April 13 Energy News

April 13, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Nuclear Energy Should Not Be Part Of The Global Solution To Climate Change” • Nuclear culture, skills, vendors, and prospects are shriveling, mostly due to bad economics. Sun and wind are now the cheapest bulk source for at least 91% of world electricity, says Bloomberg New Energy Finance, so they’re winning about 10–20 times more investment. [Utility Dive]

Old cooling towers (Johannes Plenio, Unsplash)

Science and Technology:

¶ “You’ve Heard Of Water Droughts. Could ‘Energy’ Droughts Be Next?” • Renewable energy prices have fallen by more than 70% in the last decade, driving more Americans to abandon fossil fuels for greener, less-polluting energy. But as wind and solar power continue to grow, grid operators may have to plan for large swings in availability. [Columbia News]

¶ “The Climate Crisis Is Supercharging Rainfall In Hurricanes, Scientists Report” • A study, published in the journal Nature Communications, found global warming supercharged hourly rainfall rates in tropical storms and hurricanes by 5% to 10%. When they looked at only hurricanes – the strongest storms – the increase was 8% to 11%. [CNN]

Rain in a desert (Lucy Chian, Unsplash)

¶ “Storing Renewables With Brayton Pumped Thermal Energy Storage” • UK researchers have designed a pumped thermal energy storage system for large-scale grid electricity, stored as high-grade thermal energy. The system consists of two insulated containers filled with gravel, and hot and cold vessels operating at different pressure levels. [PV Magazine]

World:

¶ “Electric Truck Trials Down Under” • How will the Volvo FL Electric and the Janus Freightliner stack up to the distances, heat, and dust of Australian conditions in the electric truck trials Down Under? Here is a look at the results of tests of two heavy-duty trucks in the difficult conditions they will face driving through the Australian outback. [CleanTechnica]

Volvo FL Electric (Courtesy of Volvo)

¶ “The Climate Answer Is Blowing In The Wind” • UK energy forecasters Rethink Energy say that 2021 annual installations of 93 GW of global wind capacity (onshore and offshore) put the world on track with the targets defined by Global Wind Energy Council to reach the renewable energy capacity levels needed to limit climate change to below 1.5°C. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “RWE Plans €1.5 Billion Spend On Irish Renewable Projects” • German energy giant RWE is to spend up to €1.5 billion in Ireland on renewable energy projects between now and 2030. RWE envisions onshore wind, offshore wind, and battery storage projects. RWE is to invest €50 billion to expand its global green capacity to 50 GW by 2030. [The Irish Times]

Wind turbines (Nitin Sharma, Pexels)

¶ “South Korea To Make Nuclear Power U-Turn Under New Government” • The transition committee working for President Yoon Suk-yeol said the incoming government will embrace nuclear power in its decarbonization efforts, signaling a major shift in energy policy. The outgoing government policy had no place for nuclear power. [Asia News Network]

US:

¶ “Biden Announces Emergency Waiver On Summer Ethanol Ban” • President Joe Biden announced steps his administration is taking to address rising gasoline prices across the country. The steps include emergency measures permitting year-round sales of E15 gasoline, which is not normally sold during the summer because of air quality concerns. [CNN]

Joe Biden (Cameron Smith, White House, public domain)

¶ “Open For Applications: 2023 Hydropower And Marine Energy Collegiate Competitions” • The US Department of Energy’s Water Power Technologies Office announced the launch of the inaugural Hydropower Collegiate Competition and the fourth annual Marine Energy Collegiate Competition: Powering the Blue Economy™. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “‘Electric Vehicle Master Plan’ – 10,000 EVs For Los Angeles” • The Los Angeles city council has unanimously passed a motion that calls for the electrification of the city’s entire vehicle fleet. The Electric Vehicle Master Plan would add over 10,000 electric vehicles to the city’s fleet and build the appropriate charging infrastructure, according to Electrive. [CleanTechnica]

Los Angeles (Image credit: City of Los Angeles)

¶ “New York Enacts First-In-Nation Plan To Electrify All State School Buses” • An agreement reached on New York’s annual state budget builds on Governor Kathy Hochul’s State of the State and Executive Budget proposals. It aims for all new school bus purchases to be zero emission by 2027 and all buses in operation are electric by 2035. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Maine Lawmakers Get Pressure To Pass Renewable Energy Expansion” • A decision by the Maine Legislature to order the Public Utilities Commission to expand the number of renewable energy projects in the state has born fruit. The average price of solar projects has fallen to 3.5¢/kWh, and now, the Legislature is being asked to do it again. [News Center Maine]

Solar panels in Maine (William Byers, US DOE, public domain)

¶ “Nevada Utility Seeks 20-MW-Plus Renewables Projects” • NV Energy issued a request for proposals to add new renewable energy projects to its portfolio. The company seeks solar, wind, biomass, hydroelectric, geothermal, and biogas projects that are a minimum of 20 MW in size and are compliant with Nevada’s renewable portfolio standards. [reNews]

¶ “Duke Energy’s First Solar Plant In Surry County, NC, Goes Online” • Duke Energy continues to expand solar power in North Carolina with its 22.6-MW Stony Knoll Solar power plant in Surry County now in operation. The solar plant has 76,600 panels with single-axis tracking. It will supply power equivalent to the needs of 5,000 homes. [Duke Energy]

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April 12 Energy News

April 12, 2022

Opinion:

¶ “The Global Sprint Away From Fossil Fuels” • With his barbaric war on Ukraine, Vladimir Putin has set in motion every outcome he dreaded, including shaking up global energy markets. Now, energy security is at the forefront of the minds of national and regional policymakers, investors, businesses, and consumers alike. Now is a time to act. [CleanTechnica]

Tanker at anchor (Ian Simmonds, Unsplash)

¶ “Energy-Rich Scotland Does Not Need New Nuclear Power Plants” • Nuclear is set in what it can supply. That’s why hydro is needed, especially pumped storage. Scotland has 90% of UK hydro. It produces at high loads, but in low-usage periods spare electricity is used to pump water up to the reservoir. Without hydro, nuclear energy is less useful. [The National]

¶ “The New Phenomenon Of Climate Migrants” • The effects of climate change, including heat waves, wildfires, floods, droughts, and sea level rise, are producing climate migrants. Countries around the world are struggling to reconcile political pressures to insulate borders with the pressing humanitarian need caused by the climate crisis. [CleanTechnica]

Refugee camp (Julie Ricard, Unsplash)

Science and Technology:

¶ “Biochar Has Potential To Enhance Agriculture In California And Mitigate Climate Change” • Human production of biochar has been going on for a long time. It has a rich history in places like the Amazon basin, where it was used to improve soil quality dramatically. It is relatively easy to make, and its benefits are pretty astounding. [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶ “Southern Africa Storms Fueled By Climate Change – Study” • Climate change fueled heavier rainfall during a series of storms that battered southern Africa earlier this year, scientists say in analysis from the World Weather Attribution group. The region of southern Africa was hit by three cyclones and two tropical storms in six weeks. [BBC]

Boy trying to get home (Menyea, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “Call For Renewable Energy Revolution To Be At Heart Of Election Campaign” • The 2022 Australian federal election is officially underway. The Clean Energy Council has called on political leaders to put the industry at the heart of their election campaigns, given the massive economic opportunities that are created by the sector. [Renew Economy]

¶ “Nissan And NASA To Take On Solid-State Battery Challenge” • Solid-state battery is projected to cost less than traditional lithium-ion batteries, have higher energy density, charge faster, and last longer. A lot of research is being done to bring them to market. Nissan and NASA say they will team up to crack this particular nut. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Seoul To Develop Renewable Energy Technology Using Sewage Sludge For Green Hydrogen Production” • Seoul will develop technologies to utilize sewage sludge created in a water recycling center for the production of gas fuel. The sludge can be used for production of green hydrogen, which does not use any fossil fuel to generate. [AJU Business Daily]

¶ “Clean Power Capacity Grows Over 9% In 2021” • Global renewable generation capacity was 3,064 GW at the end of 2021, up over 9% on the previous year, according to an International Renewable Energy Agency report. Together, wind and solar technologies contributed 88% to the share of all new renewable capacity in 2021. [reNews]

Renewable energy (IRENA image)

¶ “Solar, Wind Surge In 2021 ‘Another Testament Of Renewable Energy’s Resilience'” • Solar and wind energy had another good year for global expansion, the International Renewable Energy Agency said. The agency declared, “the global shift to renewables is underway.” But the switch to renewable energy from fossil fuels must accelerate. [Common Dreams]

US:

¶ “Mattel Releases Its First Carbon Neutral Toys, Including A Matchbox Tesla” • Mattel has released its first-ever carbon neutral toys, including a Matchbox Tesla model made from recycled materials. Mattel has pledged to use “100% recycled, recyclable or bio-based plastic materials in all its products and packaging by 2030.” [CNN]

Earlier Matchbox Tesla Roadster (Mattel image)

¶ “Tesla Model 3 And Model Y Score About 100,000 US Sales In First Quarter Of 2022” • Based on well informed estimates of US Tesla sales, the Tesla Model Y and Tesla Model 3 dominated sales of electric cars in the US in the first quarter of 2022, just as in previous quarters. The Tesla Model S and Model X took the third and fourth spots in the ranking. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “One Year On, Ford Dealers Keep Playing Games” • A year ago, dealer markups on the Mustang Mach-E, represented about 10% of the price of the car. Today? Almost every new Ford carries a hefty dealer markup, and it’s got so bad that fed-up consumers have even started a website to track dealership markups called markups.org. [CleanTechnica]

Ford Mustang Mach-E (Courtesy of Ford)

¶ “Top Companies In The US Leading The Transition To Green Energy” • As evidence of a changing climate gets more clear, the business world is no longer ignoring sustainability. Companies are committing themselves to meeting bigger targets. Negative impacts of climate change have hit 97% of businesses, a Deloitte survey shows. [The CEO Magazine]

¶ “Wind Energy Company Pleads Guilty To Killing Eagles” • The wind energy company ESI Energy Inc must pay more than $8 million in fines and restitution and serve a five-year probation after pleading guilty to violating the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, according to a statement released by the US Department of Justice. [Smithsonian Magazine]

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April 11 Energy News

April 11, 2022

Science and Technology:

¶ “NREL Researchers Plot Energy Storage Under Our Feet” • US National Renewable Energy Laboratory scientists have been researching the use of depleted oil and gas wells as reservoirs for storing compressed natural gas. The wells can subsequently be used to hold other gases, such as carbon dioxide, nitrogen, or hydrogen, to store energy. [CleanTechnica]

Energy storage system using old wells (Al Hicks, NREL)

¶ “Berkeley Scientists Develop Prototype For Measuring Carbon In Soil” • Current methods for measuring carbon in the ground require digging holes to collect and burn soil samples. They are destructive, costly, and inefficient. But scientists are testing a unit that scans the ground and offers a 3D measurement of the soil’s distribution of elements. [The Daily Californian]

World:

¶ “Banks Say They’re Getting Tough On Coal, But They Keep Lending Trillions To Polluters” • Banks can’t seem to ditch coal. Over the last three years commercial banks have funneled $1.5 trillion into the industry, according to a recent report by green campaign groups Urgewald and Reclaim Finance, along with more than two dozen other NGOs. [CNN]

Coal-burning power plant (Pixabay, Pexels)

¶ “Stakeholders Rally For Renewable Energy, Efficiency” • In Nigeria, renewable energy and energy efficiency are vital ingredients for the new phase of power as the global focus is shifting from fossil fuel to cleaner energy use, stakeholders have said. They were speaking at “Energise,” the country’s first career fair for clean energy. [The Tide News Online]

¶ “Germany Unveils A New Renewable Energy Plan For Ukraine” • Robert Habeck, who serves as Germany’s vice-chancellor as well as minister in charge of the economic affairs and climate change, unveiled the Berlin coalition government’s “Easter Package” for renewable energy. The plan includes an ambitious plan for renewable energy. [Cody News Company]

Renewable energy (Jem Sanchez, Pexels)

¶ “The Linden Suites Switches To 100% Renewable Energy” • In Manilla, the Linden Suites shifted to geothermal energy for its power requirements, joining the government’s green energy option program. First Gen is delivering 480 kW of geothermal power to the hotel, eliminating 1,203 tons of carbon dioxide emissions per year. [Rappler]

¶ “Green Ice Cream: Mars Wrigley Unveils Plans For First Factory Powered Entirely By Renewable Energy” • Mars Wrigley unveiled plans to convert an ice cream plant in France to be the first 100% electrically powered industrial site in the Mars Group. The plant is already using 100% renewable power, but now it is switching to full electrification also. [Business Green]

Mars Wrigley plant (Mars Wrigley image)

¶ “IAEA Says Ukraine Carried Out First Staff Rotations At Chernobyl” • Ukraine informed the International Atomic Energy Agency that it carried out the first staff rotation at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in three weeks, the IAEA Director General said, adding the agency would send a mission there soon to assist in returning in to normality. [The Star]

¶ “Boskalis Is To Turn Bokalift Twins Into Hybrid Vessels” • Boskalis is to convert numerous vessels in its offshore energy division into hybrid vessels with retrofits of energy storage systems. The conversions entail a sizeable investment. They will reduce fuel consumption and associated emissions of CO₂ and NOₓ by an average of up to 20%. [reNews]

Windpower installation ship (Huisman image)

¶ “Russia’s Invasion Of Ukraine Has Upset Uzbekistan’s Nuclear Plans” • Four years ago, Uzbekistan turned to nuclear energy to address its chronic energy shortages, relying on Russia to drive the projects forward. Today, with Russia facing sanctions due to its invasion of Ukraine, Uzbekistan’s nuclear future is suddenly looking very uncertain. [Oil Price]

¶ “Ukraine Says Russian Soldiers Stole Potentially Deadly Radioactive Substances From Chernobyl” • Russian occupiers at the Chernobyl nuclear plant stole potentially deadly radioactive substances from research laboratories, Ukraine’s State Agency for Managing the Exclusion Zone says. They stole 133 substances that were highly radioactive. [ABC]

Exclusion Zone (Oleksandra Bardash, Unsplash)

US:

¶ “US Auto Sales Down 18% In First Quarter Of 2022 Versus 2019, Tesla Sales Up 256%” • Compared to the first quarter of 2019, US sales in the first quarter of 2022 were down over 684,000. There are theories about why this happened. But compared to 2019’s first quarter sales, Tesla sales were up 256% in the first quarter of this year, 2022. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Power Has Been Restored To Much Of Puerto Rico Following An Island-Wide Outage” • Power has been restored to 99.7% of LUMA Energy customers in Puerto Rico, the utility said Sunday, after hundreds of thousands had been in the dark since a fire at a power plant Wednesday evening. The utility said the exact cause wasn’t immediately known. [CNN]

San Juan (Sonder Quest, Unsplash)

¶ “Climate Resilience Academy Ushers In New Era Of Research, Solutions” • The University of Miami’s Climate Resilience Academy will be launched on Earth Day, April 22. It is to be a novel functional academic program highlighting the University as a center to address issues of the climate crisis, sustainability, and resilience. [News@TheU]

¶ “Fruit Farmers Adopt New Strategies To Deal With Changing Climate” • The changing climate is affecting fruit farmers and forcing them to adapt. Science shows winters are getting warmer. This can cause buds to swell to open early. Fruit farmers feel the burn, especially when late season freezes, cold enough to kill the buds, are in the forecast. [WGAL]

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April 10 Energy News

April 10, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Britain Was Promised A Bold And Visionary Energy Plan. But We’ve Been Sold A Dud” • The double threat of climate crisis and war requires an urgent response. The government supplied its energy security strategy, which includes eye-catching headlines, especially on expanding nuclear power. But it fails on immediate, pressing problems. [The Guardian]

Delivery of a turbine blade (ShellAsp, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “Power Outages Can Mean The Difference Between Life And Death – Rooftop Solar Can Help” • Puerto Rico is in the throes of an energy crisis. On Thursday, a fire at a power plant outside the southeastern town of Guayanilla caused an island-wide blackout. Blackouts are a feature of daily life, along with price increases. There is a better way. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “EU Foreign Ministers Must Lead On Immediate Sanctions On Russian Oil” • EU foreign ministers will meet in Brussels, as the world looks on in horror at the suffering in Ukraine. Discoveries of atrocities makes clear the violent actions against the Ukraine’s people. But the EU still sends Putin $285 million a day to feed its dependence on imported oil. [CleanTechnica]

Russian natural gas facility (JukoFF, CC-BY-SA 4.0, cropped)

World:

¶ “Real Embargo On Russian Energy Could End Ukraine War” • A “real embargo” on Russian energy by Western countries could stop war in Ukraine, President Putin’s former chief economic advisor has suggested. Dr Andrei Illarionov said Russia “did not take seriously” the threats by other countries to reduce their energy usage. [BBC]

¶ “T&E Annual Report 2021 – Great Expectation” • From our growing national offices, T&E continues to influence national capitals across Europe and this year also saw the T&E-backed Clean Cities Campaign gather momentum. T&E’s report shows that European policymakers were more ambitious than ever before in 2021. [CleanTechnica]

T&E Annual Report 2021

¶ “Why Many Experts Aren’t Impressed With The UK’s Energy Plans” • Environmentalists and many energy experts reacted with dismay as the government’s energy security strategy fails to cut emissions and bills in the short term. They say it down-plays the fastest and cheapest ways to combat energy dependency, energy efficiency, onshore wind, and solar power. [BBC]

¶ “Volvo Cars Invests In Flax Fibers For Sustainable Interiors” • Volvo Cars is moving away from such “luxury” materials as leather in its car interiors. It recently made a strategic investment in Bcomp, a firm developing high-performance, lightweight materials based on natural flax fibers to replace conventional, petroleum-based plastics. [CleanTechnica]

Volvo interior (Volvo image)

¶ “Samsung Heavy And Seaborg To Develop Floating Nuclear Power Plant Combined With Hydrogen And Ammonia Plants” • Samsung Heavy Industries and Seaborg signed a partnership agreement to develop floating nuclear power plants based on Seaborg’s Compact Molten Salt Reactor. The reactor is claimed to be inherently safe. [Green Car Congress

¶ “Three-Quarters Of Britons Back Expansion Of Wind Power, Poll Reveals” • In an Opinium poll, 79% of Tory voters said they were strongly or somewhat in favor of windfarms being installed in the UK, compared with 83% of Labour voters and 88% of Lib Dems. Only 46% of all voters favored new nuclear power stations in principle. [The Guardian]

Wind turbines (Dan Meyers, Unsplash)

US:

¶ “Over 100 NYC Streets Will Be Car-Free For Earth Day” • More than 100 streets in New York City’s five boroughs will go car-free to celebrate Earth Day, Saturday, April 23, from 11 AM to 5 PM. For the fifth year in a row, the city will mark the occasion by closing streets to vehicles, according to a news release from the NYC Department of Transportation. [CNN]

¶ “Frustrated And Anxious, Climate Advocates Are Turning To Legal Action. The Latest Petitioners: College Students” • College campuses have for years been at the center of climate change activism. But now, frustrated and anxious by what they see as slow action alongside growing climate damages, students are engaging a new tactic: legal action. [CNN]

Protest (Kate Ausburn, Unsplash)

¶ “US Auto Sales Declined 22–23% In 4th Quarter” • US auto sales declined in Q4 of 2021. Among car makers, Mitsubishi had the most growth on a percentage basis (68%), followed by Tesla (54%), Chrysler (18%), and Porsche (5%). But every other auto brand saw a decline in sales, including Cadillac (-48%), Infiniti (-47%), Audi (-47%), and Chevrolet (-45%). [CleanTechnica]

¶ “UW Madison, Alliant Energy Partner On A Renewable Energy Project” • University of Wisconsin Madison and Alliant Energy are using solar and agricultural research for a joint project that could make waves in the world of solar sustainability. The 2.25-MW solar project is set to begin in Spring 2023. It will be built on 15-acres on UW Madison land. [NBC15]

UW Madison (UW Madison image)

¶ “Georgia Power Presents Plan To Reduce Reliance On Coal, Boost Use Of Renewables” • Executives from Georgia Power Co outlined the utility’s planned mix of generating sources for the next 20 years in Public Service Commission hearings. Their plan is to close nine coal and three oil-burning plants and install 2.3 GW of renewables by 2029. [The Augusta Chronicle]

¶ “Hundreds Rally In Plymouth To Prevent Nuclear Wastewater Dumping Into Cape Cod Bay” • Hundreds of people are voicing their opposition to a proposal to dump a million gallons of processed radioactive water from Plymouth’s decommissioned Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station into the ocean off the coast of Massachusetts. [WCVB-TV]

