September 20, 2013
Opinion:
¶ A current analysis of proposals to reform the Energiewende shows that all of current ideas floated by politicians would hinder the country’s energy transition at the grass-roots level while making institutional investors the real beneficiaries. [pv magazine]
World:
¶ Ireland’s first renewable biomass electricity plant is set to convert straw into electricity starting 2015. Irish renewable company Biotricity Ltd. is set to begin construction on their 16 megawatt Rhode, Co. Offaly biomass plant in the Irish midlands. [EcoSeed]
¶ The UK government’s energy policy is under attack from one of its biggest political donors, who accuses it of squandering an opportunity to create thousands of jobs and billions in revenue by scaring off potential investors in the UK wind energy industry. [Renewable Energy Magazine]
¶ Naftna Industrija Srbije has kicked off construction on the 102 MW Plandiste wind farm in Serbia. The 34-turbine project some 70 km north-east of Belgrade is being developed by NIS in a joint venture with private investors and is expected to cost €160 million. [reNews]
¶ European Union regulators are considering doubling the bloc’s target to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 and setting a tougher binding goal for renewable energy use, EU sources said. A firm legislative proposal is expected around the end of the year. [eco-business.com]
¶ A moderately strong earthquake hit northern Japan early Friday in the region of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, but there was no immediate damage to the crippled facility and no reports of other damage in the area. [Wall Street Journal]
¶ Ahead of the Manmohan Singh-Barack Obama meeting in the US on September 27, the Indian government has clarified that any contract signed between the two countries will be fully consistent with Indian law. [Daily Mail]
¶ The president of TEPCO said that the company is seeking a budget of ¥1 trillion ($10.05 billion) to complete the dismantling of the damaged reactors at Fukushima Daiichi, according to the Nikkei. [The Japan Daily Press]
¶ Prime Minister Abe’s plant tour and his attempts to show the government taking control of the radiation-contaminated water problem at Fukushima Daiichi only left the workers at the crippled nuclear plant and residents in the surrounding communities angry. [Asahi Shimbun]
US:
¶ Solar Thin Films has signed a contract to design, supply and build three solar plants totaling up to 40 MW in West Virginia. The deal with Tri-State Solar covers schemes of 8 MW to 10 MW in Crawley and Fayetteville, plus a project of 15 MW to 20 MW in Alderson. [reNews]
¶ Five Washington DC Council members, led by Chairman Phil Mendelson, have introduced legislation requiring DC retirement and life insurance funds to pull their money from corporations that are sitting on fountains of fossil fuel reserves. [Washington Business Journal]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 19, 2013
Opinion:
¶ “Will the Rise of Distributed Energy Spell the End for Traditional Utilities?” Increases in environmental regulation, new demand-side technology, and the rise of distributed energy resource systems are giving old-style utilities problems. [PennEnergy]
World:
¶ The number of jobs in the wind and marine energy industries has increased by 74% since 2010, according to a new study from Renewable UK. The offshore wind sector saw the biggest growth over this period. [Utility Week]
¶ Two years ago US experts urged Japanese authorities to take immediate steps to prevent groundwater contamination at Fukushima Daiichi. They decided against the advice because it would frighten investors, and now they are struggling with the problem. [The West Australian]
¶ Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has ordered the decommissioning of the intact No. 5 and No. 6 reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. His decision follows groundwater contamination from damaged reactors. [Deutsche Welle]
¶ Ahead of Prime Minister’s visit to the US, a controversy has broken out over the nuclear liability law with reports suggesting that an agreement will be signed which may not be in tune with the law. [Times of India]
US:
¶ Energy Capital Group is laying the groundwork for the 300 MW ECG Utah Solar 1 plant in the state’s Millard County. The $600m scheme will cover 1754 acres leased from the Utah School and Institutional Trust Land Administration. [reNews]
¶ GM has unveiled a massive expansion of its Global Battery Systems Laboratory, tripling the facility’s size and making it the largest battery lab in North America owned and operated by an auto manufacturer. [CleanTechnica]
¶ A paper in the Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences, which includes government estimates for costs of environmental and health effects in the calculations, shows wind and solar power are now less expensive than fossil fuels and nuclear. [EarthTechling]
¶ Environmental controls designed to prevent leaks of methane from newly drilled natural gas wells are effective, a study has found — but emissions from existing wells in production are much higher than previously believed. [Scientific American]
¶ Republicans and some Democrats criticised Ron Binz in a hearing on his nomination to lead a key US energy regulatory agency because his views support renewable sources like wind over coal and natural gas. He had said natural gas is a “dead-end” energy source. [Business Spectator]
¶ State regulators approved a request by South Carolina Electric and Gas to increase its electric rates by about 3%, a move that would help pay the costs of building two new nuclear reactors. SCE&G, which will is funding 55% of the roughly $10 billion project. [Aiken Standard]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 18, 2013
Science and Technology:
¶ Just as wind turbines tap into the energy of flowing air to generate electricity, hydrokinetic devices produce power from moving masses of water. A new system consists of a string of submerged blades or sails, connected by cables, angled into the oncoming current. [Science World Report]
¶ Researchers at ETH Zürich have developed an internal combustion engine that emits less than half the CO2 compared to a regular engine without compromising performance. It is a natural gas/diesel hybrid with fuel consumption equivalent to less than 118 mpg. [Science World Report]
World:
¶ The UK’s Department of Energy and Climate Change expects renewable energy to increase to meet over 37% of the nation’s electricity demand by 2022, in its latest annual energy and emissions projections. [solarserver.com]
¶ The financing for a 150 MW Ontario wind power project has been completed by Samsung Renewable Energy and Pattern Energy Group. The Grand Renewable Wind Project will produce enough renewable energy for around 50,000 Ontario homes. [EcoSeed]
¶ India’s plans to harness its abundant solar energy and cut emissions appear to be coming into the daylight. Solar-powered air-conditioned coaches and Asia’s largest single-location solar power plant are just a beginning. [MENAFN.COM]
¶ ABB has successfully commissioned the subsea transmission link connecting one of the largest offshore wind farms in Europe to the Belgian grid on schedule. The transmission link has an overall capacity to 325 MW. [Your Renewable News]
¶ Japanese authorities say they’ve managed to deal with over a thousand tons of rainwater at the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant. The rainwater accumulated in a concrete dike around the hundreds of storage tanks brought on by tropical storm Man-yi. [CRIENGLISH.com]
US:
¶ Google has signed a deal to purchase all the energy from a wind farm in Texas, as it continues to move to power all its operations using renewable energy. The deal is a 20-year power purchase agreement to buy the entire output of a 240 MW wind farm near Amarillo. [Business Green]
¶ The United States Army has awarded Chicago-based New Generation Power Inc. a contract to develop geothermal power generation projects for Department of Defense installation. [EcoSeed]
¶ A report from the American Council on Renewable Energy on renewable power in the US western region says that the 13 Western states produced almost a third of their total energy from renewable sources, compared to around an eighth for the nation as a whole. [Business Green]
¶ A joint agreement between the Russian and U.S. governments lays the groundwork for bilateral cooperation on nuclear energy, the US Energy Department said. Energy Secretary Moniz met his Russian counterpart during the IAEA conference in Vienna to sign the deal. [United Press International, Asia]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 17, 2013
Opinion:
¶ “Utilities shocked to find they are already dead” For utilities in the US, changes to the business model to adapt to distributed power are imminent, but the change is 20 years too late, and many utilities (and their ratepayers) are already screwed. [RenewEconomy]
¶ “Utility companies: has their business model become redundant?” Utilities in the UK, with ageing nuclear and coal plants coming offline, must make massive investments. Meanwhile, environmental legislation, energy efficiency, and distributed renewable generation undermine them. [The Guardian]
World:
¶ Societe Generale cut its estimates for German forward power prices from the €44/MWh estimate last March to €39/MWh, despite a recent surge to five-month highs. They say renewable energy generation and efficiency measures were advancing and Europe’s economic outlook is subdued. [Business Spectator]
¶ Solar panels will be installed in sixteen Wellington, New Zealand schools over the next three years under a joint venture between Wellington City Council and Genesis Energy. Wellington is very well known for its renewable wind energy and seeks to make use of its outstanding sunshine hours. [Voxy]
¶ Japan’s Trade and Industry Minister said that the government is looking into the possibility of lowering the country’s dependence on nuclear power. The trade minister said that they will still be maintaining the technology and personnel because they are still needed to contribute to the world. [The Japan Daily Press]
¶ TEPCO said on Tuesday that it dumped more than 1,000 tons of polluted water into the sea after a typhoon raked the Fukushima Daiichi facility, swamping enclosure walls around clusters of water tanks containing toxic water that was used to cool broken reactors. [Independent Online]
US:
¶ California is about to get four important new laws; two on renewables and two on electric vehicles. Two provide a shared renewable energy that everyone to get access and give utilities revenue to eliminate a cap on net metering. The others ease permitting and access for charging stations. [SustainableBusiness.com]
¶ Scientists and business leaders from the Far East are in Maine this week to talk about the worldwide progress being made in harnessing tidal power. About 11 people from Japan are among those attending the University of Maine’s second annual Marine Energy International Symposium. [WLBZ-TV]
¶ Duke Energy’s Texas-based Notrees Battery Storage Project has been honored with an innovation award at the 2013 Energy Storage North America Conference and Expo in San Jose. The project’s 36 MW advanced lead-acid battery helps smooth output from Notrees 153 MW Wind Power Project. [SmartMeters]
¶ Over 100 environmental organizations today called on US EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy to withdraw EPA’s controversial new Protective Action Guides, which would allow exposure to very high doses from radiation releases before government would take action to protect the public. [eNews Park Forest]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 16, 2013
World:
¶ Work is to begin on the largest tidal energy project in Europe after the Scottish government granted permission. A 9 MW demonstration project will come first, with the remainder expected to be built on a phased basis until 2020, when the 86 MW system will be completed. [BBC News]
