wind, hydropower, and biomass. [CleanTechnica]

¶ With the serious business of negotiation beginning at COP21, Oxfam has published a report showing that, despite the rich causing most of the global warming, it is the poor that must bear the brunt of the consequences. The richest 1% of the world’s population produces 175 times as much CO2 per person as the bottom 10%. [The Independent]

¶ The postal service of Norway, the Posten, will soon possess an electric vehicle fleet enriched by the purchase of an additional 240 new Renault Kangoo Maxi ZEs, according to recent reports. The Norwegian postal service already possesses a fleet of 900 electric vehicles, including electric cars as well as bikes, quadricycles, etc. [CleanTechnica]

Renault Kangoo Maxi ZEs

Renault Kangoo Maxi ZEs

¶ Wylfa nuclear power plant, in northern Wales, will shutdown at the end of this month. After 44 years producing electricity the plant on Anglesey will start to be decommissioned in the New Year. There will be a 100-day “cool down” period before full decommissioning gets underway and the nuclear fuel is removed. [Daily Post North Wales]

US:

¶ Justin Farrell, assistant professor of sociology at Yale University, writes in Nature Climate Change that semantic analysis and statistical techniques can identify “organizational power” within the contrarian network that has somehow persuaded US voters that scientists are “divided” on the issue of climate change. [eco-business.com]

¶ Hours after President Barack Obama pushed for an international agreement to combat climate change, the GOP-led US House of Representatives voted to demonstrate a lack of support. The House passed two resolutions, largely along party lines, to prevent the EPA from implementing the Clean Energy Plan. [CNN]

Climate change is real.

Climate change is real.

¶ EDF Renewable Energy has closed structured equity financing for its 175-MW Pilot Hill wind project in Illinois, from two American firms, General Electric and Metlife. The project, situated in Kankakee and Iroquois counties, features 91 of GE’s 1.7-100 turbine models, along with 12 of GE 1.85-87 wind turbines. [Power Technology]

¶ DC Water’s Blue Plains plant treats 370 million gallons of dirty water from more than two million households, purging it with micro-organisms that ingest carbon and transform nitrates into nitrogen gas. The water is clean enough to be released without disrupting fragile ecosystems. Solids yield 10 MW of electricity and compost. [Phys.Org]


December 1 Energy News

December 1, 2015

COP21:

¶ The 12th part of the second session of the COP21 Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action (ADP 2-12) convened a day early. Sunday evening, November 29, 2015, saw the first Paris session of the ADP, which is the body mainly responsible for forging a unanimous declaration of international will. [CleanTechnica]

ADP Contact Group stocktaking in Bonn (October, iisd.ca)

ADP Contact Group stocktaking in Bonn (October, iisd.ca)

¶ World leaders opened talks Monday in Paris saying the stakes are too high to end the conference without achieving a binding agreement to help slow the pace of global climate change. Their main goal: agree on legally binding greenhouse gas emissions reductions to hold increase in global average temperatures short of 2° C. [CNN]

¶ Bill Gates, the world’s richest man, led a group of philanthropists in vowing to plow $2 billion into clean energy through personal investments and a new fund to be set up next year. Gates will be joined by 26 private investors and the University of California in the so-called Breakthrough Energy Coalition, he said in a briefing. [Independent Online]

Kandi Mossett joins Human Chain, Paris

Kandi Mossett joins Human Chain, Paris

¶ Indigenous Peoples in Paris at COP21, are exposing the facts of the polluters destroying their homelands, and the green schemes designed for the rich to get richer. “Our world is melting,” said Allison Akootchook Warden from Alaska Arctic village Kaktovik. “Climate change and global warming is a reality in my home.” [The NarcoSphere]

World:

¶ Russian President Vladimir Putin has accused Turkey of shooting down a Russian war plane to protect supplies of oil from ISIS to Turkey. On the sidelines of the COP21 conference, Putin said the downing of the plane was a “huge mistake”. It was not the first time that Putin has claimed that Turkey buys oil from ISIS. [News24]

¶ Crude oil just capped off a third straight week of declines, as WTI nears the $40 per barrel threshold. Goldman Sachs is once again raising the possibility of oil dipping into the $20s per barrel. Oil and gas companies have laid off more than 250,000 workers around the world, a tally that will rise if oil prices remain in the dumps. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Dong Energy has agreed to conduct a feasibility study to explore developing a wind farm in Manx waters off the north-east coast of the Isle of Man. Dong Energy will carry out preliminary surveys to determine the practicality and commercial viability of installing wind turbines within the island’s territorial sea. [CleanTechnology News]

Image: Isle of Man is looking to harness offshore wind resources to generate clean electricity. Photo: courtesy of xedos4 / FreeDigitalPhotos.net.

Isle of Man is looking to harness offshore wind resources to generate clean electricity. Photo: courtesy of xedos4 / FreeDigitalPhotos.net.

¶ If all coal plants in the pipeline were built, emissions from coal power would be 400% higher by 2030 than what is consistent with a 2˚C pathway, according the Climate Action Tracker. Even without new plants, 2030 coal emissions would still be more than 150% higher than what is consistent with holding warming below 2˚C. [NewClimate Institute]

¶ Ahead of the Japanese prime minister’s India visit in December, 13 villages in Jaitapur, Maharashtra, have declared their opposition to the proposed nuclear project by passing a unanimous resolution. The reactor is to be built by Areva, a French company, but Mitsubishi would supply crucial components. [COUNTERVIEW]

US:

¶ The transportation of people and goods accounts for about 25% of all energy consumption. Passenger transportation, in particular light-duty vehicles, accounts for most transportation energy consumption, and light-duty vehicles alone consume more than all freight transportation, such as heavy trucks, marine, and rail. [CleanTechnica]

Source: US Energy Information Administration, International Transportation Energy Demand Determinants model estimates

Source: US Energy Information Administration, International Transportation Energy Demand Determinants model estimates

¶ Xiuhtezcatl Tonatiuh became a climate change activist at age 6 when he saw an environmental documentary. Now 15, the long-haired, hip-hop-savvy Coloradoan is one of 21 young activists joining climate scientist James Hansen in suing the Obama administration for failing to ditch fossil fuels, saying it is not doing its job. [CNN]

¶ As COP21 kicked off in Paris on Monday, a key committee in San Diego pushed ahead with a blueprint for cutting greenhouse-gas emissions and powering the city using only green energy within two decades. Members of the City Council’s environment committee unanimously approved the proposed plan. [The San Diego Union-Tribune]

¶ Think of cities across the country where solar power is booming, and some obvious sunny spots come to mind: Las Vegas, Phoenix, Los Angeles, San Antonio. There’s another city, however, that beats them in solar energy production. Try sunny Newark, New Jersey, which ranks eighth in a survey of 65 large US cities, per capita. [NJ.com]

A 13-acre solar producing 3 MW of power in Kearny has been in operation for about three years. (Aristide Economopoulos | The Star-Ledger)

A 13-acre solar producing 3 MW in Kearny, New Jersey, has been in operation for about three years. (Aristide Economopoulos | The Star-Ledger)

¶ A partnership between NRG Home Solar and Airbnb will deliver incentives to Airbnb members in the form of rebates and/or travel credits. According to the results of a study conducted by Cleantech Group for Airbnb, using a green home sharing service while traveling can create significant environmental benefits. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The Obama administration is boosting the amount of corn-based ethanol and other renewable fuels in the US gasoline supply despite sustained opposition by an unusual alliance of oil companies, environmentalists and some GOP presidential candidates. The EPA issued a final rule designed to increase use of ethanol. [NewsOK.com]

 


November 30 Energy News

November 30, 2015

COP21:

¶ Leaders from 147 nations are addressing COP21 on its opening day. Negotiators from 195 countries will try to reach a deal during the two-week conference aimed at reducing global carbon emissions. Initiatives to boost clean technologies are due to be launched. But the world’s poorest countries say they fear being “left behind.” [BBC]

The Eiffel Tower was lit up on Sunday evening in support of the climate conference. Reuters

The Eiffel Tower was lit up on Sunday evening in support of the climate conference. Reuters

¶ With world leaders converging in Paris today for the start of the long-awaited COP21 climate talks, The Climate Group’s International Communications Director, Eduardo Goncalves, outlines why we should be optimistic about both a successful outcome, and crucially, the months and years that will follow. [The Climate Group]

¶ All eyes are on the French capital, two weeks after extremists killed 130 people around Paris. Fears of repeat attacks have prompted extra-high security and a crackdown on protests, and threaten to eclipse longer-term concerns about rising seas and extreme weather linked to man-made global warming. [Huffington Post UK]

¶ Organisers have said that at least 50,000 people marched through London in what was the UK’s largest ever demonstration for action against climate change. In the run up to the COP21, activists have been marching in cities around the world, and over 2,000 marches are said to have taken place since Friday. [Yahoo News UK]

March in London

Climate demonstration in London

World:

¶ Wind farm owners representing 12% of global turbine assets have founded a peer-to-peer online platform exchanging information on operations, with an objective of optimizing turbine yields through information exchange. Members include EDPR, Vattenfall, RWE, Dong Energy, Statoil and Acciona Energia. [reNews]

¶ Egypt inaugurated on Sunday the largest wind power station in the Middle East and North Africa region with a capacity of 200 MW, the ministry of electricity and energy said. The project’s cost is estimated at €270 million (roughly $286 million). Egypt has been suffering through increasing power shortages. [Al-Bawaba]

¶ London-based infrastructure group John Laing is “ready to invest” in more Australian renewable energy projects if the Turnbull government gets behind wind and solar farms, its CEO says. Australia was previously not a priority for renewable energy investors because there was a lack of support from the government. [Sydney Morning Herald]

John Laing's first Australian renewable energy investment is in a wind farm near Adelaide. Photo: Mark Kolbe

John Laing’s first Australian renewable energy investment is in a wind farm near Adelaide. Photo: Mark Kolbe

¶ The global coal industry is touting “cleaner coal” technology to fight competition from renewable energy. The World Coal Association is pushing technology it says can cut the greenhouse gases emitted from burning coal by up to 30%. But the high costs of greener coal plants are proving a major obstacle for sales. [Huffington Post India]

¶ The largest solar farm in the Philippines will start supplying energy to Meralco on December 4. The new 11-hectare solar power plant has 32,692 solar panels that can generate 8.6 MW, meaning it can supply 61,920 households. The site had been a fish pond, but it ran dry, prompting its former owners to sell the property. [Manila Bulletin]

US:

¶ Climate change takes center stage Monday as a global conversation begins in Paris. But it’s not just international politicians who will lead discussions. US cities like Boulder will have representatives there to share their best practices. Now the city’s strategy includes a job many have never heard of: Chief Resilience Officer. [Colorado Public Radio]

Greg Guibert, Boulder's first ever Chief Resilience Officer. More US cities are using CROs to strategize for climate change and other natural disaster challenges.

Greg Guibert, Boulder’s first ever Chief Resilience Officer. More US cities are using CROs to strategize for climate change and natural disaster challenges.

¶ President Barack Obama said Sunday that American leadership was helping make gains in the global fight against climate change as he tried to reassure world leaders assembling for a historic conference in Paris that the United States can deliver on its own commitments. Obama is joining other world leaders at COP21. [Albuquerque Journal]

¶ A San Francisco judge urged state regulators to release e-mails about a multibillion-dollar deal with two utilities that shut down the San Onofre nuclear plant. He said the Public Utilities Commission should “do the right thing” and reveal information about what went into a deal that would cost area utility customers over $3.3 billion. [CBS Local]


November 29 Energy News

November 29, 2015

COP21:

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

Durban, South Africa, if temperatures rise as much as 4° C, according to Climate Central.

