Posts Tagged ‘nuclear waste’

September 5 Energy News

September 5, 2012

Technology:

¶   Hybrid solar cells, which combine both organic and inorganic semiconductors, have long been researched, but do not have much power output. Now, researchers at Vanderbilt University have found that the addition of a protein extracted from spinach provides a large increase in power. [NBCNews.com]

¶   Robots might save the cost of solar electricity by adjusting solar panels to face the sun. In a large solar array, it can be less costly than giving each panel an independent tracking system. [Forbes]

Japan:

¶   The Japanese Government estimates ending nuclear power in that country by 2030 will require investing ¥50 trillion ($638 billion) on other power sources.  That is about $37.5 billion per year. [The Japan Times]
… The average residential electric bill will increase would be from about $124 to $259 per month, according to the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry, which is the most vocal supporter of nuclear power in the Japanese government. [Wall Street Journal]

World:

¶   A small fuel cell CHP system is up and running in Güssing, Austria. [Cogeneration & On-site Power Production Magazine]

¶   Levels of methane in the atmosphere are declining, despite increases in drilling activity. It is believed that better controls may be the cause. [Environmental Expert]

US:

¶   The State of New York says the Indian Point nuclear plant is unnecessary. The Independent Systems Operator was reported to have drawn the opposite conclusion (see August 28 Energy News), but a close reading of their conclusions, and the fact that they are constrained not to base those conclusions on expectations of new power sources, shows they may agree with the state. [newjerseynewsroom.com]

¶   The Electricity Reliability Council of Texas sees solar as a solution to brownouts and blackouts that peak demand has caused during hot times in recent summers. [Austinist]

¶   The Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources has adopted the final Massachusetts Renewable Portfolio Standard Class I regulations. It is defining classifications of waste and implementing changes on eligibility and use. [Waste Management World]

¶   US utility, Direct Energy, is offering its customers the option of buying electricity that is 100% renewably produced. [NewNet]

¶   A group of young Republicans, Young Conservatives for Energy Reform, is trying to change the party’s stands on energy, decreasing dependency on fossil fuels for the sake of both security and prosperity. [Inside Climate News]

¶   A new utility in Georgia will build a solar farm to replace a closing coal plant, if the laws giving a monopoly on electrical generation to the coal plant owner can be changed. [Revmodo]

September 4 Energy News

September 4, 2012

Japan:

¶   The energy and environment committee of the ruling Democratic Party of Japan has proposed abandoning nuclear for generating electricity by the early 2050s, rather than a target of 2030. The proposal includes closing all reactors more than forty years old, restarting only those reactors that have passed strict safety requirements, and building no new reactors. [Asahi Shimbun]

¶   The governments of both Osaka Prefecture and the city of Osaka have formally asked the central government to close the only two reactors running in Japan. Among other things, they criticized the central government for failing to fulfill its obligations on safety. [The Japan Daily Press]

¶   The government is proposing that it promote four specific underdeveloped renewable power sources: offshore wind, tidal and wave energy, geothermal, and biomass.  Combined, these sources produce about 1% of the electricity generated today, and the goal is to increase that to 10% by 2030. [Power Engineering]

¶   The Japanese Environment Ministry has chosen a national forest in Tochigi Prefecture (between Fukushima and Tokyo) as a site for nuclear waste disposal. [The Daily Yomiuri]

 

World:

¶   Chempolis, a Finnish company, is setting up a biorefinery in India. The company says biorefining can cut Indian oil imports by 25%. [Utility Products]

¶   A third of farmers polled by Barclays said they were planning on investing in renewable energy production over the next two years. Renewable generating is seen as a way of diversifying. [FarmersWeekly]

¶   In Northern Ireland, the green economy is producing more jobs than automotive, financial services, and telecommunications combined. [H&V News]

US:

¶   Ocean Power Technologies is setting up the first commercially licensed grid-connected wave-energy generator in the US. [New York Times]

¶   The political positions of US presidential candidates are very different, and there may be no more glaring difference than their positions on coal. Obama has supported environmental limits. Though he had also done so as governor, Romney now supports relaxation of them. [Resource Investing News]

September 3 Energy News

September 3, 2012

Technology:

Elon Musk, founder of Tesla, sees a future when solar power supplies the energy for automotive transportation. [TheGreenWebsite.co.uk]

Japan:

¶   Two components of the new Japanese energy policy are that no new nuclear reactors will be built there, and the reactors will not continue to run after they reach a retirement age of forty years. [publics.bg] 

World:

¶   The Metsamor nuclear power plant, in Armenia, is of great concern to the country’s neighbors. It is rated as one of the oldest and least reliable reactors of Soviet design, and it sits in an active earthquake zone. [News.Az]

¶   With a large house, a heated pool, and a number of heated outbuildings, Scottish businessman Paul Basford was facing utility bills of £23,000 ($36,550) per year. Since he decided to use renewable resources, he has been selling power worth a multiple of that. [Brechin Advertiser]

US:

¶   As a new coal-fired generating plant comes online in Indiana, its customers can expect a rate hike of 40% to 100%. [Care2.com]

¶   A community solar bill, designed to add two gigawatts of  renewable power in California, was killed in committee.  The bill would have enabled cooperatives to buy power from shared solar, wind, biomass, geothermal and small hydro power systems. It was killed after intense lobbying by large utilities. [CleanTechnica]

¶   The Prairie Island Indian Community is petitioning the federal government for a deeper look at the risks of on-site storage because outdoor casks holding spent fuel rods likely will remain in place for decades longer than ever intended. Storage casks have leaked in the past, and long-term storage increases the chances of leakage. [Equities.com]

 

September 2 Energy News

September 2, 2012

Japan:

¶   Officials in the government of Japan say that the new energy plan due out this month will initially aim to reduce dependence on nuclear power to 15%, with review every five years, and an ultimate target of eliminating nuclear power altogether. [The Japan Times]

World:

¶   Energy storage is an important issue for heavy reliance on renewable power. Since excess energy can be used to make hydrogen, which can be stored and used as fuel, Germany is doing a lot of research in hydrogen technology. [Hydrogen Fuel News]

¶   The Indian government may auction a third of the solar projects planned by 2017 during the current financial year. The hope is find sufficient investments to double the nation’s sun-powered capacity while reducing government subsidies. Solar power is important as an environmentally clean answer for power shortages. [Chicago Daily Herald]

¶   Greenpeace is urging Indian telephone companies to use solar power for cell towers, rather than diesel. [Utility Products]

¶   The Indian State of Odisha state has stopped operations at six mines belonging to Coal India, the world’s largest coal mining company, after their environmental clearances expired. [Reuters]

¶   Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is being accused of being directly responsible for a recent coal allocation scam. In the scam, five blocks of coal, worth $3.3 billion, were allocated without auction. [Oneindia]

US:

¶   After a long environmental fight, two coal-burning generating plants in Chicago were shut down in the last week. [Chicago Tribune]
… Three more coal plants will be closed this week in West Virginia. First Energy, which owns them, will also close coal plants soon in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Maryland. The closures are happening because of emissions, particularly of mercury. [WTRF]

¶   A biomass plant being built in Gainsville, Georgia, will produce 100 MW of electricity, enough for 70,000 local homes. It will be fueled by $30 million worth of locally purchased wood scraps each year. It will provide 700 jobs, and $5.5 million each year in tax revenues.  [Gainsville Sun]

Not Energy, but Interesting:

Lamboo, Inc., a company based in Illinois that manufactures engineered bamboo for structural and industrial applications, has designed a ship tender built of renewable material, the world’s first to be made of laminated bamboo. [Galesburg Register-Mail]

September 1 Energy News

September 1, 2012

Opinion:

¶   Free Market Hypocrisy: Why Do We Hold Renewables to Different Standards than Fossil Fuels and Nuclear? [RenewableEnergyWorld.com]

Japan:

¶   According to the leaders of the probes into the Fukushima Disaster, the same sort of failure could happen again. More needs to be learned. Yoichiro Hatamura, who chaired a government inquiry, said a new field of research needs to be established, to determine why current approaches do not work. [Asahi Shimbun]

¶   Japanese judges are less confident on the government’s position on nuclear safety than they had been formerly. The Supreme Court had a study meeting to examine what to do about the issue. [The Japan Times]