¶ Australian power prices can move from $30 per MWh to $12,000 in a few minutes, and then back down again just as fast. There are implications to the fact that profits from generating power during a week-long heat-wave in Adelaide can exceed those of the rest of the year. [Business Spectator]
¶ Leading wave device developers Aquamarine Power and Pelamis Wave Power are to receive grant award allocations from the Scottish government. The two companies will share £13 million from Holyrood’s wave first array support program. [reNews]
¶ The UK’s Liberal Democrats voted to support new nuclear and fracking at their party conference in Glasgow today. The party turned against its historic objection to nuclear power by 230 votes to 183 to accept a “limited role” for nuclear power. [Utility Week]
¶ According to the head of Brazil’s energy planning agency, the country will probably scale down its plans for new nuclear plants due to safety concerns following the 2011 radiation leak in Japan and pick up some of the slack with a “revolution” in wind power. [Reuters AlertNet]
¶ Japan’s former Prime Minister Kan urged Taiwan to close all its nuclear power plants, as the island’s legislature prepares to tackle the matter when it reconvenes next week. Kan told an audience in Taipei that the Fukushima Disaster changed his views on nuclear power. [The Japan Times]
¶ Typhoon Man-yi hit central Japan Monday, with almost 300,000 households told to evacuate and fears the storm could go on to hit the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant. The typhoon made landfall in Toyohashi, Aichi prefecture, with gusts of up to 100 miles per hour. [The Asian Age]
¶ Japan’s only operating nuclear reactor has been shut down for maintenance, leaving the country with no nuclear power supply for the second time in 40 years. Kansai Electric confirmed reactor no. 4 was shuttered at midnight on Sunday at its Ohi plant. [CNN]
US:
¶ Ethanol credits were supposed to help clean the air, reduce dependence on foreign oil and bolster agriculture. But a little known market in ethanol credits has also become a hot new game on Wall Street. [Livemint]
¶ Michigan utility Consumers Energy is getting ready for a $255 million wind energy park in Tuscola County, Michigan, about two hours north of Detroit. The 105-megawatt Cross Winds Energy Park will be constructed at a cost of $255 million. [SmartMeters]
¶ The coal industry, feeling threatened by federal efforts to promote wind and solar power, has opened a counterattack by opposing President Obama’s nomination of a renewable electricity advocate to head the federal agency with jurisdiction over power lines. [New York Times]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 15, 2013
Science and Technology:
¶ A new study appears to back up the idea that building more wind power in order to meet peak demand – even if the turbines sometimes produce more energy than the grid needs – could be a better strategy than spending resources on trying to store the energy in batteries. [EarthTechling]
World:
¶ New research conducted by NPD Solarbuzz shows that Japanese solar PV installations have now passed 10 GW for cumulative PV capacity, only the fifth country to reach the mark. Two other countries reached the milestone within the past few months, highlighting Japan’s achievement. [Energy Collective]
¶ The European Parliament is capping the use of food-based biofuels to counter concerns over the energy source’s ethical and environmental sustainability. Parliament voted to lower the amount of fuel that must come from renewable sources by 2020 from 10% to 6%. [Las Vegas Sun]
¶ At the recent G-20 summit in St. Petersburg, Russia, world leaders took two steps toward mitigating climate change. The leaders agreed in principle to phase out fossil-fuel subsidies and the use of hydrofluorocarbons. [Green Car Reports]
¶ The Jamaica Public Service company has signed one of its first major agreements with the American company, WindStream Technologies, to bring some 1,000 SolarMills into the island by October. SolarMills harness both wind and solar power. [Stabroek News]
¶ The European Investment Bank has shown its willingness to invest €100 million for the construction of a 128 MW hydropower project in Pakistan. During a meeting with Finance Minister Ishaq Dar, the EU ambassador said the EU supported Pakistan’s energy policies. [DAWN.com]
¶ Japan is shutting down its last functioning nuclear reactor, with no timetable for a restart. Reactor 4 at Ohi in western Japan will stop generating electricity in the early hours of Monday. Analysts say Japan will be without nuclear power until December at the earliest. [BBC News]
US:
¶ Connecticut’s renewable energy industry is doing well despite a lack of support from within the government. The state is playing catchup, however, as other states are moving faster. [Danbury News Times]
¶ Formed just five years ago, Element Power has successfully developed over 430 MWs of renewable energy projects that are now in construction or operation. The company develops both wind and solar projects in the US, Latin America and Europe. [CIOL]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 14, 2013
World:
¶ Citibank has released an interesting report, The Unimaginable: Peak Coal in China – referring to peak demand rather than any supply driven peak. The limit to coal use appears to be how much pollution the Chinese population is willing to tolerate. [Resilience]
¶ Tanzania received endorsement from the Climate Investment Fund of an investment plan to scale-up the development of its abundant renewable resources. The plan is designed to shift the country from its increasing dependence on fossil fuels to an energy mix including geothermal and solar resources. [IPPmedia]
¶ Solar energy has become so popular in Bangladesh that a total of two million Solar Home Systems and one million Improved Cook Stoves have already been installed in different parts of Bangladesh. It is particularly of great importance in remote areas. [Financial Express Bangladesh]
¶ Harvest Power, officially launched its Energy Garden in British Columbia, the largest commercial-scale high solids anaerobic digester in North America. The Energy Garden is located in Richmond, BC and has the capacity to convert 40,000 tonnes of food and yard waste annually into clean energy and compost. [HispanicBusiness.com]
¶ After Prime Minister Abe assured an international audience that the radioactive water problem at Fukushima Daiichi is under control, a TEPCO technology specialist contradicted him. Now the Japanese government would lead us to believe they were talking about different things. [Asahi Shimbun]
US:
¶ Just when it seemed like the outlook for renewables in California couldn’t get any brighter, the state legislature has passed a bill that will open up access to the 75% of its residents unable to install clean energy on their property. The bill now heads to Governor Jerry Brown for signature into law. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Components for the Vestas Wind Systems turbines to be supplied under an agreement announced yesterday with EDF will be manufactured at Vestas plants in Colorado. The agreement covers up to 750 MW of turbines for multiple EDF Renewable Energy US projects beginning construction in 2013. [Denver Post]
¶ New York state environmental regulations may force Entergy Corp to shut its Indian Point nuclear power plant by 2018, according to a report from US financial firm Morgan Stanley. They believe New York will require new cooling towers, and the company will close the plant instead of building them. [Reuters]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 13, 2013
Opinion:
¶ “The next Solyndra? $8 billion U.S. loan guarantee for Vogtle nuclear reactors too risky” Think what you want about nuclear power. If you are a taxpayer, that debate may be less relevant than the one aimed right at your pocketbook. [Clean Energy News]
World:
¶ Vestas will be providing 14 of the company’s 3.0 MW wind turbines to Bordelum III GmbH & Co., a citizen-owned wind power plant in northern Germany. Over a third of the 2000 residents of Bordelum invested in the project, showing the high level of support of renewable energy. [EcoSeed]
¶ The Chinese Nuclear Society announced at its annual meeting that in 2012 nuclear power produced 98 billion kWh, only 2% of the country’s whole electricity output, lower than the global average of 15% of the gross power generation for countries with nuclear power. [Global Times]
¶ A senior official of the operator of the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant on Sept. 13 disputed Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s assertion to International Olympic Committee members that the Fukushima crisis is under control, which helped Tokyo land the 2020 Summer Games. [Asahi Shimbun]
¶ TEPCO, the operator of the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, announced on Friday that the tritium levels in the groundwater near the tanks have reached their highest level so far, at 97,000 becquerels per liter on Wednesday from the 64,000 measured the day before. [The Japan Daily Press]
US:
¶ A collaborative research effort on plug-in electric vehicles was announced September 11 at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. The laboratory, the Department of Energy, and Toyota will research integrating plug-in electric vehicles into the power grid. [Electric Light & Power]
¶ EDF, the French energy company, has signed a supply agreement with Vestas for the purchase of the turbines totaling 80 MW for US projects. The utility has also signed a 200 MW deal with GE for a project in Texas, although the project names and locations were not disclosed. [Windpower Monthly]
¶ In a visit to the DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Energy Secretary Moniz laid out the mission of DOE, under his reign, highlighting four key technologies to save energy and reduce carbon emissions: wind, photovoltaic solar, LED lighting, and batteries for EVs. [Energy Manager Today]
¶ California has become the largest solar energy market in the country thanks in part to its incentives for putting solar panels on the roofs of homes and businesses. Now it’s also leading the way in installing projects that rely less on government subsidies. [Forbes]
¶ Vermont Governor Shumlin announced that Bennington’s state office complex would be one of ten state facilities throughout Vermont participating in a renewable energy initiative. The complex was chosen based on its existing energy efficiency. It has the possibility of becoming a “net zero” facility. [Bennington Banner]
¶ EDF Renewable Energy has announced it has closed on the membership interest purchase agreement to acquire the Heartland Biogas Project in Nevada. The 20 MW-equivalent renewable natural gas facility should begin to deliver biogas by the end of first quarter 2014. [Biomass Magazine]
¶ A new Civil Society Institute report says power from coal, nuclear, natural gas and hydro are all struggling with supplies of water that diminish as the climate changes. The US needs to start planning to take water use into account, not just energy production. [PR Newswire]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 12, 2013
Science and Technology:
¶ There are times when solar and wind farms generate more electricity than is needed by consumers. Storing that surplus energy in batteries for later use seems like an obvious solution, but a new study from Stanford University suggests that might not always be the case. [Daily Fusion]
¶ Pandas may hold the key to efficiently and cheaply turning plants into renewable energy — in their feces. Microbes in panda feces might turn out to be a solution to the search for sustainable new sources of energy. [The Week Magazine]
Economics and Finance:
¶ Uranium prices are at their lowest level in nearly eight years, as investors and utilities give up hopes for a quick revival for nuclear power. The market for the radioactive fuel hasn’t recovered from the 2011 earthquake and tsunami that devastated Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi power plant. [The Australian]
¶ The levelized cost of electricity from wind and solar sources in America has fallen by more than 50% over the past four years, according to Lazard’s Levelized Cost of Energy Analysis 7.0, recently released by global financial advisor and asset manager firm Lazard Freres & Co. [CleanTechnica]
World:
¶ Scotland’s strategy for renewable energy is clear but achieving goals will be challenging, according to Audit Scotland. A new report highlights strong leadership from the Scottish government and its investment of £209 million in the renewables sector success factors. [reNews]
… Audit Scotland also says the country’s ambitious vision of meeting all demand for electricity with green energy by 2020 is being seriously undermined by the current economic climate and changes in UK energy policy. [Herald Scotland]
¶ The Clean Energy Finance Corporation, set to be scrapped by Australia’s incoming Coalition government, has issued a loan to Pacific Hydro to build the final stage of its Portland wind farm in what is likely to be among the bank’s final deals. [WA today]
¶ The European Parliament voted on draft legislation Sept. 11, calling for a cap on first-generation biofuels and a swift transition second-generation renewable fuels. The Renewable Energy Association said the series of tight votes will prolong instability in biofuel policy. [Biomass Magazine]
¶ De Aar Solar Power has wrapped up module installation at a 50 MW PV plant in South Africa’s Northern Cape. More than 167,000 units have been installed at the site in the past five months and during the peak construction period up to 3000 modules went up per day. [reNews]
¶ Vattenfall is opening the Zuidlob wind farm in the central part of the Netherlands. With its 36 turbines and a total of 122 MW of installed capacity, it will be Vattenfall’s largest onshore wind farm and will supply 88,000 households with renewable electricity annually. [The Swedish Wire]
¶ China will aim to cut total coal consumption to below 65 per cent of total primary energy use by 2017 as part of a comprehensive new plan to tackle air pollution, the government said today. Coal consumption accounted for 66.8 per cent of total use in 2002. [Business Spectator]
¶ A report from two environmental groups argues that declining power consumption in Ontario means that new nuclear reactors are not needed in the province. The Pembina Institute and Greenpeace say that conservation and renewables will answer the province’s energy needs. [durhamregion.com]
US:
¶ South Carolina state-owned utility Santee Cooper became the first electricity producer the state to approve a solar pilot project aimed at putting added power on its grid. The utility will purchase up to 3 megawatts of renewable electricity from a solar farm to be constructed in Colleton County. [RenewablesBiz]
¶ New York Governor Cuomo has asked the Public Service Commission to release $165.6 million as seed money for the NY Green Bank, which will be used to encourage private lenders to support renewable energy projects in the state. [SustainableBusiness.com]
¶ Some Massachusetts lawmakers want the state to join a growing national movement that is pressuring institutional investors like pension funds and university endowments to divest holdings in companies that produce, distribute, and support fossil fuels as a way to fight climate change. [Boston.com]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 11, 2013
Opinion:
¶ “Even under Abbott, coal generation has no future” Coal-fired electricity may have little or no economic future in Australia, a new analysis has found. Even while the new government seems determined to turn its back on renewable energy, coal may not be able to compete with it. [RenewEconomy]
World:
¶ The main German political parties have recently clarified their positions on the future of feed-in tariffs and renewable energy in advance of federal elections to be held on September 22nd, 2013. [solarserver.com]
¶ According to a new report from GlobalData, the global market for high voltage grid connections could grow more than 10 fold over the next seven years to reach nearly $90 billion a year, as a result of the booming market for renewable energy. [Business Green]
¶ Germany’s mainstream power sector, needing a stable source of renewable electricity, backed its wind power rivals in saying that development of offshore wind will halt unless it gets fast assurances on future earnings potential. [Reuters]
¶ Adding the new material Proinso delivered in the first half of 2013, which amounts to 27.1 MW, the company has totaled 62.3 MW in PV products supplied in India. Proinso has had a branch in India since 2012 and has 109 members in its International Network of Qualified Installers. [Solar Plaza]
¶ Ontario will start paying wind power generators today not to produce electricity when the surplus cannot be used or sold, but the move will actually save ratepayers money. The province imported $500 million worth of power in 2003, but now wind power helps it export up to $6 billion worth. [570 News]
¶ The true raw material footprint of the world’s leading economies has been revealed thanks to new research — and the findings don’t bode well, the amount of raw materials necessary to sustain the economies of the developed world is considerably greater than previously thought. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The leader of Sweden’s Social Democratic Party, Stefan Löfven, was previously a strong supporter of nuclear power in his role as chairman of the IF Metall trade union. However, since becoming the leader of the opposition last year, Löfven has changed his stance on the issue. [The Local.se]
¶ The operator of the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant said levels of tritium – considered one of the least harmful radioactive elements – spiked more than 15 times in groundwater near a leaked tank at the facility over three days this week. [Reuters UK]
US:
¶ Nearly 100 organizations and businesses have urged the EIA to reconsider how it develops its renewable energy forecasts. It noted, for example, the that the EIA’s projected renewable energy resources for 2040 had already been achieved in 2013, according to EIA’s own data. [Sustainable Industries]
¶ The US biodiesel industry appears headed toward another banner year, driven in large part by a $1-per-gallon production tax credit through the end of 2013. Biodiesel production for the month of July reached 132 million gallons and year-to-date volume is at more than 768 million gallons. [Agri-Pulse]
¶ Eagle Creek Renewable Energy has completed the purchase of 10 hydroelectric facilities in the north-east of New Jersey from Algonquin Power. The facilities have a total capacity of around 29 MW and will be integrated with Eagle Creek’s existing hydroelectric plants in New York. [reNews]
¶ The US army has handed deals to 17 wind developers in the latest phase of its $7 billion renewable energy drive. The Multiple Award Task Order Contracts will be used to procure reliable, locally generated, renewable and alternative energy for DOD installations. [reNews]
¶ Mounting evidence of water contamination, air pollution and even earthquakes has been piling on fracking, while state and federal agencies have been scrambling to develop a platform for managing future impacts. They have been left in the dust because of regulatory loopholes. [Energy Collective]
¶ The head of the NRC told lawmakers Tuesday that it was too early to tell whether her agency could finish a safety review of Yucca Mountain because the NRC was still trying to determine whether it had enough money to complete the safety analysis. [Wall Street Journal]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 10, 2013
Opinion:
¶ “We’ll see energy revolution to the end” Thomas Grigoleit director of renewable energies at the government-backed development agency, Germany Trade and Invest, argues that the Energiewende has already had several successes and will make Germany even stronger. [The Local.de]
¶ “Nuclear Energy Survives Only on the Basis of Faulty Risk Assessment” Nuclear power survives on empty promises and false hopes fed by our inability to effectively evaluate risk. We are lulled by long periods of stability and safe operation, and shocked by catastrophe that should be anticipated. [Huffington Post]
World:
¶ In the UK, community owned energy could grow by 89 times its current size if the right national and local policies are put in place, according to a report by the think-tank ResPublica. It could reach a capacity of 550 MW by 2020. [Utility Week]
¶ Using only one fifth of the wind energy available in the world, mankind can increase the amount of the consumed electricity seven-fold. Development of more efficient wind turbines and systems for accumulation and transfer of energy moves the world towards new electrification of the economy. [Pravda]
¶ Neste Oil Oyj, the best-performing major European energy stock, jumped to its highest since July 2008 in Helsinki trading after saying full-year earnings will exceed analyst estimates as renewable-fuel sales gain. [Businessweek]
¶ The 75 MW Kalkbult solar plant has become the first PV project under South Africa’s renewable energy programme to be connected to the grid. The project finished three months ahead of schedule, becoming the first of the 18 PV current projects to go online. [PV-Tech]
¶ The UK Government has been saying that because eight large nuclear stations are scheduled to close over the next ten years, they need urgently to build some new ones. Yet EDF, the French company that bought the eight nuclear stations in 2009, has no intention of closing any of them. [The Daily Climate]
¶ Russia is hiking the price of four nuclear reactors it is selling India under an agreement struck in 2008, worried that the liability regime Parliament approved in 2010 could mean Moscow has unlimited financial exposure in case of accidents. [Calcutta Telegraph]
¶ Japanese prosecutors have decided not to indict former officials of TEPCO over their roles in the accident at Fukushima Daiichi in March 2011, according to Japan’s public broadcaster. Naoto Kan, who was prime minister at the time, will also not be prosecuted. [New York Times]
US:
¶ National Rural Utilities Cooperative Finance Corp., along with Federated Rural Electric Insurance Exchange and the National Renewables Cooperative Organization launched a pilot program Sept. 5 to streamline solar energy project development in a cost-effective way. [Electric Co-op Today]
¶ The National Farmers Union Board of Directors has unanimously passed a resolution indicating the obligation of Congress to provide continuing to support Country-of-Origin Labeling and the Renewable Fuel Standard. [ThePigSite.com]
¶ Hawaii, which is currently generating nearly 14% of its electricity from renewable sources and well on its way to achieving 40% clean energy by 2030, is projecting to eclipse 40% and is looking to set a new goal. [Pacific Business News (Honolulu)]
¶ The Hawaiian Electric Company (HECO) has announced steps to enable more rooftop solar systems to connect to the grid. The Interstate Renewable Energy Council, Inc. commends HECO’s announcement and its path-charting model for renewable energy integration. [AltEnergyMag]
¶ The NRC will hold a series of 12 meetings this fall to discuss the fate of spent nuclear fuel that could be left behind after commercial power reactors are shut down and closed. The meetings are part of the process of dealing with what is called the “waste confidence rule.” [The Augusta Chronicle]
¶ A series of mechanical difficulties at the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station has kept the plant from operating at peak for more than two weeks. Now Pilgrim is completely off the electric grid, shut down Sunday evening because of a steam leak in a pipe supplying hot water to the nuclear reactor. [Capecodonline]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 9, 2013