A view of Durban, South Africa, if temperatures rise as much as 4° C, according to Climate Central.

COP21: Beginner’s guide to the UN Paris climate summit • World governments have already committed to curbing human activities such as burning fossil fuels that release the gases that interfere with the climate. The difficulty comes when you try to get 195 countries to agree on how to deal with the issue of climate change. [BBC]

Science and Technology:

¶ New onshore wind turbines are coming to market. Senvion’s 3.4M140 is a 3.4-MW example with 140 meter rotor blades. The turbine should be able to generate 12.2 GWh of electricity annually in locations with wind velocities of 6.5 meters per second at hub height, making capacity factor around 41%. [www.renewablesinternational.net]

World:

¶ The Wachau, a picture-postcard river valley in Austria, makes a lot of wine. Soon it could be producing its own electricity too, and in a way that will not spoil the stunning views. People in the valley have found a way to contribute to the fight against global warming by using what is called “river current power.” [CTV News]

The Wachau Valley. Photo by Karl Gruber. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.

The Wachau Valley. Photo by Karl Gruber. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.

¶ In 2010, a farmer in St. David’s, Newfoundland, installed an anaerobic digester that turns the waste from his 1,200 cows into electricity. His farm uses only 24% of the power, and the excess is enough to keep the lights on in 400 homes all year long. He wants to sell the power, but red tape has been holding him up for years. [CBC.ca]

¶ Australian Environment Minister Greg Hunt said new low-emissions coal power plants were unlikely to be built in Australia, despite experts saying they could help coal remain the dominant global fuel. He expects renewable energy, such as wind and solar, would take up the slack as old coal plant close. [The Australian Financial Review]

¶ Israel hopes to highlight its green technology expertise, with an emphasis on solar energy, as a major solution to global warming at the COP21 talks in Paris on November 30, according to a member of the delegation. Israeli innovation is being highlighted for its potential to help countries achieve climate goals. [The Times of Israel]

An aerial view of the 40 megawatt solar field recently built at Kibbutz Ketura, which provides the one third of the daytime electricity for the city of Eilat. (courtesy Gigawatt Global)

An aerial view of the 40 megawatt solar field recently built at Kibbutz Ketura, which provides the one third of the daytime electricity for the city of Eilat. (courtesy Gigawatt Global)

¶ When forest fires roared through Siberia this summer, so vast that the smoke blocked vast Lake Baikal from satellite view, Russian officials blamed the blazes on arsonists and disorganized fire crews. There may be another culprit: global warming, but Russia has little interest in reducing greenhouse gases. [The Journal]

US:

¶ Arizona could meet the requirements of the Clean Power Plan with large-scale solar and wind projects already under review in the state, according to a recent analysis released by Arizona State University’s Energy Policy Innovation Council and the Sonoran Institute, a sustainability group based in Tucson. [azcentral.com]

¶ The California birthplace of a machine that could bring clean power to the developing world and knock a tiny dent in global warming looks like a junkyard. But the Power Pallet, which generates electricity from corn cobs, wood chips, coconut shells and other kinds of cheap, dense biomass is “carbon negative.” [San Francisco Chronicle]

Tom Price, director of strategic initiatives, looks over a PP20 Power Pallet while giving a tour at All Power Labs. Photo: Lea Suzuki, The Chronicle

Tom Price, director of strategic initiatives, looks over a PP20 Power Pallet while giving a tour at All Power Labs. Photo: Lea Suzuki, The Chronicle

¶ A new solar plant being built near Florence, Arizona, will reduce carbon emissions equal to removing almost 20,000 vehicles from the road each year, company officials say. The Sandstone Solar ranch, currently under construction, will use 182,000 Jinko Solar photovoltaic modules, mounted on trackers. [TriValley Central]

¶ Research has found that an earthquake fault near California’s Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant is linked to another fault farther north, potentially making it capable of stronger shaking. A US Geological Survey scientist says it is not yet known what the implications are for the possibility of earthquake. [KSBY San Luis Obispo News]


November 28 Energy News

November 28, 2015

Science and Technology:

¶ Rising levels of carbon dioxide in the oceans are changing the makeup of plankton. While the shift in numbers could certainly be fortunate for animals that eat one type with a burgeoning population, researchers are unsure exactly which animals those are. That is worrisome because it shows just how little is known about the ecosystems. [Science Recorder]

Recent research shows that higher levels of carbon dioxide may be leading to a rise in the numbers of tiny phytoplankton known as coccolithophores.

Recent research shows that higher levels of carbon dioxide may be leading to a rise in the numbers of tiny phytoplankton known as coccolithophores.

¶ Canadian researchers say they have developed a power cell that generates electrical energy using the photosynthesis of blue-green algae, generating renewable energy while removing carbon from the atmosphere. During photosynthesis, electrons are released and can be drawn off into an external circuit, producing an electric current. [ABC Online]

World:

¶ The prestigious London School of Economics announced this week that it would divest from its £97.2 million in investments in coal and tar sands companies. Research published by magazine Corporate Knights concluded that the LSE endowment had lost $3 million due to not having divested 3 years ago. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Recently, the US released analysis of the country’s 2014 carbon emissions. It showed that growth in carbon emissions is declining even as economic activity expands. A new report indicates the same held true globally. Even though the global economy expanded by 3% last year, carbon emissions only rose by 0.5%. [Ars Technica]

Emissions trends: China flattening, US flat, and EU dropping. But be very afraid of India's growth. Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency

Emissions trends: China flattening, US flat, and EU dropping. But be very afraid of India’s growth. Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency

¶ Quenching India’s energy demand will take $140 billion a year in new investments, and while India has deregulated much of its energy sector and has recently issued a “historic climate pledge”, growing demand could prompt policymakers to usher in a broader swath of energy investments, especially in renewables. [Rapid News Network]

¶ In the next five years, China would invest 200 billion yuan ($31 billion) in building power grids in its northwest province of Xinjiang to connect the region to the country’s east, Pakistan and central Asian countries. Resources-rich Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region would create “Power Silk Road” transmission lines by 2020. [Daily Times]

¶ Latin America is one of the fastest-growing solar markets worldwide, spurred on by high solar resources and surging electricity demand, resulting in 280% installation growth in 2015 compared to 2014. The Latin American solar market may dip slightly in 2016, but is expected to rebound strongly between 2017–2020. [CleanTechnica]

Visita Planta Abengoa in Chile. Image by Ministerio Bienes Nacionales. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons.

Visita Planta Abengoa in Chile. Image by Ministerio Bienes Nacionales. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons.

¶ BP’s CEO Bob Dudley talked about climate change and the role oil and gas companies can play in the transition to a low carbon future. BP management believes the best course of action would be for the parties at the UN conference to reach an agreement on carbon pricing, either with taxes or by cap-and-trade. [Business Finance News]

¶ Japan’s Nuclear Regulation Authority said that it has confirmed active faults at the site of the No 1 reactor at Tohoku Electric Power Co’s Higashidori nuclear plant and will base discussions on the restart of the idled reactor on the assumption that the faults will move. Tohoku Electric denies the existence of such faults. [The Japan Times]

US:

¶ Texas has by far the most potential for solar and wind generation in the United States, which means the Lone Star state might be even more energy-rich in the 21st century than it has been in the past. In addition, the state’s energy sector is trending cleaner due to market forces for a number of important reasons. [Breaking Energy]

Nodding donkey and housing under construction in Texas.

Nodding donkey and housing under construction in Texas.

¶ With climate negotiators gathering in Paris, calls are intensifying to make all polluters pay a price for carbon dioxide and other planet-warming emissions. Many economists back the approach as a market-friendly way to cut greenhouse gasses. The US Congress is hostile to the idea, but it’s gaining traction elsewhere. [Voice of America]

¶ For more than three decades, people from the Marshall islands have moved in the thousands to the landlocked Ozark Mountains for better education, jobs and health care, thanks to an agreement that lets them live and work in the US. The connection makes it an obvious destination for those facing a new threat: global warming. [Fox News]

Climate change poses an existential threat to places like the Marshall Islands, which protrude only 6 feet (2 meters) above sea level in most places. (AP Photo/Rob Griffith)

Climate change poses an existential threat to places like the Marshall Islands, which protrude only 6 feet (2 meters) above sea level in most places. (AP Photo/Rob Griffith)

¶ Six years ago, the owner California’s last operating nuclear power plant announced it would seek an extended license for its aging reactors. Now, with a much changed power landscape, it is evaluating whether to meet the costly state environmental requirements it needs. If it decides not to, California’s nuclear power age would end. [Manteca Bulletin]

¶ Officials in Vernon, Vermont, are shooting for a Town Meeting day referendum on the possibility of building a 600-MW, gas-fired power plant somewhere near the Vermont Yankee site. Officials also are asking the project’s lead advocate, a resident of Winhall, Vermont, to narrow in on a site for the plant by early 2016. [The Keene Sentinel]


November 27 Energy News

November 27, 2015

World:

¶ China’s emissions tied directly to burning fossil fuels may rise only 0.24% in 2015, the slowest pace in at least 15 years, according to a Bloomberg New Energy Finance preliminary estimate based on coal consumption data drawn from government customs reports, company production filings and port inventories. [Macau Daily Times]

China is boosting renewable energy at a time its coal consumption is dropping.

China is boosting renewable energy at a time its coal consumption is dropping.

¶ Pakistan is looking to increase the share of renewable energy in its overall energy mix substantially and has announced a roadmap that will see around 3.5 GW wind energy capacity operational by 2018. Over 40 wind energy projects in various stages of development should contribute around 2,050 MW capacity by 2017-18. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The Government of Bangladesh approved construction of a solar power project that is expected to play a critical role for the country to meet its renewable energy targets. A 200-MW solar power project in the Teknaf sub-district has been given the go ahead by the government to be developed by a SunEdison subsidiary. [CleanTechnica]

¶ CitiPower, via funding provided by the Australian Energy Regulator, is paying for battery storage to be installed in selected houses in Melbourne as a test. Properties with particular characteristics and in specific locations are being selected to see how those households’ reliance on the power grid changes with batteries in place. [The Age]

A solar-powered unit in East Melbourne. Councils are looking for ways to share solar power between residents. Photo: supplied

A solar-powered unit in East Melbourne. Councils are looking for ways to share solar power between residents. Photo: supplied

¶ South Australia has committed to a new target of zero net emissions by 2050, the state’s Premier has revealed. The announcement was made following the release of the recommendations of the South Australian Low Carbon Economy Expert Panel. The panel said 100% renewables could be achieved relatively quickly. [RenewEconomy]

¶ Unilever announced that it would stop using coal energy by 2020, and planned to use only renewable energy by 2030. Paul Polman, Unilever’s CEO, said, “If we don’t tackle climate change we won’t achieve economic growth. This is an issue for all businesses, not just Unilever. We all have to act.” [International Business Times]

¶ Completed only last month and designed to keep contaminated groundwater from seeping into the sea, a 780-meter protective wall built alongside Fukushima Daiichi is already “slightly leaning,” plant operator TEPCO has announced. Pressure from the flow of groundwater has tilted the wall some 20cm towards the sea. [RT]