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April 9 Energy News

April 9, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “IPCC: City Planners Face “Make-Or-Break” Moment For Climate Action” • Despite cities’ significant contribution to climate change, the IPCC finds that they also represent a huge opportunity for ambitious climate action – if they undertake swift and aggressive measures on the climate. The good news is cities are starting to mobilize. [CleanTechnica]

Seattle (Thom Milkovic, Unsplash)

Science and Technology:

¶ “Up, Up, And Away: Vertical Farms, The Pros And Cons” • The vertical farming market now is expected to expand from $3.1 billion in 2021 to $9.7 billion by 2026 with a compound annual growth rate of 25.0% during the forecast period. However, as with any growth industry, there are also obstacles to viable, large scale vertical farms. [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶ “Brazil’s Amazon Rainforest Has Reached A Deforestation Record This Year Already” • The portion of Amazon rainforest impacted by deforestation in the first three months of 2022 was the highest ever recorded, according to a new report by Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research. That is a 64% increase from the same time period last year. [CNN]

Deforested area of rainforest (Ibama, CC-BY-SA 2.0)

¶ “Europe Turns Its Back On Russian Coal. Is Oil Next?” • The European leaders have agreed to phase out Russian coal imports as part of a new package of sanctions triggered by evidence of atrocities in Bucha, Ukraine. Europe plans to wind down imports over the next four months, an EU source told CNN Business. An oil embargo could be next. [CNN]

¶ “Federal Minister Of Transport Hands Over Funding Notices To Transport Companies From All Over Germany” • Around 1,700 buses will be procured by transport companies with new German funding, including around 1,400 battery, 150 fuel cell, 50 trolley, and 100 gas buses. Their maintenance and charging infrastructure are also funded. [CleanTechnica]

German trolley (Sasan, Unsplash)

¶ “At Chernobyl: We Stole Russian Fuel To Prevent Catastrophe” • After the Russians took over the Chernobyl nuclear plant, site of the world’s worst nuclear disaster, staff were anxious to keep control of the plant’s maintenance. A lot of radioactive waste is still stored at there. The staff had to steal Russian fuel to keep generators running. [BBC]

¶ “IPP Procurement: Renewable Sector Welcomes Opening Of Electricity Bid Window Six” • Stakeholders in the South African renewable sector have welcomed the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy’s opening of the long-awaited Bid Window Six in its Renewable Energy Independent Power Producers Procurement Programme. [IOL]

Wind turbine in South Africa (AerialcamSA, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “Ukrainians Shocked By ‘Crazy’ Scene At Chernobyl After Russian Pullout Reveals Radioactive Contamination” • Radiation monitors show that a room where Russian soldiers lived at the Chernobyl nuclear plant has higher than normal levels of radioactivity. The reason is that the Russian soldiers tracked in radioactive dust from the Red Forest. [CNN]

¶ “Alberta Company Mulls Dumping Coal Mine Proposal For Renewable Energy Project” • Montem Resources, a company hoping to develop coal in Alberta’s Rocky Mountains, says it will decide by the end of June whether to convert its open-pit mine proposal into a renewable energy project, as the rules for energy are changing. [Canada’s National Observer]

Alberta (James Wheeler, Pexels)

US:

¶ “Hundreds Of Thousands Of Puerto Rico’s Homes And Businesses Still Without Power Two Days After Outage” • Nearly half of the homes and businesses in Puerto Rico were without power two days after an island-wide outage began with a fire at a power plant. Electric power has been restored for about 760,000 of the island’s utility customers. [CNN]

¶ “DeLorean Will Debut Four New Models In 2022″ • The official launch of the reborn DeLorean Motor Cars EVolved is 90 days away. But the bigger news isn’t about what the electric DeLorean sportscar will be like. Instead, it’s that the new electric DeLorean sportscar is only one of several DeLorean models that will be rolled out this year. [CleanTechnica]

DeLorean EV (Screenshot)

¶ “Encinitas Flips The Switch On 100% Renewable Energy” • The city of Encinitas is the latest in California to sign up with a new electricity provider. The San Diego Community Power program says it purchases renewable power and feeds it into the electricity grid. It then works with San Diego Gas & Electric to deliver it at competitive rates. [NBC 7 San Diego]

¶ “TVA Board Nominees Support Exploring Clean Energy Options As Federal Utility Plans Coal Retirements” • As the Tennessee Valley Authority considers options for replacing two coal-fired power plants, three nominees to the federal power utility’s board told a Senate panel they would explore adding more renewable energy. [Utility Dive]

Coal-burning power plant (Retrieved from TVA)

¶ “As US Looks To Nuclear Power, Uranium Sourcing A Concern” • As the Biden administration continues to push for green energy and nuclear power is increasingly seen as an attractive option, policy experts are warning that without a reliable, domestic supply of uranium, the US could find itself dependent on Russia for fuel. [Newsmax]

¶ “US Nuclear Electricity Generation Continues To Decline As More Reactors Retire” • Six nuclear reactors with a total capacity of 4,736 MW have retired since 2017. Three more reactors with a combined 3,009 MW of capacity are scheduled to retire in the coming years. Two nuclear generating units are being built in Georgia, each rated at 1,114 MW. [EIA]

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April 8 Energy News

April 8, 2022

World:

¶ “This Incredibly Potent Planet-Warming Gas Just Set Another Record For The Second Year In A Row” • Methane, the second largest contributor to the human-caused climate crisis after carbon dioxide, increased in the atmosphere by the largest amount in 2021 since measurements began nearly 40 years ago, according to NOAA. [CNN]

Liquified natural gas tanker (Joshua J Cotten, Unsplash)

¶ “NREL Identifies Abundant Renewable Energy Resources As Key To Mexico’s Clean Energy Ambitions” • The US DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory released an in-depth report on the potential for developing clean energy in Mexico. Mexico is replete with solar and wind resources and has some potential for new geothermal and hydropower. [NREL]

¶ “Pacific Institute Water Conflict Chronology Updated” • Over the past few years, severe droughts in India and Iran have led to a big increase in conflicts over access to irrigation and domestic water and to demonstrations against water diversions from one community to another. Violence over water resources continues to worsen. [CleanTechnica]

Water (Manki Kim, Unsplash)

¶ “Mitsui To Invest In $1.35 Billion Renewable Energy Project In India” • Japan’s Mitsui has agreed to make an investment in a large-scale 1.3-GW renewable energy project that India’s ReNew Power is developing. The project will consist of three newly built wind farms (900 MW in total) and one solar plus battery storage farm (400 MW plus up to 100 MWh). [Energy Voice]

¶ “Fortescue Buys Cattle Stations For 5-GW Renewable Energy Hub” • Fortescue Future Industries bought three cattle stations in Western Australia. It plans to use them for renewable energy to decarbonize its mining business and export green hydrogen and green ammonia. The stations will continue to run cattle, but their primary product will be renewable energy. [PV Magazine]

Homestead in Western Australia (Yewenyi, CC-BY-SA 3.0)

UK:

¶ “Boris Johnson Defends Plan Amid Cost Of Living Crisis” • UK consumers are facing huge increases in energy bills after the Russian invasion of Ukraine pushed gas prices even higher. The PM has defended the government’s new energy strategy, after criticism from his political foes that it does little to help people struggling with soaring bills. [BBC]

¶ “REA Slams UK Energy Strategy As ‘Wholly Inadequate’” • The Association for Renewable Energy and Clean Technology (REA) has branded the UK Government’s Energy Security Strategy as “wholly inadequate.” The REA said that nuclear power is too expensive. Instead of nuclear, a focus should be put on onshore windpower and microgrids. [reNews]

Wind turbines and hay (William DeHoogh, Unsplash)

¶ “UK Energy Strategy: Here’s How New Nuclear Will Be Blocked In Scotland” • The SNP Government says it will halt any attempts to bring new nuclear power developments to Scotland. Scottish energy secretary Michael Matheson says the government in Holyrood remains firmly against nuclear power stations, and will use its planning powers to stop them. [Press and Journal]

US:

¶ “19 Named Storms Expected This Hurricane Season, Above Average But Becoming More Common” • After two consecutive years of exhausting the hurricane name list, forecasters predict 19 named storms this hurricane season, five more than normal. Nine are expected to become hurricanes, and four are expected to become major hurricanes. [CNN]

Eye of Hurricane Florence, 2018 (NASA image)

¶ “Puerto Rico Crews Scramble To Restore Power After Island-Wide Outage” • Electric service restoration efforts were still underway Thursday evening in Puerto Rico, a utility company said, a day after the start of an island-wide outage that left many people in the dark overnight and prompted school cancellations and other interruptions. [CNN]

¶ “Helping US Utilities Target Grid Resilience” • The US power grids are at the center of a digitalization transformation leading to decarbonizing all economic sectors, increasing distributed renewable generation, and electrifying consumption. The ultimate goal is to improve grid resilience, sustainability, and reliability in the US. [CleanTechnica]

Grid operations (Photo courtesy of Enel)

¶ “Proposed Law In New York Allows Customer-Generators To Donate Credit To Low-Income Families” • A proposed law in New York state aims to allow residential solar customers to donate energy credits to low-income families. The law would broaden the benefits of solar to provide for low income people who might not have solar panels. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Environmental Monitoring Priorities For Offshore Wind” • While the need for this transition is becoming only more urgent, for the full potential of offshore wind to be realized, we can and must ensure that all offshore windpower in the US is developed in a way that minimizes impacts on our vulnerable marine ecosystems. [CleanTechnica]

Offshore windfarm (Guillaume Baviere, CC-BY-SA 2.0)

¶ “Electric Vehicles Could Save North Carolinians $92 Billion, Avoid 679 Hospital Visits” • North Carolina can save $92 billion and avoid 679 hospital visits by transitioning to zero-emission EVs and trucks, a report says. The report, “North Carolina Transportation Electrification Roadmap,” was commissioned by the NRDC and prepared by ERM. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “State Regulators Approve Construction Of Wisconsin’s Largest Renewable Energy Plant In Dane County” • The Public Service Commission has approved construction of the state’s largest renewable energy plant in Dane County. The Koshkonong Solar Energy Center would have 300 MW of solar capacity and 165 MW of battery storage. [Wisconsin Public Radio]

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April 7 Energy News

April 7, 2022

Science and Technology:

¶ “Yes, The Grid Can Handle EVs” • We’ve all seen it. Insufferable fanatics of fossil fuels, seeking to win an argument against EVs, pull out what they think is the ultimate argument against them: “Where does that power come from?” They have all of their facts from decades ago in order. Here is a video that looks at the data and does the math. [CleanTechnica]

Charging an EV (dcbel, Unsplash)

World:

¶ “Germany Plugin Auto Sales Reach 26% Of Auto Market” • The German auto market saw plugin cars take 25.6% share in March, up modestly from 22.5% year on year. Against a declining auto market, full electrics grew in volume whilst plugin hybrids fell. Overall auto volumes were 241,330 units, down 31% from the 2017 to 2019 seasonal average. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Europe’s Dirtiest Airlines Received Millions In Free Pollution Permits In 2021” • Analysis by Transport & Environment shows that the ten most polluting airlines in Europe received €683 million worth of free CO₂ permits under the EU’s carbon market for aviation in 2021. Lufthansa, easyJet, Air France, and SAS were among the top ten polluters. [CleanTechnica]

Airport (Ashim D’Silva, Unsplash)

¶ “India Faces A Hard Choice: Eat Or Drive?” • India is rapidly approaching an existential choice: eat or drive. India decided years ago to use ethanol to reduce oil imports and to use its domestic resources more appropriately. But with the invasion of Ukraine, the global grain supply is reduced, meaning less food or less ethanol for India. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Germany Boosts Renewables With ‘Biggest Energy Policy Reform In Decades'” • In the “biggest energy policy reform in decades,” the coalition of Social Democrats, Greens, and Free Democrats proposes to lift the rollout of wind and solar power “to a completely new level” in a draft law aiming at getting near to 100% renewable power by 2035. [Renew Economy]

Wind turbine in Germany (Karsten Würth, Unsplash)

¶ “Cancelling Ninh Thuan Nuclear Power Project A Right Policy: NA Chairman” • Stopping implementation of the Ninh Thuan nuclear power project (in 2016) was a right policy of historical significance by the Party Central Committee and Politburo led by General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong, said National Assembly Chairman Vuong Dinh Hue. [Vietnam Plus]

¶ “UN: Africa A Possible Center For Renewable Energy” • The UN IPCC climate report brought attention to Africa’s potential for renewable kinds of energy production. It said renewable energy projects could reduce the effects of global warming and support African economic development. Africa’s renewable energy is already increasing. [VOA Learning English]

Wind turbines in South Africa (Charl Folscher, Unsplash)

UK:

¶ “UK Supercharges Renewables In New Energy Strategy” • The UK government pledged to accelerate deployment of renewables with a series of new sector targets and reduced permit approval timelines. The government increased the 2030 offshore wind goal from 40 GW to 50 GW in the long-awaited British Energy Security Strategy. [reNews]

¶ “Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng Orders Scientific Review Of Fracking Impact” • The UK government ordered a new report on the impact of fracking, days ahead of publishing an energy plan. Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng has given the British Geological Survey three months to assess changes to the science around the controversial practice. [BBC]

Fracking protest in London (David Holt, CC-BY-SA 2.0)

¶ “UK Focuses On Nuclear Power Under Energy Security Strategy” • The UK Government published an energy security strategy that aims to boost the country’s energy independence. This follows rising power prices and market volatility due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Up to eight nuclear reactors could be built on existing locations. [Power Technology]

US:

¶ “US Wind Energy Just Hit A Major Milestone” • On April 5, wind power was the second-highest source of electricity for the first time since the Energy Information Administration began gathering the data. Wind turbines generated over 2,000 GWh of electricity, edging out electricity generated by nuclear and coal, only trailing behind natural gas. [CNN]

Wind farm in Washington State (Jeffrey G Katz, CC-BY-SA 3.0)

¶ “Americans Are Far More Likely To Say Climate Crisis Is A Threat After Facing Recent Extreme Weather” • A Gallup poll found 1 in 3 Americans said they have been affected by some kind of extreme weather in the past two years, and those who had been affected by extreme weather were far more likely to say the climate crisis is a threat. [CNN]

¶ “From Florida To Alaska, Tribes Seek To Harness Energy From Sun, Wind And Water” • From Florida to Alaska, dozens of tribes are working to harness energy from wind, sun, and water to generate revenues, create jobs and reduce utility costs for citizens, while also helping combat climate change and boost energy independence. [InvestigateWest]

Installing solar PVs (Navajo Tribal Utility Authority/Navajo Nation)

¶ “Pinterest Bans Climate Change Misinformation” • Pinterest announced a policy prohibiting using its platform to share climate misinformation, making it the rare social platform to ban such content. Pinterest said it will remove content that denies the existence or impacts of climate change as well as the role of humans in causing climate change. [CNN]

¶ “Solectrac Launches Dealer Network For Electric Tractors, Adds New Facility” • Electric tractor manufacturer Solectrac recently announced two new developments: the launch of its certified dealer network and moving into a new 36,000-square-foot production facility in Windsor, California, which will be at full capacity in June 2022. [CleanTechnica]

Have an impressively jolly day.

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April 6 Energy News

April 6, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Who Cares About EV Fuel Efficiency? Drivers Don’t, But Investors Should” • Despite the daily disinformation from the oil industry and its enablers, driving electric is clearly cleaner than driving fossil, and if you do most of your charging at home, it’s substantially cheaper. But this doesn’t mean that the efficiency of an EV doesn’t matter. [CleanTechnica]

Please click on the image to enlarge it.
(Image Courtesy of Transport & Environment)

¶ “Five Takeaways From The April IPCC 6 Report” • The latest IPCC 6 report released this week is 3000 pages long. Here, we can share some of the highlights, so you can fill in the spaces on your own. We can start with a tweet from Bill McKibben, who has just returned home after accepting the prestigious Congressional Medal of Distinction. [CleanTechnica]

Science and Technology:

¶ “The Fungi Cleaning New Delhi’s Air” • New Delhi is one of the world’s most polluted cities. Much of the pollution comes from burning agricultural waste. Pusa Decomposer, which is made up of seven different species of fungus naturally present in the soil, can be used to compost the waste in place, reducing pollution and improving the soil. [BBC]

¶ “Nature-Based Solutions Can Tap The Earth’s Powers to Sequester Carbon” • In the newest IPCC report, scientists argue that we should harness the planet’s own powers to sequester carbon. Natural solutions, such as reforestation and ecosystem restoration, pay for themselves as they sequester carbon, boost biodiversity, and aid in our well-being. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Getting Electric Off The Ground With R&D: Analysis On Battery-Powered Electric Aircraft And Seacraft” • With growing success of R&D in preparing EVs for the road, NREL researchers are applying their expertise to non-road transportation modes. Like EVs, battery-powered aircraft and seacraft can decrease emissions, noise, and costs. [CleanTechnica]

Electric airplane concept (Courtesy of Wright Electric/easyJet)

¶ “IPCC Report: Oil, Renewables And ‘Stranded Assets’” • The IPCC Report says that without carbon capture, coal and gas plants would need to retire about 23 years earlier than expected in order to hold global temperature rise to 1.5°C, and 17 years earlier in the case of the 2°C limit. Fossil fuels facilities will be stranded assets. [E&E News]

World:

¶ “Europe Proposes Ban On Russian Coal Imports” • The EU is planning a new round of sanctions that includes a ban on Russian coal imports, and it’s also working on sanctions on Russian oil. The measures were announced by President Ursula von der Leyen of the European Commission. They still need approval of all 27 EU member states. [CNN]

Coal on a barge (Tobias Reich, Unsplash)

¶ “Europe Is Finally Coming After Russia’s Energy” • The European Commission proposed a phased ban of €4 billion ($4.3 billion) worth of Russian coal imports per year as part of a fifth package of sanctions designed to further diminish Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war chest. Other proposals on Russian imports are worth another €10 billion. [CNN]

¶ “UK Plugin EVs Hit 23% In March, Full Electrics Up Over 100% YOY” • The UK auto market saw plugin electric vehicles take a 22.7% share in March, up strongly from 13.5% from 2021. Battery EVs’ 16.1% share is up from 7.7%, more than double. Overall auto volumes were 243,749, down some 45% from the seasonal norms of the pre-pandemic years. [CleanTechnica]

Vauxhall Corsa-e (Vauxford, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “Australia’s Oldest University Goes 100% Renewable In Supply Deal With Snowy” • The University of Sydney will become the latest tertiary institution to make the switch to 100% renewables, after striking a deal with Snowy Hydro. The university, Australia’s oldest, signed a five-year agreement for power from renewable energy projects. [Renew Economy]

¶ “Australian Businesses Bypass Federal Politics As The Switch To Renewable Energy Gathers Steam” • “What’s happening is across Australia, across the whole economy, corporations are moving to decarbonise,” said Matthew Bowen, a partner at law firm Jackson McDonald specialising in energy. He sited the IPCC report as just one reason for the change. [ABC]

BHP nickel mine (Courtesy of BHP)

¶ “Investment In Renewable Energy Can Deliver More Jobs Than Fossil Fuels, Report Finds” • Renewable energy has the potential to create three times as many jobs per million pounds invested compared to gas or coal power, while investment in energy efficiency can create five times as many, according to a report by the UK Energy Research Centre. [MSN]

US:

¶ “ExxonMobil Shows Its Lobbying Hand, But Hides Some Cards” • After years of resolutions from shareholders, reports are starting to come from ExxonMobil. They provide some insight into the fossil fuel industry’s investment in political influence, but a sleight of hand is preventing investors from seeing the company’s full strategy. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Green Mountain Power Announces New LMI Community Solar Subscription Software Pilot” • LO3 Energy’s developed Pando, software allowing clean energy operators to offer new compensation models to optimize renewable energy assets. Green Mountain Power will use the softwar for a new “Sun Match” pilot for customers. [Solar Power World]

¶ “Eastern New Mexico University Will Soon Be Implementing Renewable Energy Practices” • Eastern New Mexico University approved a solar project that will have over 10,000 solar panels and offset around 75% of the campuses’ yearly power needs. This project plans to maximize the universities’ energy efficiency and educational opportunities. [KVII]

Have an unrestrainedly wonderful day.