Science and Technology:
¶ Dr. David MacKay, Professor of Physics at Cambridge University, has published a book called Sustainable Energy – Without the Hot Air, in which he gives a thorough and critical analysis of the feasibility of a post-fossil fuel world. (It will not be easy, but we can and need to.) [ENGINEERING.com]
World:
¶ An Asian Center of Excellence for Smart Grid and Renewable Energy Management has been opened by the DNV KEMA Clean Technology Center in Singapore to provide advisory services on the technical and business aspects of smart grids. [Metering International]
¶ Alstom signed a €25 million contract with Enerplan, a Brazilian power company, to supply wind turbines to the Pontal wind project in the South of Brazil. The equipment will be installed in a new wind farm located in Viamão, city of Rio Grande do Sul State. [Your Renewable News]
¶ The annual rate of China’s idled wind capacity may fall to 12% this year from 17% in 2012, as investments in new wind farms slowed and developments shifted to areas with better grid access, aiding operators such as China Longyuan Power Group Corp. [Businessweek]
¶ According to Meed Insight’s Mena Renewables Status Report 2013, more than 100 renewable energy projects including solar, wind and biomass are currently under development in the Middle East-North Africa region, which has had 40% year-on-year growth. [MENAFN.COM]
¶ The wind energy sector is probably the biggest and most immediate loser from the Australian election bringing Tony Abbott to power. It has been at a virtual standstill for months because utilities and bankers were mindful of a likely Coalition win. [RenewEconomy]
¶ China used subsidies and $47.5 billion of credit to wrest supremacy in manufacture of PVs from Germany, Japan, and the US. The result is that the industry has been saddled with losses for at least two years. Most of the businesses that started up have been closed. [Bloomberg]
¶ Radioactive contamination worries at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant did not stop Tokyo from being chosen as the host of the 2020 Olympics, as many had feared. But even as Tokyo celebrates, the worries at Fukushima continue. [Wall Street Journal]
US:
¶ A pilot project that converts methane, carbon dioxide and other trace elements from an Ohio landfill into burnable natural gas that can be sold to customers is helping Detroit-based DTE Energy Co. inch closer to its state-mandated renewable energy goals. [Crain’s Detroit Business]
¶ The clean energy and clean transportation sectors created 38,600 jobs during the second quarter of this year, according to a recent report published by Environmental Entrepreneurs. This includes jobs in energy, transportation, the power grid, and energy efficiency. [Earth911.com]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 8, 2013
Opinion:
¶ “Don’t worry: Team Abe is tackling the nuclear crisis at Fukushima” After spending its eight months in power studiously averting its eyes from the gathering troubles at Fukushima, Team Abe is now on the job, reassuring people that everything is under control. [The Japan Times]
Science and Technology:
¶ One potential source of renewable energy that has been gaining interest is the Piezoelectric Technology. It generates power from the electromagnetic properties of some minerals when they are put under stress or pressure. [EcoChunk]
Finance:
¶ Thanks to falling costs in solar-panel production, solar power in California has fallen from 25-30¢ per kWh to about 10¢. Renewable profit margins are improving, sparking investor interest in wind and solar. [The News-Press]
World:
¶ Oil producing and exporting countries are advised to use renewable energy, especially wind and solar not only to their environmental and economic advantages but to limit the internal consumption of oil and gas and preserve its export potential. [gulfnews.com]
¶ While Australia’s mining companies are no doubt delighted by Abbot’s election victory over the weekend, a Coalition government is likely to hamper the development prospects of the renewable energy sector. [Sourceable]
¶ Under plans currently being discussed by the UK and Icelandic governments, Iceland would provide the UK with renewable electricity at a cheaper cost than offshore wind. The plans being discussed by the two governments concern a 1,000 km undersea cable with a capacity of 1 GW. [Renewable Energy Magazine]
¶ Denmark’s largest offshore wind farm located off the eastern coast of the country near Anholt has been officially opened. The wind farm consists of 111 Siemens 3.6 MW wind turbines with a total capacity of 400 MW [Renewable Energy Magazine]
¶ The prime minister of Japan, Shinzo Abe, seeking to reassure that Tokyo was a safe place to host the Olympics, travelled with the Japanese delegation and claimed that problems at the Fukushima nuclear plant were under control. [Straight.com]
US:
¶ Energy analysts at Deutsche Bank are predicting a huge surge in the uptake of distributed solar PV in the United States, saying solar PV installations could rise 7-fold in coming years and lift overall solar PV capacity to nearly 50 GW by 2016. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Maui Electric Company says it is increasing efficiency of its wind turbines through by changes in its use and integration of wind power that are allowing it to use about 91% of available wind energy compared to an estimated 72% prior to making the changes. [EarthTechling]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 7, 2013
Science and Technology:
¶ A tweak to an automobile’s engine software can improve by as much as 20% the estimated fuel efficiency when using gasoline with ethanol or methanol, according to a non-profit group pushing gasoline alternatives. [Businessweek]
World:
¶ South Africa has started to focus on renewable power, especially solar. The country how has an investment in solar of $5.7 billion and can now boast that it is the world’s fastest growing investor of clean energy. It is moving away from 86% reliance on coal. [Day News]
¶ Fred. Olsen Renewables has announced that the Rothes II Wind Farm in Scotland has commenced operation. The wind farm has an installed operational capacity of 41.4 MW, equivalent to generating enough electricity to power over 20,500 homes. [Domestic Fuel]
¶ South Korea announced Friday it has placed an import ban on all fisheries products from eight Japanese prefectures deemed effected by radiation from the Fukushima nuclear disaster. [The Japan Times]
¶ After a tank leaked 300 tons of radioactive water without anyone noticing, TEPCO says that it will install water-level gauges on all flange-type tanks storing radioactive coolant water at the Fukushima Daiichi by the end of November to beef up monitoring. [The Japan Times]
US:
¶ Today, policies like Renewable Portfolio Standards and Net Energy Metering are helping to fuel solar’s explosive growth. The industry now employs 120,000 Americans at 5,600 US companies. What’s more, solar power now generates enough electricity for 1.5 million homes. [Business Insider]
¶ Under a Renewable Energy Standard more than 1,000 renewable energy projects have been built in Ohio during the past five years, including a $600 million wind farm. Now the Public Utilities Commission knows what it actually cost: The wholesale price of power went down. [Grist]
¶ About 700,000 Entergy customers in Louisiana are paying an average of $5.81 each month for repairs the Waterford nuclear plant. The total cost of repairs would be enough to replace the 28-year-old nuclear plant with a new natural gas plant. [The Advocate]
¶ Two weeks after an electrical malfunction caused the shutdown of the Pilgrim nuclear reactor, the plant is still not at full power. The owners said the delay was standard procedure, but it turns out that the plant is operating without one of its three recirculating pumps. [Capecodonline]
¶ Southern California Edison wants customers to pay more than $2 billion over the next seven years to cover the company’s capital investment in the shuttered San Onofre nuclear plant. The utility says it needs the money to compensate shareholders. [Las Vegas Sun]
… San Diego Gas & Electric is seeking $808 million from customers to recover its investments in the recently retired San Onofre nuclear plant, the utility said Friday. SDG&E owns a 20% stake in the plant. [U-T San Diego]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 6, 2013
Science and Technology:
¶ In 2011, Chinese manufacturers accounted for 63% of all PV production worldwide. A detailed analysis of costs associated with PV production shows that the main contributors to that country’s lower PV prices are economies of scale and well-developed supply chains — not cheap labor. [MIT News]
World:
¶ President Obama and leaders from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden said they share the goal of reaching a binding global climate agreement by 2015, noting that taking action on climate change, domestically and internationally, “requires mobilizing scaled up climate finance.” [Environment News Service]
¶ In a recent announcement, the Ethiopian Ministry of Water and Energy claimed that around 13,200 solar systems have been installed in rural Ethiopia over the past nine months. These systems are based on distributed power technology as there is no grid connectivity in those areas. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Chile continues to grow more attractive to solar developers. The new renewable energy portfolio standard requires utilities to get 20% of their energy from “non-traditional” renewable sources by 2020. That is in addition to the 40% they already get from hydro. [Clean Energy Authority]
¶ German automaker Volkswagen’s Mexican unit has signed a 20-year agreement with Mexico Power Group to buy 130 MW of output from the planned La Bufa wind farm. The $360m La Bufa plant, sited in the Mexican state of Zacatecas, will have a total capacity of 180 MW. [Recharge]
¶ Wind energy records were broken in four Australian states in August, as the Coalition gears up to place the wind power industry under greater scrutiny should it win power on Saturday. South Australia derived 38% of its power from the wind last month, well above its previous record of 31%. [The Guardian]
¶ South Korea has banned the import of sea food products from eight Japanese prefectures amid radioactive contamination concerns. Seoul said the measure is in response to public fears over the flow of tainted water into the Pacific from the crippled Fukushima nuclear plan. [euronews]
US:
¶ It looks like more trouble is looming ahead for communities that host fracking operations. Two new studies have linked fracking-related operations to earthquakes in Texas and Ohio, and a recently settled lawsuit in Arkansas indicates that swarms of tiny earthquakes can damage structures. [CleanTechnica]
¶ America added 976 MW of new PV capacity in the second quarter of 2013, according to the NPD Solarbuzz North America PV Markets Quarterly report. Rising demand across the country pushing installed capacity in the second quarter of 2013 up 24% compared to the first quarter of 2012. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The US power grid, which is in three distinct parts, appears to be on the verge of becoming unified to a degree, so at least some power will be free to flow as the market dictates. And that could have particularly positive implications for generators of renewable power. [Greentech Media]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 5, 2013
Opinion:
¶ “Clean up coal or abandon it?” A paper from the University of New South Wales assesses the feasibility and cost of a 100% renewable energy powered National Electricity Market in the period 2030 and makes a statement on carbon capture and storage. [Business Spectator]
World:
¶ GE today announced its 500th wind turbine installation in Brazil. Wind energy is one of the country’s fastest growing energy sources. In 2012, 1,077 MW of wind were added there. [Your Renewable News]
¶ For the upcoming Australian election, the Coalition unveiled its energy document. It focuses almost entirely on promising to increase fossil fuel developments. The only mention of renewable power is another promise to investigate wind power and health problems. [The Guardian]
¶ Vestas is to supply 100 MW of hardware for the Yanchi wind farm in China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. Natural gas supplier Hanas New Energy, which ordered 50 MW from Vestas less than a month ago, ordered 50 more of Vestas’ new 2 MW turbines. [reNews]
¶ Findings published by the UK Department of Energy and Climate Change showed negative articles surrounding the use of green technologies have had a negligible effect on public sentiment over the past 18 months, with support remaining high and opposition low. [uSwitch.com]
¶ Power plant operator Next Kraftwerke expects to nearly triple revenues this year as it links solar, wind and biogas units to respond nimbly to Germany’s sudden big surges in demand – a model it plans to export to other countries. [Reuters]
¶ Joining the bandwagon of heavyweights in the energy sector, Hero group announced its entry in the renewable energy sector with the launch of its new unit Hero Future Energies. The company aims to develop 80 MW and 20 MW of solar by the year 2016-17. [Economic Times]
¶ Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said he will tell the International Olympic Committee that leaks of radioactive water at the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant will pose no problem in hosting the 2020 Olympics. [Businessweek]
¶ The chief of Japan’s nuclear watchdog chided TEPCO for its inability properly to explain problems. He also lashed out at media coverage, saying reports of recent leaks were exaggerating an impression of the seriousness of the situation at the stricken plant. [Economic Times]
¶ The Japanese government will soon test the concept of an ice wall to arrest the flow of ground from leaking from beneath Fukushima Daiichi into the Pacific Ocean. The feasibility test will start by mid-October at the earliest. [Zee News]
US:
¶ The California Public Utilities Commission has issued a proposal calling for the state’s private utilities to procure 1.325 GW of storage by 2020, for a variety of functions including supporting the integration of an increasing amount of renewable energy. [solarserver.com]
¶ Dominion Virginia Power bid $1.6 million to win a 2 GW site off Virginia in the United States’ second offshore wind lease auction. Apex Virginia Offshore Wind and Dominion went head to head through six rounds of bidding. [reNews]
¶ A digital library containing nearly 3,200 pages of documents related to the replacement steam generators at the shuttered San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station in northern San Diego County was made available online. Some documents are partly redacted. [KPBS]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 4, 2013
Numbers:
¶ Renewable energy has reduced wholesale prices in Germany by €0.012 per kWh. Since the surcharge is calculated by the difference between the feed-in tariff and the wholesale price, the lower prices will lead to a nominally higher surcharge next year, but lower prices to come. [RenewEconomy]
Science and Technology:
¶ Biomass is often overlooked within the renewable energy sector, but is now emerging as a key player for many countries seeking cleaner ways to power their economy. Though it is currently overlooked, biomass may just become the game changer for some countries. [eco-business.com]
World:
¶ A recent study by a green electricity provider in the UK has found that rapid expansion of renewable energy can lead to strong cost savings by 2030. Taking the consequential costs of coal and nuclear into account, the savings can run into many billions. [pv magazine]
¶ Danish wind turbine company Vestas has signed an agreement with a manufacturer and exporter of spiral-welded steel pipes in Turkey for the construction of a 52 megawatt wind power plant. Vestas will deliver, install, and commission 16 turbines of 3.3 MW. [EcoSeed]
¶ Australia’s energy industry is on an inevitable path away from fossil fuels and further investment in the sector, particularly coal, would be very risky, according to research by UNSW. The study says 100% renewable electric power by 2030 would be cost-effective. [WA today]
¶ European Union coal demand is on course for a decades-long slide as the growth in capacity of renewable power outstrips new coal-fired plants. Across the EU, a total of 28 gigawatts of old coal-fired capacity could come offline between 2012 and 2020. [Business Spectator]
¶ TEPCO detected the highest radiation levels found so far near tanks holding contaminated water used to cool reactors at its wrecked Fukushima Daiichi plant. Readings of 2,200 millisieverts per hour were found yesterday, up from 1,800 millisieverts per hour. [Bloomberg]
US:
¶ SolarWorld, the largest US solar manufacturer, announced today that it has begun building solar carports totaling 537 kW capacity at four public parks in Thousand Oaks, California. The carports are expected save local government millions of dollars over 25 years. [Your Renewable News]
¶ Hawaiian Electric Company (HECO) will deactivate its Honolulu Power Plant on Jan. 31, 2014, as part of its strategy to increase the use of renewable energy and reduce Hawaii’s dependency on imported fossil fuel. [KHON2]
¶ HECO recently announced getting almost 18% renewable energy in the first half of 2013, exceeding the 2015 requirement two years ahead of schedule. Four notable bright spots are helping to drive Hawaii’s clean energy transformation. [Huffington Post]
¶ The US Energy Information Administration’s “Electric Power Monthly” says renewable energy sources provided 14.20% of the country’s net electric generation during the first half of the year (through June 30, 2013), up from 13.57% for the same period last year. [Domestic Fuel]
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Tags: biomass, nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 3, 2013
Opinion:
¶ Five nuclear reactors have been shuttered in the United States in recent months, signaling a “rapid-fire” industry retreat that will only get worse, according to a recent study by the Institute for Energy and the Environment. [Fox News]
Science and Technology:
¶ Neste Oil and Raisioagro have launched a research project to investigate the potential of waste straw as a raw material for producing renewable diesel. Large quantities of waste straw are produced but little is currently used. [WebWire]
World:
¶ The EU Energy Commissioner warned Germany about cutting renewable energy subsidies. The Commissioner suggests that such actions could cause damage to investor confidence and reduce of renewable energy development. [Hydrogen Fuel News]
¶ Greek construction firm Ellaktor has posted a 26.4 per cent rise in its wind farm revenues for the first half of 2013, despite an overall drop of four per cent for the company. [NewNet]
¶ Japanese Prime Minister Abe said the government “will step forward and implement all necessary policies” to deal with the flood of radioactive water from the Fukushima Daiichi plant. [Reuters India]
¶ The Japanese government on Tuesday said it would spend the equivalent of $470 million to try to tackle the toxic water crisis at the country’s crippled nuclear power plant. [CNN]
US:
¶ Figures from industry experts Wiki-Solar show total installed capacity in the nation is now 3051 MW from 98 facilities, with 25 new sites totalling 1488 MW added so far in 2013. [reNews]
¶ More wind and solar energy users in Michigan are getting billing credit for excess power they generate. A state report shows net metering production increased by 55% from 2011 to 2012. [Iron Mountain Daily News]
¶ Both members of Vermont’s MiddleburyCollege community and environmentalists are dismayed over the institution’s decision not to divest its nearly $1 billion endowment from the fossil fuel industry. [Addison County Independent]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 2, 2013
Science and Technology:
¶ A key engineering executive at Continental A.G. is predicting car tires could be made of 100-percent renewable raw materials by 2020, but cautions that finding acceptable substitutes for materials used widely today is not a given. [Tire Business]
World:
¶ Germany set a new record in July by providing 5.1 terawatt-hours of electricity from solar. That beat its record production of 5.0 terawatt-hours of electricity from wind in January of this year. [Energy Collective]
¶ South Australia is one the leading regions in the world in the take-up of variable renewable energy sources such as wind energy and rooftop solar PV, and could be the first industrial economy to reach 50% variable generation. [RenewEconomy]
¶ The Australian Renewable Energy Agency has contracted Parsons Brinckerhoff to examine the potential for use of renewable energy by existing fossil fuel power stations through hybridisation in Australia. [Business Spectator]
¶ A subcontractor who was involved in building water storage tanks at the Fukushima Daiichi said late last month that concerns about leaks emerged after workers were told to build the vessels as quickly as possible. [The Japan Times]
¶ Japan’s nuclear regulator said on Monday it may have to think about dumping contaminated cooling water from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the Pacific. [euronews]
¶ Seismologists agreed there was no active fault line under the Ohi plant, Japan’s sole functioning nuclear station, giving the operator hope it can restart two reactors once they undergo maintenance and safety checks. [Yahoo!7 News]
US:
¶ The US Geological Survey and the Fish and Wildlife Service released a report that cites a fracking wastewater spill as the probable cause of a mass die-off of blackside dace, a federally listed threatened species. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Despite tremendous growth in wind energy capacity in the U.S., the antiquated energy distribution system is preventing wind from reaching its full potential—often forcing wind farms to throttle back on windy days. [AllGov]
¶ The first radioactive ocean plume released by the Fukushima nuclear power plant disaster will finally be reaching the shores of the United States sometime in 2014, according to a new study from the University of New South Wales. [CleanTechnica]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 1, 2013
Opinion:
¶ “Federal legislation key to jobs-creating, swift VY clean-up” by Lissa Weinmann. We should be able to do better than having a plant in SAFSTOR for sixty years before it is cleaned up. [Green Energy Times]
¶ “German energy crisis favors the fleet” Germany’s half-a-trillion-euro energy overhaul is forcing sector players to change their business models fast, giving smaller groups a head start on the country’s ponderous utilities. [euronews]
World:
¶ Forty-three financial institutions, including the World Bank, are setting up a working party to put values on natural resources. They may decide to withdraw credit from companies that fail to protect the environment. [Scientific American]
¶ China will raise tariffs on power to subsidize renewable energy in a bid for better quality air, the country’s economic planner said on Friday. The price adjustment will exclude residential and agricultural power. [CCTV]
¶ According to a survey recently conducted by Capacent Gallup, the overwhelming majority of the Icelandic public, 81%, is in favor of raising a wind farm in Iceland. Only 7% were against the idea. [News of Iceland] (Iceland produces more electricity per capita than any other country, and gets 100% of its electricity from renewable sources. About 15% of its energy is from fossil fuels, used in transportation.)