© The Japan Times / YouTube

Fukushima protective wall. © The Japan Times / YouTube

¶ Africa is quickly adapting to modern renewable energy sources, and could more than quadruple renewable energy use to 22% by 2030, up from 5% in 2013, according to a new report. International Renewable Energy Agency says Africa is currently among the leading markets for modern renewable energy sources. [SciDev.Net]

¶ Australia’s Federal Environment Minister has approved a $380 million wind farm on the Atherton Tablelands in far north Queensland, subject to conditions aimed at protecting native species. Developers RATCH Australia and Port Bajool hope to start building the 63-turbine Mt Emerald wind farm, near Walkamin, mid-next year. [ABC Online]

¶ A trial of project of large-scale water-source heat pump technology has been launched in the UK. The Neatpump, by Star Renewable Energy, uses ammonia as a working fluid. The trial will supply heat and hot water to 300 new homes in a project near Exeter for utility E·On. [Cogeneration & On-Site Power Production Magazine]

US:

¶ Enbridge says it has purchased a 103-MW wind farm under development in West Virginia for about $200 million from EverPower Wind Holdings. The Calgary-based pipeline operator, which has been increasing its stake in the clean energy sector, said it is aiming to have the New Wind Creek project in operation by December 2016. [CBC.ca]

Enbridge has been increasingly investing in renewable energy, including two major wind-power purchases in November 2015. (Reuters)

Enbridge has been increasingly investing in renewable energy, including two major wind-power purchases in November 2015. (Reuters)

¶ In a report, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory says, “In just four years, thanks to falling renewable energy technology costs, economic potential has more than tripled.” Economic potential is a metric that quantifies the amount of economically viable renewable generation that is available at a specific location. [pv magazine]

¶ The Vermont Yankee nuclear plant stopped producing power last year, but security measures, including heavily armed guards in bulletproof towers, will remain in place for decades to protect hundreds of tons of radioactive waste. The spent fuel will stay here until the federal government can determine where to store it. [The Boston Globe]

Dry cask storage was used to store spent fuel at the Entergy Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant. Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff

Dry cask storage was used to store spent fuel at the Entergy Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant. Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff

¶ Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders calls climate change the greatest threat to national security. Hillary Rodham Clinton promises to install more than 500 million solar panels across the country. Republican Jeb Bush would phase out tax credits for solar power. Rival Marco Rubio wants to cut the federal gas tax by 80%. [ABC News]

¶ Google said it would offset the huge amounts of electricity it needed to run its North Carolina server farm with solar power under a new program that allows corporations to voluntarily pay more for renewable energy. Duke Energy will supply electricity it buys from a new Rutherford County solar farm under a new program. [domain-B]


November 26 Energy News

November 26, 2015

Science and Technology:

¶ This year will be the hottest on record and 2016 could be even hotter due to the El Niño weather pattern, the World Meteorological Organization said. WMO director-general Michel Jarraud rejected climate sceptics’ arguments, saying, “It’s not about believing or not. It’s a matter of seeing the facts. The facts are there.” [Free Malaysia Today]

Parched

How long will it last?

¶ One significant challenge to lithium-ion EV battery technology is coming from the lithium-sulfur field. A lithium-sulfur battery research project at Oak Ridge National Laboratory has had sufficient success that Oak Ridge announced that it has signed an exclusive lithium-sulfur battery agreement with a startup called Solid Power. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Stanford researcher Mark Jacobson has analyzed what it would take for each of the 50 states to go fully renewable. Normally, intermittency issues are expected to be handled by fossil fuel power and batteries. But the new analysis suggests we don’t need any of that, and we don’t need biofuels or nuclear, either. [Ars Technica UK]

World:

¶ German household-scale battery maker Sonnenbatterie will soon provide buyers of the company’s household-scale electricity storage batteries, most of whom also have solar photovoltaic panels mounted on their rooftops, to automatically buy and sell energy from each other directly through a shared online platform. [Deutsche Welle]

German rooftops.

German rooftops.

¶ According to a recent report, soon to be released by Dodge Data & Analytics, green building continues to double every three years, with strongest acceleration in emerging economies, and clients and tenants worldwide are increasingly demanding sustainability, for both energy efficiency and occupant benefit. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Early this year, France’s state energy and environment agency was set to publish a study showing the country could actually abandon nuclear power and rely entirely on renewable power in decades to come. But the presentation was scrapped under political pressure, illustrating tensions surrounding French energy policy. [Reuters]

¶ The UK Department of Energy issued a new analysis of energy and emissions projections in 2015. An analysis of the projections by Carbon Brief, shows that the government now expects 22 GW of new renewable capacity to be installed by 2025, down by more than a third from the 34 GW forecast last year. [SeeNews Renewables]

Wind farm in England. Author: stephen jones. License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic

Wind farm in England. Author: stephen jones. License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic

¶ Renewable energy is rapidly becoming the world’s preferred choice for new electricity generation, according to a Climate Council report. “A Whole New World: Tracking the renewables boom from Copenhagen to Paris” reveals how the world is in the midst of a dramatic energy revolution which could still accelerate. [Climate Control News]

¶ A competition to identify the “best value small modular reactor design for the UK” will be launched next year, to “pave the way towards building one of the world’s first small modular reactors in the UK in the 2020s,” the Treasury said. Support for the technology will come through a £250 million research package. [Yahoo Finance UK]

US:

¶ New rules could make it possible to develop more renewable energy in Alaska, by making it easier for independent projects to sell their power to the grid. After two years of hearings, the Regulatory Commission of Alaska issued new rules saying utilities should buy renewable power if it is least expensive. [Alaska Public Radio Network]

Alaska Environmental Power workers and contractors prepare to hoist the hub of a rotor and the three large blades to a hub. Photo: Tim Ellis/KUAC

Alaska Environmental Power workers and contractors prepare to hoist the hub of a rotor and the three large blades to a hub. Photo: Tim Ellis/KUAC

¶ The energy storage market is rapidly becoming one of the most exciting spaces in all of renewables. Two major developments highlight this. First, even that the most dysfunctional of American institutions, the Congress, is getting interested in energy storage. Second, Wall Street is putting money into energy storage. [OilPrice.com]

¶ Fred Costello, a free-market Republican member of Florida’s House of Representatives, filed a bill last week to open the state’s energy market to solar energy competition by allowing homeowners and businesses to lease their rooftops to companies that generate solar power and sell it back to the grid. [Government Technology]

¶ North Dakota regulators have approved a 100.4-MW community-initiated wind project in Rolette County. The Public Service Commission voted unanimously to grant a certificate of site compatibility authorizing construction of up to 59 turbines. The project is located on a 14,000-acre site in north-central North Dakota [reNews]

Image: G114 (Gamesa)

Image: G114 (Gamesa)

¶ Developer Cape Wind has urged a US court to dismiss opponents’ appeal of its 468-MW offshore wind project in Nantucket Sound. The appeal is the latest in the plaintiffs “14-year crusade” against the project, which includes more than 30 administrative and court challenges, Cape Wind told a federal Court of Appeals. [reNews]

¶ Biodico announced its new facility in California’s San Joaquin Valley. The plant is purportedly the world’s first biofuel production facility operating entirely on renewable heat and power generated on-site. It will go online the first week of December, to produce 20 million gallons of biodiesel fuel each year. [Renewable Energy Magazine]


November 25 Energy News

November 25, 2015

Opinion:

Australia should back calls to end coal and save its drowning neighbours While all of us of will experience the effects of climate change most are not facing the inevitable disappearance of our country. Yet that is the case for the 92,000 inhabitants of Kiribati, as well as other low-lying island states across the planet. [eco-business.com]

Kiribati, with about 92,000 inhabitants, recently bought land in Fiji to relocate its inhabitants as the sea level rises. Image: Shutterstock

Kiribati, with about 92,000 inhabitants, recently bought land in Fiji to relocate its inhabitants as the sea level rises. Image: Shutterstock

The Climate Talks in Paris Might Actually Work This Time • UN climate talks set to begin in Paris next week promise to produce a landmark deal that has eluded diplomats for more than two decades. All of the G20 nations, including the biggest developing countries, China, India and Brazil, have prepared to limit pollution. [Bloomberg]

Science and Technology:

¶ An accelerated transition to renewable energy could limit the global temperature rise to below 2° C, says an International Renewable Energy Agency report. It says if renewable energy accounted for 36% of the world energy mix by 2030, half the emission reductions needed to limit warming to 2° C would already be met. [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶ US-based Envirofit was one of the first social enterprises to provide clean cookstoves, and it’s just recently sold its millionth unit. Rocket stoves are wonders of sustainability. They address dangers to human health posed by open-fire cooking; they also burn very small amounts of wood fuel, with low emissions. [CleanTechnica]

Image credit: Envirofit International via Picasa. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0

Image credit: Envirofit International via Picasa. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0

¶ Ireland could install nearly 4 GW of solar by 2030, adding more than €2 billion to its economy and creating more than 7,000 jobs, with modest policy support, a new report produced by KPMG has claimed. The report was produced on behalf of the Irish Solar Energy Association and says the technology should be supported. [Solar Power Portal]

¶ The government of South Australia released the final report from its Low Carbon Economy Expert Panel, which recommends the state’s greenhouse gas emissions be cut by more than half by 2030 and the state be a net zero emitter by 2050. The panel also recommends an emissions trading scheme linked to California’s. [InDaily]

¶ The 300-MW Cestas solar photovoltaic project, located in the Bordeaux region of France, has now been fully connected to the electric grid, according to recent reports. Full grid connection was achieved with the connection of the last 12-MW portion of the project, which has a total of 25 different 12 MW project portions. [CleanTechnica]

Cestas solar project

Cestas solar project

US:

¶ The US DOE announced that a company called Dioxide Materials is getting a slice of the agency’s new $125 million round of funding for “transformational” energy projects. Among its areas of expertise, Dioxide Materials is developing a low cost system that uses renewable energy to produce hydrogen fuel from water. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Vestas is to supply an unnamed client with 200 MW of turbines for a wind farm in Oklahoma. The manufacturer will deliver 61 of its V126 3.3-MW units; it is the first order from the US for that model. Delivery will start in the second quarter of 2016, with completion in the second half of year. Oklahoma has been 2-MW territory. [reNews]

¶ Duke Energy, the largest electric power holding company in the US, has repurposed a retired coal-powered operation in New Richmond, Ohio, in a development partnership with LG Chem, Greensmith, and Parker Hannifin, which provided the 2-MW power conversion inverter. The storage capacity of the unit was not disclosed. [CleanTechnica]

Duke Energy’s Walter C. Beckjord retired coal-powered generating station. Image via Cincinnati Business Courier

Duke Energy’s Walter C. Beckjord retired coal-powered generating station. Image via Cincinnati Business Courier

¶ Las Vegas is planning to run municipal buildings, fire stations, parks, streetlights and other facilities exclusively with renewable energy, under a deal announced Tuesday with the NV Energy, a utility owned by Berkshire Hathaway. The agreement doesn’t cover the famously bright casinos on the Las Vegas Strip. [Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]

¶ According to the Environmental Defense Fund, 70% of Hoboken’s population lives in flood zones. The city also has a plan to manage flooding and other disasters. Working with EDF’s Climate Corps program, Hoboken is moving toward building a microgrid to keep the power on at 55 buildings during disasters. [Government Technology]

¶ Alaska is a vast wilderness of natural beauty. But it also holds more coal than all the other US states put together. As world leaders prepare to gather for a major climate change summit, plans to build an open coal mine that would cover 78 sq km (30 sq miles) surrounding a valued Alaskan river could be coming to a head. [BBC]