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April 5 Energy News

April 5, 2022

Opinion:

¶ “Can The Defense Production Act Jump-Start A Transition To Renewable Energy?” • Soon after Russia invaded Ukraine, Bill McKibben proposed a radically simple idea: President Joe Biden should invoke the Defense Production Act to undermine Russia’s economic power over the EU by having US manufacturers make millions of electric heat pumps. [Sierra Club]

Outdoor heatpump units (Kristoferb, CC-BY-SA 3.0)

¶ “Accelerate Energy Transition To Protect National Security” • With Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, an energy crisis has yet again brought home that our nation’s continued reliance on fossil fuels leaves us vulnerable to unfriendly foreign actors and unstable global markets. To secure our economy, we must transition to a clean-energy future. [pv magazine USA]

Science and Technology:

¶ “Ocean Energy? River Power? There’s A Toolkit For That” • Our water is a renewable energy resource. Called marine energy, it is equivalent to about 80% of the US annual electricity needs. Now, marine energy developers can start building this future faster and cheaper with the Marine and Hydrokinetic Toolkit, a huge, searchable knowledge hub. [CleanTechnica]

Coming ocean energy technology (US DOE image)

¶ “Suddenly, Heat Pump Clothes Dryers Are Having A Moment” • A heat pump is an energy efficient appliance that can do much more than heat a building. Heat pumps can also deliver AC, and now it turns out they can run clothes dryers, which is a big deal because laundry is one of the leading energy-sucking features of the modern household. [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶ “UN Report On Climate Crisis Confirms The World Already Has Solutions – But Politics Are Getting In The Way” • The world is careening toward levels of global warming with irreversible impacts, a landmark report says. We have the solutions – the only thing preventing us from using them is political will and interests in fossil fuels. [CNN]

Coal-burning power plant (Jason Blackeye, Unsplash, cropped)

¶ “IPCC Scientists Report Five Ways To Save The Planet” • UN scientists have laid out a plan to avoid the worst impacts of rising temperatures. The IPCC report essentially calls for a revolution in how we produce energy and power our world. To avoid very dangerous warming, carbon emissions need to peak within three years, and fall rapidly after that. [BBC]

¶ “BYD Has Ended Production Of Conventional Cars Powered by Gasoline” • The last BYD passenger car without a plug rolled off the line in China at the end of February. Since then, every one built has been either a plug-in hybrid or a battery-electric car, according to Electrive, which cites several different Chinese sources for its report. [CleanTechnica]

BYD Han EV (Courtesy of BYD via Electrive)

¶ “Electric Vans Are 25% Cheaper To Own Than Diesels” • The European advocacy group Transport & Environment is on a mission to accelerate the transition to EVs. Their latest survey shows battery-electric vans average 25% cheaper to own than equivalent diesels, with a cost per kilometer of €0.15 for electrics and €0.20 for diesels. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “UPS Begins EQuad Electric Bike Trials In London” • The UPS vice president of fleet maintenance and engineering, told Reuters that UPS is about to begin trials in London of 100 eQuad electric cargo bikes designed and built by UK firm Fernhay. The eQuad is electric-assisted, has a top speed of about 25 km/h (15.5 mph) and carries a load of up to 200 kg (441 lb). [CleanTechnica]

UPS eQuad (Courtesy of Fernhay)

¶ “Enel Green Power To Build 3-GW Solar Panel Factory In Italy” • Italian renewable energy firm Enel Green Power signed a grant agreement with the European Commission to build a solar panel gigafactory in Italy. The facility will be built at EGP’s 3Sun solar PV plant in Catania, Sicily, increasing the PV-making capacity from 200 MW to 3 GW. [Power Technology]

¶ “Serious Setback For Renewable Energy Goals As Budget Backs Away From Transition Support” • The Australian federal budget was handed down last week, and among all the cost-of-living reliefs, fuel concessions, benefits to home buyers, and so on, there was notable silence on one major aspect – the transition to renewable energy. [Monash Lens]

Offshore wind turbine (Grahame Jenkins, Unsplash)

¶ “Boris Johnson Blows Cold On Onshore Wind Faced With 100-Plus Rebel MPs” • Pro-green cabinet ministers are frustrated by Boris Johnson’s decision to back away from ambitious onshore windfarm plans for England, as it emerged more than 100 Tory MPs are lobbying against the policy. He will focus on nuclear, offshore wind, and natural gas. [The Guardian]

US:

¶ “Volunteer State (Finally) Discovers Solar Power – And With A Regenerative Twist” • Tennessee is adding a 70-MW solar project to its stable of PV arrays. This particular project is also of interest because it sports a regenerative agriculture angle, and that could help spark more solar activity in a state where more than 40% of the land is farmland. [CleanTechnica]

Farming with PVs in Tennessee (Silicon Ranch via Cision)

¶ “Democrats To Big Oil: Suspend Buybacks And Dividends During Ukraine War” • Two top House Democrats are pushing the CEOs of ExxonMobil, Chevron, BP, and Shell to scrap their stock buyback and dividends during the war in Ukraine and shift funding for those shareholder rewards towards lowering prices at the gas pump. [CNN]

¶ “Hertz Buys 65,000 New Electric Cars From Polestar” • Hertz is proving to be a major player in the switch to electrification, and is following up its 100,000 unit Tesla order with another massive electric car order. This time, from Swedish performance brand Polestar. The 65,000 order is more than double Polestar’s entire sales for last year (29,000 units). [CleanTechnica]

Have an immensely contented day.

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April 4 Energy News

April 4, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Tesla And German Auto Industry’s Varied Tech Paths” • Tesla manages its business very differently than its competitors. As a result, Tesla sales grew almost 90% in 2021, compared to a declines of 2% at Daimler and 3% at the VW Group. Tesla’s growth took place despite a world-wide shortage in chips, and some of the legacy car makers are noticing. [CleanTechnica]

Quality control at Giga Berlin (Tesla image)

¶ “It’s Time For Charles Koch To Testify About His Climate Change Disinformation Campaign” • The US House Oversight and Reform Committee is investigating the fossil fuel industry’s decades-long climate change disinformation campaign. The committee would be remiss if it doesn’t invite Charles Koch for questioning. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “First EV Road Trip For EV Veteran” • I’ve been driving an EV for some time, but my 2011 Nissan Leaf, while dependable and fun, is a first-generation EV with limited range. I planned to take my wife’s plug-in hybrid on a road trip from Kentucky, where I live, to visit my dad in Connecticut. Then a friend offered a loan of his Tesla Model 3. [CleanTechnica]

Tesla Model 3 (Bram Van Oost, Unsplash)

World:

¶ “Coalition Tries For Third Time To Let Renewable Energy Agency Fund Technologies Using Fossil Fuels” • The Morrison government launched a third attempt to change the Australian Renewable Energy Agency to allow it to fund a broader range of technologies than had been originally envisioned, including some using fossil fuels. [The Guardian]

¶ “France Plugin EV Share Hits 21.4% As Diesels Reach Record Low” • France, Europe’s second largest auto market, saw plugin electric vehicles take 21.4% market share in March 2022, up from 16.1% in 2021. Full electrics took 13.5%, their second highest result. Overall auto market volume was down by some 35% compared to pre-pandemic March 2019. [CleanTechnica]

Peugeot e-208 (Vauxford, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “Indian Oil Corp, L&T, ReNew Power Form Joint Venture For Green Hydrogen Projects” • State-run Indian Oil Corporation Ltd, engineering major Larsen & Toubro, and clean energy firm ReNew Power signed an agreement to form a joint venture to collaborate for green hydrogen. The three companies will hold equal stake in the joint venture. [Moneycontrol]

¶ “Greencoat Renewables Enters Offshore With Riffgrund 1 Deal” • Irish investor Greencoat Renewables has reached an agreement to acquire 50% of the Borkum Riffgrund 1 offshore wind farm in Germany from Kirkbi A/S and William Demant Invest A/S for around €350 million. Ørsted, which developed and constructed the windfarm, owns the other 50%. [reNews]

Borkum Riffgrund 1 offshore wind farm (Ørsted image)

¶ “Energy Dome And Ansaldo Energia Sign Agreement To Bring Energy Storage Facilities To Europe, Middle East, and Africa” • Energy Dome, a global provider of energy storage, and Ansaldo Energia, an international power OEM and service provider, signed a non-exclusive license agreement to partner on storage in the EMEA region. [Business Wire]

¶ “Here’s How Master Group Is Producing Four Times More Renewable Energy Than It Consumes” • The fact that the world needs sustainable, clean forms energy is no secret. As technology advances, so do our choices of sustainable energy. Wind energy is one of the fastest-growing energy sources globally. And Master Group is bringing that to Pakistan. [Dawn]

Wind farm in Pakistan (Muzaffar Bukhari, CC-BY-SA 2.0)

¶ “Boris Johnson Will Bow To Pressure From Conservative MPs To Block New Onshore Wind Farms” • Boris Johnson is poised to bow to pressure from Conservative MPs to block new onshore wind farms. The energy strategy to be published will focus on reviving nuclear power and expanding offshore wind, along with new North Sea oil and gas licenses. [MSN]

¶ “Ukraine Plans To Resume Regulatory Control At Chornobyl Nuclear Plant” • The International Atomic Energy Agency has been notified by Ukraine that it is examining the possibility to resume regulatory control of the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant, after the withdrawal of the Russian military from the site. Ukraine did not specify a date. [Power Technology]

Chernobyl plant, before it blew up (IAEA, CC-BY-SA 2.0)

US:

¶ “Climate Change Could Cost US Budget $2 Trillion A Year By End Century – White House” • Flood, fire, and drought fueled by climate change could take a massive bite out of the US federal budget per year by the end of the century, the White House said in its first ever such assessment. It could take up $2 trillion per year, the assessment said. [WKZO]

¶ “Could Tesla Soon Be Worth $4 Trillion? Some Analysts Think So” • Elon Musk’s electric vehicle company has been making waves in the wealth world in recent years. The automaker’s market capitalization creeping its way towards the trillion dollar mark, and some analysts believe it may someday quadruple its current levels. [CleanTechnica]

Charging an EV (Kindel Media, Pexels, cropped)

¶ “Tesla’s Model X SUV Takes On Some Sleek, Sexy Supercars – Drag Race!” • Have you ever seen a Porsche or Lamborghini drag racing a full-size luxury SUV? Probably not. YouTube channel DragTimes brings us the thrill and excitement of watching a 5,390 lb (2,445 kg) Tesla Model X Plaid routing the internal combustion engine superstars. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “More Than 800 Solar Projects In Bay States Stuck Waiting For Review” • The rollout of solar and other renewable energy projects in Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia is caught up in a review bottleneck. So far, 807 utility-scale, commercial rooftop, community solar, and solar storage projects have been stuck in a growing regulatory traffic jam. [Bay Journal]

Have a consistently brilliant day.

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April 3 Energy News

April 3, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “The FUD Against Global Warming Lives On” • FUD – Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt – about global warming persists, despite the science being solid for decades. Whenever scientific evidence challenges the revenues of large corporations, a strategy has been cooked up and continually used to obscure the truth of the new evidence. It’s still happening. [CleanTechnica]

Atmospheric CO₂ at Mauna Loa Observatory (NOAA image)

¶ “Why ‘Bio’ And ‘Green’ Don’t Mean What You Think” • The rising public enthusiasm for climate action has led to a surge in corporate climate claims, making it increasingly difficult for consumers to distinguish between good environmental practices and misleading statements, including a practice now referred to as “greenwashing.” [BBC]

¶ “Creating A One-Stop Shop For Whole-Home Retrofits” • To decarbonize the US building stock, we must start by ensuring that low-income residents have easy access to healthy, safe, and climate-aligned housing. Funding from the US DOE, provides a momentous opportunity for communities in the US to deliver retrofits for low-income housing. [CleanTechnica]

Apartment building (Brandon Griggs, Unsplash)

¶ “Dire warning on climate change ‘is being ignored’ amid war and economic turmoil” • Scientists fear that their last-ditch climate warnings are going unheeded. The third segment of the scientific report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change will be published. The fear is it will be ignored with the war in Ukraine and high energy prices. [The Guardian]

Science and Technology:

¶ “New Sulfur Battery Promises 300% More EV Range” • German startup Theion is promising a new sulfur battery technology that could help mainstream electric cars offer 900 miles of range on a single charge. The best part? Compared to lithium, sulfur uses much less energy to produce and costs just pennies on the dollar to source. [CleanTechnica]

Natural sulfur crystal (Didier Descouens, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

World:

¶ “Norway At New Record High 92% Plugin EV Share” • Norway’s combined plugin result of 91.9% was overwhelmingly comprised of full battery electrics at a record of 86.1% of sales. Plugin hybrid vehicles contributed just 5.8%. All other powertrains were less than half of that, with petrol-only internal combustion engines taking just 2.8%. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “As Energy Prices Soar, UK Faces A Cucumber Crisis” • Growers of vegetables in UK greenhouses are facing a problem because of high energy costs due to the high price of natural gas. A year ago, paid 40 to 50 pence per therm for natural gas, or about 65¢. Last week, it was £2.25, or nearly $3. The costs of fertilizer and labor have also soared. [MarketScreener]

Cucumbers (Jonathan Pielmayer, Unsplash)

¶ “India Is Set To Miss Renewables Goal For 2022” • From curbing emissions to increasing forest cover, India has often boasted about making progress toward its pledges under the 2015 Paris climate change accord. But officials have kept quiet about renewable energy. That may be because India is on track to miss its goal for renewable energy. [Regina Leader Post]

¶ “Ukraine Hoists National Flag Above Chernobyl Nuclear Plant After Russian Troops’ Departure” • Amid the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, Energoatom, a nuclear power company in Ukraine, announced in a statement on Telegram, “Today, April 2, at 11:00, the Ukrainian flag was raised over the Chernobyl NPP and the anthem was sung,” CNN reported. [Republic World]

Chernobyl nuclear plant (Viktor Hesse, Unsplash)

US:

¶ “Tesla Delivered Over 300,000 EVs In Q1 2022” • In Q1 2022, Tesla once again proved its naysayers and critics wrong. Tesla announced earlier today that it produced over 305,000 vehicles and delivered over 310,000 in the first quarter of 2022 while facing the challenges of the ongoing supply chain hurdles and factory shutdowns. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Five Grid Plans To Cut Fossil Fuel Dependence” • The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is in the midst of proposing new transmission planning rules. While these reforms are open for discussion, it would be useful to take a close look at the five regional US grid operators’ recent practices to see what FERC should include in its new rules. [CleanTechnica]

Solar array in California (Courtesy of Sempra Energy)

¶ “Buzz Solutions Takes Out 50% Of Grid Inspection Image Effort And Duration” • Buzz Solutions has a platform for utilities to analyze, store, and manage the increasing load of inspection images of transmission and distribution assets. Its CEO took interest in energy when she was involved in the fight to close the San Onofre nuclear plant. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Dangerous Combination of Intense Wildfires and Extreme Rainfall Likely to Happen More Often” • The dangers of extreme wildfires followed by torrential rainfall leading to deadly flooding and landslides will likely become more common in western US as the world becomes warmer, according to a study in the journal Science Advances. [The Weather Channel]

Deluge on the way (Jim Witkowski, Unsplash)

¶ “Can Texas Replace Coal With Wind And Solar Power?” • How likely is a scenario in which renewables overtake coal in the US, and where will all of that renewable energy come from? It could be coming sooner than you think. According to research from Rice University, Texas could replace nearly 100% of its coal output with wind and solar. [Oil Price]

¶ “Fossil Fuel Protest Held In Northampton Against Banks” • In Northampton, Massachusetts, local organizations held a protest to target TD and Bank of America over climate destruction. Area groups including Climate Action Now had members demanding that the banks stop funding, insuring, and investing in climate destruction. [Western Mass News]

Have a fondly memorable day.

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April 2 Energy News

April 2, 2022

Opinion:

¶ “Let’s ‘Finally, Formally, Categorically, And Irreversibly’ End Our Oil Obsession!” • Thomas Friedman says the US needs to “finally, formally, categorically, and irreversibly” end its oil addiction. That addiction has distorted US “foreign policy, our commitments to human rights, our national security, and, most of all, our environment.” [CleanTechnica]

Offshore oil (NOAA image, public domain)

Science and Technology:

¶ “Can Wind, Water, And Air Combine In A New Energy Revolution?” • Startup Highly Innovative Fuels’ “Haru Oni” project is a $55 million effort to display a viable commercial process for turning wind, water and air into synthetic fuels that can be used to power internal combustion engines while reducing carbon emissions. [CNN]

World:

¶ “Russia Says It Won’t Cut Off Gas Supplies Yet In Ruble Payment Row” • Russia has said it will not cut off gas exports to Europe yet in a standoff over its demand to be paid in rubles. Russian president Vladimir Putin signed a decree stating buyers must pay in rubles through Russian bank accounts. The contracts call for payment in dollars or euros. [BBC]

Rubles (Anna Tis, Pexels)

¶ “Russia Accuses Ukraine Of Attacking Oil Depot” • An oil depot was set on fire in a Russian city near Ukraine in what Russia said as an attack by two Ukrainian helicopters. A video on Twitter showed a blaze near apartment blocks in Belgorod, 40 km (25 miles) from the border. Ukraine’s top security official denied his country’s forces were behind the attack. [BBC]

¶ “SAFIRUN Launches Daily Lifestyle App And Marketplace In Rwanda” • A Rwandese company SAFIRUN, mostly known for pioneering eco-friendly delivery and logistics services in Kigali, has been working on various green-transport solutions for goods and services using electric scooters, electric bikes, and electric vans over the past four years. [CleanTechnica]

Green delivery (SAFIRUN image)

¶ “Ministers Go Cool On Fracking Plan – With More Onshore Wind Likely To Be Included In Energy Security Strategy” • New proposals to look at fracking may be put on the back burner even though the UK’s only shale gas wells have been given a year-long reprieve. More onshore wind could be in the plan despite some opposition from Tory MPs. [Daily Mail]

¶ “Noxious weed prickly acacia to be turned into ‘green coal’ by renewable energy company in outback Queensland” • Prickly acacia, originally from Africa, has been a multi-million-dollar problem across outback Queensland for decades, infesting prime grazing land, killing native grasslands and degrading soil health. Now it could become an energy source. [ABC]

Prickly acacia (Queensland government image)

¶ “Vedanta To Source 580 MW Of Renewable Energy For Its Operations Across India” • Vedanta announced that it signed a Power Delivery Agreement with affiliates of Sterlite Power Technologies – a company to supply hybrid-based power with solar, wind, and storage solutions. Vedanta is seeking 2.5 GW of constant power by 2030. [Construction Week India]

¶ “Portugal To Speed Up Switch To Renewable Power In Wake Of Ukraine War” • Portugal aims to accelerate its energy transition to have renewable sources supply 80% of its electricity output by 2026, the government said. That is four years earlier than had been planned. The transition is being accelerated in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. [Reuters]

Pelamis wave machine (P123, public domain)

¶ “Russian Soldier Was Killed By ‘Radiation From Damaged Chernobyl Nuclear Plant'” • A Russian soldier died of radiation from the damaged Chernobyl nuclear plant in Ukraine after his unit camped in a toxic forest, reports say. His unit dug trenches into radioactive mud and their trucks kicked up radioactive dust as they drove along dirt roads. [The Mirror]

¶ “Johnson To ‘Bet Big’ On Nuclear Energy Despite Sunak’s Reservations” • Boris Johnson wants his promised energy security strategy to “bet big” on nuclear despite reservations of Rishi Sunak, Chancellor of the Exchequer. But he has cooled on more onshore wind turbines in England amid a Conservative backlash. [The Guardian]

To achieve security, bet big! (Michał Parzuchowski, Unsplash)

US:

¶ “California Snowpack Is Critically Low, Signaling Another Year Of Devastating Drought” • Snowpack in the California Sierra this winter is just 38% of normal, California water officials said, in the latest sign the state’s drought is growing more devastating by the month. Heavy snows in December were followed by months of basically no snow at all. [CNN]

¶ “New Yorkers And Wildlife Are Finding Solace In The City’s Parks” • New York City’s wildlife is thriving, and that’s thanks to devoted scientists and activists who have spent decades on work bolstering robust wildlife habitats in the city’s five boroughs. New York is densely populated, but much of it’s 30,000 acres of parkland is teeming with wildlife. [CNN]

Screech owl (Joshua J. Cotten, Unsplash)

¶ “Nevada Governor Signs Multi-State Medium And Heavy-Duty Zero Emission Vehicle MOU” • Nevada Governor Steve Sisolak signed a memorandum of understanding to join 16 other states, the District of Columbia, and Quebec to work toward a goal to have 100% of medium-duty and heavy-duty vehicle sales have zero emissions by 2050. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Red Hook Terminals Look To Reduce Fuel Costs And Carbon Emissions” • Red Hook Terminals is one of the largest cargo facilities on the east coast of the US. It recently acquired 10 battery-electric terminal tractors made by BYD to replace some of its diesel trucks. The resulting benefits included an 81% decline in fuel costs. [CleanTechnica]