¶ High radiation readings detected during the daily inspection on Saturday near three water tanks and one pipe stretched between the tanks and the plant, indicating new leaks, Kyodo news agency reported. [RT]
¶ Radiation at one spot at Fukushima Daiichi is 1800 millisieverts, high enough to prove lethal within four hours of exposure. Earlier reports of 100 millisieverts were from detectors that could not measure any higher. [BBC News]
US:
¶ It should be no surprise that the price of solar has been dropping. A new Tracking the Sun report from the DOE’s Lawrence Berkeley National Labs confirms the trend: solar keeps getting cheaper. [Energy Collective]
¶ The DOE estimates ocean power could produce up to 1400 TWh of electricity per year, enough to power millions of homes. The private sector has no clear incentive to invest, so the DOE is providing $16 million funding. [Energy Collective] (In 2008, the US used 4120 TWh.)
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
August 31, 2013
Opinion:
¶ “Why Fukushima is worse than you think” By Mycle Schneider, Special to CNN [CNN]
¶ “More U.S. nuclear power plant closures to come?” The closing of the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant could be indicative of more shutdowns to come, experts say. [iStockAnalyst]
World:
¶ A Kenyan government delegation met with key European wind power developers, government departments, and others to increase the use of renewable energy in Kenya and attract investment in wind power there. [Windpower Monthly]
¶ The West Bengal government does not want nuclear plants and it is instead all set to introduce rooftop solar power schemes to increase its renewable energy supply, a minister said Friday. [Vancouver Desi]
¶ In what experts call a novel and controversial solution, Japan is considering whether to install “a subterranean ring of ice” to contain the contaminated water leaking from Fukushima Daiichi. [Water Online]
US:
¶ Clean energy and sustainable transportation projects launched this year created nearly 40,000 new green jobs in America during the second quarter of 2013. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Duke Energy has agreed to retire five Indiana coal-fired power plants by June 2018 under a settlement with environmental and citizens groups that also calls for the company to increase its investments in renewable energy. [Huffington Post]
¶ Construction of a five-megawatt solar installation on 43 acres in East Lyme, Connecticut has begun, the project developer Middletown-based Greenskies Renewable Energy announced on Friday. [Hartford Business]
¶ Dominion Virginia Power updated its long-range energy plan, offering natural gas generation as its base plan but also wind and possibly nuclear options in anticipation of regulations to reduce greenhouse gases. [Washington Post]
¶ The governor of New Hampshire has formed a working group in response to the planned closing of the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant. It will monitor plans for public safety and coordinate with other states to aid workers. [Concord Monitor]
¶ Duke Energy Florida wants to raise the average customer’s bill by more than $8 a month to $124.30 starting Jan. 1 to pay for an increase in fuel and nuclear costs. [Tampabay.com]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
August 30, 2013
Opinion:
¶ “King Coal running out of luck, and it could be terminal” By Ben Caldecott, Bloomberg New Energy Finance [RenewEconomy]
Science and Technology:
¶ A small start-up with roots in North CarolinaA&TUniversity has developed PiGrid, an alternative to asphalt that is derived from pig waste and actually performs better than conventional asphalt itself. [ValueWalk]
¶ Electricity sourcing from energy storage technology is now a growing industry trend as businesses can reduce waste by producing their own power from renewable sources, including wind and solar. [The Strategic Sourceror]
World:
¶ According to the new data, renewables’ share of UK power generation rose from 11.3% in the first quarter of 2012 to 12.3% this year, delivered despite a 32.1% fall in hydro generation because of lack of rain, [Business Green]
¶ Azerbaijan is set to ramp up its renewable energy capacities. The government has instructed the Institute of Geography to draw up the country’s solar and wind power maps by July next year. [pv magazine]
US:
¶ Under Wisconsin’s renewable energy standard, Dairyland Power Cooperative should get 8.44% of its electricity from renewables by 2015. It has already achieved 12.47% in 2013. [Electric Co-op Today]
¶ The Renewable Energy Group has completed upgrades to its 30-million gallon biodiesel refinery in southern Minnesota to allow the plant to use multiple kinds of raw materials. [EcoSeed]
¶ The loss of a nuclear power plant that once provided Vermont with one-third of its electricity won’t affect the region’s power supply, according to officials at ISO New England. [The Keene Sentinel]
¶ Dismantling Three Mile Island’s Unit 2 and returning the property to a pre-plant state would cost about $918 million in 2012 dollars, John Buckley of the NRC said at a meeting Wednesday evening in Hershey. [The Sunday Dispatch]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
August 29, 2013
Science and Technology:
¶ The largest battery in the world has been sitting quietly in George Washington National Forest along the Virginia-West Virginia border providing peak power for nearly 30 years. It is a pumped-storage facility with a capacity of 3003 MW. [CleanTechnica]
World:
¶ Carbon emissions in China could peak as soon as 2023 if a carbon pricing mechanism is introduced, according to new research by Bloomberg New Energy Finance. [4-traders]
… The report from Bloomberg New Energy Finance also predicts that China will invest $362 billion in new solar PV capacity by 2030, and could invest as much as $649 billion. [solarserver.com]
¶ Germany’s wind power sector will expand faster in the second half of the year, ahead of an expected reduction in government incentives. The country’s wind association said it expected about 2,900 MW of new capacity, up from 1,143 MW in the first six months. [Reuters UK]
US:
¶ The U.S. Army Corp of Engineers has dedicated the entire $7 billion in its renewable energy purchase program to solar technology. The agency has additionally published a list of 22 companies that qualify for the work, which will span the next ten years. [solarserver.com]
¶ Google announced it decreased total carbon emissions 9% to 1.5 million tons of CO2 in 2012 in its Green Blog this week. It emitted 30 metric tons of carbon per million dollars of revenue compared to 44 tons in 2011, but revenue increased. [EarthTechling]
¶ Almost 4,500 people have signed up on the Lake Erie Energy Development Corporation website since April, with a promise to pay a little more for electricity from wind turbines on Lake Erie. [freshwatercleveland]
¶ A study by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, looked at more than 50,000 home sales near 67 wind farms in nine states. Researchers found no statistical evidence that wind turbines negatively affected property values. [ThinkProgress]
¶ Duke Energy has publicly shared new proposals to divert rushing waters away from the Oconee nuclear plant in case the 385-foot-high Jocassee Dam were to ever fail. The fixes would be made to the Keowee Dam and areas of the station. [Greenville News]
¶ Entergy Nuclear has filed an amended petition with the Public Service Board seeking to operate Vermont Yankee until Dec. 31, 2014. [Barre Montpelier Times Argus]
¶ The president of the Tennessee Valley Authority said a drop in demand is putting Bellefonte Nuclear Plant workers on the chopping block. More energy-efficient consumers and increased hydroelectric production are reducing demand for the plant’s power. [whnt.com]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
August 28, 2013
Opinion:
¶ “Entergy Surrender On Vermont Yankee Reactor Is Latest Evidence Of ‘Rapid-Fire Downsizing’ Of Nuclear Power In US” Mark Cooper, senior fellow for economic analysis, Institute for Energy and the Environment, Vermont Law School, makes his observations. [PR Newswire]
World:
¶ For the upcoming Australian election, the Coalition has announced it will realize $7.8 billion of savings from programs linked to carbon price and other emission reduction programs. This includes cuts to the Australian Renewable Energy Agency. [Business Spectator]
¶ Bloomberg New Energy Finance has released analysis which finds wind and solar power will make up more than half of new power capacity growth in China to 2030. By 2030 total installed capacity of renewable energy power plants will equal that of coal. [Business Spectator]
¶ IKEA is a huge supporter of renewable energy and has had installed 500,000 solar PV panels. At the present time, renewable energy schemes provide the company with one third of its energy supply. [Solar Panels UK]
¶ The former Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, 71-year-old former leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party has made it known that he is for the abandonment of nuclear power. He is considered still to be influential in Japanese politics. [The Japan Daily Press]
¶ The International Atomic Energy Agency, the world’s nuclear watchdog, has urged Japan to explain more clearly what is happening at Fukushima and avoid sending “confusing messages” about the disaster, the country’s atomic regulator revealed. [Yahoo!7 News]
US:
¶ According to the latest issue of the US Energy Information Administration’s “Electric Power Monthly,” renewable energy sources (biomass, geothermal, hydropower, solar, and wind) provided 14.2% of the nation’s electric power during the first half of the year. [Green Building Elements]
¶ While influenced by the future cost of natural gas and other forms of energy, a new report forecasts the cost of solar will be competitive after New Jersey state subsidies expire, a fact that one New Jersey Utility is investing in. [GetSolar.com]
¶ The governor of Louisiana and CEO of Cool Planet Energy Systems have announced that the company will build three bio-refineries in Louisiana with a capital investment of $168 million. The project will consist of modular biomass-to-gasoline refineries. [KMSS TV33]
¶ Development of solar and wind energy in Missouri has been sluggish, despite a 2008 law that instituted a renewable energy standard. A lawsuit has been filed alleging that state government has interfered with fulfillment of the law’s mandate. [Salon]
¶ The idle Fort Calhoun nuclear power plant is loaded with fuel for the first time in more than two years, and utility officials say it will be ready to operate safely if regulators allow it to restart. [Omaha World-Herald]
¶ The complete decommissioning of Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant “is likely to take decades,” according to information released by its owners. [BurlingtonFreePress.com]
¶ Vermont House Speaker Shap Smith said he will pursue whatever options are at his disposal to expedite a decommissioning process that could soon become the center of its own legislative controversy. [Barre Montpelier Times Argus]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
August 27, 2013
World:
¶ According to the Worldwatch Institute, support policies for renewable energy technologies have increased dramatically over the last decade. The number has grown from 48 countries having policies in place in mid-2005 to 127 as of early 2013. [EcoSeed]
¶ German Environment Minister Peter Altmaier expects German solar panel installations to nearly halve this year, showing that efforts to curb subsidies and get solar expansion under control have yielded results. [Reuters UK]
¶ Hitting a target of 22 GW of installed solar capacity in the UK by 2020 will impact less than 0.29% of the nation’s agricultural land, according to research by PV operator Lightsource Renewable Energy. [reNews]
¶ Siemens, the world’s number three maker of wind turbines, expects the global market to be more than quadrupled by 2030, lifted by strong growth in Asia. They see globally installed wind power capacity increasing from 273 GW in 2012 to 1,107 GW in 2030. [CITY A.M.]
