Posts Tagged ‘Nuclear Regulatory Commission’
October 24, 2012
Technology:
¶ Researchers from Penn State University in the US have developed sensors, driven by the heat of a nuclear reactor, that can monitor fuel rods in the case of a disaster. [The Engineer]
¶ A pilot project is testing technology that promises to ‘turn buildings into power stations.’ Steel and glass, which is coated to make it conductive, will be incorporated into buildings, so it’s the fabric of the buildings themselves that generates, stores and releases the electricity. [ITV News]
Japan:
¶ The Japanese Nuclear Regulation Authority has proposed a radius of 30 km from a nuclear plant as a rough standard for areas where special preparations against fallout exposure should be made. In some cases, it may not be enough. [The Japan Times]
¶ New robots are being prepared to examine the reactors at Fukushima Daiichi. [CNET]
World:
¶ Three leading UK scientists have called for a moratorium on the building of new conventional power plants following research indicating that renewables could be implemented much faster than the majority of people realize. [Solar Power Portal]
¶ The Isle of Wight, off the UK’s south coast, could become self-sufficient in renewable energy over the next decade thanks to an ambitious new project. [Energy Efficiency News]
¶ Two companies are planning to build a total of 3.5 gigawatts of wind capacity in the Firth of Forth. [Herald Scotland]
¶ Protesters against a rate increase have occupied the offices of a South African utility, charging that it is failing to switch from coal to renewable power sources. [The New Age Online]
¶ The government of China has released a white paper on energy policy, encouraging private investment. [The West Australian]
US:
¶ Experts say that because of low natural gas prices, the nuclear industry may be nearing its first round of retirements since the mid-1990s. [New York Times]
¶ The federal government will conduct a study into rates of cancer for people near nuclear power plants. [CNN]
¶ According to a new poll, the majority of people living in the lower Hudson River area want Indian Point to continue operating. [Newsday]
¶ Xcel is dropping the proposed upgrade at its Prairie Island nuclear power plant. [Mankato Free Press]
¶ Fracking has increased US petrochemical production for four years in a row, but the price of gasoline has not gone down. [Huffington Post]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 23, 2012
Japan:
¶ The Japanese government is refusing to join an initiative at the UN by sixteen countries to work toward banning nuclear weapons. [The Japan Daily Press]
¶ Parts of the restricted zone at Fukushima are being overrun by alien plant species. [The Daily Yomiuri]
¶ Greenpeace is charging that Japanese radiation testing is unreliable. [Greenpeace]
World:
¶ A poll in the UK shows the public majority favors wind, strongly favors solar, and does not favor any other power source. [Director of Finance online]
¶ The past failures of the Indian nuclear industry argue against selling uranium in that market. [Australian Mining]
¶ Ikea says it will power all its stores and buildings with solar and wind by 2020. [Straits Times]
US:
¶ The Kewaunee nuclear plant will close because of competition from other forms of electrical generation. Shutdown will begin in six months, and will be completed before the end of 2013. [Door County Advocate]
¶ A hydrogen leak was found at San Onofre, in a non-nuclear area. The gas is dissipating, and there is said to be no danger. [Los Angeles Times]
¶ Rooftop solar installations in Los Angeles added 22 megawatts of capacity last year, up from 9 the previous year, and 5 the year before that. This is part of a drive to install solar panels on a million rooftops. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The Moapa Band of Paiute Indians, who live near a coal-fired power plant outside Las Vegas, are taking complaints about air quality to a federal appeals court in San Francisco. [CBS News]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 22, 2012
Japan:
¶ The IAEA and the Japanese government plan to set up a long-term research base in Fukushima to study decontamination and waste disposal methods. [The Japan Times]
World:
¶ According to a new poll, most Germans back the government’s decision to phase out nuclear power and switch to renewable energies within a decade, despite rising electricity bills. [Phys.Org]
¶ Worldwide subsidies for fossil fuels are far greater than those for renewable sources. We could cut a lot of expenses by dropping them. [Businessweek]
¶ In an extremely competitive market, the German electronics giant, Siemens, is dropping solar manufacturing in favor of wind and hydro. [pv magazine]
¶ Scottish Renewables said 15% of the country’s total carbon emissions have been displaced by renewables projects. [NewNet]
US:
¶ A minor earthquake hit the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant. No damage has been reported. [Businessweek]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 21, 2012
Japan:
¶ Expressing her thoughts during birthday observations, Empress Michiko had only one sincere wish regarding the people of Fukushima, “and that was for the victims to receive the most accurate information available and proper care should be given to those working valiantly at the Fukushima plant.” [The Japan Daily Press]
¶ Marubeni Corporation will begin construction of Japan’s largest solar power plant in Kyushu next month. It will generate 81.5 megawatts, enough power for 25,000 households, and will be completed by the end of March 2014. [Asahi Shimbun]
World:
¶ The government of the Indian State of Tamil Nadu is planning to install 3000 MW of solar power over the next three years. [Power Engineering Magazine]
¶ The Chinese government will provide incentives to make it more attractive for companies to connect solar power to the grid. This is seen as a support for solar PV manufacturers. [SteelGuru]
US:
¶ Chesapeake Energy has obtained a permit for hydraulic fracking one mile from the Beaver Valley Nuclear Power Station in Shippingport, Pennsylvania. [Timesloline.com]
¶ The risk of meltdown from flooding is higher in the US than at Fukushima. This article has some interesting maps. [Center for Research on Globalization]
¶ Santee Cooper is closing two major coal-burning plants, the first time it has closed any since it began generating power, 70 years ago. There will be no layoffs. [Equities.com]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 20, 2012
Japan:
¶ Areva will fit all 23 Japanese pressurized water reactors with hydrogen recombiners to help prevent hydrogen gas building up in emergency situations. [World Nuclear News]
World:
¶ The government of Saudi Arabia plans to go to 100% renewable energy sources. [Treehugger]
US:
¶ Some details have come out on a censored NRC report that has been in the news because of whistle blowers. The US has thirty-four nuclear reactors that could face flooding hazards greater than they were designed to withstand if an upstream dam fails. An example of the report’s contents is that the Oconee plant could melt down within three days of a failure of an upstream dam; this was discovered in 1996, but no action was taken. [Union of Concerned Scientists]
¶ Vermont Yankee has finished testing wells for tritium. [Ct Post]
¶ The NRC is not allowed to issue licenses until the nuclear waste situation is updated. The solution, which will be implemented by September, 2014, is to update the rules, rather than deal with the waste. [Bloomberg] (This seems to refer to a document with access number ML12264A451 at ADAMS. I am unable to download from ADAMS at this time.)