Photo by Pete Niesen

Photo by Pete Niesen

¶ According to the California Air Resources Board, a leak that started October 23 at a Southern California Gas Company well accounted for a quarter of all the methane released by the state since it started. Estimates are that up to 50 metric tons of the potent greenhouse gas leaked into the atmosphere each hour since the leak started. [KCET]

¶ The US is set to become the first nation to decide whether it’s safe to operate nuclear power plants for 80 years, twice as long as initially allowed. The majority of the nation’s 99 reactors already have 20-year extensions to their 40-year operating licenses. Now, operators led by Dominion Resources want even more time. [Bloomberg]


November 24 Energy News

November 24, 2015

Opinion:

How Renewable Energy Could Make Climate Treaties Moot • Creating an international agreement is an admirable goal, but notably, countries are not racing to zero emissions on their own. It is amazing that no country has performed a study on the benefits and costs of going to 100% clean, renewable energy. [Scientific American]

©iStock.com

©iStock.com

How Virtual Power Plants Can Help Replace Dirty Peaker Plants • A recent Wall Street Journal article highlighted a common problem: How to pay for aging, mostly coal-fired power plants whose only function is as backup for peak demand? One way is to combine distributed power and loads sources in a “virtual” power plant. [CleanTechnica]

Science and Technology:

¶ Sooner than it takes to build a nuclear power station, lithium-air batteries could be helping wind and solar to make coal, oil and nuclear obsolete, according to researchers from the Cambridge University. Five times lighter and five times cheaper than current lithium batteries, Li-air would open the way to our 100% renewable future. [The Ecologist]

World:

¶ A developing country dubbed one of the most vulnerable to climate change has confirmed controversial plans for more coal-fired power stations. The president of the Philippines has told the BBC the new coal plants are needed to meet demands for energy. This comes despite coal’s huge contributions to global warming. [BBC]

The Philippines is regarded as one of the most vulnerable countries to climate change. Kate Stephens/BBC

The Philippines is regarded as one of the most vulnerable countries to climate change. Kate Stephens/BBC

¶ Richard Branson and other notable business leaders were signatories of a definitive letter of climate action directed to heads of state. Specifically, the letter calls for the Paris (COP21) deal to include a long-term climate goal of net-zero emissions by 2050. Their aim in the process is “the end of business as usual.” [CleanTechnica]

¶ Allianz CEO Oliver Baete said the company will no longer invest in companies if more than 30% of sales come from coal mining or if they generate more than 30% of electricity from the fossil fuel. Allianz manages about €1.8 trillion in assets, focusing on the U.S., Germany, France, Italy, Britain and the Asia-Pacific region. [Newser]

¶ A study concludes that long-term ocean warming worsened deadly floods that hit Australia in 2010/11. During that summer, a series of floods hit Queensland, affecting at least 90 towns, over 200,000 people, killing at least 38 people, causing damage of $2.38 billion (Aus), and reducing Australia’s GDP about $40 billion. [CleanTechnica]

Image Credit: Markus Gebauer / Shutterstock.com

Image Credit: Markus Gebauer / Shutterstock.com

¶ LG Chem has announced it will supply Steag with six 15 MW Li-ion battery systems, while Nidec ASI will provide the necessary PCS and EMS solutions. “With 140 megawatt hours of power, the storage systems will deliver enough energy to supply 10,000 households per day with electricity,” said LG Chem. [pv magazine]

¶ Jordan is set to add 1,600 MW of solar and wind power to the national energy mix by 2016. The renewable energy sector needs an investment of $2.4 billion by 2025, in order to increase the contribution of clean energy sources to the Kingdom’s overall power capacity, says Ibrahim Saif, minister of energy and mineral resources. [AMEinfo]

¶ Investment in renewable sources of energy in Latin America and the Caribbean grew by nearly 50% last year to $23 billion, according to a study released by the Inter-American Development Bank and Bloomberg New Energy Finance. Brazil accounted for $14 billion of that total; Mexico and Chile followed with $2 billion each. [La prensa]

US:

¶ The EU’s renewable energy requirements are forcing coal-based power plants to use biomass fuel. Swaths of woodlands in Southeastern United States are being cut down to fuel the biomass boom across the Atlantic. A report by the Natural Resources Defense Council points out that 15 million acres of unprotected forests are at risk. [Digital Journal]

Europe's biomass boom is putting American forests at risk. Photo by cuellar.

Europe’s biomass boom is putting American forests at risk. Photo by cuellar.

¶ To bring the benefits of solar energy to more of people, especially those who are not wealthy and who otherwise lack easy access to solar power, the Obama administration rolled out a national solar initiative last July. One of its key components, a private-public community solar partnership, is now starting to really come together. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Nuclear power plant owners are welcoming reports that Gov. Andrew Cuomo wants state regulators to mandate that half of the state’s energy come from renewable energy sources by 2030 while creating incentives for nuclear to remain viable in the interim. The governor wants to keep the Ginna and Fitzpatrick nuclear plants going. [RTO Insider]

¶ Builders seeking a net-zero energy home showcase can look to BuiltGreen’s zHome townhome complex in Issaquah, Washington. Several year’s later, the country’s first Net-Zero Energy townhome complex, meets expectations on reducing energy and water consumption, according this newly released white paper. [CleanTechnica]

zHome townhome complex

zHome townhome complex

¶ A research study has found that using more solar power in Arizona could save 15 billion gallons of water annually. Most of the water used in Arizona is for agriculture, but another common usage is for cooling natural gas, coal, and nuclear power plants. Obviously, operating rooftop solar power does not require such water use. [CleanTechnica]


November 23 Energy News

November 23, 2015

World:

¶ Most people know global oil prices have crashed this year. This was caused by a massive supply glut created by ferocious production from OPEC and near-record US output. The oversupply problem is so bad that oil tankers waiting to be offloaded are piling up off the US Gulf Coast because there’s nowhere to put the crude. [CNN]

"Tanker offshore terminal" by US Navy photo by Photographer's Mate 2nd Class Andrew M. Meyers. Public Domain. Wikimedia Commons.

Tanker loading oil. US Navy photo by Photographer’s Mate 2nd Class Andrew M. Meyers. Public Domain. Wikimedia Commons.

¶ UK-based project developer Lightsource has announced its expansion into the rapidly growing solar power market of India, as it has signed an agreement to invest $3 billion to develop 3 GW solar power capacity in the country. The agreement was signed during Indian Prime Minister Modi’s visit to the United Kingdom. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Wind turbine blade manufacturer LM Wind Power is setting up a blade factory in Vadodara in the Indian state of Gujarat in response to increased domestic demand, the Danish company said. The plant is scheduled to start operations in March 2016 and will supply blades to wind projects in the northern part of India and beyond. [SeeNews Renewables]

¶ An 8.5-MW solar power plant in Rwanda is designed so that, from a bird’s-eye view, it resembles the shape of the African continent. The $23.7 million (£15.6 million) solar field went from contract signing to construction to connection in just a year, defying sceptics of Africa’s ability to realise projects fast. [The Guardian]

The 8.5-MW solar power plant in Rwanda’s famed green hills. Photograph: Cyril Ndegeya / AFP for the Guardian

The 8.5-MW solar power plant in Rwanda’s famed green hills. Photograph: Cyril Ndegeya / AFP for the Guardian

¶ Battery costs are falling to the point that they are becoming increasingly viable as an option for uses such as supporting the stability of power grids. New electricity storage installed on to the grid to support renewables is likely to grow more than 60-fold from 196 MW of capacity now to 12,700 MW in 2025, according to Navigant. [Irish Times]

¶ For the first time ever, over half of all new annual investment into clean energy power generating projects globally went toward projects in emerging markets, rather than toward wealthier countries. Emerging market investments in renewables hit a record annual high of $126 billion in 2014, up $35.5 billion from 2013 levels. [Jakarta Post]

¶ Alberta will speed up the phase out of coal-fired power and move to more renewable energy by 2030, according to its newly released climate change strategy. The plan suggests that two-thirds of coal-generated electricity will be replaced by renewables, mainly wind power, with natural gas generation for load reliability. [Calgary Herald]

A wind farm near Fort MacLeod, Alberta. Leah Hennel / Calgary Hearald Archives

A wind farm near Fort MacLeod, Alberta. Leah Hennel / Calgary Hearald Archives

¶ Just a few weeks after the UK’s Prime Minister announced a deal with the Chinese to build the Hinkley Point nuclear plant, Baroness Jones, a Green party London Assembly member, asked London’s mayor, Boris Johnson, whether he supported it despite the cost. In reply, he said, “It’s a disgrace.” [The London Economic]

US:

¶ In Climate Science, two of the three Democratic presidential candidates are ‘A’ students, while most of the Republican contenders are flunking, according to a panel of scientists who reviewed candidates’ comments. The climate and biological scientists did the rating at the request of The Associated Press. [Watertown Public Opinion]

¶ In the face of growing safety problems, cheap natural gas and the rising use of renewable energy sources, aging nuclear power plants are closing down across the US, raising questions about the future viability of nuclear energy production. Pilgrim and Fitzpatrick are both old and expensive to run, but they typify nuclear problems. [Jefferson Public Radio]

The Entergy Corporation will close Pilgrim Nuclear Generating Station, on Cape Cod Bay, within four years. Entergy Nuclear / Flickr

The Entergy Corporation will close Pilgrim Nuclear Generating Station, on Cape Cod Bay, within four years. Entergy Nuclear / Flickr

¶ Danish wind turbine blade maker LM Wind Power is increasing the number of employees at a North Dakota plant by 100 to almost 700 in coming months. The company wants to be competitive in the labor market and lifted its starting wage for production employees. The plant has been retooling for longer blades. [SeeNews Renewables]


November 22 Energy News

November 22, 2015

Opinion:

Good news: Big companies are using a record amount of clean energy • In the United States, clean energy is already a booming business. Solar is the fastest-growing energy source in the country, and in 2015, total investment in renewable energy projects here reached nearly $40 billion. And big companies are getting involved. [Grist]

Shutterstock image.

Shutterstock image.

The broken promises, politics of corn ethanol • The federal corn ethanol mandate, also known as the Renewable Fuel Standard, exemplifies how national politics play into an issue that makes absolutely no sense. The case against it is so strong that groups ranging from the Sierra Club to Americans for Tax Reform agree on it. [Modesto Bee]

World:

¶ With just a week to go until a crucial global warming summit begins, 170 countries have submitted pledges for greenhouse gas curbs to underpin a 195-nation climate pact. Those countries account for about 93% of the world population and produce roughly 93% of emissions driving dangerous levels of climate change. [The Japan Times]

¶ Two years ago, a global energy company abandoned plans to build a $120 million pilot wind farm off Maine’s coast following opposition from the Governor Paul LePage. Now it is moving ahead with a similar project in Scotland. The decision is inviting an examination of what Maine may be losing in terms of jobs and investment. [Press Herald]

Floating wind turbines.

Floating wind turbines.