¶   TEPCO is having problems with water injection in all three of the reactors that suffered meltdowns. They do not know why this has happened. [The Daily Yomiuri]

World:

¶   SMA Solar, a German company, will sell photovoltaic panels specifically for the purpose of offsetting fuel consumption of diesel generators for the off-grid market. [CleanTechnica]

¶   The UK’s biggest turkey farm is getting a new biomass plant, which will provide electricity and heat. It will also eliminate trips per year for trucks to carry waste away for treatment. [Biomass Magazine]

¶   China widened its lead over the US in the renewable-energy rating by Ernst & Young. The rating gauges the attractiveness of countries to investors. [Business Mirror]

US:

¶   Solar is booming coast to coast, and some companies in the field look quite sound.  [DailyFinance]

¶   New York State has an energy plan in which it says it expects to make up for the loss of Indian Point several times over, in the event that Indian Point is closed. [Politics on the Hudson]

¶   There is some question about whether the containment building at Crystal River can be repaired at all. Compounding that is the fact that electric demand in the area where it sits has gone down, producing the question of whether the plant is needed at all. [Power Engineering]

¶   The expected cost of new reactors at Vogtle has risen by $116 million since February, putting it above what the state regulators said the utility could recover from ratepayers. [Platts]

¶   Unistar, which was denied permission to build a nuclear plant because the law requires at least 50% US ownership, has sixty days to find a partner. So far it has been looking for two years without success, which is mostly a result of economic circumstances. [Baltimore Sun]

¶   The NRC has released guidance on post-Fukushima changes. The include improvements in design and construction, additional features to prevent radioactive release, and improvements in evacuation and other emergency planning. [Fredericksburg.com]

August 31 Energy News

August 31, 2012

Japan:

¶   The Japanese Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry is promoting development of low-cost, high-efficiency technologies to convert electricity generated by renewable energy sources into hydrogen. Hydrogen can be stored, transported, used as a fuel, or used as a feedstock for fuels or chemicals. As a fuel or fuel feedstock, it can be used with solar or wind for load leveling.  [The Denki Shimbun]

World:

¶   Italy now has more electricity supplied by solar than by wind.  Over 25% of all electricity generated in Italy is from renewable power. [Wind-Works.org]

¶   Moray Offshore Renewables Ltd has submitted plans for what would be the largest wind farm on Earth, in the Moray Firth.  At a cost of £4.5 billion, it would power a million homes in 2020. Donald Trump is objecting loudly. [Edinburgh Evening News]

¶   Cracks found in the Doel Unit 3 reactor have caused inspections of the reactors built by Rotterdam Drydock Company because they are assumed to be manufacturing flaws. Nuclear Physicist Nils Bøhmer, general director of Bellona Foundation, believes the cracks are a result of the radioactivity in nuclear reactors, are an indication of age, and will occur in all reactors, in time. [Bellona]

US:

¶   The NRC has denied a license for the Calvert Cliffs 3 reactor. The reason is that the reactor is owned by a French company, and US law requires a majority share be US owned. [The Associated Press]

¶   The US corn crop has been hit badly enough by the drought that it is severely impacting the ability to make ethanol for gasoline. [EIA – Today in Energy]

¶   Coal is becoming less important in western states of the US, and carbon emissions are being reduced, as old coal plants are being replaced by natural gas and renewable power sources. [Denver Post]

¶   US Insurance companies are being advised, in a Forbes editorial, to rethink rates based on increasingly bad weather accompanying global warming, and encouraged customers to adopt climate-change mitigation plans. [Forbes]

¶   A cost benefit analysis is underway for reactors at San Onofre. [KPBS]

August 30 Energy News

August 30, 2012

Technology:

A program at Drexel University is increasing the efficiency of dye-sensitized photovoltaics. [Product Design & Development]

Japan:

¶   Algae can remove cesium and strontium from water, so algae will be used as part of cleanup efforts, with mechanical harvesting. [Zacks.com]

¶   Japan has a trial operation starting for its first offshore floating wind farm off the coast of Goto Islands, Nagasake Prefecture. The wind farm installed a trial 100 kilowatt turbine equipped with an 11-meter rotor diameter on a 60-meter tower. [Marinelink]