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April 1 Energy News

April 1, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “The World Is Stuck Between Gas Prices And Climate Change” • The West needs more oil now. The world needs to get off oil and gas ASAP. It is an epic quandary of the oil addiction that runs the world economy. President Joe Biden announced a plan he said would address all of the above, with a large release from the strategic oil reserve. But will it work? [CNN]

Gas storage in Massachusetts (Fletcher6, CC-BY-SA 3.0)

¶ “These Are The 10 Most Efficient EVs You Can Buy In 2022” • Most EV buyers seem to understand that poor efficiency means a number of other problems, too, like limited towing range, more stops on road trips, and a higher cost of ownership. This list of the Top 10 Most Efficient EVs shows that interest in efficiency is hitting the mainstream. [CleanTechnica]

Science and Technology:

¶ “American Lung Association Says EVs Save Lives” • A report from the American Lung Association says that transitioning away from fossil fuels to battery-EVs would lead to important health and financial benefits. The US would see more than $1.2 trillion in health benefits if it goes electric for personal vehicles by 2040 and for trucks by 2035. [CleanTechnica]

Electric cement truck (Courtesy of Volvo Trucks)

World:

¶ “Russia Raises Stakes In Energy Standoff, Insisting On Rubles For Gas” • Russia has doubled down on its threat to cut off natural gas supplies to Western countries that refuse to pay in rubles, raising new concerns about rationing. Germany, Russia’s biggest energy customer in Europe, has described the plan as “blackmail” and a breach of contract. [CNN]

¶ “Mediterranean Sea Could Become A ‘Supergrid'” • Electric power could flow across the sea to Europe through the EuroAsia Interconnector. Instead of building gas pipelines so Europe can generate electricity and heat homes, the idea is to move solar energy from Israel, where it’s abundant, to places in Europe, where power is not so cheap. [CleanTechnica]

Mediterranean Sea (NASA image, public domain)

¶ “Mainstream PPA signals entry into Colombia” • Mainstream Renewable Power has commercialized its first development in Colombia by signing a deal to supply 180 GWh of electricity a year from the 100-MW Andromeda solar farm in a private power purchase agreement. The PPA has a tenure of 15 years, and will come into effect from 2024. [reNews]

¶ “Australia’s Renewables Boom Is Fading As Investors Lose Confidence, Energy Council Says” • After 6.3 GW of renewable energy were installed in 2021, Australia’s boom in rooftop solar and large-scale renewables is fading as investors lose confidence, with the lack of coordination by the Morrison government partly to blame, the Clean Energy Council says. [The Guardian]

Windy Hill Wind Farm (Lepidlizard, public domain)

¶ “Solar Cells Import Jumps To $3,447 Million In April Through January” • Indian solar cell imports rose to $3,447 million (about ₹26,000 crore) during April through January 2021-22, Parliament was informed. India has a goal of installing 100 GW of solar by December of this year. Projects of 108.91 GW have been put online or are in the pipeline. [Business Standard]

¶ “IAEA Investigates Claim Russians Fled Chernobyl With Radiation Sickness” • Russian troops have largely withdrawn from the Chernobyl nuclear power. The Ukrainian state power company Energoatom said the pullout came after soldiers received “significant doses” of radiation, a claim the UN’s nuclear watchdog has said it is investigating. [The Guardian]

Sarcophagus for destroyed reactor (Mick De Paola, Unsplash)

US:

¶ “America’s Home Builders Are Getting Squeezed By The War In Ukraine – Here’s How” • Supply chain disruptions from the pandemic have meant garage doors are on back order, floor tiles keep getting discontinued mid-construction, and appliances are marooned aboard waylaid shipping vessels. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has made things worse. [CNN]

¶ “Biden To Invoke Defense Production Act To Boost EV Mineral Production” • President Joe Biden is set invoke the use of Title III of the Korean War-era Defense Production Act to ramp up US production of minerals for electric vehicles and large energy storage batteries as the latest salvo in the ongoing economic battle with Russia. [CleanTechnica]

President Joe Biden (White House image)

¶ “Biden Orders ‘Unprecedented’ Release Of Oil Reserves” • US President Joe Biden ordered a major release from America’s oil reserves in an effort to bring down high fuel costs. The release of up to 180 million barrels of oil over six months is the largest in the reserve’s 48 year history. But it is unlikely to fully resolve the energy crisis, analysts say. [BBC]

¶ “Engie Finances 665-MW US Clean Power Trio” • Engie North America has successfully completed tax-equity financing and equity financing for renewables projects totaling 665 MW. The finance covers the Iron Star wind farm in Ford County, Kansas, the Priddy wind farm in Mills County, Texas, and the Hawtree solar park in Warren County, North Carolina. [reNews]

Live Oak wind farm (Engie image)

¶ “NHTSA Agrees With Tesla And Increases Fines For Auto Makers That Don’t Meet Fuel Economy Rules” • The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has agreed with Tesla in a move that will increase the fines for automakers whose vehicles don’t meet fuel efficiency requirements for model years 2019 and up, Reuters reports. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Report Claims Northern California Wildfire Smoke Will Reach ‘Unbearable’ Levels Due To Climate Change” • A report from Princeton University and NOAA says wildfire smoke in Northern California will be worse than thought. “We are going to see a future full of more smoke,” said Dr Scott Stephens, Professor of Wildland Fire Science at UC Berkeley. [MSN]

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March 31 Energy News

March 31, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Ditching Fossil Fuels Makes Even More Sense Now” • The surging and volatile oil and gas prices created by the Russian war on Ukraine highlights the urgent need for the US to reduce its dependence on foreign oil and natural gas and accelerate its move to cleaner energy sources. Never before has it been this clear that fossil fuels threaten our economy. [CNN]

Break free (Eelco Böhtlingk, Unsplash)

Science and Technology:

¶ “Living In Wind Energy’s Shadow” • The moving shadows caused by wind turbines, called “shadow flicker,” are known to annoy some people. A study led by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory examined the extent of shadow flicker exposure near US wind projects and identifies the key factors predicting shadow flicker perception and annoyance. [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶ “Germany Issues ‘Early Warning’ Of Possible Gas Shortages As Russia Threatens Supplies” • Germany issued an “early warning” of potential natural gas shortages as a payments dispute with Russia is developing. The German government said there are no supply shortages now, but it urged consumers to reduce their use as far as possible. [CNN]

Wind turbines (Fabian Wiktor, Unsplash, cropped)

¶ “Indian Government Plans To Raise $3.3 Billion Through Green Bonds” • Media reports say the Indian government is planning to raise $3.3 billion by issuing a series of green bonds over the next few months. At COP26 the Indian prime minister announced the target to have 500 GW of renewable energy capacity by the end of this decade. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Greenko Lands Two Deals For India Pumped Hydro Storage Project” • Renewable energy developer Greenko, based in India, signed two deals for pumped hydropower storage. Adani Group signed for around 6 GWh of storage capacity. And a joint venture of ArcelorMittal and Nippon Steel wants 250 MW of renewable energy on an round-the-clock basis. [CleanTechnica]

Please click on the image to enlarge it. (NREL image)

¶ “Sharing The Benefits With A Dynamic Approach To Solar” • Australia’s booming solar industry is creating challenges for electricity network operators, but a new approach can increase solar exports and reduce costs for electricity customers. The Distributed Energy Integration Program has recently tackled the issue. [Australian Renewable Energy Agency]

¶ “XLCC Completes Concept Design For New Cable-Lay Ship” • XLCC, in a collaboration with Salt Ship Design, has completed the concept design of a cable-lay vessel, which it says will be delivered in the first half of 2025. The planned delivery of the XLCC CLV will support the Morocco-UK Power Project, the cable manufacturer said. [reNews]

XLCC CLS (XLCC)

¶ “Radical Shift To Renewable Energy Worldwide Needed To Hit Climate Goals” • The world must shift to take “radical action” by investing $5.7 trillion each year through 2030 to shift away from fossil fuels and ensure the planetary warming they cause doesn’t pass dangerous thresholds, the International Renewable Energy Agency says. [Canada’s National Observer]

¶ “World Bank In Philippines Partnership Studying Renewables As Baseload Energy” • The World Bank’s International Finance Corporation is taking part in a study to assess how technologies like solar-plus-storage hybrids can provide baseload power in the Philippines. It is working with AboitizPower Corporation to do the study jointly. [Energy Storage News]

Philippines’ first hybrid solar PV and battery plant (ACEN image)

¶ “Russian Troops Leaving Chernobyl Nuclear Site ‘Have Acute Radiation Sickness'” • Russian troops leaving the nuclear site at Chernobyl have ‘acute radiation sickness’, an employee at the Public Council at the State Agency of Ukraine for Exclusion Zone Management claimed. The Pentagon confirmed Russian troops were pulling out of the nuclear wasteland. [The Mirror]

¶ “Chinchilla Battery To Charge Up Queensland’s Renewable Energy Revolution” • Queensland government-owned utility CS Energy announced plans to build a 100-MW, 200-MWh battery near Chinchilla on the Western Downs. The state government has identified large-scale energy storage as fundamental in the state’s energy transition. [pv magazine Australia]

Artist’s impression of the Chinchilla battery (CS Energy image)

US:

¶ “Renewables Provided 24% Of US Electricity In December” • In December 2021, renewable energy sources accounted for 23.8% of electricity generation across the US. Wind energy alone accounted for 11.9%, while grid-scale solar energy accounted for 2.7%. In December 2019, the US got 17.5% of its electricity from renewable capacity. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Severe Drought And Mandatory Water Cuts Are Pitting Communities Against Each Other In Arizona” • As the climate crisis intensifies, battle lines are beginning to form over water amid a decades-long megadrought. Some Arizona communities are facing the very real possibility of losing access to the precious water that remains. [CNN]

No water, no crops (USDA, public domain)

¶ “Scientists To Biden: World Needs ‘Rapid Transition From Fossil Fuels To Renewable Energy'” • Five scientists sent an open letter to President Joe Biden, writing “with utmost urgency to advise [him] to halt recent moves towards increasing fossil fuel production and instead take bold action to rapidly reduce fossil fuel extraction and infrastructure.” [Common Dreams]

¶ “Vermont Panel Hears Strategies To Store Nuclear Waste In Boreholes” • The Vermont Nuclear Decommissioning Citizens Advisory Panel’s Federal Nuclear Waste Policy Committee meets to review potential nuclear waste storage issues. This week the panel heard from a company that is proposing to use borehole technology to store such waste. [WAMC] ()

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March 30 Energy News

March 30, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Great Video Explains Solar-Powered EVs” • A recent video at YouTube not only explains the math behind solar-powered EVs, but also gave plenty of nuance on the subject. More importantly, it’s made to be accessible for people who don’t follow EVs the way that many of our readers do. The video assesses how useful solar-powered EVs are. [CleanTechnica]

Aptera (Aptera image)

Science and Technology:

¶ “Artificial Whale Poop Could Save The Planet – Here’s How” • We’ve known that whale feces is good for marine life for more than a decade. In 2010, German whale scientist Victor Smetacek discovered that whale poop is like agricultural dung, a fertilizer. Whale poop is turns out to be a vital part of a natural system that supports life of many types. [DW] Thanks to Tad Montgomery.

World:

¶ “Will Russia Use Its Gas To ‘Blackmail’ Europe? We’re About To Find Out” • In the weeks since Russia invaded Ukraine, Moscow has continued to ship natural gas to Europe. That may be about to change. President Vladimir Putin demanded that “unfriendly” countries start paying for natural gas with rubles rather than US dollars or euros. [CNN]

Pipeline (Mike Benna, Unsplash)

¶ “Climate Change: Wind And Solar Reach Milestone As Demand Surges” • Wind and solar generated 10% of global electricity for the first time in 2021, an analysis shows. Fifty countries get more than a tenth of their electric power from wind and solar sources, according to the “Global Electricity Review” released by Ember, a climate and energy think tank. [BBC]

¶ “Oil Conglomerates Made Record Profits In 2021” • Surging gas prices hurt working people just as 25 of the world’s biggest fossil fuel companies reaped a total of $205 billion in profits in 2021. It’s no coincidence that the big profits came after shareholders pressured fossil fuel corporations to restrict supply in order to drive prices higher. [CleanTechnica]

Natural gas flare (Image retrieved from NASA, public domain)

¶ “Australian State Utility Picks Tesla Batteries To Back Up Renewable Energy” • Queensland’s CS Energy, a state-owned utility, has picked Tesla Inc’s Megapack batteries for a A$150 million ($113 million) energy storage project with capacities of 100-MW and 200-MWh to back up wind and solar power, the government of Queensland said. [Reuters]

¶ “Renewable-Energy Transition ‘Only True Path To Energy Security’” • The renewable energy transition “is the only true path to energy security,” UN secretary-general António Guterres asserted, adding that the current energy crisis, precipitated by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, underlined the need to accelerate rather than slow the transition. [Engineering News]

¶ “Climate Goals Need ‘Radical Action’” • An IRENA report said investments of $5.7 trillion in renewable energy are needed each year globally to 2030. The world must take “radical action” to move from fossil fuels and keep global warming from passing dangerous thresholds, the head of the International Renewable Energy Agency said. [AP News]

¶ “Head Of UN’s Nuclear Watchdog Arrives In Ukraine” • The Chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Rafael Grossi, arrived in war-torn Ukraine to meet with government officials and discuss ways to ensure the security of the country’s nuclear facilities. The visit’s aim is to provide safety support guidance for Ukraine’s nuclear facilities. [Energy Live News]

Rafael Mariano Grossi (Rafael Mariano Grossi via Twitter)

US:

¶ “Some Americans Are Going To Mexico For Cheaper Gas” • As gasoline prices across the US continue to rise, American drivers are looking for cheaper ways to fill their tanks. And some of them are even are seeking deals in another country. There are drivers in southern California who head across the US-Mexico border in search of savings. [BBC]

¶ “As Drought Pushes East, More Intense Wildfires Are Sparking In New Areas” • This year is already a dreadful year for wildfires. More than 14,781 separate wildfires have scorched over half a million acres so far, the largest number of fires year-to-date the National Interagency Fire Center has recorded in a decade. And they are popping up farther to the east. [CNN]

Fire-fighting airplane (Filippos Sdralias, Unsplash)

¶ “Washington Could Ban Internal Combustion Cars By 2030” • Washington Governor Jay Inslee has signed the Move Ahead Washington program, reducing emissions in the transportation sector in that state. The program bans private passenger vehicles powered by gasoline or diesel internal combustion engines starting with model year 2030. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “New Study Of The Permian Basin – US Oil-Drilling Hotspot Is Kicking Out Far More Methane Than We Thought” • A new study of the Permian Basin in New Mexico, one of the largest and fastest-growing oil production sites in the US, shows it leaked the greenhouse gas methane at double the expected rate from 2018 through 2020. [CleanTechnica]

Permian Basin landscape (Fortguy, CC-BY-SA 3.0)

¶ “Stanford Now Runs On 100% Renewable Energy” • Stanford University now runs on 100% renewable energy, with its second solar generating plant running, the university announced online. Stanford’s Solar Generating Station #2, a 63-MW PV plant, began commercial operation in mid-March. It the final component of the Stanford Energy System Innovations. [Patch]

¶ “NRC Didn’t Properly Inspect Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant Equipment Ahead of Leak, Report Finds” • The US NRC didn’t properly inspect equipment at Diablo Canyon, just three months before a leak in its cooling system shut down the nuclear power plant, according to a report released by the US Office of the Inspector General. [Noozhawk.com]

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Month 29 Energy News

March 29, 2022

Opinion:

¶ “What Is Biodiversity And How Are We Protecting It?” • World governments are meeting in China later this year, to discuss how to stop human activities from causing the extinction of animal and plant species. They hope to come up with a long-term plan to reverse the threat to life on Earth – in all its varieties – at the UN Biodiversity Conference. [BBC]

Mangrove forest (David Clode, Unsplash)

¶ “Misinformation Is Derailing Renewable Energy Projects Across The US” • Researchers say that misinformation is raising doubts about renewable energy and slowing or derailing projects. The opposition comes at a time when climate scientists say the world must shift quickly away from fossil fuels to avoid the worst impacts of climate change. [NPR]

World:

¶ “Pressure Grows For Deal To Save Nature” • A global agreement to reverse the loss of nature and halt extinctions is inching closer, as talks in Geneva enter their final day. International negotiators are working on the text of a UN framework to safeguard nature ahead of a high-level summit in China. Observers slammed the “snail’s pace” of negotiations. [BBC]

Red leaf monkey in Borneo (Jeremy Bezanger, Unsplash)

¶ “Shanghai Covid: Oil Prices Fall After City Starts Lockdown” • Global oil prices fell as China implements a city-wide lockdown in Shanghai, an important manufacturing and financial hub. Brent crude lost more than $4.50 a barrel on concerns that the move would lead to reduced oil demand. The futures contract for Brent crude fell to $115.80 a barrel. [BBC]

¶ “Why India Is Buying More Russian Oil” • Russia is seeking new markets for its oil exports as Western sanctions tighten, and India has been taking advantage of discounted prices to ramp up imports from the country. The US has pointed out that although the oil imports do not violate sanctions, they do support Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. [BBC]

Oil tanker (Fredrick Filix, Unsplash)

¶ “UK Plans To Add 300,000 New EV Chargers By 2030” • There are around 30,000 EV chargers in the UK. But a government program could increase that ten-fold by 2030. It has committed £1.6 billion ($2.1 billion) to its new EV Infrastructure Strategy to make that happen. The regulations will require a 99% reliability rate for chargers in the program. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Spotlight On Space Solar Power As EU Skitters Away From Russian Gas” • Russia’s murderous rampage through Ukraine has sent nations scrambling to cut energy ties with the rogue nation. The US Air Force is starting an update of research into orbiting solar power, and UK science minister George Freeman expressed support for it. [CleanTechnica]

Space power (US Air Force Research Laboratory)

¶ “AGL Plans Big Battery In The Desert” • AGL has announced plans to build a lithium-ion battery at the remote city of Broken Hill, in central west New South Wales. The 50 MW, 50 MWh system will provide electricity storage to power businesses and homes in Broken Hill and support growth of renewable energy in the region. [Australian Renewable Energy Agency]

¶ “Bountiful Wind, Sun Boost German Renewable Power This Year” • Germany had about 25% more electricity from renewable sources in the first three months of the year than in the same period last year thanks to windy and sunny weather. Renewable energy provided about 54% of Germany’s electricity in January and February, officials said. [The Mainichi]

Wind turbines (Bastian Pudill, Unsplash)

¶ “Unprotected Russian Soldiers Disturbed Radioactive Dust In Chornobyl’s ‘Red Forest’, Workers Say” • Russian soldiers who seized the site of the Chornobyl nuclear disaster drove their armored vehicles without radiation protection through a highly toxic zone called the “Red Forest,” exposing themselves to clouds of radioactive dust, workers at the site said. [CTV News]

US:

¶ “Starbucks Wants To Woo Electric Car Drivers With More EV Chargers” • Most of the time, EV owners don’t have to worry about charging – they plug in their car at home in the evening and wake up with it charged. But Starbucks sees an opportunity to bring in customers who have to charge their cars when they are on longer trips. [CleanTechnica]

Starbucks charger (Courtesy of Starbucks via Fast Company)

¶ “83% Of New Power Capacity In 2021 Was Renewable” • In the US, renewable energy power plants continue to dominate new power capacity. In December, roughly 80% of new US capacity was renewable, following a month of November in which the split was 90% for renewables. For the full year, over 83% of new power capacity was renewable. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Odin And GoFor Partnership Will Bring StreetScooter To North America” • Odin Automotive purchased the StreetScooter manufacturing rights from Deutsche Post last month. Now it says it will partner with GoFor, a delivery service that specializes in same day deliveries of large items, to bring StreetScooter electric vehicles to North America. [CleanTechnica]

Delivery EVs (Image courtesy of GoFor)

¶ “Maersk And Einride Partner To Electric Semi Trucks To America” • Maersk is the world’s largest ocean freight company, with 738 ships. But Maersk doesn’t just drop cargo at ports and sail away. It also distributes it to freight terminals. It formed a partnership with Swedish startup Einride to add 300 electric trucks to its distribution fleet. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “The City Of Sarasota Takes Next Step Toward 100% Renewable Energy Goal” • The City of Sarasota is moving toward a goal of 100% renewable energy by 2045. In collaboration with the Sierra Club, the Race to Zero campaign and local communities and partners, the city will be working toward a more affordable clean energy future. [WGCU Public Media]