¶ First Solar has sold three solar projects in Ontario totalling 50 MW to an investment partnership led by GE Energy Financial Services. Output from the PV plants will be sold to Ontario Power Authority with 20-year power purchase agreements. [reNews]
¶ An officer of the King Abdullah city for Atomic and Renewable Energy says Saudi Arabia could become a leader in renewable energy by building 16 nuclear reactors by 2030 at an estimated cost of $100 billion and with a combined capacity of 22 GW. [Hindu Business Line]
¶ The Japanese government will lead “emergency measures” to tackle radioactive water spills at the wrecked Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant, wresting control of the disaster recovery from the plant’s heavily criticized operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co. [The Japan Times]
US:
¶ Senators Chuck Grassley (R-IA) and Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) are asking the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission to investigate possible anticompetitive practices by oil companies that limit consumers’ access to “homegrown renewable fuels.” [National Hog Farmer]
¶ The biofuels industry is pushing back against ad campaigns the oil-and-gas industry has been running in Ohio for years, launching a campaign against what it calls an attempt to “stop the growth of clean, green renewable fuels to protect their own bottom lines.” [Youngstown Vindicator]
¶ There is a proposal in the works to store and recycle nuclear waste in Mississippi. The Mississippi Energy Institute gave a presentation to the Senate Economic Development Committee Monday for an above-ground interim storage facility. [WDAM-TV]
¶ A radiation monitor at the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant showed faulty readings last week, a continuation of a problem that has plagued the plant several times this summer. [Vermont Public Radio]
¶ Friends of the Coast/New England Coalition reached a settlement agreement with the owners of the Seabrook nuclear plant regarding the remaining active contention against the plant’s operating license renewal. This may clear the way for a license extension. [Exeter News-Letter]
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August 26, 2013
World:
¶ Nova Scotia, with its record-setting tides, could be a world leader in tidal technology. The epicentre of Nova Scotia’s attempts to stay in the tidal game is a stretch of ocean floor near the town of Parrsboro. [The Globe and Mail]
¶ According to the latest Fuel Mix and CO2 Emissions report, from industry watchdog the Commission for Energy Regulation, the Vayu, a Dublin-based firm, is the first provider in Ireland to achieve a 100% renewable energy rating for its electricity supply. [Irish Examiner]
¶ The Norwegian government has given the green light to eight wind farms totalling around 1300 MW in a focused area of mid-Norway. Statkraft and Agder Energi Vind picked up nearly half of the total with permission granted to build a quartet of projects totalling 660 MW. [reNews]
¶ In the week beginning August 11, wind farms supplied a record 290 GWh to the National Electricity Market, which serves the eastern states and much of South Australia. That tally smashed the previous record of 246 GWh set in the week starting June 30 by 18%. [The Canberra Times]
¶ With the Fukushima nuclear plant leaking hundreds of tonnes of radioactive water into the Pacific every day, fishing has once again been banned off the coast. Test catches have shown that some fish – especially bottom-feeding species, have been affected. [ABC Online]
¶ Two years ago, Russia offered to help Japan clean up the disaster-stricken Fukushima nuclear power facility. This week, as TEPCO has found it difficult to continue the decommissioning process and has decided to seek outside help, Russia has stated that their offer to help still stands. [The Japan Daily Press]
¶ Japan’s industry minister visited the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant and promised Monday that the government would take urgent action to curb leaks of radiation-contaminated water. [STLtoday.com]
US:
¶ A new study conducted by the US DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory indicates that by 2025 wind and solar power could become cost-competitive without federal subsidies, and including costs of integration and transmission. [Nanowerk]
¶ Ever Cat Fuels plant in Isanti, Minnesota has been working for two years with a team of scientists and farmers to commercially grow two seed-bearing weeds as energy crops. [Farming UK]
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August 25, 2013
A Quote:
¶ “Unfortunately, what we’ve seen too often in Congress is that the fossil fuel industries tend to be very influential – let’s put it that way – on the energy committees in Congress and they tend not to be particularly sympathetic to alternative energy strategies,” President Obama said in a speech. [Opposing Views]
Opinion:
¶ “Finding Our Energy Future: A Conversation with Tony Klein” Tony Klein, chair of Vermont’s House Committee on Natural Resources and Energy, responds to the question, “What do you wish people knew about energy and Vermont?” [Montpelier Bridge]
World:
¶ Switching Australia to 100% renewable power from solar, wind and other clean sources would be technically viable by 2030, and could end up costing the same as continuing to use fossil fuels, a new study by the Australian federal government suggests. [Sydney Morning Herald]
¶ Marine energy could have the potential to boost the Welsh economy by up to £840 million according to a new report commissioned by the Welsh Government. The study examined the economic benefits for Wales from developing the sector, using three different scenarios. [WalesOnline]
¶ Alstom reports that its full-scale tidal turbine in Orkney, Scotland, has reached a full nominal power of 1 MW. The turbine was immersed in January 2013 at the European Marine Energy Center in Orkney. The turbine connected to the grid has now generated more than 10 MWh. [High Performance Composites]
¶ A state-run Chinese power generating equipment manufacturer has claimed to have built the world’s biggest nuclear generator in terms of per-unit installed capacity. The Dongfang Electrical Machinery Company Ltd says its 1,750 MW generator will soon be installed at a power plant. [Economic Times]
¶ The operator of Japan’s crippled nuclear plant said Saturday that deteriorated seams and a possible contortion of a reassembled storage tank might have caused a massive contaminated water leak that has triggered fears over the plant’s radioactive water management. [Honolulu Star-Advertiser]
US:
¶ Iowa houses one of the nation’s largest and fastest-growing wind markets, according to the US DOE, which released two reports earlier this month showing robust state and nationwide wind markets. The state can generate 25% of its power from wind, and the number is growing. [Dubuque Telegraph Herald]
¶ Lake Erie Energy Development’s Icebreaker project, a six-turbine, 18-megawatt undertaking, is in the serious planning stages after snagging a $4 million U.S. Department of Energy grant late last year. States and organizations are looking at other sites in the Great Lakes. [EarthTechling]
¶ A Gallup poll in March found that 76% of Americans thought the country should put more emphasis on producing domestic energy from solar power. As more options become available, more homeowners do it. Now, ten times as many homes get solar power than did five years ago. [Press Herald]
¶ The Montpelier Energy Advisory Committee and the Montpelier Planning and Community Development Office are working with the Energy Action Network, considering making Montpelier the nation’s first state capital to have all energy needs supplied by renewable energy sources. [Montpelier Bridge]
¶ Members of Vermont’s first community solar farm met at the site in Putney Friday to celebrate the opening of the solar array. SunFarm Community Solar, the 147 kilowatt solar project which is made up of 588 panels, is online and producing electricity, project founder Nick Ziter said. [Brattleboro Reformer]
¶ Dominion Virginia Power placed its biomass-fired Altavista Power Station into commercial operation in July. The 51 megawatt facility in Altavista, Va., is the first of three stations the company is converting from coal to biomass. [Biomass Magazine]
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August 24, 2013
Opinion:
¶ “Externality 101, Understanding Hidden Costs of Fossil Fuel” Renewables don’t hurt us or our environment, an advantage that has a demonstrable dollar-and-cents value. [NJ Spotlight]
Science and Technology:
¶ An 7.5 MW wind turbine may be installed at Le Havre, France, at an onshore location designed to test turbines for both on and offshore use. Many of the world’s largest wind turbines are designed for offshore use, but this turbine, an Enercon E-126, is for onshore power generation. [CleanTechnica]
World:
¶ In the UK, a new rift could be developing as two government departments, led by a Liberal Democrat and Conservative MP respectively, are set to go head-to-head over a forthcoming report into the impact of wind turbines on rural house prices. [The Upcoming]
¶ Brazil has contracted 1.5GW of new capacity at an average price of around $46 per megawatt-hour during its first wind auction of 2013. The country sealed deals with 66 projects, each of which will be given a 20-year supply contract. Projects are due online by September 2015. [reNews]
¶ The Indian government is planning to reduce the time frame for setting up nuclear power plants to meet increasing energy demand, according to the Indian Minister of State. A bill pending with the parliament would reduce the time for permitting from five years to a maximum of two years. [New York Daily News]
¶ An enormous reservoir of radiation-contaminated water beneath Fukushima Daiichi is on the verge of spilling into the Pacific Ocean, creating a new serious worry in the long-running effort of to contain radioactive fallout from the 2011 disaster, the Associated Press reported on Friday. [Yahoo! News]