¶ One of Mitt Romney’s top donors is majority owner of a company that seeks to profit from storing uranium-based waste from nuclear and weapons plants. [Shreveport Times]
¶ The schools in Hemet, California, will save $300,000 per year from the installation of 4.4 MW of solar power. The panels also shade parking lots. [EON: Enhanced Online News]
¶ A former Maine state economist says cheap coal and the federal government’s unwillingness to enact a carbon pollution tax are the primary reasons Maine residents pay more for power than most other Americans. [Bangor Daily News]
¶ The Killington ski resort will power its lifts with manure from local farms. [ESPN]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 19, 2012
Technology:
¶ A company in the UK demonstrated in a laboratory project that it could capture carbon dioxide from the air, and turn it into petrol. This process is powered by electricity. [Daily Mail]
Japan:
¶ Stories of families in Fukushima Prefecture are the subject of a documentary being released in the US. It indicates a widespread cover-up of problems resulting from the Fukushima Disaster. [The Japan Daily Press]
¶ A new robot developed to survey the contents of the failed Fukushima Daiichi reactor buildings was shown to the press. [The Denki Shimbun]
World:
¶ Chile’s environmental evaluation service has approved construction of a 162 MW solar power park in the mineral-rich Atacama region. [PV-Tech]
¶ The European solar industry believes it will have at least 15% of production, and possibly up to 25%, by 2030. [EurActiv]
¶ A new report suggests that concentrated solar power could play an essential role in achieving a secure and diversified energy future for India, especially to deal with the issues of energy blackouts. [The Hindu]
US:
¶ For the first time, output of wind generators was greater than hydro plants in the Pacific Northwest. [EarthTechling]
¶ A report just released says Nebraska is missing an opportunity to add jobs to the state economy while producing a cleaner form of energy, at just a time neighboring states are building wind capacity. [The Republic]
¶ A “Perfect Storm” may be brewing for US solar manufacturers. [Consumer Energy Report]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 18, 2012
Opinion:
¶ Renewable energy would be the real winner in a world of cheap, stable fossil fuels, which no longer need massive subsidies. [chinadialog]
Japan:
¶ Los Alamos National Laboratory is proposing the use of muons to detect where the location of corium that escaped from reactors at Fukushima Daiichi. [Examiner.com]
¶ Researchers showed a full-body robotic suit, intended to protect workers for cleanup at Fukushima Daiichi. [The Japan Daily Press]
World:
¶ The new Chinese nuclear safety program will cost over $12.7 billion US dollars. [China Post]
¶ The European Commission has released a proposal that will limit the global land conversion for biofuel production and increase the climate-related benefits of biofuels consumed in the EU. [Biodiesel Magazine]
¶ Ambassadors of thirteen European countries, Korea, and China are protesting the Bulgarian electricity regulator’s decision to introduce grid access charges on all operating renewable energy producers. [Balkans.com Business News]
US:
¶ One of ten points being contended on the Indian Point relicensing is being settled. The settlement will have fish in the Hudson River tested regularly in multiple places for radioactivity, and the results made public. [The Daily Voice]
¶ The NRC issued a Confirmatory Order to Honeywell International, Inc. outlining actions the company must take before it can resume its uranium conversion operations at the Honeywell Metropolis Works facility. [Occupational Health and Safety]
¶ Renewable energy was discussed in the presidential debate by both candidates. [solarserver.com]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 17, 2012
Japan:
¶ A remote-controlled camera taken pictures of the fuel in the spent fuel pool of Fukushima Daiichi’s Unit 3. The company says it now knows “approximately” where a 35-ton chunk of steel landed on top of the fuel, and the claim is made that the fuel is intact. [The Japan Times]
World:
¶ The Chinese Ministry of Environmental Protection has issued a report acknowledging concern over the safety of China’s nuclear reactors. [Wall Street Journal]
¶ A study by the Crown Estate says there are “tens of gigawatts” of tidal and wave power that could be developed in the UK. [Out-Law.com]
¶ Current low prices and difficulties with financing resulting from lack of demand after the Fukushima Disaster are projected to lead to reduced exploration for uranium, mine closures, and increased prices for uranium fuel. [The Australian]
¶ In addition to nature, bad design, and human error, South Korea’s nuclear fleet is exposed to the possibility of nuclear war. [OilPrice.com]
¶ German Chancellor Angela Merkel will review taxes with a view to shifting the cost of switching to renewable power away from consumers. [Businessweek]
US:
¶ Pittsburgh ratepayers can specify 100% renewable for their electricity source, and doing so gets them a 10% reduction in price. [CleanTechnica]
¶ An oil sheen on Gulf waters near the site of BP’s Deep Water Horizon is causing concern. A robotic submarine is being sent to find the source. [Rigzone]
¶ The State of California is considering an investigation into the cause and the costs of the San Onofre shutdown. [Los Angeles Times]
¶ The NRC has reached an agreement with the Prairie Island Indian Community over waste storage at the Prairie Island nuclear facility. [Power Engineering Magazine]
¶ Crude oil is being removed from the Bayou Corne Sinkhole and the failed cavern beneath it. It is being shipped out for salvage. [The Advocate]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 16, 2012
Technology:
The Wall Street Journal awarded Kurion, Inc., an innovator in nuclear and hazardous waste management, its 2012 Technology Innovation Awards in the environmental category. Kurion’s technology has been used for cleanup at Fukushima Daiichi. [Environmental Expert]
World:
¶ Canadian solar PV capacity in Canada increased from 20 MW in 2006 to 500 MW in 2011, and is forecast to reach 6,579 MW by 2020. [Power Engineering]
¶ Germany could save around €570 billion ($740 billion) by 2050 if it stays with its plans of replacing nuclear with renewable sources. [Energy Live News]
¶ A joke on French TV about the “Fukushima effect” has drawn a protest from the Japanese Government [The Voice of Russia]