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March 28 Energy News

March 28, 2022

Opinion:

¶ “More Power To The Women – Renewable Energy Leaders” • We might do better to say definitively, “Renewable energy needs women,” instead of asking, “Why do women need renewable energy?” In the meantime, let us not overlook the women who broke through barriers to get here. We asked three of NREL’s women in water power. [CleanTechnica]

NREL Scientist (NREL image, public domain)

Science and Technology:

¶ “New Ford Patent Shows Its Interest In Hydrogen” • Ford Motor Company recently filed a patent for a combustion engine that will run on hydrogen, Motor1 reports. The patent isn’t for a propulsion system that uses hydrogen to make electricity in a fuel cell. The patent Ford filed is for a turbocharged combustion engine that burns hydrogen. [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶ “Ukraine War: Chernobyl’s Vodka Producer Remains Defiant” • Scientists studying crops grown in the Chernobyl exclusion zone used leftover grain to make alcohol. That produced a spirit drink called, appropriately enough, Atomik. With all the radioactive dust stirred up by the Russian army there are questions about whether it is still safe to drink. [BBC]

Atomik spirits (Atomik image)

¶ “Canada Pledges To Help Countries Stop Using Russian Oil” • Canada says it can provide more oil, gas and uranium to help solve the global energy crisis. Prices have soared because of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Canada’s natural resources minister said many countries are committed “to help as much as we can in terms of displacing Russian oil and gas.” [BBC]

¶ “20% Of New Cars In Europe Have A Plug!” • The European passenger plugin vehicle market is still in the fast lane. Some 160,000 plugin vehicles were registered in February, up 38% year over year. This growth in the EV market came as the overall auto market continued to fall, down 7% last month, to the lowest February in over 20 years. [CleanTechnica]

EV charging (Rick Govic, Unsplash)

¶ “Northland Councils Voice Strong Support For New Zealand’s First Renewable Energy Zone Pilot” • Local government in Northland is strongly in favor of Tai Tokerau becoming New Zealand’s first renewable energy zone pilot. Whangārei Mayor Sheryl Mai said Northland councils were sending a clear message that the pilot should be in the region. [RNZ]

¶ “Renewables’ Share In Austria Stands At About 60% In Feb” • Renewable energy covered around 60% of the electricity needs in Austria in February as windpower generation more than doubled in annual terms thanks to stormy weather, the Austrian Power Grid said. Wind turbines provided nearly 18.5% of the country’s electricity mix. [Renewables Now]

Fuerstkogel wind farm, Austria (Image by BayWa re)

¶ “Russia Must Be Removed From IAEA For ‘nuclear Terrorism’, Urges Ukraine’s Energy Ministry” • Ukraine’s Energy Ministry has urged that Russia must be removed from the International Atomic Energy Agency for ‘nuclear terrorism,’ after they attacked Ukrainian nuclear plants and occupied the Chernobyl and Zaporizhzhia plants. [Republic World]

¶ “Forest Fires Spread To 10,000 Hectares Around Chernobyl Nuclear Plant” • More than 10,000 hectares of forest are ablaze in the Chernobyl exclusion zone, posing a dangerous risk of nuclear wildfires, an Ukrainian official warned, according to the Interfax agency. The fires could cause increased levels of radioactive air pollution in nearby countries. [Republic World]

Deer near Chernobyl (Sergey Omelchenko, Unsplash)

Australia:

¶ “Government plan to let renewable agency fund fossil fuels blocked after Liberal-led committee’s motion” • A Morrison government plan to change the Australian Renewable Energy Agency to allow it to fund a broader range of technologies, including some using fossil fuels, has been blocked by a Liberal-led committee. [The Guardian]

¶ “Oz Wind Developer To Boost Burrendong To 650 MW” • Australian developer Epuron has expanded the design of its Burrendong wind farm in New South Wales from 400 MW to 650 MW. The expansion is in response to WaterNSW, through its Renewable Energy and Storage Program, seeking investment in clean power generation and storage assets. [reNews]

Wind turbines (Peter Beukema, Unsplash)

¶ “Progressing World’s Largest Renewable Energy System” • The Northern Territory Labor Government will introduce legislation to facilitate the $30 billion Sun Cable Australia-Asia PowerLink project. The Sun Cable project is the world’s largest renewable energy transmission system. One part of it is the world’s largest solar farm and battery. [Mirage News]

US:

¶ “Creativity And Exploration Drive Marine Energy Research” • There are vast marine energy resources in the US, and the National Renewable Energy Laboritory water power team is catalyzing its creativity and the full scope of the laboratory’s capabilities to make marine energy a viable and productive renewable energy source. [CleanTechnica]

Ocean Wave (Silas Baisch, Unsplash)

¶ “House Set To Debate Sweeping Climate Legislation, With Amendments To Senate Bill” • Two committees in Maryland’s House of Delegates voted to approve an amended version of a sweeping climate bill that would accelerate the statewide goal to achieve carbon neutral emissions by 2045. The bill was amended to include a role for nuclear power. [Maryland Matters]

¶ “Senator John Barrasso Calls For Banning Russian Uranium, Increasing US Production” • Senator John Barrasso of Wyoming called to shut down imports of Russian uranium and increase US production, arguing that the imports prop up the Russian attack on Ukraine. The ban would add to an earlier ban on imports of Russian oil and gas. [Washington Times]

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March 27 Energy News

March 27, 2022

Science and Technology:

¶ “Pivotal Battery Discovery Could Impact Transportation And The Grid: Overcoming Performance Decline” • One of the more promising candidates for new battery technology is sodium-ion. It is attractive in part because of sodium is so cheap, but battery performance declines rapidly. Researchers have found a cause of that problem, and a possible solution. [CleanTechnica]

Lithium ion batteries (Image from Argonne Laboratory)

¶ “Duration Of Utility-Scale Batteries Depends On How They’re Used” • The US Energy Information Administration’s Annual Electric Generator Report contains information on how energy storage is used by utilities. Utility-scale battery storage will primarily be used in two ways: serving grid applications and allowing electricity load shifting. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Moving Our Farms to Better Areas Could Help the Climate – But Should We Do It?” • Moving cropland to ‘better’ locations and allowing the old fields to move back to a natural state could decrease the carbon footprint of agriculture, a study shows. But it doesn’t account for different intensities of agriculture or social and cultural consequences. [The Wire Science]

Work in a field (aboodi vesakaran, Unsplash)

World:

¶ “Nigeria – Where President Buhari Had To Say Sorry For A Power Cut” • A national scarcity of fuel coincided with the collapse of the national power grid that plunged parts of major cities across Nigeria, including Lagos and Abuja, into darkness for days on end. Even wealthy people with their own generators were in the dark. [BBC]

¶ “Video: Inside Look At Tesla’s Giga Berlin” • YouTuber StuffmasterBen has shared a four-minute video from inside Tesla’s Gigafactory in Berlin. Set against the backdrop of some energizing music, a drone provides a bird’s eye view of the factory from above and then flies inside, showing the factory’s machines making machines. [CleanTechnica]

Inside look at Tesla’s Gigafactory in Berlin (Screenshot)

¶ “CSIRO Releases Electricity Roadmap To Guide Australia’s Transition To Renewables” • When it comes to Australia’s renewable energy transition, the cost of renewable energy is no longer the challenge. The new challenge, the CSIRO says, is how to best integrate renewables into our existing electricity grid. The CCSIRO has a roadmap for that. [Energy Matters]

¶ “Plugin And Electric Car Market Reaches 8.4% In Italy – Dacia Spring #1” • The race of Italy’s electric car market shows signs of fatigue, as 2022 started off with mixed results. While other EU countries still saw exponential rises in January consistent with the exuberance of year-end, the same was not completely true in the continent’s fourth largest car market. [CleanTechnica]

Dacia Spring

¶ “PM Instructs To Remove Barriers To Renewable Energy Use” • Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa has instructed Anusha Pelpita, Secretary to the Ministry of Economic Policies and Plan Implementation, to take immediate action to remove obstacles to the use of renewable energy as a solution to the power crisis. [ColomboPage]

¶ “Mersey Tidal Project Could Be The Renewable Energy Answer The North Needs” • The Russian invasion in Ukraine is causing rising energy bills in the UK. A project in the River Mersey in Liverpool could be the energy source we need to become more self-reliant, reports the Liverpool Echo. Tidal power is more secure and a sustainable source of energy. [Cheshire Live]

River Mersey (Mitchell Orr, Unsplash)

¶ “India To Build Fleet Of 10 Nuclear Plants, Work On First Station To Begin In 2023” • India plans to build ten nuclear reactors in ‘fleet mode’ over the next three years, starting with a 700 MW nuclear plant in Karnataka slated in 2023. Building ten nuclear power reactors at once is expected to save costs and reduce construction time. [Republic World]

¶ “Russia Reported Firing At Kharkiv Nuclear Research Facility” • Russian forces are firing at a nuclear research facility in the city of Kharkiv, the Ukrainian parliament said in a Twitter post on Saturday. “It is currently impossible to estimate the extent of damage due to hostilities that do not stop in the area of the nuclear installation.” [The Jerusalem Post]

Demonstration in Poland (Eugene Tkachenko, Unsplash)

US:

¶ “Shocking Poll: Tesla Owners Want Tesla To Have A Presence In Connecticut” • The Hartford Business Journal held a poll asking whether or not Tesla and other car companies should be allowed to sell directly to consumers in Connecticut. The majority of votes said “No.” Most votes said that if you want to buy a Tesla, you should to do it in some other state. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Climate Change Is Turning California’s Wildfire Season Into Wildfire Year” • There is no wildfire season any more. Like pay phones, typewriters, and VCRs, a wildfire “season” is a thing of the past. We are seeing serious wildfires in the West throughout the year. Earlier spring and drier weather mean that vegetation has more time to dry out. [CleanTechnica]

Fighting a fire (Joe Bradshaw, Bureau of Land Management)

¶ “White City Wood-Fire Power Plant To Repurpose Wood, Trees Burned In Past Wildfires” • Oregon’s White City power plant is using wood scorched in wildfires to make renewable energy and biochar, a form of carbon used as a soil supplement. The plant supplies 20,000 homes with energy and produces 50,000 cubic yards of biochar annually. [KTVL]

¶ “Offshore Wind Development Blows Closer To Reality In California” • The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, which is tasked with regulating off-shore energy development, is planning its first lease auction for California’s first offshore wind farms for the fall of 2022. This starts a new drive for offshore renewable energy for the state. [National Law Review]

Have a singularly uplifting day.

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March 26 Energy News

March 26, 2022

Science and Technology:

¶ “Birds Are Laying Eggs Earlier, A Study Shows. Scientists Blame The Climate Crisis” • Using collections of egg samples from the modern and Victorian eras, researchers found that several bird species in the Chicago area nest and lay eggs almost a full month earlier now than they did a century ago. Their study appeared in the Journal of Animal Ecology. [CNN]

Robin’s eggs (Solen Feyissa, Unsplash)

¶ “How Waste Food Can Reduce Our Reliance On Natural Gas” • At a large industrial facility not far south-west of Ireland’s capital Dublin, one man says old food waste and pig manure can help Europe fight climate change – and reduce its reliance on Russia for energy. Billy Costello directs Green Generation, which makes biomethane from food waste and other sources. [BBC]

¶ “Battery Research Tackles New Challenges For Behind-The-Meter Stationary Storage Systems” • The transition to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050 will radically change the power grid. Stationary energy storage systems are critical to grid resiliency by ensuring that the power from renewable energy sources is available when it is needed. [CleanTechnica]

Stationary battery (Photo by Dennis Schroeder, NREL)

World:

¶ “Antarctic Ice Shelf Nearly The Size Of Los Angeles Collapsed As Temperatures Soared To 40°C (70°F) Above Normal” • The Conger Ice Shelf, spanning approximately 460 square miles, collapsed around March 15. It was around the time temperatures soared to -12°C (10°F), more than 40°C warmer than normal, at the Concordia research station. [CNN]

¶ “Europe Can’t Live Without Russian Gas. Can This Tiny Middle East Country Help?” • Qatar is one of the world’s top suppliers of liquefied natural gas. As European states rush to find alternatives to the Russian gas that has powered their economies for decades, because of Moscow’s brutal war in Ukraine, Qatar has been thrust into the limelight. [CNN]

Doha, Qatar (Rowen Smith, Unsplash)

¶ “20% Plugin Vehicle Market Share In China! BYD Shining” • Plugin vehicles are all the rage in the Chinese auto market. Even in the slowest month of the year, plugins have scored 291,000 registrations, up 176% year over year. March looks like it could be another strong month, and China might see a million plugin registrations by the end of Q1. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “NSW Maps Out New Renewable Energy Zone As Shift From Coal Accelerates” • The NSW government has published a draft declaration of the South-West Renewable Energy Zone, as it prepares for a massive shift from coal to renewables. The draft details the potential boundaries, the required infrastructure and appointing a planner. [Renew Economy]

Blayney Wind Farm (Bren Barnes, CC-BY-SA 2.5)

¶ “Energy Bill Discounts For People Who Live Near Wind Farms Could Be Used To Boost Renewable Power” • Families living near windfarms may get discounts on their energy bills under plans to encourage more renewable electricity. Boris Johnson plans to publish the UK’s energy security strategy soon, in a bid to reduce dependence on Russian oil and gas. [iNews]

¶ “Chernobyl: Where Is Nuclear Power Plant, When Did Disaster Happen, How To Watch TV Documentary The Lost Tapes” • In the UK, Channel 4 is set to air a new documentary about the Chernobyl Disaster of 1986. Formerly secret KGB files have revealed the “astonishing truth” behind the explosion of the nuclear reactor in Ukraine. [NationalWorld]

Chernobyl (Mads Eneqvist, Unsplash)

US:

¶ “Treasury Secretary Yellen: The US Should Have Moved Faster Toward Renewable Energy” • Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the United States should have moved faster toward renewable energy sources. She said that if we had done so, the country would be in a better position to address climate change and national security. [CNBC]

¶ “Manchin Engaging With Biden Administration On New Climate And Economic Bill But Timeline Unclear” • Sen Joe Manchin (D-WV), who torpedoed the Build Back Better bill in December, is in informal talks with White House officials about measures on energy, prescription drugs, tax changes, and deficit reduction he could potentially support. [CNN]

Sen Joe Manchin, 2021 (MDGovpics, CC-BY-SA 2.0)

¶ “America’s First 5G Connected Car Is Here – And It’s Electric!” • BMW is introducing America’s first 5G connected cars, the BMW i4 sports sedan and the all-electric BMW iX. The pair will be powered by T-Mobile’s “Magenta Drive for BMW” service plan as part of an agreement with T-Mobile to bring unlimited calling and 5G data to select BMWs. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “100% Renewable Energy In Puerto Rico – How To Get There” • An analysis led by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory is underway to supply Puerto Rico with options for achieving a renewable, reliable, and equitable electric power system. A goal is to de-risk Puerto Rico’s investments in modern, intelligent, and affordable grid infrastructure. [CleanTechnica]

San Juan (Wei Zeng, Unsplash)

¶ “Wildfire Risk Remains High For Much Of Texas In The Days Ahead, Fire Officials Say” • Much of Texas is at an elevated risk of wildfires this weekend and early next week because of higher-than-usual temperatures and a worsening drought, according to Texas A&M Forest Service analysts and the state climatologist. Current conditions favor wildfires. [KERA News]

¶ “Americans Unsure About Increasing Nuclear Power Capacity, Poll Finds” • Advocates of nuclear power tout it as a cleaner energy source than coal or gas since nuclear fission can generate electricity without producing carbon. But Americans continue to have mixed feelings on whether to use nuclear power as a source of energy, a new poll found. [TheHill]

Have a noteworthily nifty day.

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March 25 Energy News

March 25, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Russia’s Days As An Energy Superpower Are Coming To An End” • In a matter of weeks, the war in Ukraine has upended an energy relationship between Europe and Russia that goes back decades. Russia’s role in the European and global energy system has been shaken. This is a profound shift that will mark the end of Russia as an energy superpower. [CNN]

Zapolyarnoye gas field (government.ru, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “Putin’s Leverage Shows The Danger Of Relying On Fossil Fuels” • In the wake of Russia’s brutal invasion of Ukraine, the world needs a massive international effort to free democracies from their dependence on oil produced by Moscow and other dictatorial regimes. It needs a green energy Manhattan Project, like the World War II effort on atomic power. [CNN]

World:

¶ “Flights Are Taking Huge ‘Detours’ Around Russian Air Space. Here’s What That Means For The Climate Crisis” • In response to sanctions for its invasion of Ukraine, Russia closed its airspace to airlines from dozens of countries. About 400 flights per month are being forced to take a wider berth, each using significantly greater amounts of fuel. [CNN]

Airplane taking off (Quintin Soloviev, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “These Fossil Fuel Companies Sent More Than $15 Billion In Taxes To Russia Since It Annexed Crimea, NGOs Say” • Nine European and US fossil fuel companies have paid a collective $15.8 billion to Russia in various forms of taxes and fees since the country annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, according to a group of NGOs. [CNN]

¶ “Great Barrier Reef: Australia Confirms New Mass Bleaching Event” • Australia’s Great Barrier Reef is being devastated by another mass bleaching event, officials confirmed. It is the fourth time in six years that such severe and widespread damage has been detected. Prior to 2016, only two mass bleaching events had ever been recorded. [BBC]

Coral bleaching (Ahmed Areef, Unsplash)

¶ “Directed Technologies Will Test Arcimoto EVs In Australia” • Directed Technologies and Arcimoto announced the testing of Arcimoto’s Fun Utility Vehicle and Deliverator across Australia. “It’s staggering to think that you can build a hundred Mean Lean Machines with the same amount of extracted material that goes into one Hummer.” [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Stellantis Will Partner With LG To Build A Battery Factory In Canada” • Stellantis and LG Energy Solution have plans to build a battery factory together in Windsor, Ontario, directly across the Detroit River from the Motor City. According to Electrive, the annual production capacity of the new $4 billion factory will be 45 GWh. [CleanTechnica]

Bridge to Windsor (N Band, Unsplash)

¶ “China’s Green Hydrogen Message Spells Bad News For Russia” • China announced an ambitious plan to jack up its production of green hydrogen. The plan appears aimed at increasing the nation’s deployment of hydrogen without an equal increase in its dependence on natural gas or coal, which are the main sources of hydrogen today. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Alinta Says Court Wind Farm Ruling Will Have ‘Dramatic’ And Chilling Effect On Renewable Energy Investment” • One of Australia’s biggest renewable energy investors says a court’s decision to uphold complaints against a Victorian wind farm could have “dramatic” and chilling effects on the country’s transition away from fossil fuels. [ABC]

Wind turbine (APA image, supplied)

¶ “Russian Agents Charged With Targeting US Nuclear Plant, Saudi Oil Refinery” • US and British officials accused the Russian government of running a years-long campaign to hack into critical infrastructure, including an American nuclear plant and a Saudi oil refinery. The US unsealed criminal charges against four Russian government officials. [Yahoo Finance]

US:

¶ “R&D Proves To Be The Right Investment For Tesla” • Tesla is proving that its R&D is a better investment than advertising. Last year, Visual Capitalist compared Tesla’s spending with that of legacy automakers such as GM, Toyota, and Ford. Tesla spent $0 on advertising but almost $3,000 per car on R&D. That idea has now been backed up by a study. [CleanTechnica]

Tesla (Vlad Tchompalov, Unsplash)

¶ “Governor Lamont Announces Connecticut Partners With Area States To Develop Regional Clean Hydrogen Hub Proposal” • Connecticut is joining New York, New Jersey, and Massachusetts to develop a proposal to become one of at least four regional clean hydrogen hubs designated through the federal Clean Hydrogen Hubs program. [EIN News]

¶ “Meta Chooses Kansas City For Construction Of $800 Million Data Center” • Missouri economic development leaders gathered at Union Station to announce plans to build a giant data-storage facility for Meta in Kansas City, Missouri. Meta, formerly known as Facebook, selected the Kansas City region for a new hyper-scale data center. [KSHB]

Kansas City (Darren Hibbs, Unsplash)

¶ “The University of Michigan Moves Toward 100% Renewable Purchased Power” • The University of Michigan announced steps toward procuring 100% renewable purchased power, plans for new geothermal heating and cooling systems, and $10 million in funding for more LED lighting in roughly 100 buildings on all three campuses. [The University Record]

¶ “Federal Officials: Russian Spies Tried To Hack Into Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant” • A federal indictment accuses four men, with ties to Russian spy outfits, of trying to gain control of US nuclear power plants through cyber sabotage. One plant targeted was the Wolf Creek nuclear generating station near Burlington, Kansas. [Kansas Public Radio]

Have a radically flawless day.