US:

¶   Renewable power generation is growing in the US. New installations are more than double those of coal, and catching up with natural gas.  In the last four years, US renewable electric production capacity has grown by 79%. Solar has increased 285%, and wind 172%. [Power Engineering]

¶   In parts of drought-struck Midwest, some farmers are getting an income by harvesting the wind. [Huffington Post]

¶   In California, geothermal power is having trouble competing with solar. [Forbes]

¶   The tidal power project in Eastport, Maine, is progressing. It is receiving $10 million from the DOE. [Electric Power & Light]

¶   The Connecticut River Watershed Council says Vermont Yankee is discharging too much hot water into the Connecticut River. [Commons]

¶   An employee of GE Hitachi has filed a whistleblower lawsuit, claiming he was placed on probation for refusing to make a change in an alarm plan because he believed it would be a violation of NRC regulations. [StarNewsOnline.com]

August 29 Energy News

August 29, 2012

Technology:

¶   Big companies are putting big investments into development of power storage technology. [RenewableEnergyWorld.com]

Japan:

¶   The government has acknowledged that most Japanese people favor doing away with all nuclear reactors. [The Japan Times]

¶   Aomori Prefecture is no longer allowed to ship Pacific cod after two cases in which fish with exceptionally high readings of radioactive cesium were found. [Asahi Shimbun]

World:

¶   E.ON and RWE, the two largest electricity utilities in Germany, have both said they will not build any more fossil fuel generation plants.  The plants are simply not needed, despite phasing out nuclear power. New fossil fuel plants already being constructed are being fitted out for a baseload/peaking combination.  [CleanTechnica]

¶   German renewable development has slowed in some respects, as the country has to deal with the changes caused by a huge increase in renewable power, high feed-in tariffs, and  an old grid. [Power Engineering Magazine]

¶   Indian grid-tied solar power has risen from 2.5 megawatts in 2011 to 1040 megawatts in 2012. [Invest in India]

¶   The Indian government estimates the potential for that country’s small hydro power capacity is 19,750 megawatts. [Invest in India]

US:

¶   Exelon is dropping plans to build a nuclear plant in Texas. The price of natural gas is low, and nuclear power will be unable to compete in the marketplace for the foreseeable future. [Chicago Tribune]

¶   Public lands are being made available for solar farms. [Solar Novus Today]

¶   A new facility in Tulare, California, will produce jet fuel from algae fertilized with gas emissions from a waste treatment plant. They expect to make about half a million gallons per year initially, and hope to expand to six times that eventually. [Biofuels Digest]

August 26 Energy News

August 26, 2012

Technology:

¶   A more energy-efficient and precise way to manufacture thin-film photovoltaic cells is to give up conventional heating systems for manufacture and use microwave ovens instead. [Nanotechnology News]

Japan:

¶   The Onagawa nuclear plant was much closer to the epicenter of the earthquake that caused the disaster than Fukushima Daiichi was. Even so, it did not have a meltdown. The person behind this is an engineer who believes that the three most important inventions in human history are alcohol, the board game “go”, and nuclear power, in that order. He prevented the meltdowns because he did not trust bureaucrats, and believed their safety standards are insufficient. [OregonLive.com]

World:

¶   Radiation from Fukushima could be deadly in Uganda. Used cars from the exclusion zone are being sold there. Radioactive material are said to be present in potentially lethal amounts on the dashboards and bodies. [Daily Monitor]

¶   Palestinians living on the West Bank are trying to break their dependence on Israel for energy. One result is a new solar-powered vehicle. [Arab American News]

¶   Conventional power generation, mostly coal and nuclear, has left 60,000 villages in India without electricity. Now, renewable sources can provide them with power more reliable than the grid, and they can do it at lower cost and faster. [Power Engineering]

US:

¶   The National Renewable Energy Laboratory is testing microgrids, which are being called the ultimate in energy democracy. [CleanTechnica]

¶   The most heavily discussed matter in the energy news right now is the question of whether ethanol should be added to gasoline, when it comes from food stocks and a drought is going on. The accompanying article is an example. [Baltimore Sun]
… But we must ask the question: How renewable is the gasoline/ethanol mix?