¶ The future of nuclear power in Central Europe is becoming more doubtful. [Financial Times]
¶ The Iraqi government plans to add 400 MW of solar and wind power over the next three years. Part of the reason is to free up oil for export. [Recharge]
US:
¶ The evacuation plan for an emergency at the Pilgrim nuclear plant, could have both bridges over the Bourne Canal closed, providing residents of Cape Cod no route to safety at all. [Bizjournals.com]
¶ An Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel is beginning an evidentiary hearing addressing ten technical and environmental challenges to license renewal for Indian Point. [The Daily Voice]
¶ The State of Pennsylvania has a new law allowing fracking and fossil fuel extraction on college campuses. [SustainableBusiness.com]
Vermont:
¶ CalcoGreen has launched a new website to help clean energy developers and funding sources find each other. [Green Energy Times]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 15, 2012
Technology:
¶ Solar Junction, a Silicon Valley based developer of high-efficiency solar cells for the concentrating photovoltaics market, has set a world record of 44% for energy efficiency of a commercial-ready production solar cell. [U.S. Politics Today]
Japan:
¶ The internal document produced by TEPCO, in which it admitted the Fukushima Disaster could have been prevented, is available online. [TEPCO web page]
World:
¶ In a non-binding referendum, 32% of Lithuanians voted in favor of a nuclear power plant, and 62.1% voted against it. The Japanese reactor builder is likely to pull out of the project, given the poll results. [Baltic Business News]
¶ A worldwide poll on nuclear power shows an increase in support since the period immediately after the Fukushima Disaster, but worldwide, most still oppose it. [Nuclear Engineering International]
US:
¶ In southern California, ratepayers are being charged an average of $10 each month to cover costs of a nuclear power plant that has not delivered them any power for nearly a year. [Los Angeles Times]
¶ In an election year, no decision is forthcoming on regulating coal waste. [Washington Post]
¶ The Bayou Corne sinkhole is covered with a thick layer of crude oil, which is spreading into the adjacent environment. [Examiner.com]
Vermont:
¶ Governor Shumlin’s administration is being criticized for opposing a wind project in Windham County. The administration takes the view that they cannot support the project because local regulations block the project. [NewsOK]
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Tags: electric power costs, Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 14, 2012
VERMONT:
¶ A HUGE solar project is starting up in Vermont. The 200-megawatt project will use 800,000 panels. Training for the first 500 employees will begin this winter. Other, similar projects are planned to follow. [Green Energy Times]
Technology:
¶ A new, anti-reflective surface developed at the US National Renewable Energy Laboratory increases the efficiency of solar cells dramatically. The surface uses nanostructures to achieve 18.2% efficiency. [CleanTechnica]
Back to the Future:
¶ Sailing merchant ships are appearing once again, some traditional, and some of more modern design. [CNN]
Japan:
¶ A group of farmers in Fukushima Province are growing rice with 3% of the limit for radiation, from contaminated fields. To do this, they are using techniques learned from the Chernobyl disaster or developed on their own. [The Japan Times]
¶ Nobel Prize-winning writer Kenzaburo Oe was among the leaders of a rally in Tokyo to protest the resumption of construction of a new nuclear power plant in Aomori Prefecture. [Asahi Shimbun]
World:
¶ Mexican President Calderon inaugurated the first utility-scale solar power plant in Latin America, in the northwestern state of Baja California. [Hispanically Speaking News]
¶ An 80% drop in the price of solar cells over the past five years is helping Pakistan overcome its energy crisis. [The Express Tribune]
US:
¶ Environmental groups are questioning the economics of a nuclear reactor power uprate for Prairie Island. The question has implications for other uprates. [Equities.com]
¶ Complicated laws, resistance from power companies, poor tax incentives, and an emphasis on nuclear energy have kept solar power from achieving success in sunny South Carolina. [equities.com]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 13, 2012
Japan:
¶ TEPCO failed to introduce new safety measures it knew to be needed because of “concern of litigation risks” and “it would exacerbate … public anxiety and add momentum to anti-nuclear movements.” [The Epoch Times]
¶ An advisor appointed to oversee reforms in TEPCO says the nuclear industry should adopt standards common in other Japanese industries, which lead to excellence in performance. Under such standards, any worker can stop a process if he sees a defect. [Chicago Tribune]
World:
¶ The renewable energy surcharge may raise electric costs 11% in Germany next year. [PV-Tech]
¶ There is a plan underway in Germany to have a cap on renewable energy subsidies to take some pressure off consumers. At the same time, the government is planning to increase the goal from 35% renewable by 2020 to 40%. [Bloomberg]
US:
¶ A paradigm shift is under way for use of public lands for energy. Currently, 66% of such use is for coal mining, and 1% is for renewables. Newer development practice would change that. [ThinkProgress]
¶ A plan for streamlining solar projects in the Southwest has been approved, making it easier for developers to establish projects on 445 square miles of land. The land could produce over 16 GW. [The Desert Sun]
¶ The Natural Resources Defense Council and Riverkeeper have released a report detailing how Indian Point can close without causing an electricity shortage or major cost increase. [The Daily Voice]
¶ The NRC says Diablo Canyon is seismically safe. [Chicago Tribune]
¶ A 2.8 MW fuel cell system using biogas for fuel is now online at a California waste treatment plant. It is the largest such system in operation. [Fuel Cell Today]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 12, 2012
Science:
¶ The University of Texas at Austin will conduct a study of how much methane leaks into the atmosphere as a result of natural gas operations. [Environmental Defense Fund]
Japan:
¶ A probe into Fukushima Daiichi Unit 1 finds conditions a little different from what was expected. There is more water in the reactor than anticipated, and though radiation was quite high at some distance above the reactor, it dropped as the probe got to the water. No one really knows where the melted core went. [The Japan Times]
¶ A statement from TEPCO says the company had known safety improvements were needed before last year’s meltdowns, but feared the political, economic and legal consequences of implementing them. [TIME]
World:
¶ Energy investment has fallen for the first time in eight years, as the industry deals with problems of overcapacity. [Environmental Expert]
¶ The German government is looking at ways of capping incentives as the goals for renewable energy generation are realized and renewable power can compete with conventional generation. [Bloomberg]
¶ The British government says it will work with energy officials in Scotland to advance the development of marine and wind energy. Scotland intends to have 100% renewable electric generation by 2020. [UPI]
US:
¶ The US Department of Interior has announced authorization of a 3 GW windfarm complex for Wyoming. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The Union of Concerned Scientists has issued a report on biomass, which says the country could supply 20% of its electrical energy needs by 2030. [Union of Concerned Scientists]
¶ A sinkhole releasing methane, such as the one at Bayou Corne, was predicted in 2010. The prediction said it would be a result of the BP oil disaster, and the way the well was capped. [Examiner.com]
¶ Wells Fargo is investing in solar projects. [NASDAQ]
¶ Two more “imperfections” were found at welds in the reactor head at Beaver Valley in addition to the crack reported earlier. The owner considers this “ordinary” and is applying a new weld. [Timesonline.com]
¶ A roadside solar installation in Carver, Massachusetts brings the state’s capacity to 163 MW, up from 3 MW, when Governor Deval Patrick took office. [Wicked Local]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 11, 2012
Japan:
¶ A load of tobacco grown in Fukushima Province has been rejected by Japan Tobacco because it was above the safe limit for radioactive cesium. [The Japan Daily Press]
¶ Solar power accounts for 83% of new installations approved in Japan. [Businessweek]
World:
¶ A study in Germany, done by the Association for Electrical, Electronic and Information Technologies, indicates that no additional power storage is required when 40% of the energy is from renewable sources. [The Green Optimistic]
¶ BMW is moving its supercomputers to Iceland to take advantage of the renewable power already available there. [TechWeekEurope]
¶ Northern Ireland is adding 800 MW of wind power. [MSN News UK]
US:
¶ An ultrasound inspection revealed a degraded weld at a control rod penetration in the Beaver Valley Unit 2 reactor. The cracks did not provide a pathway for radiation release. [Nuclear Street]
¶ The US is applying heavy tariffs on Chinese solar panels, which are being sold below cost. [Phys.Org]
… The Chinese are accusing the US of obstructing conversions to renewable power. [Recharge]
¶ New Hampshire’s Groton Wind Farm is expected to begin generating power next month. [PSU The Clock] (It will ultimately produce 48 MW.)
¶ A report from the University of Texas at Austin says switching from coal to natural gas could reduce water usage for power plants by 60%. In Texas, this is very important. [energybiz]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 10, 2012
Japan:
¶ Japan’s carbon tax will cost utilities ¥80 billion ($1 billion) per year. [Chicago Tribune]
¶ The emperor and empress will visit a village that lies partially in the no-go zone around Fukushima Daiichi. They are doing this to inspect decontamination work and encourage residents. [The Japan Times]
World:
¶ The Indonesian government is planning to develop renewable energy as a way to keep exporting petroleum. [Platts]
¶ Australia’s first utility-scale solar farm has been put into service. It provides 10 MW. [Power Engineering Magazine]
¶ Solar hot water systems have been installed in 858,000 homes in Australia. [Energy Matters]
US:
¶ An NRC public meeting on the future of the San Onofre plant drew an audience of 1600. The crowd had a lot of anti-nuclear activists in it, along with a lot of nuclear workers. [Capistrano Dispatch]
… Permission to restart San Onofre is not a done deal, according to the NRC’s regional administrator. [Chicago Tribune]
¶ The Federal Government has approved 10 GW of renewable installation on federal lands. [KCET]
¶ A group of activists is planning to sue Entergy for polluting Cape Cod Bay. [WGBH]
¶ The sinkhole at Bayou Corne is getting bigger. The hydrocarbons coming up on the water turn out to be crude oil. [The Advocate]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 9, 2012
Japan:
¶ During the Fukushima Disaster, workers needed to open a valve to supply coolant, but could not do so because the backup battery, an ordinary car battery, was damaged. They did not have the cash needed to buy one, so TEPCO sent a helicopter with the cash the next day. [ROCKETNEWS24]
¶ TEPCO is looking into importing shale gas from the US to lower costs. [The Japan Daily Press]
World:
¶ The government of India is committed to installing 55 GW of renewable power by 2022, providing electrical power to millions of households. [Hindustan Times]
US:
¶ The NRC’s review of the plan to restart San Onofre could be very long. According to the regional administrator, a licence amendment may be necessary, and this could take up to two years. [Washington Post]
¶ Connecticut’s current plan is to have 20% of its electrical power from renewable sources by 2020. The governor is considering increasing that for job growth. [North American Windpower]
¶ Economists say clean coal is too expensive. [WyoFile]
¶ Haliburton has recovered the radioactive device it lost in a desert in Texas a month ago. It had been the object of an extensive search with sophisticated detection gear. It was found by an oilfield worker, who recognized it from a flyer. [Equites.com]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 8, 2012
Japan:
¶ The Japanese government estimates 20 GW of power could be derived from the country’s geothermal resources, and is interested in using it to replace nuclear power. [Hydrogen Fuel News]
World:
¶ The South Australian regulatory agency responsible for retail electricity prices has released a draft price determination that proposes an 8.1% reduction in the minimum price for electricity. The reason behind this appears to be the increases in supply of renewable power. [SBS]