¶ Radiation spreading from Japan’s crippled Fukushima plant threatens to derail Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s efforts to revive nuclear power and deliver the lower energy prices needed to power his economic reforms. [Business Mirror]
US:
¶ A forest fire in Yosemite National Park as led to declaration of a state of emergency for San Francisco, 150 miles away. The fire threatens a reservoir that supplies the city with water and electricity. [Huffington Post]
¶ At least six renewable energy projects, five solar-powered and one biomass facility, proposed for sites in southeastern Connecticut are vying to be chosen next month for power purchase agreements with the state’s two largest utilities. [TheDay.com]
¶ With the declining amount of tobacco grown these days, North Carolina farmers have been diversifying. Now, along with planting crops, a landowner can get a contract to use land for a solar farm. [WECT-TV6]
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August 23, 2013
Opinion:
¶ “Climate Change, Poverty and Energy – Is renewable energy the solution for Africa?” Approximately 1.4 billion people don’t have access to electricity, yet countries in the emerging economies have huge, untapped potential in solar, wind, hydro, geothermal or biomass energy. [Sierra Express Media]
World:
¶ The UK Department of Energy & Climate Change is setting sustainability standards for biomass and biogas. Starting in 2015, the biomass industry must show its fuel is sustainable to receive financial support. [Biomass Magazine]
¶ The changing global energy mix and the growth of renewables will drive a revival in the underground compressed air energy storage industry, according to a new report. The analysis predicts that the sector will install capacity of 11 GW between this year and 2013. [Power Engineering International]
¶ China is half way through a $100 billion ultra-high voltage grid investment, according to an official from the country’s grid operator. The network will open remote renewable installations to the country’s east coast by moving power thousands of kilometres with minimal losses. [PV-Tech]
¶ A Japanese daily has reported all water drainage valves of a concrete barrier nearby the leaking tank at the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant were, in fact, opened when highly radioactive water leaked and drained into the ocean. [Arirang News]
¶ More tanks at the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant site may have leaks as TEPCO, the plant operator, said on Aug. 22 that high radiation levels were detected near a second section of storage tanks. [Asahi Shimbun]
¶ TEPCO failed to monitor storages tanks holding dangerously contaminated water properly, the country’s nuclear regulator has said. Now they have sprung leaks and are a source of international concern. TEPCO also failed to keep records of inspections of the tanks. [Reuters]
US:
¶ One of the largest thin-film PV power plants to date in southern California has been completed. The Catalina Solar Photovoltaic s located adjacent to the EDF’s 140 MW Pacific Wind power plant, making the combined facilities a globally significant hybrid project. [pv magazine]
¶ Vestas will be supplying wind-energy projects in the United States with 400 megawatts-worth of wind turbines, an order that is in line with a master supply agreement of 1,500 MW that they have with EDP Renovaveis. [EcoSeed]
¶ South Carolina’s electric cooperatives have stopped a solar energy forum that was supposed to let people explain how the state can improve its sun power rules, which are among the least customer friendly in the country. [Hilton Head Island Packet]
¶ The National Renewable Energy Laboratory in the US is working with Ecopetrol, the largest oil company in Colombia, to process the residue from sugar cane and palm oil harvesting into fuel ethanol for blending with gasoline. [Renewable Energy Magazine]
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August 22, 2013
Interesting Report:
¶ “Solar Needs 32 Acres To Power 1,000 Homes” Did you know that “on a life-cycle electricity-output basis – including direct and indirect land transformation – utility-scale PV in the U.S. Southwest requires less land than the average U.S. power plant using surface-mined coal”? [EarthTechling]
Opinion:
¶ “Fossil Fuel Collateral Damage” Neighborhoods can be turned upside down by shale oil and shale gas drilling , but it’s always felt theoretical as the prospects of something like these happening in my neighborhood have seemed remote. [National Geographic]
World:
¶ The installed capacity of renewable sources worldwide will reach an estimated 2,252.3 GW in 2020, finds a new report from Frost & Sullivan. The report notes that since the beginning of the last decade the number of countries with renewable support policies has grown from 50 to over 120. [Solar Industry]
¶ If offshore wind sees continuous development over the next 10 years the cost of the electricity generated at schemes could be slashed by around a third, according to a study by Prognos and The Fichtner Group, which identified cost reduction potentials in Germany. [reNews]
¶ A nuclear expert who has advised the French and German governments has told the BBC that he believes the current water leaks at Fukushima are much worse than the authorities have stated. He says water is leaking out all over the site and there are no accurate figures for radiation levels. [BBC News]
US:
¶ California has released its new vehicle sales numbers for the first half of 2013. According to the data, the Tesla Model S has a greater market share than Buick, FIAT, Land Rover, Lincoln, and Mitsubishi. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The utilities supplying power to the US electrical grid sell $400 billion worth of electricity a year. Regulators set rates and utilities get guaranteed returns. The model is largely unaltered since Edison invented the light bulb. But the CEO of NRG Energy believes it’s doomed to obsolescence. [Businessweek]
¶ Bloomberg has reported that the boom in gas field purchasing from 2009 to 2012 has turned into a whopper of a bust, leaving oil and gas companies with a belly load of depressed assets and “disappointing” wells to go with falling gas prices. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The electricity powering San Francisco city departments is 100% renewable. It comes largely from the hydropower production in Yosemite Valley, but since 2004, the Public Utilities Commission agency has completed 15 solar projects that produce 7.5 MW of power. [San Francisco Examiner]
¶ Renewable energy projects in the United States experienced a banner year in 2012, with wind deployment adding a record 13,124 MW of capacity and solar adding 3,313 MW of solar photovoltaic capacity. [San Francisco Chronicle]
¶ According to the Solar Energy Industries Association, 845 MW of solar energy were installed across the country during the first quarter of this year, augmenting the record-breaking 3,313 MW installed in 2012. PV installations grew 76% in 2012 over 2011, with an estimated market value of $11.5 billion. [Solar Industry]
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August 21, 2013
Science and Technology:
¶ Scientists are more convinced that human activity is behind the increase in global temperatures since the 1950s, which has boosted sea levels and the odds of extreme storms, according to a leaked draft of an upcoming U.N. report. [CNN]
World:
¶ The Federal Republic of Germany just broke its monthly solar generation record by clocking over 5.1 TWh in July, according to data from the EEX Transparency Platform. The July solar record is 42% higher than last year’s. [inhabitat.com]
¶ PV will account for 3.6% of installed power generation globally by 2020, according to market analyst and advisor, Frost & Sullivan’s Annual Renewable Outlook 2013. It accounted for 0.7% in 2010. [PV-Tech]
¶ The Australian government appears to have made a remarkable concession following the release of the 100% renewables report by the country’s energy market operator – a renewables future will be no more costly than the largely fossil fuel alternative. [RenewEconomy]
¶ Renewable energy facilities that newly started operating in fiscal 2012 in Japan totaled 2.08 million kilowatts in capacity, which is worth two nuclear reactors, the Economy, Trade and Industry Ministry said Tuesday. [ECNmag.com]
¶ Six more young people from Fukushima prefecture in Japan have been diagnosed with thyroid cancer since Japan’s worst nuclear accident in 2011. There are now a total of 18 cancer cases among people who were 18 or younger at the time of the Fukushima Disaster. [Hindu Business Line]
¶ Japan is poised to declare a toxic water leak at the Fukushima nuclear plant a level 3 “serious incident,” its gravest warning since the aftermath of the massive 2011 earthquake and tsunami that sent three reactors into meltdown. [CNN]
US:
¶ Green building is growing fast in the US, and may represent more than half of all commercial and institutional construction as soon as 2016, according to a new report from the US Green Building Council (USGBC), “LEED in Motion: People and Progress,” [CleanTechnica]
¶ Work commences in September on 448 turbines in Iowa, creating 460 construction jobs, then 48 permanent jobs. They will churn out $12 million a year in property tax and generate $3.2 million annually for their property owners. Call them YIMBYs: Yes in my backyard. [Muscatine Journal]
¶ The federal government has created a new renewable energy zone along the southeast shore of the Salton Sea that could eventually host thousands of megawatts of solar and geothermal energy on previously disturbed lands. [The Desert Sun]
¶ Siemens Energy has been awarded received an order for 116 units of its SWT-2.3-108 wind turbines from Portland General Electric Company in the US state of Oregon. Each has a capacity of 2.3 megawatts (MW) and a rotor diameter of 108 meters. [Renewable Energy Magazine]
¶ San Francisco-based renewable power producer Pattern Energy Group said Tuesday it has started building a 218 megawatt wind power facility in the Texas Panhandle. The facility will be able to produce wind energy for up to 60,000 Texas homes. [FuelFix]
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