August 25 Energy News

August 25, 2012

Japan:

¶   The Japanese Industry Ministry plans to amend legislation to allow direct disposal of nuclear waste without reprocessing into new fuel. [Asahi Shimbun]

¶   Japanese beef is being cleared by US authorities for export to the US. It was already not permitted at the time of the Fukushima Disaster because of foot-and-mouth disease, but since the disaster had to be tested for radiation as well. [Farms.com]

¶   A Japanese home improvement company is planning to invest ¥100 billion ($1.27 billion) on 250 solar power plants with a total capacity of 500 megawatts. [CleanTechnica]

World:

¶   The uranium industry is hoping for an increase in prices because of new reactor construction in China. [Melodica.net]

¶   Europe’s resistance to shale gas could boost renewables. [Utility Products]

US:

¶   Wells Fargo is funding solar power for low-income homes in Colorado. [Denver Business Journal]

¶   Professionals, investors, and philanthropists from the Santa Barbara area have considering community-supported solar power as an innovative new way to help Santa Barbara’s non-profit organizations. [Santa Barbara Edhat]

¶   Some Florida public schools are getting power from solar arrays. This is a benefit in hurricanes, when the schools will be used for emergency shelters. [The Herald|HeraldOnline.com]

August 23 Energy News

August 23, 2012

Japan:

¶   Demand for power has declined 6.3% in Japan, despite hot weather. Critics are pointing out that restarting the Ohi plants has proven unnecessary. [The Japan Times]

¶   Prime Minister Noda was not moved in his meeting with protesters. [The Japan Times]

¶   Plutonium has been found in ten locations tested in Fukushima Prefecture. [The Japan Daily Press]

¶   The Governor of Yamaguchi Prefecture is freezing plans to build nuclear plants there. [The Japan Times]

World:

¶   The national auditor’s report on India’s nuclear safety warns of a Fukushima or Chernobyl-like disaster if the nuclear safety issue is not addressed by the government. [NDTV]

¶   The cracks found in two Belgian reactors, which led to their being shut down, were first found  in 1979, before they even went online. [ABC News]

US:

¶   Federal regulators have approved an experimental wave power electrical generating station. It will be sited off the coast of Oregon. [Electric Co-op Today]

¶   Fort Calhoun’s restart will be delayed until December of 2012, or later. [Reuters]

¶   Power plants are dumping increasingly hot water into lakes and rivers, increasing stress on ecological systems. [Channel 6 News Online]

August 21 Energy News

August 21, 2012

Economics:

¶   Probable reasons are cited for GE’s stated belief that new nuclear reactors are too expensive to be feasible. [Green Chip Stocks]

Technology:

¶   Gas Technology Institute, a developer of fuel technology, announced a new system producing gasoline and diesel fuel from non-food renewable materials. [Science Daily]

Japan:

¶   An old movie that examined the risks of nuclear is drawing new audiences: “Ashita ga Kieru: Doshite Genpatsu?” (Tomorrow is disappearing: Why the nuclear plant?). [Asahi Shimbun]

World:

¶   China asked the US to remove some stimulus measures for the renewable-energy industry, saying they’re against World Trade Organization rules. [Bloomberg]

US:

¶   Xcel’s Colorado Community Solar Gardens Developer Initiative was sold out in thirty minutes.  In fact, it was oversubscribed by 200%. [Triple Pundit]

¶   A third of the workers at San Onofre are being laid off, leading to speculation that the plant will not be brought back online. [Los Angeles Times]

¶   The lawsuit brought by three environmental groups against the NRC over Seabrook is based on a requirement that the NRC consider alternatives to nuclear power, and such alternatives exist in the area. [New Hampshire Business Review]

¶   During the first half of 2012, nearly all new electric plants were powered by natural gas and renewable power.  The new plants tended to be of much smaller size than what was usually built in the past, and many new plants were peaking generators, which deliver power at times of peak demand. [Power Engineering]

August 20 Energy News

August 20, 2012

Technology:

¶   Researchers have developed a way to have solar components track the sun passively, with no moving parts and no use of electricity. [Energy Matters]

Japan:

¶   Newly released video shows TEPCO made plans to abandon Fukushima Daiichi as the disaster was unfolding. Previously, TEPCO officials had denied this. [The Daily Yomiuri]

World:

¶   Between August 8 and August 18, there were ten events at nuclear plants. Eight reactors had unplanned shutdowns, at least one of which is probably permanent, there was a fire at a nuclear facility in the UK, and a large leak of radioactive water was found at Fukushima Daiichi. [DigitalJournal.com]

US:

¶   In southern California, temperatures went up, but electricity demand went down. San Onofre’s idled reactors are being largely replaced by conservation. [MENAFN.com]

¶   Installed capacity of solar electric generation in the US increased almost 100% in 2011. Among utilities and other commercial operations it rose 145% and 132% respectively. In the same time, residential installations rose 25%. [SmartPlanet.com]

¶   At the large sinkhole in Louisiana, a metal casing has been driven into the ground, and crews are almost ready to begin their work of drilling an observational well. Meanwhile, natural gas continues to bubble up, and no one is clear on where it is coming from. [The Advocate]

August 18 Energy News

August 18, 2012

Technology:

¶   IBM has a new thin-film PV technology that can be printed or cast, is made of such common elements as copper, zinc, and tin, and has a 11.1% solar-to-electric power conversion efficiency, setting a new record. [eWeek]

Japan:

¶   National policy minister Motohisa Furukawa said that none of the reactors at Fukushima Daiichi and Fukushima Daini should ever be restarted. [The Japan Times]

¶   A number of large solar projects are planned for the Chubu Region of Japan. [The Japan Times]

World:

¶   The International Atomic Energy Agency said it has made “significant progress” in a number of key areas of its 12 point Action Plan on Nuclear Safety, which was begun after the Fukushima Disaster. [World Nuclear News]

¶   China increased its wind-generated capacity by over 50 gigawatts in the last year. The increase in capacity has averaged 87% each year for the last six years. [RenewableEnergyWorld.com]

US:

¶   Commissioner Liz Miller of the Vermont Department of Public Service is asking the NRC to look into a series of problems at Vermont Yankee. [Boston.com]

¶   Three environmental groups, Beyond Nuclear, Seacoast Anti-Pollution League and the New Hampshire Chapter of the Sierra Club filed suit against the NRC over relicensing at Seabrook. [Seacoastonline.com]

¶   New legislation would enable $50 billion in bonds to be raised for green energy. [SustainableBusiness.com]

¶   New York Governor Cuomo signed legislation promoting solar energy in his state. [PennEnergy]

August 17 Energy News

August 17, 2012

Technology:

¶   A new battery design uses paper industry waste for the cathode, reducing the amount and cost of metals needed. [EarthTechling]

Japan:

¶   More information is gradually becoming available about contamination and casualties of the Fukushima Disaster. There was a marked increase in the death rate in Japan after the disaster. Not counting accidental deaths from the earthquake and tsunami, there were 38,700 more in the year following the Fukushima Disaster  than there were for the previous year. [Huffington Post]

World:

¶   The entire energy industry is changing because of the changes in the solar PV industry, which is now at 32 GW and growing rapidly. The old energy paradigm is being turned on its head, and utilities are facing enormous challenges. [The Australian]

¶   Thousands of cracks may have been detected in the Doel Unit 3 reactor vessel.  [Power Engineering International]
… Belgian regulators have shut down a second reactor made by the same manufacturer as Doel Unit 3, fearing it may have the same manufacturing flaws. [EurActiv]

US:

¶   The clean energy sector now accounts for 1.7% of the Massachusetts workforce, employing 71,523 workers. This number is projected to grow by 12.4% in the coming year. [Wicked Local]

¶   US carbon dioxide emissions have dropped to a twenty year low, largely because a low price for natural gas has induced utilities to switch from coal to natural gas. [Morning Sentinel]

¶   Owners of Millstone are looking for ways to operate Unit 2 when water is at higher temperatures. There is some hope that equipment changes will help. [The Day]