¶ The Chancellor of the UK has been warned by a number of large corporations that mixed messages on renewable power will have a negative effect on investment. [Financial Times]
¶ The UK is becoming an important center for research in marine power, in part because the Severn estuary has the world’s second largest tidal range. [ESI-Africa]
¶ The protests against the Kudankulam atomic power project resulted in 5000 security personnel being called out. Villagers intend to lay siege to the plant. [The Asian Age]
¶ A radiation researcher is making the case that the Kudankulam plant is completely unprepared for solar Coronal Mass Ejection, and could be badly damaged by it. [IBNLive]
US:
¶ Ohio State University has entered an agreement to get 25% of its electric power from wind. [OSU – The Lantern]
¶ Coal is being replaced by natural gas as the main fuel source for generating electricity. [Financial Times]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 7, 2012
Japan:
¶ This weekend, officials from Japan and Europe are meeting to discuss energy solutions at a forum in Kyoto. The focus is the Japanese plan to replace nuclear atomic power with other resources by 2040. [Gulf Times]
¶ The Japanese Prime Minister toured Fukushima Daiichi and inspected the reactor at Unit 4, as workers prepare to remove fuel from it. He is also scheduled to tour municipalities undergoing decontamination. [Radio Netherlands]
World:
¶ A Polish plan restores many incentives for renewable power generation that had been proposed to be cut earlier. The measure also shifts the emphasis away from biomass and onshore wind, toward solar power, offshore wind, and micro-generation. [Reuters]
¶ Before the opening of the first Anaerobic Digestion Conference in Northern Ireland, the country’s Agriculture Minister, Michelle O’Neill, told the press she wanted to see more farmers benefit from renewable power to help support farming activities, and that funds were available too assist in that. [Farming Life]
US:
¶ One place the difference between presidential candidates can be seen most clearly is in their energy policies. [Budgeteer]
¶ In Michigan, voters will decide on Proposal 3, which would create a constitutional amendment requiring 25% of power be from renewable sources by 2025. The issue is controversial. [Lansing State Journal]
¶ The amount of methane in the air is potentially life-threatening in some places around the Bayou Corne sinkhole, according to the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals. It is coming up out of the ground and waters of an expanding area in southern Louisiana, at “bubble sites,” and in household water wells. [Examiner.com]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 6, 2012
Japan:
¶ A citizens group that has been monitoring radiation in Fukushima Prefecture says its readings are consistently higher than the figures the government released. It is suggesting the government somehow manipulated the data it released and purposely misinformed the public. [Asahi Shimbun]
World:
¶ Despite claims to the contrary, generating electricity with coal continues a long decline in Germany, and the country continues to export power, even though several nuclear plants were closed. Renewable resources are now contributing more than either nuclear or hard coal. They may surpass soft coal this year as well. [Renewable Energy World]
¶ Chinese solar panels have been selling at below cost, helping to drive the boom in solar power. That may end soon. What effect it will have on the solar electric market is less certain. [Washington Post]
¶ The UK may be facing higher electric costs and blackouts by 2015, because coal plants will be closed early, according to the energy regulator. [The Guardian]
US:
¶ An ongoing news issue is that NRC whistleblowers are accusing the agency of concealing details of a possible problem from the public. A forty-year-old 385 foot tall earth dam, which supplies cooling water, is upriver from the Oconee nuclear plant. If it fails, the plant could be flooded, and its three reactors damaged. [Greenville News]
¶ Those who have a little extra time may want to visit some of the thirteen homes and businesses on the Solar Tour in Fairbanks. It is from 10:00 to 4:00 today, Alaska time. [Fairbanks Daily News-Miner]
¶ New York’s Lincoln Center will be getting its electric supply entirely from wind power. [North American Windpower]
¶ According to Boeing’s Chief Technology Officer, the airline industry is “begging” for biofuels to power its fleets. [Agri News]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 5, 2012
Japan:
¶ It seems no one in Japan wants to take responsibility for deciding on reactor restarts. The Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary says that the new Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) has the ultimate responsibility. The NRA has said it will only decide on matters of science, and not make decisions about whether reactors should restart. [The Japan Times]
¶ The Ampere Down movement is gaining supporters in Japan. People are replacing circuit breakers with new ones rated for fewer amps, and living within the resulting limitations. Electricity bills go down as power is saved. Also, more Japanese are choosing to live off the grid. [The Japan Daily Press]
World:
¶ The EU’s report on the results of stress tests has issued, and as expected, says practically all nuclear plants are in need of safety upgrades. [Telegraph.co.uk]
… The EU’s energy commissioner says nuclear operators should have to buy liability insurance to cover damages from accidents, just like everyone else. [Financial Times]
¶ Developing wind resources in Ireland could produce 30,000 jobs and €18 billion in revenues for the state by 2020. [Irish Examiner]
US:
¶ Southern California Edison is proposing to run San Onofre Unit 2, the less damaged of the two reactors, at 70% power. [Wall Street Journal]
… The NRC says the review needed to restart San Onofre will take months. [Reuters]
… Unit 3 will remain offline for at least until next summer. [Los Angeles Times]
…Workers at San Onofre say they are working in a climate of fear and distrust. [Inside Climate News]
¶ According to the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity, 205 coal-fueled generating plants will shut down by 2015 because of environmental regulations. [CoalGuru.com]
(Bear in mind, the cause is the regulations, not the pollution.)