¶ Electricity coming to Crimea from Ukraine was cut shortly after midnight on Sunday, local time, according to the Crimean branch of Russia’s Emergency Situations Ministry. The ministry said 1,896,000 people were without power, and that emergency supplies had been turned on for hospitals and other important facilities. [Deutsche Welle]

¶ The government of Bangladesh approved construction of a large-scale solar park in an effort to increase the share of power from renewable sources in this electricity-starved country. The new solar park, which is due to begin generating within the next 18 months, will supply up to 200 MW of electricity to the national grid. [DhakaTribune]

¶ The Greens will seek to build momentum for more ambitious action on climate change by calling for the creation of a new government authority to help Australia reach a 90% target for renewable energy by 2030. The party has already adopted the goal, but the new policy document spells out how this could be achieved. [The Guardian]

Wind farm near Merredin, Western Australia. Photograph: Calla Wahlquist for the Guardian

Wind farm near Merredin, Western Australia. Photograph: Calla Wahlquist for the Guardian

¶ Residents of rural China have fears about the proposed expansion of the country’s nuclear program. Ask villagers in the Chinese village of Hubin what they think of proposed nuclear plant, and talk quickly turns to the Communist government’s dismal record of industrial accidents, as well as the Fukushima Disaster of 2011. [New York Times]

US:

¶ Republicans are taking aim at a new “Green Climate Fund,” as they look to weaken President Obama’s hand in global climate talks later this month. The pot of money, a $3 billion climate change pledge the administration made last year, is something officials hope to bring to the negotiating table at United Nations summit in Paris. [The Hill]

¶ A proposed solar energy project in Bethel, Connecticut, that has been entangled in bureaucracy for years could finally get underway early in 2016. Officials expect that a proposal to build a 954-kW solar farm on the site of the town’s old landfill will finally come to a vote soon, allowing construction to begin in the spring. [Danbury News Times]


November 21 Energy News

November 21, 2015

Opinion:

Nuking Clean Energy:  How Nuclear Power Makes Wind and Solar Harder • Nuclear is a barrier to a clean-energy future, not a piece of it. Nuclear is so expensive that there’s little room left in a utility budget to build wind and solar, but more importantly, it makes high levels of wind and solar become harder to achieve. [Energy Collective]

Science and Technology:

¶ By adopting bicycles and electric bikes for just 10% of urban trips, we would save some $24 trillion between now and 2050, as well as reducing GHG emissions from motor vehicles by about 11%, according to a report from the Institute for Transportation & Development Policy. About 6% of urban trips are already on bicycles. [CleanTechnica]

Commuter bikes at Alewife Station, near Boston, Massachusetts. Photo by agr. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons. 

Commuter bikes at Alewife Station, near Boston, Massachusetts. Photo by agr. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons

¶ Though many believe the lifetime of a solar panel is twenty-five years, a number of older models have exceeded this. When Kyocera tested a 30-year-old module last year, it discovered it was still operating at 90.4% of capacity. There are 37-year-old Arco Solar (now SolarWorld USA) panels in operation. [CleanTechnica]

¶ After a staggering 90% decline, it is hoped that the population of the iconic monarch butterfly will recover following coordinated efforts of North American governments. The insects have been damaged by illegal logging and pesticide use that have destroyed the milkweed plants they depend on for food and to lay their eggs. [Columbus Dispatch]

World:

¶ Spain has made renewable energy a top priority, and the investment has paid off: 42% of Spain’s electricity came from renewable sources in 2013. The majority comes from wind power, but solar provided 13% of the country’s energy and is growing. Spain is also home to the largest solar farm in the world, Andasol. (Photos) [Tech Insider]

International Energy Agency photo

International Energy Agency photo

¶ South African utility Eskom, which is known for regular power outages, has gone 104 days without any load shedding, leading observers to comment that it is now relatively stable. Important among the leading causes of the new stability are various renewable sources of electricity, which have recently gone online. [The Citizen]

¶ Thanks to the abundance of hydropower in Quebec, Manitoba, and British Columbia, Canada already obtains 65% of its electricity from clean energy sources. But a report from the Canadian Council on Renewable Electricity concludes that to meet its climate targets, Canada needs to double its renewable capacity. [CleanTechnica]

Image from Powering Climate Prosperity: Canada’s Renewable Electricity Advantage

Image from Powering Climate Prosperity: Canada’s Renewable Electricity Advantage

¶ Coal plants in Thailand cause an estimated 1,550 premature deaths every year, according to new research by Harvard University and Greenpeace Southeast Asia. That number of could climb to 5,300 per year if plans to expand electricity production by building new coal-fired plants go ahead, the study found. [ThaiVisa News]

¶ Luxembourg will join Austria’s legal challenge to the UK’s support package for the Hinkley C nuclear power station, which totals €108 billion. Meanwhile EDF has laid off 65 engineers working on the project in Paris, and the EU Commission has initiated proceedings against Hungary over its Paks II nuclear project with Rosatom. [The Ecologist]

¶ Irish wind hit a new peak output earlier this week with favourable weather conditions helping wind farms to supply almost 50% of electricity demand. Wind output hit some 2035 MW or enough to meet 46% of the country’s electricity demand. It is the first time that the country has broken the 2-GW barrier. [reNews]

Gaelectric wind farm (Gaelectric)

Gaelectric wind farm (Gaelectric)

US:

¶ A smart home service, OhmConnect, launched an online store offering California customers cash back rebates on such products as smart thermostats, smart plugs, home automation, and EV charging brands. OhmConnect can sync with all these products, sending users cash back rebates for automatically using less energy. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The city of Portland, Oregon, has unanimously passed a new resolution to block the expansion of new fossil fuel storage and transport activities in the city. The resolution is the first of its kind to be passed in the US, and represents a pretty big victory for activists concerned about climate change. It can serve as an example. [EV Obsession]

¶ It appears the wind industry is not at a complete standstill in northwestern Ohio. Amazon Web Services announced Thursday it is partnering with EDP Renewables to build and operate a 100-M wind farm in Paulding County. The power would be enough to provide electricity for 29,000 homes in the US in a year. [Times Bulletin]

Ohio wind farm.

Ohio wind farm.

¶ Cheaper Canadian power is a myth, according to two former Maine public utilities commissioners who spoke about Maine’s energy future at the University of Southern Maine. The panelists agree that Maine should take another approach for its energy future: invest in energy efficiency and foster offshore wind development. [Maine Public Broadcasting]

¶ The Massachusetts legislature recessed formal sessions for the year earlier this week without renewing a solar power incentive program. It leaves many solar power projects across the state in limbo. Lawmakers were torn between arguments from environmental activists and solar developers and lobbying by utility companies. [WAMC]


November 20 Energy News

November 20, 2015

World:

¶ A massive solar farm the size of more than 175 football pitches is to go ahead on farmland in East Cambridgeshire, with the District council’s planning committee approval. The farm’s capacity will be nearly 39.5 MW, enough for 11,000 homes, and its energy will feed directly into the local power grid network. [Newmarket Journal]

Solar farm approved. SUS-150325-142109001

Solar farm approved. SUS-150325-142109001

¶ The Clean Energy Finance Commission in Australia has reported that its recently launched solar financing program has attracted a substantial amount of interest; in fact it is enough to boost the country’s large-scale PV capacity 10-fold. The CEFC program will offer loans of AU$15 million and above, for projects over 10 MW. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The world could be powered almost entirely by clean, renewable energy sources in the space of a few decades, and two US engineers say they have figured out exactly how it can be done. One of them, Mark Jacobson, a civil and environmental engineer at Stanford University, has been granted two opportunities to speak at COP21. [ScienceAlert]

¶ ScottishPower Renewables submitted its plan to build a 1,200-MW wind farm off the coast of Suffolk, after UK Government clears that it will provide support to such projects. The project called East Anglia THREE will feature up to 172 wind turbines and generate enough energy to meet the power needs of more than 850,000 homes. [Power Technology]

¶ The Scottish Government refused consent earlier this week for two separate wind farms intended for the county of Sutherland. Specifically, the two wind farms were said to have “an unacceptable impact” on the nearby wild land areas, and that such impact would not be outweighed by any wider policy benefit. [CleanTechnica]

Head of Loch Long with Beinn Mheadhoin beyond. Photo by Richard Webb. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia

Countryside near a refused wind farm, Head of Loch Long with Beinn Mheadhoin. Photo by Richard Webb. CC BY-SA 2.0. Wikimedia Commons.

¶ Russia has signed two agreements with Egypt to build the North African country’s first nuclear power plant in a televised ceremony attended by the Egyptian president. The deals were signed by the Egyptian Electricity and Renewable Energy Minister and the head of Russia’s Rosatom State Atomic Energy Corporation in Cairo. [APA]

¶ In Australia, 1320-MW coal-fired power station has been sold by the NSW Government for just $1 million to a former ERM Power chief and a coal mining executive. As an illustration of how cheap this purchase price is, to replace such a coal power plant with a newly constructed plant would cost well over $2 billion. [Business Spectator]

US:

¶ While many countries continue to drag their feet on reducing emissions, individual cities are taking the lead and setting ambitious renewable energy targets. Some have already made the transition to 100% renewable energy. Here in the US, four cities or population centers stand out as having gone 100% renewable. [EcoWatch]

Burlington, Vermont, runs on a mix of biomass, hydroelectric, solar and wind. Erika J Mitchell / Shutterstock.com

Burlington, Vermont, runs on a mix of biomass, hydroelectric, solar and wind. Erika J Mitchell / Shutterstock.com

¶ Environmental groups will rally in Hartford, Connecticut, on Saturday, asking the governor to invest in clean energy, not gas pipelines. With the gas boom, major new pipelines are being built in Connecticut to carry gas to consumers and for export. But the groups say getting 100% renewable energy should be the goal. [Public News Service]

¶ EDF Renewable Energy announced that the 175-MW Pilot Hill Wind Project in Illinois has reached commercial operation. The project was made possible through Microsoft Corporation’s commitment to a long-term purchase agreement. The project will power 100% of the energy needs of Microsoft’s data center in Illinois. [AltEnergyMag]

¶ Texas homeowners and business owners can keep more money in their pockets, and Texas ranchers and family farmers can receive millions of dollars more a year in land lease payments by building new wind farms and using more wind resources. That’s according to a new report, “A wind vision for new growth in Texas.” [Windpower Engineering]

Texas already leads the nation in wind energy production.

Texas already leads the nation in wind energy production.

¶ A Public Citizen report, “Clean Power, Clear Savings,” shows that energy bills will fall in every state by 2030 as a result of the Clean Power Plan compared to a business-as-usual scenario, including the states contesting the plan. The Clean Power Plan, finalized in August, sets targets for reducing carbon pollution in each state. [citizen.org]

¶ The Kauai Island Utility Cooperative has begun a process for a creating community-based renewable energy program to bring the benefits of renewables to more people in Hawaii. The Lihue-based nonprofit co-op submitted its projected rates and guidelines to the Hawaii Public Utilities Commission for commission approval. [Pacific Business News]

¶ Analysts at the DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory devised a method for measuring the economic potential of renewable energy across the US. Using it, NREL has found that renewable generation is economically viable in many parts of the country primarily because of declining technology costs. [Windpower Engineering]

¶ After five years, all preliminary reviews are complete and it is now up to two federal boards whether PSEG Nuclear gets one of the key permits it needs to build a new reactor in Salem County, New Jersey. The NRC and the US Army Corps of Engineers have issued a final Environmental Impact Statements. [NJ.com]


November 19 Energy News

November 19, 2015

World:

¶ A report by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, distributed just days before the crucial climate talks in Paris, is directed at policymakers. It shows how keeping global warming to less than 2° C from pre-industrial levels is not only feasible, but also urgently needed and economically viable. [The Climate Group]

McCarty Glacier, in Alaska. These US government images are in the public domain. Wikimedia Commons.

Where did it go? McCarty Glacier, in Alaska. These images are in the public domain. For more information, go to Wikimedia Commons.