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March 24 Energy News

March 24, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Eliminating The UK’s Reliance On Russian Oil” • Almost a fifth of the diesel oil and 5% of the jet fuel used in the UK comes from Russia. This oil helps fund Putin’s war in Ukraine. There is now a moral and energy security imperative to stop Russian imports as quickly as possible. A briefing paper sets out steps as to how this can be done. [CleanTechnica]

Protesting the war (Ehimetalor Akhere Unuabona, Unsplash)

¶ “A Dereliction Of Fuel Duty: Europe’s €9 Billion Gift To Putin And The Rich” • Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has pushed fuel prices to recent highs. To appease drivers at the pump, 14 of the 27 EU member states have reacted by cutting fuel taxes. While simple, this approach is expensive and helps fund Russia’s war on the Ukraine. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “We Can Get To 30% Electric Heavy-Duty Trucks By 2030 – Here’s How” • Zero-emission trucks hardly seemed viable not long ago, but now heavy-duty electric trucks, such as semis and delivery vans, are beginning to hit the roads and are poised to bring with them significant benefits for clean air, climate change, and fleet operators. [CleanTechnica]

Electric truck charging (Image courtesy of ABB)

World:

¶ “The Tesla Effect Is Happening In Germany” • The region of Brandenburg, Tesmanian noted, has been struggling with a job shortage. Tesla’s recent grand opening and its Phase 1 will help transform the area from one struggling with a job shortage into an economic powerhouse for Germany. That’s what might be called the “Tesla Effect.” [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Shell Is Offering Tesla & Other EV Subscriptions In Germany” • Shell oil company is offering Tesla and other EV subscriptions in Germany. Oil and gas companies need to evolve if they want to survive the eventual EV revolution, and Shell may be leading the way. This isn’t to say that Shell is 100% a good company, but it is making progress. [CleanTechnica]

Please click on the image to enlarge it.

¶ “Renewable Power To Account For 20.6 GW Of Morocco’s Power Capacity By 2035” • GlobalData has issued its latest report on renewable energy in Morocco. The country is focusing on attracting international companies and easing financing to get to its target of 52% of power installed capacity being renewable energy by 2030. [Power Technology]

¶ “Eden Scoped For $10 Billion Floating Offshore Windfarm” • The Southeast of New South Wales is expected to see an influx of more green energy projects over the next two decades. A floating offshore wind farm has been proposed to be built near Eden, at an estimated cost of A$10 billion, while a large-scale solar farm has been touted for Rock Flat, near Cooma. [ABC]

Wind turbine (Supplied by Saitec Offshore)

¶ “Russia Destroys Chernobyl Lab, Gaining ‘Highly Active Samples'” • The State Agency of Ukraine on Exclusion Zone Management said the Russian military destroyed a laboratory near the decommissioned Chernobyl nuclear power plant that was working to improve the management of nuclear waste and contained “highly active samples.” [The Hill]

¶ “Johnson To Defy Cabinet Fears And Push For Onshore Wind Expansion” • Boris Johnson is expected to favor more onshore wind at next week’s energy strategy, despite lobbying by some cabinet ministers against relaxing planning laws. The cabinet has been split on windpower since officials drew up plans for a target of 30 GW by 2030. [The Guardian]

Wind farm at Lochgelly Loch (Alexnoel66, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

US:

¶ “Jamie Dimon To Joe Biden: We Need A ‘Marshall Plan’ For US And European Energy Security” • JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon urged President Joe Biden in an off-the-record meeting this week to develop a “Marshall Plan” to fortify the energy security of the US and Europe, a person familiar with the matter confirmed to CNN. [CNN]

¶ “Mercedes Will Be Legally Responsible While Drive Pilot System Is Engaged” • Mercedes says its Drive Pilot system is the first Level 3 hands-free autonomous driving technology available on a production car. It says that means it assumes liability for mishaps – provided you are on an approved road, and you are going no faster than 40 mph. [CleanTechnica]

Mercedes drive pilot system (Image courtesy of Mercedes)

¶ “USPS Inspector General Study Favors Electric Vehicles” • The Office of Inspector General for the USPS has issued an extensive report on the purchase of new postal vehicles. It states nearly 99% of all postal delivery routes in the US could be served reliably by battery EVs that would cost less to buy, fuel, and maintain than conventional vehicles. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Electric Chevy Equinox: 300-Mile Range, $30,000, Coming In 2023” • Chevy introduced a new teaser video of the Equinox EV this week. It doesn’t offer many new details, other than the fact that is a battery-electric SUV that offers up to 300 miles of range and rapid charging (we presume) at a base price of “around $30,000.” Sweet! [CleanTechnica]

Chevy Equinox EV (Image courtesy of Chevrolet)

¶ “Veteran Officials Say Invoke Defense Production Act for Renewable Energy” • As gas prices across the country are at record levels due to the Russia-Ukraine war, elected officials who are also military veterans are calling on the Biden administration to invoke the Defense Production Act to accelerate the transition to clean energy. [Public News Service]

¶ “Wind, Solar Could Replace Coal Power In Texas” • Texas can be a model on how to replace coal with wind and solar for its energy needs while meeting environmental goals, according to research by Rice University engineers. Their report is based on modeling to determine the least-cost combinations of proposed wind and solar projects. [Renewable Energy Magazine]

Have a perfectly jubilant day.

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March 23 Energy News

March 23, 2022

World:

¶ “French Energy Giant TotalEnergies To Stop Buying Russian Oil By Year-End” • French energy giant TotalEnergies said it would stop buying Russian oil and oil products by the end of 2022 at the latest, according to a press release from the company. Due to European logistics capacities, it will take two to three years to end purchaces of natural gas. [CNN]

Demonstration (Markus Spiske, Unsplash)

¶ “Aging Oil Tanker Has Become A Floating Time Bomb. It’s An Environmental Disaster Waiting To Happen” • A decaying, old oil tanker, the FSO Safer, has been anchored five miles off the coast of Yemen since March 2015, when Houthi rebels took control of the Red Sea coastline near the port city of Al-Hudaydah. It holds over 40 million barrels of oil. [CNN]

¶ “Zendesk Signs Carbon Removal Agreement With Climeworks” • Climeworks signed a progressive deal with Zendesk to remove part of its unavoidable emissions permanently. This deal shows a clear sense of climate understanding by Zendesk and will enable Climeworks’ carbon-removal solution and also its necessary and sustainable mission. [CleanTechnica]

Climeworks Orca facility (Climeworks image)

¶ “Suzuki Will Invest $1.3 Billion To Manufacture EVs And Batteries In India” • Suzuki plans to invest nearly $1.3 billion in India to make EVs and the batteries needed to power them. It is safe to assume many of those vehicles will be scooters and mopeds designed for city operation. Production is expected to begin in 2025, sources claim. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Volkswagen Plans $7 Billion Investment To Build Electric Cars In North America” • Volkswagen Group announced it will invest $7.1 billion to produce battery-electric cars in North America, and offer 25 new EV models to customers in the US, Mexico, and Canada by 2030. Its goal is for 55% of its cars to run on electricity by the beginning of the next decade. [CleanTechnica]

Work in a Volkswagen plant (Volkswagen image)

¶ “India Has Installed Renewable Energy Projects Of 152 GW Capacity” • India has installed 152.90 GW of renewable energy projects, according to RK Singh, Union energy minister. This includes 50.78 GW from solar, 46.52 GW from large hydropower, 40.13 GW from wind, 10.63 GW from bio-power, and 4.84 GW from small hydropower. [Down To Earth]

¶ “Nordex Scores 314-MW Finnish Double” • Nordex Group is to supply 57 turbines totaling almost 314 MW to two wind farms in Finland for Valorem. The German manufacturer will deliver 30 N163/5.X turbines of the Delta4000 series to the Kalistanneva wind project and 27 machines of the same turbine type to the Matkussaari wind facility. [reNews]

Wind farm (Nordex image)

¶ “Forest Fires Erupt Around Chernobyl Nuclear Plant In Ukraine” • Several forest fires have erupted in the vicinity of the Chernobyl nuclear reactor, with Ukraine claiming that Russian control of the abandoned power plant is hampering efforts to control the flames. At least seven fires have been spotted within Chernobyl’s exclusion zone. [The Guardian]

¶ “Taiwan Looks To Renewables As Nuclear Phase-Out Advances” • As Taiwan phases out nuclear power by 2025, renewable energy is likely to gain traction to fill the power generation gap, data and analytics company GlobalData shows. The installed renewable capacity was 9.31 GW in 2021, up from 1.38 GW in 2010, for a CAGR of 19.0%. [Power Engineering International]

Taipei (Thomas Tucker, Unsplash)

US:

¶ “Climate Groups Sue Interior Department Over Controversial Black Friday Report On Oil And Gas Leasing” • Several climate and conservation groups are suing the Interior Department to get more information about the department’s November review of its oil and gas leasing program, which was widely criticized for sidestepping the program’s climate impacts. [CNN]

¶ “Romeo Power And Wrightspeed Debut ‘Powertrain In A Crate’ For Buses And Heavy Trucks” • Romeo Power and Wrightspeed are working on what they call a “Powertrain In A Crate,” which can be installed in an existing large vehicle. Their system is intended for transit buses and trucks of medium or heavy duty, according to Romeo. [CleanTechnica]

Electric powertrain (Wrightspeed image)

¶ “Microsoft Partners With Carbonfuture On Carbon Removal Purchases” • Microsoft selected Carbonfuture to be an integral part of its carbon removal portfolio, an announcement says. Microsoft has pledged to be carbon negative by 2030. For the climate action supported by Microsoft, Carbonfuture is to work with Pacific Biochar. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “GE, Bond To Deliver Empire Wind 1 Onshore Substation” • GE and Bond Civil & Utility Construction have been awarded an engineering, procurement and construction contract to provide the onshore substation for the 816-MW Empire Wind 1 offshore wind farm off New York. The onshore substation will be built in Brooklyn, New York City. [reNews]

Wind farm substations (GE-Bond image)

¶ “Mega Drought To Expand Amid Warmer Climate Conditions” • NOAA issued its US Spring Outlook, and for the second year in a row, forecasters predict prolonged, persistent drought in the West where below-average precipitation is most likely. NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center forecasts above-average temperatures for most of the US. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Governor Hochul Announces New York As Top Community Solar Market In The US” • Governor Kathy Hochul announced New York is the top community solar market in the US, with more than 1 GW of community solar installed and operational, enough to serve 209,000 homes. New York also has the largest pipeline of solar projects. [Governor Kathy Hochul]

Have a comfortably triumphant day.

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March 22 Energy News

March 22, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Virginia Governor Tilting At Windmills, Releases Bogus RGGI ‘Report’” • Incoming Virginia Gov Youngkin in January tasked his Special Advisor and former coal lobbyist Andrew Wheeler with producing an assessment of Virginia’s Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative. Somehow, the report lost about every good mention of renewable energy. [CleanTechnica]

Pollution (Ella Ivanescu, Unsplash)

¶ “Reliance On Nuclear Power Is The Last Thing Japan Needs” • A nuclear power state of emergency issued by the government on the day of the March 11, 2011, Fukushima nuclear disaster has yet to be lifted. Eleven years on, the nation is still reeling from the catastrophic damage to TEPCO’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. [Asahi Shimbun]

¶ “Going Nuclear: Can Boris Johnson Really Ramp Up Nuclear Power?” • Prime Minister Boris Johnson is no stranger to eye-catching pledges and, in fairness, he occasionally achieves them. His latest media-friendly commitment for “big new bets” on nuclear is typical Johnsonian politics. It is brash and bold. It is also intentionally vague. [City AM]

Construction of new power station at Hinkley
Point, 2017 (Nick Chipchase, CC-BY-SA 2.0)

World:

¶ “Climate Change: ‘Madness’ To Turn To Fossil Fuels Because Of Ukraine War” • The UN Secretary General says the rush to use fossil fuels due to the war in Ukraine is “madness” and threatens climate targets. Antonio Guterres warns that these short-term measures to get fossil fuels to replace those from Russia might “close the window” on the Paris climate goals. [BBC]

¶ “Taiga Begins Deliveries Of Its Electric Snowmobile” • Taiga has electrified one of the most challenging vehicles in the off-road segment. The Taiga Nomad was the world’s first electric snowmobile to reach production, and the first examples have begun to reach customers, as the company continues to ramp up production. [CleanTechnica]

Taiga electric snowmobiles (Taiga image)

¶ “IEA Ten-Point Plan To Cut Demand For Oil By 2.7 Million Barrels A Day” • The International Energy Agency foresees an energy crunch ahead, especially for summer travel times. This is due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the disruption to energy supplies that results. The IEA has a ten-point plan to reduce energy demand. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Revenge Of The Electric Truck Hydropower Scheme, Infinity Train Edition” • The idea behind the electric truck hydropower scheme is simple. Send an electric truck with a large container up to the top of a mountain, fill it with water from streams that are there, and send it down the mountain again. Fortescue is using the same idea for ore trains. [CleanTechnica]

Fortescue ore train (Fortescue image)

¶ “Crown Estate Invests In Welsh Tidal Demo Zone” • The Crown Estate to invest over £1 million in a Welsh tidal stream energy demonstration project site, located off the coast of Anglesey in north Wales. The Morlais tidal stream demonstration zone, being developed by Menter Mon, covers an area of 35 sq km in the Irish Sea. [reNews]

US:

¶ “Severe Storms And Reported Tornadoes Tear Through Texas As Storm System Heads East” • There were 17 tornado reports across Texas and Oklahoma, a CNN meteorologist said, and over 800,000 people were under a flash-flood warning in the Austin area. The line of severe weather struck as the state was already dealing with more than 170 wildfires. [CNN]

Austin, Texas (Carlos Alfonso, Unsplash)

¶ “Electricity Prices Are Up, But An EV Is Still Much Cheaper Than A Conventional Car” • Based on calculations, CNBC says while oil prices are likely to fall in the coming months as output is increased, “it’s unlikely that the price of electricity will rise enough to make EVs less affordable over their life cycles than internal combustion alternatives.” [CleanTechnica]

¶ “GM Begins Production Of Electric Cadillac Lyriq” • GM celebrated the production of its first Ultium-powered electric Cadillac Lyriq rolling off the assembly line. It also announced plans to reopen its order books in May after selling out the entirety of its first production run within minutes of the vehicle’s announcement last year. [CleanTechnica]

Cadillac Lyriq (Nissangeniss, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “Deep Red Alabama Dives Headlong Into Green Energy” • Renewable energy can make strange bedfellows along the political divide, and the latest example is Alabama, which has been wandering in the doldrums of the green energy revolution while others leap ahead. Alabama is now poised to kick its solar output into high gear. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “AEP Brings 998-MW Traverse Wind Online In Oklahoma” • American Electric Power brought online the 998-MW Traverse Wind Energy Center in Oklahoma. The project has 365 2-MW GE turbines. It provides electricity to customers of AEP’s Public Service Company of Oklahoma and Southwestern Electric Power Company in Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana. [reNews]

Traverse wind farm (AEP image)

¶ “Sustainability Planners At ATL Draft Plan For 100% Renewable Energy By 2035” • Major efforts are underway to reduce carbon footprint at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. The airport’s new sustainable management plan is a roadmap aimed at achieving 100% renewable energy by 2035 and net zero carbon emissions by 2050. [CBS46 News]

¶ “Governor Signs New Wyoming Nuclear Regulations Into Law” • Wyoming Governor Mark Gordon signed into law legislation to amend the state’s nuclear power and storage regulations. The law includes various provisions related to producing nuclear energy and storing nuclear waste. The state is anticipating construction of a TerraPower Natrium reactor. [Oil City News]

Have a simply splendid day.

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March 21 Energy News

March 21, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Increasing Oil Drilling Won’t Solve High Gas Prices” • More oil drilling will not solve high gas prices, despite what the fossil fuel industry wants you to believe. US Rep Sean Casten (D-IL) pointed out that the oil industry and conservative politicians are both lying when they make the claim that increasing oil drilling will alleviate high gas prices. [CleanTechnica]

Oil rig (Worksite Ltd, Unsplash)

Science and Technology:

¶ “Scientists Show Large Impact Of Controlling Humidity On Greenhouse Gas Emissions” • Analysis by National Renewable Energy Laboratory and Xerox PARC scientists explores impacts on the environmental due to controlling humidity. It showed that humidity accounts for roughly half of the energy-related emissions from air conditioners. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Scientists Astonished By Heatwaves At North And South Poles” • Startling heatwaves at both of Earth’s poles are causing alarm among climate scientists, who have warned the “unprecedented” events could signal faster and abrupt climate breakdown. At both the North Pole and Antarctica, temperatures reached record high levels over the weekend. [The Irish Times]

Penguin (Ian Parker, Unsplash)

¶ “The Epic Attempts To Power Planes With Hydrogen” • During the Cold War, both the US and USSR researched liquid hydrogen as a way to fuel aircraft. Could this cleaner fuel finally be around the corner? Liquid hydrogen has advantages over the alternative, kerosene. But it also has some pretty significant disadvantages. A lack of support infrastructure is just a start. [BBC]

World:

¶ “Tübingen: Europe’s Fiercely Vegan, Fairy-Tale City” • Located in a German region famed for its frugality, Tübingen is known for its fiercely green reputation, where the default setting is veganism and environmental friendliness. Now the city has passed a tax on packaging for single-use meals packaging. McDonalds is suing. [BBC]

Tübingen (David Hertle, Unsplash)

¶ “Saudi Aramco Ramps Up Investment To Boost Production” • State-owned oil giant Saudi Aramco plans to sharply increase the amount it invests in energy production and aims to boost output significantly over the next five years. It reported doubling profits in 2021, and energy prices have soared recently as demand has outstripped supplies of oil and gas. [BBC]

¶ “Porsche Ramps Up Its Electric Car Plans” • You know the EV revolution is moving forward when Porsche announces it expects 50% of the cars its sells to come with a plug by 2025, and 80% by 2030. Last year, the company sold a record 301,915 cars. In Europe, nearly 40% of them were either a plug-in hybrid or a battery-electric car. [CleanTechnica]

Porsche EV (Porsche image)

¶ “Academics Say Universities Must Reject Fossil Fuel Cash For Climate Research” • Universities must stop accepting funding from fossil fuel companies to conduct climate research, even if the research is aimed at developing green and low-carbon technology, an influential group of over 500 distinguished academics has said. [The Guardian]

¶ “NSW Announces Net Zero Shore Power Plan For Shipping Precinct” • The New South Wales government plans to build a fully renewable-energy shore-powered shipping precinct in Sydney. Shore power involves land-based infrastructure that can power ships while they are at berth, allowing crew to switch off engines and generators. [Government News]

Port area in Sydney (Dan Freeman, Unsplash)

¶ “Gladstone Hydrogen, Renewable Energy Transition Prompts Strategy For Change” • Charities and local advocacy groups in central Queensland are working together to ensure the transition to one of Australia’s green energy powerhouses doesn’t leave the Gladstone region behind. Dozens of renewable energy projects are proposed for the area. [ABC]

¶ “Ukraine Crisis: Staff Rotated At Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant” • The International Atomic Energy Agency has been notified by Ukraine that nearly half of the staff members working at the Chornobyl nuclear power plant, site of the meltdown of 2011, were rotated and allowed to go to their homes for the first time after nearly four weeks. [Power Technology]

Chernobyl confinement (Niels Nørløv Hansen, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “PM To Chair Roundtable On Boosting UK’s Nuclear Power Output” • Boris Johnson will chair a meeting on how to increase the UK’s nuclear power output, as he prepares to publish his energy security strategy this month amid soaring prices. The prime minister will discuss domestic nuclear projects with leaders from the nuclear industry. [The Guardian]

US:

¶ “Sonoma County Airport Launches Solar Power Systems” • The Charles M Schulz Sonoma County Airport had two solar power systems installed put them on the grid in February. Challenged by climate change, Sonoma County’s government set a goal for the county to be carbon neutral by 2030. The airport solar power arrays fit that carbon-free plan. [CleanTechnica]

Sonoma County Airport (ForeFront Power image)

¶ “Tiny Cohoes To Floating Solar Wallflowers: Catch Me If You Can!” • Cohoes, New York, appears to have solved a big problem for PV in communities that don’t have enough open space for large solar arrays, and that could have broad implications for both urban and rural solar development. It is going for a floating solar array on a 10-acre reservoir. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Finally! Publicly Traded US Companies Will Have To Report GHG Emissions” • It is reported that the SEC will announce it is stepping up to require all publicly traded companies to disclose their greenhouse gas emissions and the climate risks they face. This announcement is expected to shake up hundreds of businesses. [CleanTechnica]