¶ Amid fears that natural gas is spreading through the local aquifer from the area of the Bayou Corne sinkhole, testing is being done on gasses bubbling out of the water farther away, and wells will be drilled, to discover the extent of the problem. [The Advocate]
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Tags: coal power, Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 4, 2012
Japan:
¶ Most of Japan’s 46 leading newspapers have called for the abolition of nuclear power. Twenty-eight of them, 61%, called for halting nuclear power altogether; fourteen, 30%, called for gradually replacing nuclear; two called for continuation, and two did not support any position. [Asahi Shimbun]
¶ The Japanese Nuclear Regulatory Authority says its mission is to assess the safety of reactors scientifically, and not to make judgments on whether they should be restarted. [Power Engineering]
World:
¶ The UK’s troubles attracting investors in new nuclear plants have resulted in continuation of depressed uranium prices. Australian mining operators had been hoping on recovery from their problems following the Fukushima Disaster, but it has not come. [The West Australian]
¶ The UK is doing an apparent about-face to renew support for renewable projects, and getting praise from business for it. [edie.net]
US:
¶ The owners of the Crystal River nuclear plant issued a statement on whether the plant will be repaired or closed permanently. The statement says say they do not know what to do. [Melodika.net]
¶ Sumitomo of America is joining its Japanese parent company to invest in a 550 MW solar array in California. Sumitomo already has 1800 MW of renewable capacity in the US. [Solar Industry]
¶ A federal judge has granted a request by the State of Vermont for expedited oral arguments in the appeal of Entergy’s lawsuit against Vermont. [Brattleboro Reformer]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 3, 2012
Technology:
¶ Highview Power Storage, a company in the UK, has been operating a prototype energy storage unit for two years. Excess power from wind farms is used to liquefy nitrogen, which can then be boiled off to produce power when it is needed. [Extreme Tech]
Japan:
¶ Japan Petroleum Exploration has retrieved oil shale from below the Ayukawa oil and gas field in Akita in northern Japan, and hopes to be able to extract fuel from the area. [Reuters]
¶ TEPCO is removing fuel from a reactor at Fukushima Daini. [The Japan Times]
¶ The Hakodate municipal government is considering filing a lawsuit to stop construction of a nuclear plant in nearby Oma, Aomori Prefecture. Hakodate has a population of about 280,000. [The Daily Yomiuri]
World:
¶ The EU commission is being accused in parliament of dodging the tough safety questions on nuclear power, failure to address important issues, and having no proposals to close unsafe reactors. [TheParliament.com]
¶ Wales has relaxed rules to allow certain organizations to install solar panels and some other renewable energy devices without planning permission. [Cogeneration & On-Site Power Production Magazine]
US:
¶ An independent poll of registered voters in areas served by San Onofre shows 50% want the plant shut down, and 30% want it to continue generating power. [U-T San Diego]
¶ The US nuclear power industry is trying to get export controls eased, so it can sell nuclear technology to such countries as China and Russia. [Sydney Morning Herald]
¶ A new poll by Hart Research shows Americans love solar. Among swing voters, 59% say developing solar is very important. The poll covers a lot of other questions about power. [CleanTechnica]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 2, 2012
Japan:
¶ Construction of the nuclear plant in Aomori Prefecture, reported by local media yesterday, is now quite certain. [The Daily Yomiuri]
¶ CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets estimates Japan will have 24.9 GW of renewable capacity by 2016. [Clean Technica]
World:
¶ A decision by the Bulgarian government to abandon construction of a nuclear power plant has put it at odds with Russia. [Telegraph.co.uk]
¶ A report based on the European stress tests has been seen by members of the press prior to release. It says nearly all nuclear reactors in Europe need upgrades for safety. Costs are expected to range from €30 million to €200 million ($38 million to $250 million). [Wall Street Journal]
… The results of the stress test leave many questioning whether nuclear plants are currently safe enough to operate. [Deutsche Welle]
¶ According to a new report from Green Budget Germany, the true total cost of wind power is about half that of electricity from coal. [RenewEconomy]
¶ The Australian government is looking into 100% renewable scenarios for 2030 and 2050. [Climate Spectator]
US:
¶ Customers in Tampa Florida were offered rebates for new PV systems. The total available to all was $1 million. Signing up started online, and the rebates were all claimed in one minute. [WTSP 10 News]
¶ Cost estimates for Crystal River repairs keep going up. A new figure from Zapata, Inc., says that the costs will be $1.5 billion, $200 million more than the owner’s estimates. The estimate for the worst case scenario is $3.4 billion. [Nuclear Street]
¶ An Atomic Safety and Licensing Board will hear objections to renewal of the Indian Point license, beginning October 15. [Reuters]
¶ A shutdown at Palisades was the result of cracks in a pipe associated with a control rod, which leaked radioactive cooling water. The cause of the cracks is unknown. [WOOD-TV]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
October 1, 2012
Japan:
¶ Yoshinori Kobayashi, a comic-book artist famous for his right-wing, nationalist views of Japanese history, has released a comic book called “Exit Nuclear Power.” He believes it will have a negative impact on sales of his books, but is morally necessary for him to take an anti-nuclear stand. [Wall Street Journal]
¶ According to local media, Japan Electric has decided to resume construction of a nuclear plant in Aomori Prefecture. [Global Times]
World:
¶ Investment in renewable technology is moving into Asia, with half the world’s green energy projects in such places as India and China. [EcoSeed]
¶ Geothermal power is becoming increasingly important. Though development is not fast in the US, it is in double digits elsewhere. [Nevada Appeal]
US:
¶ The Florida Supreme Court is considering whether it is right for people to be forced to pay in advance for a product they might never get, and whether, having paid, they are due a refund if the product never comes. The questions center on power from nuclear plants. [Power Engineering]
¶ Renewable energy projects produce jobs. Because of this, a number of important Republican governors are pushing clean technology. [Triple Pundit]
¶ A new coal-burning power plant is starting up in Virginia. It has reduced emissions, with mercury, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and particulate emissions reduced by 99%. [Melodica.net]