¶ The Philippines will soon have over 600 renewable energy projects operational, as it significantly expands its clean energy infrastructure. As of 31 October, 2015, the Philippine Department of Energy had approved 616 renewable energy projects with a total capacity for all renewable energy technologies over 12 GW. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Inox Wind, an Indian wind turbine maker, announced that it expanded its turbine manufacturing facility in Madhya Pradesh. The company reported that it commissioned a new production facility in the state. The facility will increase the company’s overall production capacity to 1.6 GW annually of turbine production. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Wind energy could be the largest power source in the EU by 2030 if governments drive ambition in climate and energy policies, according to a European Wind Energy Association report. If European member states stick to the policy framework already set in place, wind could surpass other forms of energy within a decade. [edie.net]

The Aiming High report suggests that wind power has the potential to exceed gas and other forms of energy within the next decade.

The Aiming High report suggests that wind power has the potential to exceed gas and other forms of energy within the next decade.

¶ Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall says 50% of the province’s power will come from renewable sources by 2030. The announcement is scheduled for Monday, but Wall slipped in the details while answering questions in the legislature about the province’s position on climate change. Wall believes the goal is achievable. [620 CKRM.com]

US:

¶ More than 160 corporate executives gathered at Bloomberg’s New York City headquarters for a meeting of Rocky Mountain Institute’s Business Renewables Center. Through November 17, 2015, their corporations had signed more than 2 GW of power purchase agreements for large-scale, off-site renewable energy in 2015. [CleanTechnica]

¶ US Senators Susan Collins and Angus King announced Monday that the US Department of Energy will award an additional $3.7 million to an offshore wind project designed by a University of Maine-led consortium. The funding builds on the $3 million committed to the project, Maine Aqua Ventus 1, in May 2014. [Mainebiz]

Habib Dagher, director of UMaine's Advanced Structures and Composites Center, in front of the VolturnUS prototype wind turbine deployed off the shores of Castine in 2014. Mainebiz file photo / James McCarthy

Habib Dagher, director of UMaine’s Advanced Structures and Composites Center, in front of the VolturnUS prototype wind turbine deployed off the shores of Castine in 2014. Mainebiz file photo / James McCarthy

¶ Ten years ago, Walmart made a pledge to become environmentally clean and shift to 100% renewable power. Now, a report, titled Walmart’s Dirty Energy Secret: How the Company’s Slick Greenwashing Hides Its Massive Coal Consumption, found that the company is “one of the nation’s largest users of coal-fired electricity.” [CleanTechnica]

¶ Vermont’s Green Mountain Power announced last week that it reached its 112-MW net metering cap for solar power, 15% of their peak load. Now, it has asked state regulators for permission to buy 7.5 MW more of net metered solar power. The net metering cap does not apply to consumers with home-sized solar installations. [vtdigger.org]

A worker checks a fuel cell in the FuelCell Energy manufacturing facility in Torrington. Photo: Douglas Healey / Bloomberg

Fuel cell in the FuelCell Energy plant. Photo: Douglas Healey / Bloomberg

¶ The microgrid for municipal buildings in Woodbridge, Connecticut, will have a central plant by FuelCell Energy of Danbury. The contract calls for a 2.2 MW power plant to serve the micro-grid. Buildings in the micro-grid include the police station, fire department, town hall, senior center and Amity Regional High School. [Danbury News Times]

¶ Duke Energy, LG Chem, and Greensmith brought new technology to the site of a 1952 retired coal plant in Ohio with the completion of a 2-MW battery system. The new project is designed to increase reliability and stability for the electric power grid. The fast-response system regulates grid frequency. [Windpower Engineering]

¶ A study commissioned by Massachusetts’ Attorney General concludes that New England does not need additional natural gas pipelines for energy reliability in the coming years. The authors take the recent announcement that the Pilgrim nuclear power plant in Plymouth will close by 2019 into account. [Foster’s Daily Democrat]


November 18 Energy News

November 18, 2015

World:

¶ Locally-produced renewable power met nearly 30.3% of Italy’s electricity needs in the first 10 months of 2015, according to data by power grid operator Terna SpA. Excluding hydropower, the share of wind, solar and geothermal energy sources was a bit over 15%. Meanwhile, thermal power plants produced 56% of Italy’s power. [SeeNews Renewables]

Solar park in Italy. Author: Solar Farm - Solar energy power plants. License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic

Solar park in Italy. Author: Solar Farm – Solar energy power plants. License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic

¶ The UK’s remaining coal-fired power stations will be shut by 2025 with their use restricted by 2023, Energy Secretary Amber Rudd announced. Ms Rudd wants more gas-fired stations to be built since relying on “polluting” coal is “perverse.” Additionally, she wants to prioritize nuclear plants. She had little support to offer renewables. [BBC]

¶ Battery storage could be just five years away from being an economic no-brainer for some Australian solar households, according to a new report. It predicts grid-connected battery storage will be economically attractive for many homes from around 2020, though Sydney and Adelaide could be at this point as early as 2018. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Hydro Tasmania is to add 600-kW of solar PV and some smart controls to Rottnest Island, helping the tourism resort supply 45% of its electricity and desalinated water from renewable energy. The new installations will supplement the single 600-kW wind turbine on the island, which Tony Abbot famously complained about. [One Step Off The Grid]

Wind turbine on Rottnest Island.

Wind turbine on Rottnest Island.

¶ Skylark Energy filed a planning application to the Scottish government for a 64.6-MW wind farm in Argyll and Bute. Skylark is a joint venture between Ecotricity and Swedish construction company Skanska AB. As the project is larger than 50 MW, it needs to be considered by the Scottish government. [SeeNews Renewables]

¶ Costa Rica is on track to double the amount of wind power it generates in the coming years. The launch of operations in October of the Orosi power plant and the upcoming inauguration of the Vientos del Oeste project in December will soon supply Costa Rica’s electrical grid with an additional 59 MW from wind power. [The Tico Times]

¶ A two-year pilot project will store a tiny bit of Toronto’s excess energy underwater in giant balloons. Local energy firm Hydrostor and Toronto Hydro are partnering on the project. The Hydrostor system is expected to improve power quality for residents of the Toronto Islands while engineers monitor and test its performance. [Toronto Star]

Construction in progress earlier this year of the first Hydrostor station on the Toronto Islands. Hydrostor photo.

Construction in progress earlier this year of the first Hydrostor station on the Toronto Islands. Hydrostor photo.

¶ After a concerted push from the United States, members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development agreed to cut subsidies aimed at exporting technology for coal-fired power plants. The policy would effectively cut off public financing for 85% of coal plants currently in the pipeline, an official said. [Washington Post]

¶ Brazil’s power sector watchdog Aneel has approved 290.6 MW of winning energy projects from an earlier auction this summer. The projects include eight wind farms with 231.6 MW of combined capacity, two small hydropower plants of 23 MW in total, one 8-MW biomass plant, and one 28-MW natural gas plant. [PennEnergy]

US:

¶ The Republican-run US Senate adopted two resolutions to shoot down key rules Barack Obama’s administration wants to limit greenhouse gas emissions by power plants. The president will veto the move. The 52 to 46 vote was largely meant to draw attention to the hostility of the Republicans to Obama’s efforts on climate change. [Business Recorder]

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2015

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2015

¶ The United Illuminating Co will start work next spring on a state-of-the art micro-grid supplying key town buildings in Woodbridge, Connecticut. The system would keep power on during grid outages. The utility has finalized an agreement with the town to build the micro-grid and it should be completed next year. [New Haven Register]

¶ At a National Community Solar Summit at the White House, the Administration announced 68 cities, states, and businesses are joining together to promote community solar. Community solar allows multiple households and businesses to pool their resources and invest in shared solar systems to reduce costs. [Newsroom America]

¶ The Massachusetts House has passed a bill to boost the state’s reliance on solar energy. The measure increases the cap on the state’s net metering program, which allows homeowners, businesses and local governments to sell excess solar power they generate back to the electrical grid in exchange for credit. [wwlp.com]

AP Photo/Stephan Savoia, File

AP Photo/Stephan Savoia, File

¶ The Mississippi Public Service Commission approved the largest solar installations in Mississippi, making Mississippi Power the largest partner in renewable energy in the state. Strata Solar is collaborating with Mississippi Power and the US Navy to build a 450-acre 50-MW solar project in Hattiesburg. [Your Renewable News]

¶ Governor Cuomo’s office has sent a letter to the NRC about the dangers of allowing the reactors at the Indian Point nuclear power facility to continue operating. One of several concerns raised in the letter was metal fatigue and the safety of non-replaceable metal components that might have grown brittle with age. [NewsLI]


November 17 Energy News

November 17, 2015

World:

¶ The task of electrifying Sarawak is no mean feat. Hampered by a lack of infrastructure, Malaysia’s largest state by land mass remains without constant supply of power in rural areas with a reported 33% of the state remaining off the grid. Now, one village will have a solar microgrid, the first of its kind in the state. [The Malaysian Insider]

Solar panels being installed in Sarawak. Malaysian Insider pic by Renai Mattu.

Solar panels being installed in Sarawak. Malaysian Insider pic by Renai Mattu.

¶ New fast-charging lithium-in batteries were recently unveiled by workers from Watt Lab, an arm of the Central Research Institute at Huawei Technology Corporation, at the recent 56th Battery Symposium in Japan. The newly unveiled batteries reportedly charge ~10 times faster than conventional lithium-ion batteries do. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Indian solar could scale up substantially to be a significant energy source by 2025, with the market penetration of solar power expected to be 5.7% (54 GW) by 2020 and 12.5% (166 GW) by 2025. Solar power prices are expected to be approximately 10% lower than coal power prices by 2020, and rooftop solar is already competitive. [Indiainfoline]

¶ Despite the general public impression of Russia as being relatively opposed to renewable energy and electric vehicles, the city of Moscow will actually be getting a fleet of electric buses in 2016, according to the head of the Department of Transportation and Development of road transport infrastructure, and the deputy mayor. [CleanTechnica]

Russian electric bus

Russian electric bus

¶ A record $391 billion flowed into low carbon and climate-resilient growth in 2014, according to a report released today by Climate Policy Initiative. The fresh figures come just two weeks before the COP21 climate talks begin in Paris, where finance is expected to play a pivotal role in scoring a robust global deal for a safe climate. [The Climate Group]

¶ The C20 Sustainability Working Group is asking the G20 to stop fossil fuel subsidies. The G20 promised to phase them out in 2009, but they still pump $452 billion annually into exploration for and production of fossil fuels, according to a report from the Overseas Development Institute released last week. [Blue & Green Tomorrow]

US:

¶ French renewable energy producer Akuo Energy has wrapped up the development stage for a 30-MW first phase of its 300-MW Sterling wind power project in Tatum, New Mexico, and plans to start construction in 2016. Akuo Energy USA has secured all the key elements to develop the 30-MW first phase. [SeeNews Renewables]

Wind park in the US. Author: CGP Grey. License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic.

Wind park in the US. Author: CGP Grey. License: Creative Commons, Attribution 2.0 Generic.