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March 20 Energy News

March 20, 2022

Opinion and Interview: 

¶ “Could Russia’s Reckless Rampage Endanger Nuclear Power?” • Russia’s reckless rampage includes savage attacks on Ukrainian nuclear plants. Shelling the plants raises questions about Russia’s future role in the international energy picture. It also poses a dilemma about whether nuclear energy is safe in a world where a madman can unleash vengeance. [Forbes]

Rivne nuclear power plant (Tanya Dedyukhina, CC-BY-SA 3.0)

¶ “The Hydrogen Risks For Homeowners And Public Money” • The author talks with Paul Martin about the new Hydrogen Science Coalition, embrittlement of steel, and transmission leaks. Then they go to other leakage, especially in homes, the increased risks from hydrogen in buildings, shipping boil-off rate, global supply implications, and more. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Odd Car Designs Are Lacking In Today’s Auto Industry” • Is it just me, or has all the fun been sucked out of the auto industry? In previous decades, the unique design of a car was something to be celebrated. It used to be that cars had fins, and chances were taken. Some models succeeded and some didn’t. Quirky and odd were qualities to be celebrated. [CleanTechnica]

Really? Toyota concept (Maximalfocus, Unsplash)

World:

¶ “Expos Proliferate As Queensland Introduces An EV Subsidy” • Queensland has finally joined the southern Australian states of New South Wales, Victoria, and South Australia in offering a rebate for the purchase of an electric vehicle. The Queensland government is proposing a $3000 rebate for the purchase of vehicles under $58,000. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Tesla Model 3 And Model Y Top EV Sales In Germany In February” • In Germany, the overall new car market had its first signs of relief (+3% year over year), but that was due to strong sales of battery EVs (+55% YoY). There were 28,306 battery EV registrations for the month, a 14% share of the market. The rest of the market was down. [CleanTechnica]

Tesla Model Y (Tyler Casey, Unsplash)

¶ “Cameron’s Decision To Cut ‘Green Crap’ Now Costs Each Household In England £150 A Year” • A study finds that ending onshore wind projects, solar subsidies, and schemes for energy efficiency has inflated bills. The decision by David Cameron’s government to ditch policies he called “green crap” will cost households £150 a year by fall. [The Guardian]

¶ “Anglo American To Build Huge Renewable Energy Plants” • Anglo and Électricité de France have agreed jointly to develop on-site and off-site solar and wind farms in South Africa with 3 GW to 5 GW of production capacity over the next decade, the companies said. The plan will bolster South Africa’s renewable electricity output greatly. [TechCentral]

Anglo American platinum mine (Anglo American image)

¶ “IAEA Director General Statement On Situation In Ukraine” • Ukraine informed the International Atomic Energy Agency that Ukrainian engineers had repaired and reconnected one of three previously disconnected power lines linking the Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant to the electricity grid, the IAEA’s Director General said. [International Atomic Energy Agency]

¶ “Russia’s Energy Clout Doesn’t Just Come From Oil And Gas – It’s Also A Key Nuclear Supplier” • As Western nations look for ways to reduce their reliance on Russian oil and gas, another aspect of the Ukraine crisis has received less attention: Most of the 32 countries that use nuclear power rely on Russia for some part of their nuclear fuel supply chain. [NDTV.com]

Yellow cake, processed uranium (US NRC image, public domain)

US:

¶ “Can Tesla Meet 2022 Goals For In-House Battery Production?” • In late 2020, Musk announced that Tesla aimed to halve the costs of the most expensive part of an EV by producing its own batteries. With a smaller number of Tesla’s 4680 lithium-ion batteries, the car gets longer range. But Tesla faces a lot of work ramping up its battery factory. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “RI Plans To Buy More Offshore Wind Power To Help Meet Goal Of 100% Renewable Energy” • Governor Dan McKee is moving ahead with a plan to ramp up Rhode Island’s supply of power from offshore wind farms that would be developed off the coast of Southern New England. He asked for another 600 MW of offshore wind energy. [The Providence Journal]

Block Island wind farm (Ionna22, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “Big-Box Stores Could Reduce Emissions And Save Millions By Putting Solar Panels On Roofs” • As the US attempts to wean itself off its heavy reliance on fossil fuels and shift to cleaner energy sources, many experts are eyeing a promising solution: your neighborhood big-box stores and shopping malls. But the solution could be used much more. [KESQ]

¶ “Drought Deepens In West, Flooding Ebbs” • There’s no relief in sight for the West’s record-shattering drought, which will likely keep deepening this spring, NOAA said. But central and eastern states should be mostly spared from significant flooding. Spring is likely to be hotter than normal in most states and drier in much of the West. [KSL News]

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March 19 Energy News

March 19, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Happy With My Tesla Model 3, And Now I’m Thankful Too!” • When I bought my car, I went all in for the “Long Range” dual-motor option and the Full Self Driving option. I say, “Navigate to Brighton” and let my car drive me the 50 miles from my home in Lindon, Utah, to the Brighton Ski Resort, as I pass gas stations with regular gas at $4.29 per gallon. [CleanTechnica]

Snowy road (Bailey Zindel, Unsplash)

Science and Technology:

¶ “How Climate Change Is Leading To Bigger Hailstones” • One result of climate change is bigger hailstorms. In Texas, Alabama, and Colorado, records for largest hailstone have been broken in the last three years, reaching sizes of up to 16cm (6.2 inches) in diameter. In 2020, Tripoli, the capital of Libya, was struck by hailstones nearly 18 cm (7.1 in) across. [BBC]

¶ “Fleetzero’s Container Ship Battery-Swapping Scheme May Help Electrify Shipping” • Fleetzero has developed a 2-MWh LiFePO₄ battery pack that fits in a shipping container. A ship can load enough containers onboard to complete a sea voyage, then swap them out when they are depleted for fully charged batteries while the ship is in port. [CleanTechnica]

Fleetzero ship (Fleetzero image)

World:

¶ “Italy’s EV Market Doubled In 2021 – Any Growth In 2022?” • In Italy, petrol and diesel powertrains closed 2021 at 29.7% and 22.6% market share respectively (from 37.5% and 33.1% in 2020). Plugless hybrids reached 29% and are the leading powertrains in Italy’s monthly sales now. Plug-in options are lagging behind, but continue to break records. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Germany Gets On Board With EU ICE Ban” • The EU is in favor of banning sales of cars with internal combustion engines by 2035. Germany has been reluctant to make that commitment, but Politico reports that Germany has reluctantly signed on to the 2035 ICE ban and will ditch plans to lobby for key exemptions to EU CO₂ emissions targets. [CleanTechnica]

EV (Martin Katler, Unsplash)

¶ “Poland To Rethink Role Of Russian Gas In Green Energy Transition, As Nuclear Plans Go Ahead” • Poland is rethinking the role of natural gas in its transition away from coal-fired energy, as it seeks to avoid dependence on Russian fuels. Russia’s war on Ukraine has compelled the EU to attempt to reduce dependence on fossil fuels from Russia. [Euronews]

¶ “Fitch: Uncertainty Holding Up 4 GW In Mexico’s Renewable Pipeline” • A floor vote on the planned constitutional reforms to Mexico’s electric power sector is unlikely to come before “late 2022,” Fitch Ratings says. Meanwhile, sector-wide uncertainty is increasing as information on a timetable, potential changes, and implementation approaches is lacking. [BNamericas]

¶ “Belgium Delays Nuclear Energy Exit By Ten Years Due To Ukraine War” • Belgium has delayed by a decade a plan to scrap nuclear energy in 2025, as energy prices due to Russia’s war on Ukraine. “The federal government has decided to take the necessary steps to extend the life of two nuclear reactors by ten years,” the Belgian Prime Minister said. [RTL Today]

¶ “Capital Power Signs 126-MW PPA In Alberta” • Ethylene glycol manufacturer MEGlobal Canada is to buy 126 MW of electricity from Capital Power from the Whitla wind farm in Alberta. The 10-year power purchase agreement is expected to meet the electricity needs at MEGlobal’s Canadian manufacturing facilities starting on 1 April. [reNews]

Whitla wind farm (Capital Power image)

US:

¶ “Estimating The Cost Of Electric Vehicle Charging Stations” • States getting EV charging station funds can count on new jobs. The country has about 47,000 public charging stations, but as the administration rolls out its plan to build a network of 500,000 electric charging stations by the end of the decade, that number will increase quickly. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Argonne Tools Helping Build Equitable Nationwide EV Charging: Electric Vehicle Charging Justice40 Map” • The US DOE’s Argonne National Laboratory contributed critical tools and expertise to a federal initiative aiming to help states build EV charging stations fairly and equitably. The network is to have 500,000 stations within ten years. [CleanTechnica]

Charging an EV (Jenny Ueberberg, Unsplash)

¶ “Ford F-150 Lightning EPA Range Ratings Leaked Online” • A Reddit user posted stickers for various Ford F-150 Lighting models. The source of the photos posted is not revealed, Jim Farley hasn’t returned our calls, and the accuracy of the photos cannot be independently verified (they sure look authentic, though), so take them accordingly. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Kansas Bill Targeting Property Tax Breaks For Wind Farms Fails In Committee Vote” • Another bill criticized as an effort to end development of wind farms in Kansas died in committee. It was introduced by Sen Mike Thompson, who keeps introducing bills critics say are attempts to stymie renewable energy dressed as efforts to protect rural Kansas. [Kansas Reflector]

Kansas wind farm (Daniel Thomas, Unsplash)

¶ “Federal legislation introduced to build renewable energy ‘superhighway'” • Senator Ed Markey (D-MA) introduced a bill, Connecting Hard-to-reach Areas with Renewable Energy (CHARGE), that is designed to make critical changes to energy transmission planning and operations in support of a future powered by renewable energy. [pv magazine USA]

¶ “US Developer Plots 800-MW Idaho Wind Farm Build” • LS Power affiliate Magic Valley Energy is planning to build an 800-MW wind farm called Salmon Falls in Idaho. The project is proposed to be built on lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management in Twin Falls County. Construction could start as early as 2024. [reNews]

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March 18 Energy News

March 18, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “EU: Help Households, Take Socially Just Measures, Don’t Cut Taxes For Wealthy SUV Drivers” • As EU economics and finance ministers meet to discuss high energy costs and fuel taxes, T&E urges governments to avoid a blanket reductions in fuel taxes. In a letter to ministers, T&E says they should instead pursue more effective and socially just measures. [CleanTechnica]

Arc de Triomphe, Paris (Florian Wehde, Unsplash)

¶ “We Need Humans To Achieve A Just Energy Transition” • The energy transition is ultimately a human transition. Why do we pioneer technological, financial, and policy innovations? For people. Who drives these innovations? People. To truly achieve a just energy transition, we must ensure an inclusive human-centered approach. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Could The Energy Crisis Boost The Path To Renewables?” • The Oil & Gas price spike has reignited important conversations about the need to invest in alternative energy sources. Fossil fuels still provide around 85% of global energy and nearly half of the EU’s natural gas imports continue to come from Russia. Over-reliance on fossil fuels is not safe. [Energy Voice]

Offshore wind turbine (Grahame Jenkins, Unsplash)

Science and Technology:

¶ “Storing Renewable Electricity With Supercritical CO₂ Heat Pump” • Researchers in Spain have designed a pumped thermal energy storage system that uses supercritical carbon dioxide as a heat pump and a heat engine. The proposed system is claimed to achieve an efficiency of 80.26% and an LCOS of €0.116/kWh (13¢/KWh, A$0.18/KWh). [pv magazine Australia]

World:

¶ “Airline Giant Delta Warns Oil Increases Mean Higher Ticket Prices” • Higher oil prices are set to lead to a 10% increase in air fares, according to Ed Bastian, head of Delta Air Lines. He told the BBC that the final impact “really depends where fuel prices settle.” Oil prices have reached 14-year highs after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. [BBC]

Delta jet (Miguel Ángel Sanz, Unsplash)

¶ “Which Gas Will Europe Import Now? The Choice Matters To The Climate” • A breakdown of emissions finds that transporting gas through Russian pipelines is three times as climate intensive as shipping it from the US. While LNG shipping accounts for 20% to 30% of transport emissions, pipeline transport dominates total shipping emissions. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Audi Shows Off A6 Avant Concept For Wagon Lovers” • The Audi A6 Avant is a pre-production concept, but it is scheduled to appear in showrooms a year after the Audi A6 Sportback. It is “a completely tangible look at future production models on our new PPE technology platform,” says technical development chief Oliver Hoffmann. [CleanTechnica]

Audi A6 Avant concept (Audi image)

¶ “Middle Eastern Oil Producers Worried More People Will Buy EVs As A Result Of High Oil Prices” • Some Middle Eastern oil producers are worried that more people will buy EVs in light of the high oil prices. Iraq’s oil minister, Ihsan Abdul Jabbar, shared these thoughts with the New York Times, noting that members of OPEC are concerned. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Acciona Completes 8.5-MW Spanish Solar Build” • Acciona Energia has completed an 8,500 kW solar plant as part of a green hydrogen project on the island of Mallorca. Spanish EPC outfit Colway Energia built the Lloseta PV plant for Acciona, which forms part of the Power to Green Hydrogen Mallorca project, led by Acciona Energia and Enagas. [reNews]

Solar power plant (Colway Energia image)

¶ “To Really Address Climate Change, Australia Could Make 27 Times As Much Electricity And Make It Renewable” • Australia’s electricity system is on the road to becoming 100% renewable as coal-fired power stations are replaced by wind and solar. But as a proportion of electricity consumed domestically, it’s on the road to more than 100% renewable. [The Conversation]

¶ “Japan Quake Revives Concerns Over Prime Minister Kishida’s Drive To Restart Idle Nuclear Plants” • A powerful quake that hit northeast of Japan has revived public concerns over the country’s nuclear energy. The earthquake serves as a challenge to anyone who argues to restart nuclear plants that have been idle since the 2011 Fukushima disaster. [The Fiji Times]

Kashiwazaki Kariwa nuclear plant (D a, CC-BY-SA 2.0)

US:

¶ “Oregon And Virginia Next In Line For Tesla Insurance” • Tesla Insurance is expanding to two new states, Virginia and Oregon, Drive Tesla Canada reports. The article noted that the policies in both states will be underwritten by Tesla General Insurance for the first time. Tesla had expanded its insurance to Arizona and Ohio earlier this year. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “The Big Oil Windfall Profits Tax Legislation Targets Price Gouging” • It may be time to ensure that corporations pay a penalty when they price gouge. A legislative proposal seeks to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 and impose a windfall profits excise tax on crude oil and to rebate the tax collected back to individual taxpayers. [CleanTechnica]

Oil platform (Image retrieved from NOAA, public domain)

¶ “Tesla Raises Its Prices Across Its Lineup – No Surprise” • Tesla has raised its prices across its vehicle lineup, and this was pretty much expected. Inflation has pretty much everyone raising prices. The most affordable Model 3 in the US is now $46,990, Bloomberg reported, while noting that other Tesla models had price increases in the past week. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “San Diego Gas & Electric Orders Mitsubishi Power Emerald Storage Solution To Add Capacity For High Energy Demand” • San Diego Gas & Electric Company has awarded Mitsubishi Power an order for a 10-MW, 60-MWh battery energy storage system for its Pala-Gomez Creek Energy Storage Project in Pala, California. [Business Wire]

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March 17 Energy News

March 17, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Natural Gas Is Expensive, Dirty, And Financing War. Here Are Five Ways To Use Less Of It To Heat Your Home” • The cost of natural gas was already rising fast as the world emerged from repeated Covid lockdowns and demand for energy soared. Now the war in Ukraine is pushing prices even higher. Here are five ways to use less. [CNN]

Thermostat (Dan LeFebvre, Unsplash)

¶ “Why Ukraine-Russia War Does Not Mean We Should Produce More Oil And Gas And Build More Nuclear Power Plants – Dr Richard Dixon” • The terrible war in Ukraine is being used by opponents of green energy to promote more oil and gas, new nuclear, and even fracking. None of these makes even the slightest sense. [The Scotsman]

¶ “Ukraine Demonstrates The Problem With Nuclear Power” • Russia is in the third week of their invasion. Their willingness to risk nuclear catastrophe shows both recklessness and military inadequacy. Terrorizing civilians and threatening the ecological well-being of the planet is unusual, but sadly it is not a unique strategy of homicidal maniacs. [State of the Planet]

Another way (Sungrow EMEA, Unsplash)

Science and Technology:

¶ “Don’t Plant Just Any Tree To Save The Planet” • A mass tree planting can be used to start restoration of a damaged ecosystem. Adding tree planting to a renewable energy transition is a natural solution to carbon reduction. But done poorly, projects to plant trees can exacerbate issues like stormwater runoff, biodiversity loss, and soil depletion. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Wireless Sensors: Tiny Battery-Free Devices Float In The Wind Like Dandelion Seeds” • Inspired by dandelion seeds, a University of Washington team developed a sensor-carrying device that can travel up to 100 meters in a moderate breeze. Powered by solar cells, it can hold at least four sensors and share data up to 60 meters. [CleanTechnica]

Sensor (Mark Stone, University of Washington)

¶ “Solid-State Battery News From Samsung SDI And Sakuu” • According to Electrive, Samsung SDI has begun building a pilot production line for solid-state batteries at the company’s R&D center. It will test systems for the production of cathodes and solid electrolytes while trialing the new production processes for solid state battteries. [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶ “Saharan Dust Turns Skies Orange Over Europe” • Ski resorts that look like deserts, skies colored brilliant hues of orange, and air quality five times worse than ideal conditions all have one thing in common: Saharan dust , which is expected to worsen over Western and Central Europe and even bring “blood rain.” It was brought by the high winds of Storm Celia. [CNN]

Dust storm over Western Europe (NASA image)

¶ “Renewable Electricity + Electric Motors Will Decarbonize Transport In Europe” • Renewable electricity will do the heavy lifting to decarbonize transport, but we still need the policies to make this happen, T&E says in a submission to the UK Transport Select Committee. To do this will require as much electricity as the UK uses today. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Northvolt Will Build Its 3rd Battery Factory In Germany” • Sweden’s Northvolt announced it will build a third battery factory in the city of Heide in northern Germany. Northvolt Drei will be able to produce 60 GWh of batteries, enough for about a million electric cars, when it reaches full production. It is to begin operating in 2025. [CleanTechnica]

Battery factory (Image courtesy of Volvo Cars and Northvolt)

¶ “Plugin Vehicles Are 20% Of New Car Sales In France” • Plugins keep rising in France. Last month’s plugin vehicle registrations ended at 23,138 units, divided between 13,453 battery EVs (a 12% share of the overall auto market) and 9,685 plugin hybrids (an 8% share). Plugin hybrids grew slightly, but full battery EVs jumped 60% year over year. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Red Alert For Fukushima Nuclear Plant After 7.3 Quake In Japan” • A series of earthquakes off the coast of Japan triggered a tsunami advisory for Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures, just over 11 years after the region endured a major nuclear disaster. The first two earthquakes, with magnitudes of 6.4 and 7.3, struck about two minutes apart. [Alaska Native News]

Typical Earthquake damage (Dave Goudreau,Unsplash,cropped)

US:

¶ “Federal Appeals Court Rules Biden Administration Can Use Key Climate Metric” • The 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals stayed a Louisiana federal judge’s injunction that prevented the Biden administration from using a metric estimating the societal cost of carbon emissions in its federal environmental and climate regulations. [CNN]

¶ “Dominion Wins Approval For 1-GW Virginia PV Boost” • The Virginia State Corporation Commission approved expansion of almost 1 GW of solar and energy storage projects for Dominion Energy Virginia customers. The approved expansion includes 15 Dominion Energy Virginia projects as well as power purchase agreements with 24 other projects. [reNews]

Dominion Energy PV array (Dominion Energy image)

¶ “Wall Street Journal: Traditional Automakers Starting To Emulate Tesla’s Retail Strategy” • According to the Wall Street Journal, “As car companies go electric, some are trying to wrest control from dealers on how those vehicles will be priced and sold, aiming to make the experience closer to the direct-selling model used by Tesla.” [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Colorado Is About To Rapidly Expand Its Transmission Network. Should It Double As A Bike Highway System?” • Piep van Heuven, a lobbyist with Bicycle Colorado, sees the build-out of power lines as a unique opportunity to add new “power line trails” across the state. Her organization is now helping push state legislation on the issue. [Colorado Public Radio]

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March 16 Energy News

March 16, 2022

Opinion:

¶ “Insanity Over Nuclear Energy: Inquirer” • The governments of the US and the Philippines have announced an agreement on the use of nuclear power. The Philippines tried to use nuclear power before, five decades ago. Generations of Filipinos were stuck with the bill for that white elephant. Now, the country is getting set to do the same thing all over again. [The Straits Times]

Near the Bataan nuclear plant (Ramon FVelasquez, CC-BY-SA 3.0)

Science and Technology:

¶ “Wave-Powered Desalination Device Sets Sail” • Amid salty air and crashing waves, National Renewable Energy Laboratory researchers deployed a wave-powered desalination test device at Jennette’s Pier, on Nags Head beach in North Carolina, and anchored it to the nearby seabed. It is a long-awaited feat for the research team. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Cellular Tuna Coming Soon” • Finless Foods, a leading cellular agriculture company focused on seafood, announced the closing of a Series B raise of $34 million to expand its operations and produce cell-based tuna this year in the US. The goal is to grow tuna in a production facility using cellular culture, so the product comes from real tuna DNA. [CleanTechnica]

Tuna dinner (Image courtesy Finless Foods)

World:

¶ “Why is turning to Saudi Arabia for oil so controversial?” • UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson defended a trip to Saudi Arabia, saying “the widest coalition” is needed to end reliance on Russian oil and gas. But maintaining close ties with the Gulf kingdom is an issue due to its human rights record. Human rights groups point to unfair trials and executions. [BBC]

¶ “Shell’s Directors Face Legal Action From Climate Group Shareholder” • Lawyers for ClientEarth, a Shell stockholder, said they were preparing legal action against the directors of Shell over the company’s climate transition plan. They say that under the UK Companies Act, Shell’s climate strategy must align with the 2015 Paris Agreement. [CNN]

Shell station (Krzysztof Hepner, Unsplash)

¶ “28% Of New Cars Sold In Netherlands Now Plugin Cars” • After a surprisingly good January, February doubled last year’s result, with the Dutch plugin EV market reaching 28% last month. That’s mostly thanks to pure electrics (16% of new vehicle sales), which surged 275%(!) year over year. In fact, battery EVs have surpassed plugin hybrids so far this year. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Volkswagen Says EV Operations Will Be Profitable Earlier Than Expected” • Volkswagen Group told the press that several of its electric car models, including the Porsche Taycan, are sold out through the end of 2022. High demand is helping its electric car business become as profitable as its conventional car business more quickly than expected. [CleanTechnica]

Volkswagen EV lineup (Volkswagen via Inside Transportation)

¶ “MG Plans To Sell Mini EV In Global Markets, Starting With India” • A little EV that could change the world, the Wuling Mini EV, has been taking China by storm. Now MG is to introduce its MG 320, which will be on the same SAIC-GM-Wuling Global Small EV platform. The car will sell for 1 million, equivalent to €11,900 or $13,000. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Australian Researchers Claim ‘Giant Leap’ In Technology To Produce Affordable Renewable Hydrogen” • Hysata, a company using technology developed at the University of Wollongong, said its patented capillary-fed electrolysis cells achieve 95% efficiency. The achievement could mean hydrogen costing A$2 per kg ($1.45 per kg) by 2025. [The Guardian]

Work on Hysata electrolysis (Hysata image)

¶ “UK Can Eliminate Need For Russian Gas This Year, Research Shows” • The UK could eliminate all need for imports of Russian gas this year by combining energy efficiency and renewable power generation along with a campaign to help people change their behavior, research has found. Households can fight back against war in the Ukraine. [The Guardian]

¶ “Denmark Targets 6 GW Of Electrolyzer Capacity By 2030” • The Danish government has reached an agreement to accelerate the development of green fuels, through a tender to support the construction of 4 GW to 6 GW of power-to-x capacity by 2030. Denmark will support hydrogen production, better framework conditions for producers, and other measures. [reNews]

Denmark (Adrian Cuj, Unsplash)

US:

¶ “How NREL Is Extending The Lifetime Of Solar Modules” • What makes for a good solar module? A few things are obvious: high energy yield, low cost, and reliable in the field. The Durable Module Materials Consortium is an effort led by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, seeking to improve PV reliability through its research. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Allergy Season Will Start Much Earlier And Be Far More Intense Because Of Climate Crisis, Study Suggests” • A study published in Nature Communications, found by the end of the century, pollen season could begin as much as 40 days earlier than it normally has in the US because of global warming. Pollen counts could climb by up to 250%. [CNN]

Pollen (Alex Jones, Unsplash)

¶ “AEP subsidiary seeks 1.3 GW for Indiana And Michigan” • AEP subsidiary Indiana Michigan Power issued a request for proposals for renewable energy consisting of 800 MW of wind power and 500 MW of solar. Indiana Michigan Power expects some of the resources to be online by as early as the end of 2024 and the full 1.3 GW operating by the end of 2025. [reNews]

¶ “Goldman Sachs Commissions 390-MW PV-Plus-Storage In California” • Goldman Sachs Renewable Power has brought its 390-MW Slate solar plus energy storage project in Kings County in California online. Slate, which was originally developed by Canadian Solar subsidiary Recurrent Energy, is backed up by 561 MWh of storage capacity. [reNews]

Have a transformatively fine day.

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March 15 Energy News

March 15, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Are ICE Vehicles Heading The Way Of CRT TVs?” • New tech replaces old tech all the time, but rarely in history have we seen what was old become worthless in such a short span of time as happened with the old TVs with cathode ray tubes. There are several reasons to believe it could happen with old technology internal combustion vehicles. [CleanTechnica]

Old Portable TV (Hana Kirana, Public domain)

Science and Technology:

¶ “Scientists In The US Are Flying Planes Into Clouds To Make It Snow More” • With 61% of the contiguous US in drought, wouldn’t it be nice if we could just “make it rain” or just “make more snow?” Well, certain parts of the country are doing just that, sort of. It’s called cloud seeding, and it’s nothing new. It’s been around since the 1940s. [CNN]

¶ “Holes The Size Of City Blocks Are Forming In The Arctic Seafloor” • Marine scientists discovered deep sinkholes – one larger than a city block – and ice-filled hills that have formed “extraordinarily” rapidly on a remote part of Canada’s Beaufort Sea. The Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute published results of their study in the journal PNAS. [CNN]

Underwater vehicle (Charlie Paull © 2016 MBARI)

World:

¶ “Australian Court Overturns Teenagers’ Landmark Climate Ruling” • The Australian government has successfully appealed a court ruling that ordered the federal environment minister to consider the impact of carbon emissions on children when approving new coal mining projects. The case was originally brought by eight children. [CNN]

¶ “EU Looks To Cut Reliance On Russian Gas With Investment In Heat Pumps” • The EU is seeking to reduce use of fossil fuels to stop financing Russian aggression. One pillar of the European Commission’s new REPowerEU plan is the increased deployment of electric heat pumps to displace fossil gas demand for heating in Europe. [CleanTechnica]

Heat pump guts (Oak Ridge National Laboratory image)

¶ “Diversifying The Rare Earth Value Chain For Europe’s Green Transition – Puławy Separation Plant In Poland” • To Secure critical raw materials for the European market, the European Raw Materials Alliance will support Mkango Resources Ltd. with getting financing for the development of a rare earth separation plant to be built in Puławy, Poland. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Subaru Planning For Life After STI” • Subaru says it is looking beyond internal combustion engines to electric powertrains. It just announced its first battery-EV model, the Solterra, which will be a high-performance car designed to be a successor of the STI. After Subaru announced the Solterra, the model was sold out for the year in the first 48 hours. [CleanTechnica]

Subaru STI (Image courtesy of Subaru)

¶ “Widespread Support In EU Parliament For 45% Renewable Energy Target” • There is growing support in the European Parliament to increase the EU’s 2030 renewable energy target. The European Commission is set to push for its 2030 target to be increased to 45%. Just over 22% of Europe’s energy comes from renewables currently. [EURACTIV.com]

¶ “Strong Demand Prompted Increased Funds For Renewable Power Sources At Cabins” • The Government of Nunavut raised the funding available through its Renewable Energy Cabin Grant Program by $100,000 due to strong demand. There were 82 applications from Nunavummiut for financial assistance to install solar or wind systems on cabins. [NNSL Media]

Arctic cabin (Hendrik Morkel, Unsplash)

¶ “US To Help Philippines Develop Nuclear Power Program; Groups Push Renewable Energy Instead” • The Philippines and the US have signed a memorandum of understanding to work together to develop the Philippines’ nuclear power program. But a Manila-based climate and energy policy group said that nuclear is no better than coal. [Philippine Star]

¶ “Chernobyl Nuclear Plant Loses Power Hours After Being Turned Back On” • Ukraine’s Chernobyl nuclear plant has lost power just hours after it was restored. The decommissioned plant, the site of the world’s worst nuclear disaster, was seized by Russian forces within days of the invasion. Its high-voltage power line was damaged by fighting. [Metro]

Chernobyl Confinement (Cls14, GNU License 1.2)

US:

¶ “House Democrats To Biden: Use Climate Action To Restart Negotiations On Spending Bill” • A bloc of 89 House Democrats sent a letter to President Biden urging him to restart negotiations on a Democrat-only spending bill centered around climate action. The lawmakers stressed that Biden must not fail to act on climate change. [CNN]

¶ “Court Case In Hawaii Against Fossil Fuel Companies Passes Major Milestone” • In Hawaii, a state judge ruled that a lawsuit seeking damages from major oil and gas companies can move forward. The companies are accused of working for decades to deceive the public and policymakers about the devastating impacts of climate change. [CleanTechnica]

Hawaii (Luca Bravo, Unsplash)

¶ “Wood Mackenzie In Partnership With Puerto Rican Solar Foundation” • Wood Mackenzie is partnering with the Let’s Share The Sun Foundation, a 501(c)3 nonprofit charity that focuses on helping the poorest get access to electricity. They sent a team of three analysts to Puerto Rico to help with installing solar PVs on off-grid housing. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Sarasota Takes Next Step Toward 100% Renewable Energy Target” • The City of Sarasota is moving forward to meet its goal of 100% renewable energy generation by 2045. In collaboration with the Sierra Club, the Race to Zero campaign and the US DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Sarasota is to embark on a deep energy analysis. [Sarasota Magazine]

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March 14 Energy News

March 14, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Why Putin Is Hell-Bent On Capturing Ukraine’s Nuclear Reactors” • “Turning off the power nationwide, as [Russian force] have done on a smaller scale in Mariupol, in the middle of winter creates mass hardship and suffering for the Ukrainian people, and that is apparently a weapon Putin feels free to utilize,” one expert on warfare said. [Yahoo]

Khmelnitskiy nuclear plant (RLuts, CC-BY-SA 3.0)

¶ “Will Russia’s War Spur Europe To Move On Green Energy?” • “Switching from Russia gas is possible, but make no mistake, it’s going to be expensive, especially if companies want to terminate their existing long-term contracts,” says Jonathan Stern, of the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies. And some countries are entirely dependent on Russia for gas. [Yale E360]

Science and Technology:

¶ “It’s A New Dawn For Concentrating Solar Power” • When concentrating solar power first emerged on the renewable energy field just a few years ago, critics were quick to go on the attack. Nevertheless, fans of the technology forged ahead. Now all that hard work is about to pay off, and the EV battery supply chain could be a beneficiary. [CleanTechnica]

Concentrating solar power (Image courtesy of Heliogen)

¶ “NHTSA: Self-Driving Vehicles No Longer Need Human Controls” • The US National Highway Transportation Safety Administration has issued final rules that eliminate the need for automated vehicle manufacturers to equip fully autonomous vehicles with manual driving controls to meet crash standards, Reuters reports. [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶ “Electrifying Trains, Planes, And Dirty Big Mining Trucks” • Twiggy Forrest has all the big boy toys, and he is planning to electrify them all and run them on green hydrogen and gravity. He plans to use Williams Advanced Engineering’s battery tech in a push to electrify Fortescue’s mining equipment – trains, planes, and dirty big mining trucks. [CleanTechnica

Electric aircraft (Image: Airbus and Fortescue Future Industries)

¶ “Indian Data Center Operator Sify Signs PPAs For 231 MW Of Solar And Wind” • Reportedly, Sify and Vibrant Energy Holdings signed power purchase agreements. They cover a total of 231 MW, including 67 MW signed in March last year. Vibrant Energy is owned by Blue Leaf Energy Asia, part of Macquarie’s Green Investment Group. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Aker And Mainstream Confirm Japanese Offshore Wind Acquisition” • Aker Offshore Wind and Mainstream Renewable Power have closed a transaction to acquire a 50% stake in a Progression Energy 800-MW floating offshore wind farm in Japan. Japan aims to expand offshore wind energy capacity to 10 GW by 2030 and 30 to 45GW by 2040. [reNews]

Floatgen floating offshore wind turbine (Lo83, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “Sun Cable’s Giant Northern Territory Solar Project Gets $210 Million Funding Boost” • The $30 billion plan to build a giant solar farm in northern Australia to power Darwin, Indonesia, and Singapore has moved a step closer to reality with billionaires Mike Cannon-Brookes and Andrew Forrest contributing to a $210 million capital raising. [The Guardian]

¶ “Adani Group Gets Two More Major Projects In Sri Lanka” • Highways Minister and Chairman of the cabinet subcommittee to expedite renewable energy projects Johnston Fernando said that President Gotabaya Rajapaksa issued instructions to arrange for 5000 MW of renewable energy sources and add them to the national grid within next six years. [NewsWire]

Sri Lanka (Hendrik Cornelissen, Unsplash)

¶ “$130 Trillion Investor Coalition Commits To End Support For Corporates That Block Climate Action” • Unveiled on 14 March, the ‘Global Standard on Responsible Climate Lobbying’ has been developed by investor networks that collectively represent more than 3,800 members with more than $130 trillion (£866 billion) of assets under management. [Edie]

¶ “The Boreal Forest Is On The Move. Here’s What That Means For Our Climate” • Canada’s boreal forest isn’t exactly where you were taught it was. As the planet warms, areas farther north are becoming hospitable to coniferous trees. But the trees on the southern edge are dying out because conditions there are now too hot and dry for them to survive. [CTV News]

Boreal forest (Milk-Tea, Unsplash)

US:

¶ “An ‘Excruciating Year’: Climate Activists Reset With Biden’s Agenda On Life Support” • President Joe Biden “was supposed to show up with Build Back Better in his back pocket and slam it down on the table and say, ‘China, India, how do you like them apples?'” Bill McKibben said. “But he showed up with nothing. And had nothing really to say.” [CNN]

¶ “Stellantis CEO Certain Company Can Catch Tesla” • Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares told the world, “I am very confident – I am trying not to be arrogant, just confident – of the fact that we are going to catch up in the next couple of years with Tesla and it’s going to be a very healthy competition.” The company plans to double its revenues by 2030. [CleanTechnica]

Chrysler Airflow Concept (Chrysler image)

¶ “Ford, GM, And PG&E To Begin Vehicle-To-Grid Trials” • Pacific Gas & Electric, the principle supplier of electricity in northern California, announced it will begin working with Ford and General Motors to test how vehicle-to-grid and vehicle-to-home systems could benefit consumers and the utility company in the future, ArsTechnica reports. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Should You Pay The Trade Association Dues For Utility Companies?” • The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is engaged in an inquiry about whether it should change its accounting rules to prevent electric and gas utilities from recovering expenses related to contributions for political and lobbying from their customers. [CleanTechnica]

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March 13 Energy News

March 13, 2022

Opinion: 

¶ “Will Russia’s Attack On Ukraine Help Thaw US-Venezuela Relations?” • These are desperate times, and desperate measures are needed. Oil helps make the world go round and Venezuela has a lot of it – and when the world is in crisis, such as with the ban on Russian oil exports causing prices to surge, leaders start revisiting those awkward friendships. [BBC]

¶ “CleanTechnica Tested: The EBL Portable Power Station” • Battery producer EBL is moving into providing portable power stations with the powerful new 1 kWh, 1,000-W EBL Portable Power Station Voyager 1000. EBL sent us one of their new power stations for us to run through the paces in the real world to see how it held up. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Traditional Automakers Could Face ‘Kodak Moment’ If They Fail To Catch Up With Tesla” • Legacy automakers are serious about EVs. But do they have what it takes to catch up with Tesla? According to Rob Hull at the UK’s This is Money media outlet, “Tesla’s ability to continue delivering EVs in 2022 could see it extend its stronghold over the market.” [CleanTechnica]

Tesla Model 3 (Vlad Tchompalov, Unsplash)

Science and Technology:

¶ “Lucid CEO Shares Details On Lucid’s Battery Pack In All New Series, “Tech Talks”” • Lucid Motors CEO Peter Rawlinson has opened up about Lucid’s battery pack. The automaker recently launched an all-new series called Tech Talks that will share some of the key details behind its EV technology. A video focuses on the battery pack. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Rusty Metal Could Be The Battery The Energy Grid Needs” • An electrochemistry professor at the MIT, Yet-Ming Chiang, with his colleagues are working on a low-cost iron-air battery that will provide multi-day storage for renewable energy by 2024. When the battery is charged rust turns to iron, and discharging returns the iron to the form of rust. [Popular Science]

How an iron air battery works (Form Energy Image)

World:

¶ “Panasonic To Begin Mass Production Of Tesla 4680 Batteries In Fiscal Year April 2023” • Panasonic plans mass production of Tesla’s 4680 battery cells for fiscal year April 2023, reports say, with two more production lines and facilities at its Wakayama factory. There’s also a rumor that Panasonic is planning a major gigafactory somewhere in the US. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “Ayana Renewable Power And Maxeon Solar Technologies Announce Completion Of The 192-MW Indian Bikaner 1 Project” • Ayana Renewable Power and Maxeon Solar Technologies, Ltd, announced that the 192-MW Bikaner 1 Solar Farm is now in commercial operation. The power plant was built in the state of Rajasthan in the second half of 2021. [WFMZ]

Solar farm (Red Zeppelin, Unsplash)

¶ “DOE Pushes Dispatch Of Renewable Energy Plants In Spot Market” • The Philippine Department of Energy is pushing for the preferential dispatch of all renewable energy plants in the wholesale electricity spot market to lower electricity prices. The DOE has added geothermal and impounding hydro plants in the priority dispatch for the spot market. [Philippine Star]

¶ “WWEA And Global100RE Call For Renewable Energy Equipment For Immediate Humanitarian Relief In Ukraine” • The World Wind Energy Association and the Global 100% Renewable Energy Platform are calling for donations of equipment which can supply off-grid power to bring relief to civilians in the Ukraine. [Evwind]

Solar panels (Erik Karits, Unsplash)

¶ “Government Plans To Meet 85% Of Energy Demands Using Renewables” • A 25-year vision paper by India’s renewable energy ministry proposes that coal-fired capacity expand to 2030. That coal-based power capacity would be replaced by renewable energy generation base to 85% of total demand by the end of 25 years, officials said. [Krishi Jagran]

¶ “Finland Opens Nuclear Power Plant Amid Concerns Of European Energy War” • Europe’s first nuclear power plant to open in 15 years, Olkiluoto 3, began production in Finland, at a crucial moment for energy supply following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The plant is seen as possibly helping to reduce the need to import gas from Russia. [The Guardian]

Olkiluoto 3 construction, 2009 (kallerna, public domain)

US:

¶ “Tesla Prioritizing Deliveries Of Cars With FSD” • Interest in electric cars is surging as the price of gasoline rises into the stratosphere because of Putin’s assault on Ukraine. There are reports that demand for Tesla EVs has increased by 100% since the invasion began. And why not? The economic case for EVs was strong; now it’s twice as strong. [CleanTechnica]

¶ “NM wind project creating the ‘Route 66 of renewable energy'” • Pattern Energy officially dedicated its Western Spirit wind project in late February. The project includes four sprawling wind farms with a total of 377 turbines scattered throughout the three counties. It will support the electricity needs of nearly 1 million people in central New Mexico. [Yahoo News]

Wind turbines in New Mexico (Deb Haaland, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “Bill Would Require RI To Get All Electricity From Renewable Sources By 2030” • Experts say that when it comes to reaching net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, as required by a landmark climate change law enacted last year, the conversion of Rhode Island’s electric system to a reliance on renewable sources is the logical first step. [The Providence Journal]

¶ “Dozens March To Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station To Protest Planned Nuclear Waste Dumping” • Dozens of people rallied outside Plymouth Town Hall and marched to the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station on Saturday to protest planned nuclear waste dumping into Cape Cod Bay off the Massachusetts coast. The plant is being decommissioned. [WCVB-TV]

Have an inexpressibly superior day.

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