¶ The Alabama Public Service Commission has struck a deal to buy electricity generated by Kansas and Nebraska wind farms. The price it is paying is below what it would cost to generate the power using conventional plants in Alabama. Coal supplied 77% of Alabama’s electricity in 1999; today it is supplying 47%. [Clean Technica]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
September 30, 2012
Japan:
¶ Japanese Industry Minister Yukio Edano says nuclear power plants are too risky, and they need to be shut down as quickly as possible. He released a book on the question of nuclear power in Japan, whose title is translated, “Even if I get a beating, I must say this.” [The Japan Daily Press]
World:
¶ The Transition Towns Movement is seeking to create communities that can sustain themselves without fossil fuels for energy. [Poughkeepsie Journal]
¶ The Indian State of Punjab is planning to provide solar photovoltaic power packs to families without electrical power. [Latest News From Punjab]
¶ A new fund is being set up by two Scottish asset management companies to provide £100 million for hydro-electric power projects in Scotland. [Scotland on Sunday]
US:
¶ The Energy Information Administration published its Annual Review. US Energy production hit a record high in 2011. Renewable production increased 13%. Natural gas increased 2%. Oil and nuclear decreased 2%. Coal decreased 6%. [NZweek]
¶ Entergy’s “political arm” is hard at work on the elections. [The Journal News | LoHud.com]
¶ Jay Inslee is running for governor of Washington. His key passion is renewable energy. [Seattle Times]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
September 29, 2012
Japan:
¶ Work on removing debris continues at Fukushima Daiichi. Progress is slow, and has to carefully considered. The beam that fell into Unit 3′ s spent fuel pool slipped when touched by a hydraulic fork, and fell on top of the fuel, evidently without damaging it. [World Nuclear News]
World:
¶ The UK city of Peterborough has plans to become energy independent by 2020. [NewNet]
¶ Renewable power output in the UK rose 6.5% in the second quarter over last year, despite a 31% drop in the output of hydro. The combined output of solar PVs, wave and tidal plants was 470 GWh, an 861% increase over last year. [Power Engineering]
US:
¶ Renewable power saves soldiers’ lives, saves money for the military, and makes the military stronger. Nevertheless new proposals continue to come before congress to prevent the military from pursuing it. [The Hill]
¶ The purchase by a Chinese company of four US wind farms has been blocked by President Obama for security reasons. All four wind farms were close to US military bases. [CNN]
¶ Environmentalists agree that the area around San Onofre needs to be examined for geological faults, but object to the damage to ocean wildlife that will be done by 250 decibel blasts every 15 seconds for 12 days. They say other ways of mapping fault lines exist. [Los Angeles Times]
¶ Renewable Energy Trust Capital, Inc. believes it can lower the cost of capital for solar projects dramatically, cutting the cost of generating solar power by up to 20 percent. [Sacramento Bee]
¶ A renewable energy plant at the City of San José Water Pollution Control Plant in California is now coming online. It uses a 1.4 MW fuel cell for power, and biogas from a waste digester for fuel. [Fuel Cell Today]
¶ More coal plants are closing. Duke Energy is closing two in South Carolina, with a total output of 493 MW, on Monday.
[Triangle Business Journal]
… GenOn will close a [482 MW] plant in Virginia, also on Monday.
[Patch.com]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
September 28, 2012
Japan:
¶ Local officials from Takahagi, Ibaraki, are opposing attempts by the central government to use part of a national forest in the city as a nuclear waste dump. Government assurances of safety are regarded as without value. Other cities have answered similarly. [The Japan Daily Press]
World:
¶ Sunny Bangchak, 44-megawatt project in Thailand, achieved grid connection on September 4. It is the largest PV installation yet in Southeast Asia. The hot and humid climate required panels adapted for the environment. [Bikya Masr]
US:
¶ The natural gas industry is trying to make friends with the renewable industry by claiming to be less destructive than other “brown” fuels, and so a better ally for the changeover to renewables. [GigaOM]
¶ Google is continuing to act on its promise to use renewable power sources by building a 48 MW wind farm in Oklahoma. [TheHostingNews.com]
¶ Georgia Solar Utility, Inc. has proposed plans to deploy 2 GW of renewable energy within the next four years. The company will use a mutual type company so ratepayers will profit from dividends. This represents a $7 Billion economic stimulus for the state. [AltEnergyMag]
¶ Georgia Power is seeking to acquire 210 MW of additional solar capacity through long-term contracts over a three-year period. [Solar Industry]
¶ The US House of Representatives passed the “Coal Miner Employment and Domestic Energy Infrastructure Protection Act,” which protects companies engaging in exploitation of fossil fuels. Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia is betting heavily on solar power. [PlanetSave.com]
¶ Solectria Renewables will provide its Megawatt Solar Stations for the 5 MW True North solar farm in Salisbury, Massachusetts. This solar farm is the largest solar installation in New England and the first direct-to-grid solar farm in Massachusetts. [Your Industry News]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
September 27, 2012
Japan:
¶ The Nuclear Regulation Authority plans to have a set of requirements for plant restarts finalized by next March. Reactors will have to be in compliance with those regulations before they will be allowed to restart. [Asahi Shimbun]
World:
¶ UK renewable energy capacity has grown 42% in the past year. [Business Green]
… Britain is expected to be a net energy exporter by 2020 because of the growth in renewables. [Reuters]
¶ Scotland has set an ambitious goal of getting 100% of their electricity from renewable sources by 2020. They are now ahead of schedule. [reNews Europe]
¶ Europe now has over 100 GW of wind power generation installed. [Business Review Europe]
¶ Solar is becoming a mainstream power source in Europe. [PublicServiceEurope.com]
¶ The IAEA expects more modest growth in the nuclear power industry than it predicted in the past. [Reuters]
US:
¶ A cooperative model makes solar a considerably cheaper power source than conventional grid sources in Massachusetts communities. [SustainableBusiness.com]
¶ Renewable power is growing rapidly in the US. The reasons for growth are not so much because it is good for the environment, but because it is cost-effective. [Businessweek]
¶ UniStar is appealing the NRC decision not to allow its proposed reactor at Calvert Cliffs to proceed. The law says a reactor in the US must have the majority of owners from the US, and UniStar is entirely foreign-owned. [Power Engineering]
¶ Sales of solar PVs have increased for US companies by 45%, manufacturing has increased 9%, but prices have declined. The average price per watt has fallen below $1. [FuelFix]
¶ GE has announced $1.2 billion in new orders for a new series of gas turbines designed to start quickly to compliment renewable resources. [SmartPlanet.com]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