¶ Changes to solar net metering policies are being studied or have been enacted in over half of the states, the North Carolina Clean Energy Technology Center’s latest “50 States of Solar” report says. The NC Clean Energy Technology Center is administered by the College of Engineering at North Carolina State University. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The city of Lebanon, Tennessee, has broken ground for a new waste-to-energy gasification plant at the city’s waste water treatment facility that will be capable of processing 64 tons per day of sewer sludge, used tires and industrial wood waste. The facility is being designed and built by PHG Energy. [Renewable Energy from Waste]

¶ Tesla Motors CTO JB Straubel told engineering students at the University of Nevada that the gigafactory is designed to be a net-zero building with zero carbon emissions. What’s makes this statement more special is that this building will reportedly be one of the largest manmade structures on Earth when it is completed. [ValueWalk]

Tesla Gigafactory under construction. 

Tesla Gigafactory under construction.

¶ Under current Wisconsin law, state regulators can’t grant permission for a new nuclear power plant unless a federal storage facility for the waste from nuclear plants across the country exists and the plant wouldn’t burden state ratepayers. Now, a Republican legislator is renewing a push to lift the state’s moratorium. [seattlepi.com]

¶ Clean Line Energy will focus again on persuading Missouri’s utility regulators to approve the $2 billion, 780-mile Grain Belt Express transmission line that would carry wind-generated electricity from Kansas through Missouri and Illinois to Indiana. Missouri landowners are the only remaining group in the way. [Columbia Daily Tribune]

¶ Halfway into the University of Iowa’s 10-year sustainability initiative, officials say it has reached its progress target and remains on track to achieve 40% renewable energy consumption by 2020. Part of the success comes from the growing use of giant miscanthus grass. [The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines]

The University of Iowa and Iowa State University are partnering to grow giant Miscanthus. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

The University of Iowa and Iowa State University are partnering to grow giant Miscanthus. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

¶ News of yet more microgrid activity in Pennsylvania came today with the announcement of an urban microgrid planned by Duquesne Light and the University of Pittsburgh. Their project will be to design and install the urban microgrid at its Woods Run Facility, a six-building campus in Pittsburgh’s North Shore. [Microgrid Knowledge]

¶ Deepwater Wind and GE are establishing a new temporary facility at the Port of Providence for the assembly of turbine components for the Block Island wind farm. GE, which recently joined forces with Alstom’s offshore wind unit, is supplying the 6-MW Haliade 150 offshore turbines for the Block Island wind farm. [reNews]


November 16 Energy News

November 16, 2015

Science and Technology:

¶ Human societies will soon start to experience adverse effects from manmade climate change, economist Richard Tol warned. He predicts the downsides of warming will outweigh the advantages at a 1.1° C increase, which we have nearly reached already. He had previously commented on positive effects of climate change. [BBC]

AFP photo

AFP photo

World:

¶ Apple announced a deal that will see its Singapore operations fully powered by solar energy, expanding on similar efforts in countries like the US and China, and also confirmed an upcoming local Apple Store that will be the first in Southeast Asia. Developer Sunseap Group will supply Apple from panels on 800 roof tops. [Apple Insider]

¶ Automotive giant Daimler announced that it plans to connect the old lithium-ion cells to the grid in Lünen, Germany, building the world’s largest stationary storage facility made out of re-used electric vehicle batteries. The system will allow excess renewable energy from the area to be stored and returned to the grid later. [Ars Technica UK]

¶ Iran has a package for $25 billion of investment in its booming power industry, the head of Iran Power Transmission, Generation and Distribution Company says. It is a key to the country’s economic recovery. Iran needs to invest $7-8 billion a year in its power generation and distribution sector to keep pace with demand. [Payvand]

Wind turbines in Manjil. Iran

Wind turbines in Manjil, Iran

¶ As Germany executes what may be Europe’s most ambitious transition to clean energy, the dirtiest form of coal-fired power has held fast to a major share of the country’s power supply. Meanwhile, some of the most efficient gas plants in Europe are shutting down. New legislation aims to correct the situation. [Big News Network.com]

¶ Six large LG Chem lithium-ion battery storage units will be put into service at Steag power plants in Germany. The €100-million project will see 15-MW energy storage systems installed in power stations at Herne, Lünen and Duisburg-Walsum, Bexbach, Fenne and Weiher. The batteries will be used for grid stabilization. [Energy Matters]

¶ India announced conclusion of a civil nuclear deal for buying uranium from Australia to increase conventional fuel supplies to overcome chronic shortages. The announcement came after Prime Minister Narendra Modi met his Australian counterpart Malcolm Turnbull on the sidelines of the G20 Summit in Antalya, Turkey. [Livemint]

US:

¶ A joint project of Roeslein Alternative Energy and Smithfield Food Hogs Production will convert manure from hogs on nine farms into renewable natural gas. Gas sales should start in 2016. A second phase would add native prairie grasses planted on erodible or marginal farm land to the manure to increase the biomass. [The Rakyat Post]

Bio-gas storage.

Bio-gas storage.

¶ Findings from real estate appraisal experts and a researcher at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory suggest that adding a photovoltaic solar power system to a home increases the home’s value across six states. The study looked at markets in California, Oregon, Florida, Maryland, North Carolina and Pennsylvania. [Daily Californian]

¶ Green Cow Power, a large digester facility, is now converting off-farm organic wastes and dairy manure into energy with two Two-Stage Mixed Plug Flow digesters from DVO Inc. The Goshen, Indiana plant it is the largest waste-to-energy facility in Elkhart County and the eighth largest digester operation in Indiana. [Renewable Energy from Waste]

 


November 15 Energy News

November 15, 2015

World:

¶ Sri Lanka will build a final large scale hydro power plant at an estimated cost of $60 million, the Minister of Power and Renewable Energy said. The proposed hydro power plant will be constructed on the Seethawaka River and will add 20 MW to the national grid. The project will be developed as a mini-hydro plant. [Colombo Page]

View of the Randenigala Dam and its spillways from downstream. Rantembe, Sri Lanka. Photo by Rehman Abubakr. CC BY-SA 4.0. Wikimedia Commons.

View of the Randenigala Dam and its spillways from downstream. Rantembe, Sri Lanka. Photo by Rehman Abubakr. CC BY-SA 4.0. Wikimedia Commons.

¶ Portugal’s EDP and Spain’s Gestamp Wind were among the companies awarded contracts to build and operate wind farms in Brazil. The contracts were for 20 wind farms with a combined capacity of 929.3 MW, and 33 solar plants with a combined capacity of 548.2 MW. All must be operational within two years. [Latin American Herald Tribune]

¶ Britain will no longer pursue green energy at all costs and will instead make keeping the lights on the top priority, energy secretary Amber Rudd, will vow this week. The energy department is understood to be considering announcing a closure date for Britain’s remaining coal plants, replacing them with gas and nuclear. [Telegraph.co.uk]

¶ It has been revealed that Coal India, which is state-run, would invest ₹60 billion ($910 million) to set up 1,000 MW of solar power units over the next five to six years, according to the Economic Times, an Indian business newspaper. The government has set a target of generating 100 GW of solar power by 2022. [The National]

A solar power microgrid in the village of Dharnai in Bihar. Prashanth Vishwanathan / Bloomberg

A solar power microgrid in the village of Dharnai in Bihar. Prashanth Vishwanathan / Bloomberg

¶ A record oil glut is set to continue into next year, maintaining pressure on prices. According to the International Energy, stockpiles stand at a record three billion. The report follows disappointing eurozone growth figures and a slump in commodity prices on the back of weaker demand from China, all of which sent stock prices lower. [BBC]

¶ France plans to go ahead with a global climate change summit in Paris at the end of the month, Prime Minister Manuel Valls said Saturday, despite a wave of deadly attacks on Friday night that killed nearly 130 people in the capital. The conference “will be held because it’s an essential meeting for humanity,” Valls explained. [The Japan Times]

US:

¶ A new $25 million plant under construction in North Carolina will convert turkey waste into industrial steam for energy. Prestage AgEnergy is being built off NC 24 in the rural community of Moltonville. It will use 55,000 tons of turkey litter a year to produce the equivalent of 95 million kilowatt hours of electricity. [Fayetteville Observer]

Turkey. Photo by Malene Thyssen. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons. 

Turkey. Photo by Malene Thyssen. CC BY-SA 3.0. Wikimedia Commons.

¶ Connecticut’s push to bring more natural gas into the state to heat homes and produce electricity is drawing fire from environmentalists, who say an expansion in pipeline construction means declining focus on renewable energy. The Algonquin pipeline, which runs from Danbury to Putnam, is a target of their protests. [CT Post]

¶ Bernie Sanders opened Saturday night’s Democratic debate by vowing to rid the world of ISIS. Following up, the moderator pointed out that during a debate last month, Sanders had identified “climate change” as the greatest threat to national security and asked whether he still believed that. “Absolutely,” replied Sanders. [Grist]

¶ A warming Arctic climate and lengthening summer growing season in recent decades have led to changes in vegetation on Alaska’s North Slope, extending the habitat of wildlife like snowshoe hares and moose farther north than they were seen previously, according to a study in Global Change Biology. [Fairbanks Daily News-Miner]


November 14 Energy News

November 14, 2015

Opinion:

Danish wind farm company could change game in N.E. • The Danish executives entered the US market relatively quietly in April with a deal to acquire development rights for 187,500 acres 15 miles south of Martha’s Vineyard. That is enough for a wind farm of over 100 turbines, powering up to 500,000 homes. [The Boston Globe]

Dong's Avedore power plant in Copenhagen.

Dong’s Avedore power plant in Copenhagen.

What One Conservative Texas Think Tank Doesn’t Want You to Know about the Clean Power Plan • Texas Public Policy Foundation, a conservative think tank, claims it is trying to protect people’s wallets – which is true if by ‘people,’ you mean its members. But what they push has costs for everyone else. [Environmental Defense Fund]

Science and Technology:

¶ One way to keep global average temperatures from warming beyond a catastrophic 2°-C tipping point may be to suck massive amounts of CO2 out of the atmosphere. Scientists say it’s theoretically possible (though expensive) to extract CO2 from the air and turn it into materials for buildings and clothes and other everyday stuff. [CNN]

¶ Commissioned by SolarCity, the report Getting to 100 discusses what is driving the transition to increasing levels of renewable energy consumption. It identifies the successes and challenges of both governments and companies in targeting, and achieving, 100% renewable energy goals. The report focuses on five developments. [PennEnergy]

World:

¶ High-level representatives of 70 countries worked at a pre-COP21 meeting this week. They continued the work of surmounting obstacles and reinforcing their commitment “to succeed in reaching a universal agreement in December in Paris,” according to French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, the chair of upcoming COP21. [CleanTechnica]

The pre-COP21 meeting, November 9-10, 2015 (ultimahoradigital.com)

The pre-COP21 meeting, November 9-10, 2015 (ultimahoradigital.com)

¶ The international network of scientists and parliamentarians Energy Watch Group has called on the International Energy Agency to release realistic energy projections. They say the World Energy Outlook 2015 misleadingly underestimates potentials of renewables and emphasizes the conventional energy sources. [Greentech Lead]

¶ German weekend power prices plunged Friday as wind power output was forecast to rise again towards 30 GW with the approach of a storm system. Baseload power for weekend delivery was assessed at €15/MWh (US 1.6¢/kWh). The week-ahead baseload rate was €28.75/MWh. (The week-ahead rate is closer to average.) [Platts]

¶ EDF staff have warned their employer’s plans to build the £18-billion Hinkley Point C nuclear power plant in Somerset could put the company’s future at risk. An EDF employee ownership association, which owns a 1.7% stake in the French energy giant, said the plant’s financial risks could “threaten the survival” of the company. [Building.co.uk]

US:

¶ Texas wind farms are generating so much energy that some utilities are giving power away. One example is TXU Energy, which offers a free overnight plan to encourage customers to use less energy when wholesale prices are highest and use more when prices are lowest, 9 pm to 6 am. The plan has slightly higher daytime rates. [HPPR]

Part of the Desert Sky Wind Farm in Texas. Photo by Pismo. Placed in the public domain by the author. Wikimedia Commons.