September 26, 2012
Technology:
¶ The US Navy is working on technology to convert carbon dioxide in seawater into fuel for its ships. The object is to increase both range and security. Nevertheless, there was an attempt in congress to curtail the research. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The National Renewable Energy Lab has produced a bacterium that makes ethylene through photosynthesis. It exudes the ethylene, which makes harvest much more efficient. [Platts]
Japan:
¶ There will be no more nuclear reactors going online in Japan between now and next summer, according to the chief of the Nuclear Regulation Authority. [The Daily Yomiuri]
¶ TEPCO says the steel beam that fell into the Fukushima Daiichi Unit 3 spent fuel pool did not damage anything. [The Daily Yomiuri]
World:
¶ Total SA, one of the five largest oil companies in the world, warns that the environmental impact of oil drilling in the Arctic would be too great to be done. The company’s CEO says, “Oil on Greenland would be a disaster.”A leak would do too much damage to the image of the company”. [CNN]
¶ Mecca will be the first city in Saudi Arabia to run entirely on solar power. [EcoSeed]
¶ So far this year, the Co-operative Bank, which operates in the UK, has loaned £232 million for renewable projects. Last year’s total, for the entire year, was £79 million. [AOL Money]
US:
¶ The US military is going renewable. The reasons are simple: reduce casualties, improve logistics, and improve security. [Business Insider]
¶ A proposed federal law would prevent the NRC from granting a renewal of an operating license until ten years before the old license expires. This would prevent Seabrook from getting renewal until 2020. [Boston Globe]
¶ The NRC approved a 17% uprate for St. Lucie Unit 2. The reactor has been down since early August, preparing for the uprate. [World Nuclear News]
¶ GE-Hitachi has won NRC approval for a new uranium enrichment plant in North Carolina. [Power Engineering]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
September 25, 2012
Japan:
¶ The new Japanese Nuclear Regulation Authority will not use the results of stress tests performed by its predecessor. Instead, it will establish its own, new criteria on whether nuclear reactors will be allowed to restart. This means the utilities will have to start the process of restarting over from the beginning, and they do not know where to start yet. [The Japan Times]
¶ Japanese utilities are lobbying hard to restart nuclear power generation. Four of them are likely to go bankrupt if the plants are not restarted. The government is waffling on the subject. Seven and a half million people have signed petitions to abandon nuclear power. Renewable power generation is growing at about twice the rate needed to achieve government goals. [IBTimes.co.uk]
¶ TEPCO has started removing steel debris from Fukushima Daiichi Unit 3. [The Denki Shimbun]
World:
¶ The man responsible for institutional investment of €100 billion at Union Investment expressed “some concern the sector overall may not be enough to absorb the general investment demand, particularly from larger allocators.” [Investment Europe]
¶ The European Commission’s Joint Research Center says renewable energy generation is the only set of power sources that offers price reductions. All others offer price increases. [pv magazine]
¶ Germany now has over 30GW PV of solar capacity. [PV Insider and News Analysis]
¶ A report from GlobalData says renewable power generation in the UK will equal thermal by 2025. [IBTimes.co.uk]
¶ Denmark is now getting 40% of its power from renewable sources. [Reuters]
¶ Scottish Energy Minister Fergus Ewing, talking of the country’s goal of 100% electrical generation by 2020, said, “We are confident, that the target, while being ambitious, is achievable.” [Deutsche Welle]
¶ The World Bank will join a United Nations initiative aimed at increasing the poor’s access to electricity and clean household fuels. [inAudit]
US:
¶ A poll taken for the wind industry indicates 67% of those responding said they would prefer to have their electricity sources supplied by renewable power sources, versus 9% for fossil fuels and 8% for nuclear. [Huffington Post]
… A poll taken for the nuclear industry came up with somewhat different figures, showing 65% support nuclear. [World Nuclear News]
¶ A cavern below the sinkhole at Bayou Corne has been found to have 1300 feet of debris at the bottom. The cavern was full of natural gas, which has been bubbling up to the surface around the area. [The Advocate]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
September 24, 2012
Japan:
¶ The Japanese power industry is working on pushing the ruling Japanese Democratic Party out of power in the next election. The issue is how the government has handled TEPCO and nuclear power. [The Japan Times]
World:
¶ In Australia, poorer families are investing more in solar than wealthier. Right now, over 10% of the population is getting electricity from solar, and 18% are getting some form of power from solar systems. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The nuclear plants at risk from tsunami include many in Asian countries not equipped to deal with disaster as well as the Japanese were at the time of the Fukushima disaster. [EcoSeed]
US:
¶ An article on waste at data centers that appeared in the New York Times provides some insight into why fossil fuels are a thing of the past. [Triple Pundit]
¶ Last month’s shutdown at Millstone is seen as a wake-up call on global warming. Global warming is threatening the nuclear plants’ access to cool water. [The Connecticut Mirror]
¶ Cooperative solar projects are catching on in Delaware. [The News Journal]
¶ Total Energy Today, a trade event in Houston sponsored by Shell and Halliburton, is providing three days of events dealing with energy, with an “all of the above” approach. [CleanTechnica]
… The schedule shows out of about 50 talks and symposiums, 14 deal with renewable energy, 7 with fossil fuels, 7 with finance, 6 with the grid, and 1 with nuclear. [Schedule for Total Energy]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power
September 23, 2012
Japan:
¶ Radiation levels at the town of Futaba, 5.6 km northwest of Fukushima Daiichi, had already gone above safe limits before the first explosion at the plant. [The Japan Times]
¶ A crane knocked a steel beam 7 m. long (23′ 4″), weighing 470 kg. (1034 lbs.), into the Unit 3 spent fuel pool. [NKH]
¶ The town assembly of Okuma, Fukushima, approved a reconstruction plan, under which no residents may return home for at least five years. [The Daily Yomiuri]
US:
¶ A large plastic bin washed ashore in Hawaii, the first debris from the tsunami following the Tohoku Earthquake of 2011 to hit the islands. A Japanese official confirmed that it came from the Fukushima Daiichi plant. [BigPond News]
¶ A better system for transmission and distribution is key to developing renewable electric generation in the US. [The Sun]
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Tags: Fukushima, nuclear, nuclear power, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power