Part of the Desert Sky Wind Farm in Texas. Photo by Pismo. Placed in the public domain by the author. Wikimedia Commons.

¶ US developer Invenergy has signed a 125-MW wind power purchase agreement with insulation, roofing, and fibreglass manufacturer Owens Corning. When completed, Invenergy’s Wake Wind facility in Texas will provide Owens Corning with power sufficient to supply the annual needs of 32,000 homes. [reNews]

¶ The California Public Utilities Commission reports it has received a signature-heavy petition calling on it not to enact controversial proposals to reform net metering in the state. Vote Solar, which works to fight climate change and foster economic opportunity by promoting solar energy, organized the petition. [CleanTechnica]

¶ North Carolina reached a milestone this year as a national and regional leader in solar energy. Solar power installations in the state surpassed a combined 1 GW in capacity, putting North Carolina behind only California, Arizona and New Jersey. But the a key state tax credit behind growth will expire at the end of this year. [Mountain Xpress]

Char Colwell of Sundance Power Systems, installing a solar array in North Carolina. Photo courtesy of Sundance Power Systems

Char Colwell of Sundance Power Systems, installing a solar array in North Carolina. Photo courtesy of Sundance Power Systems

¶ Hawaiian Electric, Maui Electric, and Hawaii Electric Light Company proposed new voluntary time-of-use rates for residential customers that encourage the use of power during mid-day and off-peak hours, or times when solar and wind resources are most productive. Special rates also support the growing EV market. [KHON2]

¶ The Northwest’s only commercial nuclear plant, just north of Richland, Washington, had a fuel leak in the reactor core that has led engineers to take four of its 764 fuel assemblies out of service. A spokesman for Energy Northwest confirmed there was a “fuel defect” at the plant but said it posed no safety risk to workers or the public. [OregonLive.com]

 


November 13 Energy News

November 13, 2015

World:

¶ The north of England is set to be home to Europe’s largest floating solar power system. Water company United Utilities is developing a 12,000 panel system covering an area of more than 45,000 square meters. It will cover about 33% of their electricity needs. The system will be on Godley reservoir in Hyde, Greater Manchester. [CNBC]

Image courtesy of United Utilities

Image courtesy of United Utilities

¶ The carbon content of electricity generation in Ireland fell to a record low last year, according to new figures by the Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland. The country avoided 2.6 million tonnes of CO2 emissions in 2014. SEAI said without renewables, power generation emissions would have been around 23% higher. [Energy Voice]

¶ The UK’s Overseas Development Institute (ODI) and campaign group Oil Change worldwide (OCI) have now published a detailed analysis of G20 subsidies to oil, gas and coal production. The G20 countries spent around four times as much to prop up fossil fuel production as they did to subsidize renewable energy. [Financial Company Voices]

¶ In the UK, production subsidies of £5.9 billion have already benefited major fossil fuel companies operating in the country, most foreign-owned, while £3.7 billion is used to subsidise fossil fuel production overseas in countries including Russia, Saudi Arabia and China, the new analysis from the ODI and OCI found. [The Guardian]

Photograph: bluegreenpict/REX Shutterstock

Photograph: bluegreenpict/REX Shutterstock

¶ The Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland announced a Memorandum of Understanding with Apple to promote the development of ocean energy. Apple has committed a €1 million fund to help developers who receive SEAI grants to test their ocean energy prototypes in the Galway Bay Ocean Energy Test Site. [Your Renewable News]

¶ Lightsource Renewable Energy is spearheading a £2 billion investment in solar energy in India. The firm has announced plans to design, install and manage more than 3 GW of solar PV infrastructure in partnership with Indian companies over the next five years, including SREI Infrastructure Finance Limited. [Your Renewable News]

¶ The cabinet of Angela Merkel’s ruling coalition has endorsed changes to the German electricity market, ensuring their passage into law. The law relies on market mechanisms to foster competition between electricity generation and flexibility options, rejecting generator proposals for an American-style capacity market. [POWER magazine]

US:

¶ More than 7,100 solar panels will provide power to areas of Daytona International Speedway and 400 Florida homes per year, according to officials of the speedway and Florida Power & Light. The FPL Solar Pavilion and FPL Solar Patio project at the speedway will be in the Midway, the Sprint FANZONE and Lot 10 parking area. [Bay News 9]

A total of 7,186 solar panels will make up the FPL Solar Pavilion and FPL Solar Patio. (Daytona International Speedway rendering)

A total of 7,186 solar panels will make up the FPL Solar Pavilion and FPL Solar Patio. (Daytona International Speedway rendering)

¶ Procter & Gamble signed a partnership with EDF Renewable Energy to build a wind farm in Texas. It will generate 370,000 MWh of electricity per year, enough to meet the electricity needs for all Procter & Gamble North American Fabric & Home Care plants, where Tide, Cascade, and other such products are produced. [CleanTechnica]

¶ Customers of Xcel Energy Inc in Minnesota will have the option of signing long-term deals to get their electricity from wind and solar farms under a proposed program. The program, which requires state regulatory approval, would be open to all customers. But key features are aimed to support corporate sustainability targets. [Minneapolis Star Tribune]

A proposal to erect 28 wind turbines in Windham and Grafton drew opposition at a meeting Monday in Grafton. Photo by Mike Faher/VTDigger

A proposal to erect 28 wind turbines in Windham and Grafton drew opposition at a meeting Monday in Grafton. Photo by Mike Faher/VTDigger

¶ Two weeks after a developer came to town to disclose details of what would be Vermont’s largest wind-turbine site, the project’s opponents presented an impassioned case against building any wind farms in Stiles Brook Forest. Opponents to the proposal painted a picture of troubles, at a meeting they organized. [vtdigger.org]

¶ Hillary Clinton outlined a $30 billion plan to help communities and individuals that rely on coal to recover from the industry’s decline. Clinton has said repeatedly she will not forget the coal workers who “kept the lights on” and drove economic growth. Her campaign said the plan fits squarely with her climate priorities. [Rapid News Network]

¶ The New York Department of State has objected to relicensing the Indian Point nuclear plant on the Hudson River, saying it kills millions of fish larvae and sits near seismic faults with an earthquake threat to millions of people. It says the plant is incompatible with the safety of New York City 24 miles downstream. [Albany Times Union]


November 12 Energy News

November 12, 2015

Opinion:

David and Goliath struggle over solar power • Duke Energy is threatening a small nonprofit and African-American church, as it fights to restrict solar access in North Carolina. Duke Energy asked state regulators to fine Durham nonprofit NC WARN $1,000 a day for selling solar power to Faith Community Church in Greensboro. [News & Observer]

Wilson Ring AP

Wilson Ring AP

Why does the IEA keep underestimating solar and wind? • The press release for the latest World Energy Outlook of the International Energy Agency emphasized that they “see clear signs that the energy transition is underway.” The problem is, the numbers they use in the report don’t really match up with this stated optimism. [Business Spectator]

World:

¶ Germany’s transport ministry has said Volkswagen is likely to need to make more than just software changes to nearly a quarter of its 2.4 million diesel cars being recalled in the country as a result of the emissions scandal. The Federal Motor Transport Authority says about 540,000 will also need hardware changes. [The Guardian]

¶ Around four coal-powered plants are poised to come up every week in China. However, chances are they will remain under-utilised given the existing glut. Around 155 projects with a total capacity of 123 GW got the green signal in 2015 alone, despite the fact that China has nearly no need for the energy they will produce. [Yahoo News UK]

Chinese air pollution.

Chinese air pollution.

¶ German utilities giant E·ON recorded record losses of €5.7 billion ($6.1 billion) for the first nine months of 2015 as its older fossil fuel power plants declined in value amid a switch to renewable energy. There was a write-down of €8.3 billion due to the recent decline in fuel prices, with energy plants barely turning a profit. [Europe Online Magazine]

¶ In its latest planning for the transmission network, Australian Energy Market Operator, which runs the grid, looks at one scenario where 33.3 GW of rooftop solar is installed on homes and businesses by 2034-35, 40% of all homes have residential battery storage totalling 19.1 GWh, and 20% of homes have an electric vehicle. [RenewEconomy]

¶ Tasmania’s King Island was powered by 100% renewable energy for a period of 33 hours non-stop this month, another huge milestone for the renewable energy system established on the island as part of a project by Hydro Tasmania. The project is a prototype combining solar panels, wind turbines and energy storage. [One Step Off The Grid]

¶ South Australia stands at the forefront of the renewable energy transition. Soon, 28% of all households will have residential solar power and 1,473 MW of onshore capacity, representing 25% of the state’s total generation capacity, is online. Balancing the load can be done with transmission and energy storage. [Triple Pundit]

South Australian wind project Mount Bryan. Image credit: Flickr/Ian Sutton

South Australian wind project Mount Bryan. Image credit: Flickr/Ian Sutton

¶ The government of the UK gives the fossil-fuel industry nearly £6 billion a year in subsidies, almost twice the financial support it provides to renewable-energy providers, according to a study by the Overseas Development Institute. The study challenges the popular idea that green energy requires extra taxpayer support. [The Independent]

¶ Mexico will start soliciting bids later this month in its first auction of renewable energy certificates, part of an electricity sector overhaul that ends the state-owned power company’s monopoly. Up to 6 million of the certificates will be awarded in the first auction via 20-year contracts seeking up to 2,500 MW of renewable power. [Reuters]

¶ Hitachi-GE Nuclear Energy Ltd, a unit of machinery giant Hitachi Ltd, will start a business to decommission boiling water reactors at Japanese nuclear power plants. In Japan, fourteen reactors at seven nuclear plants, including all six of the reactors at TEPCO’s Fukushima Daiichi, are currently set to be scrapped. [The Japan News]

US:

¶ Hawaii’s largest solar power project was dedicated November 7 by the Lihue-based Kauai Island Electric Cooperative. The array is 12 MW, and is sited on a gently sloping 60-acre site. The goal for the island of Kauai is to get 50% of its electricity from renewable resources by 2023, it will be at 37% by the end of this year. [Electric Co-op Today]

Kauai Island Electric Cooperative’s new 12-MW solar array. (Photo By: Shelley Paik/KIUC)

Kauai Island Electric Cooperative’s new 12-MW solar array. (Photo By: Shelley Paik/KIUC)

¶ Low-income and mid-income New York residents will find it a bit financially easier to get a home solar power system, thanks to the launch of a new program from NY-Sun called Affordable Solar. This program will effectively double the incentives for solar installations on homes they own, in a bid to expand renewable energy. [CleanTechnica]

¶ The Mississippi Public Service Commission unanimously approved three solar projects. Collectively, the three facilities will produce 105 MW of electricity for Mississippi Power Co’s 190,000 ratepayers, most of whom are in South Mississippi. Ratepayers will not bear any project costs, the PSC said in a news release. [Hattiesburg American]

¶ In the fourth Republican presidential debate, which was hosted by the Fox Business Network and The Wall Street Journal on Tuesday night, viewers finally got to hear some discussion of energy policy and the Clean Power Plan, President Obama’s major effort to curb carbon emissions. Too bad it was totally misleading. [Grist]