¶   The Omaha Public Power District says it cannot reopen Fort Calhoun, so it is turning control over to Exelon Corp. [Omaha World-Herald]

¶   NRC Commissioner William Ostendorff is under investigation for attempting to pressure the NRC Inspector General to stop a safety investigation. [Huffington Post]

August 16 Energy News

August 16, 2012

Technology:

¶   A researcher at MIT has found a way to stabilize chlorophyl taken from leaves or blades of grass, clearing the way to using it in photovoltaic panels, and suggesting yet another way to produce electricity from sunlight inexpensively. [Daily News & Analysis]

¶   Carbon dioxide can be used as a feedstock for fuels and plastics. Expectations are that by 2030, improved efficiency will make it possible to take carbon dioxide directly from the atmosphere to make plastics; until then exhaust gas from combustion can be used. [EcoSeed]

Japan:

¶   A leak of radioactive water was located after covering the Unit 4 control room with a puddle one cm. deep.  The water is described as containing “tens of thousands of becquerels of radioactive cesium per cubic centimeter,” which translates into tens of millions of becquerels per kg. [The Daily Yomiuri]

¶   One study says radiation exposure caused severe mutation in butterflies.  Another says human beings got very little exposure to radioactivity. [Perth Now]

World:

¶   Mongolia is expanding its electric production for the first time in twenty-five years with the opening of its first wind farm.  Capacity is 50  megawatts. [Green Economy]

US:

¶   Goldwind, a Chinese company, has entered into an agreement with All Earth Renewables to supply Vermont’s Georgia Mountain wind farm with four of its 2.5MW turbines. [Windpower Engineering]

¶   A study by Michigan State University indicates that if the state goes to 25% renewables for its energy by 2025, it would create 74,000 jobs and bring $10 billion of investment into the state. [Smart Grid News]

¶   Communities in the Northeast Kingdom have voted in favor of new wind projects there. [EcoSeed]

¶   A water leak in the containment building at Palisades resulted in a special inspection by the NRC. [PennEnergy]

¶   Petco has recalled stainless steel food bowl for pets because of cobalt-90 in the steel. [Bandera County Courier]

August 14 Energy News

August 14, 2012

Technology:

¶   The US National Renewable Energy Laboratory has issued a report saying fuel cell technology is advancing rapidly. [Hydrogen Fuel News]

Japan:

¶   TEPCO has removed the vessel head from Unit 4 at Fukushima Daiichi, as part of debris clearing so they can remove fuel from the spent fuel pool. [World Nuclear News]

World:

¶   Lithium-ion batteries may provide stable electric micro-grids in many parts of the world without electric service today. [Energy Harvesting Journal]

¶   German utility giant RWE increased its renewable power production by 29% year-on-year in the first half of 2012. One of its plants is a 750 MW coal plant that has been converted to run on biomass. [Recharge]

US:

¶   One of the two reactors at Millstone was shut down because the water in Long Island Sound was too warm. [Wall Street Journal]

¶   A bill before the California legislature would enable community renewable energy in that state. [KQED]

¶   Solar power in Vermont: Yes in my Back Yard! in Charlotte. [equities.com]
… A solar farm is being discussed for Bennington. [NorthJersey.com]

 

August 9 Energy News

August 9, 2012

Japan:

¶   In an address to people gathered for the anniversary of the bombing of Nagasaki, Prime Minister Noda reiterated his government’s commitment to reducing the country’s dependence on nuclear energy. [RTT News]

World:

¶   Microgrids and solar power could be the answer to India’s power crisis. [OilPrice.com]

¶   Australians are converting to solar PVs, even after government support declines. [Energy Collective]

¶   German state development bank KfW plans to put about 100 billion euros ($123.6 billion) into financing the shift to renewable energy in Europe’s biggest power market. [Reuters Africa]

US:

¶   The Obama administration is putting seven large renewable energy projects on the fast track. [The Guardian]

¶   US wind power capacity has reached 50 GW. (Though the article does not say so, this means about 0.0001% of the potential has been developed) [EcoSeed]

¶   Today, the NRC will explain why cracks in the Davis-Besse containment building are okay. [Plain Dealer]

¶   The New York Attorney General is disputing the cost estimated by Entergy for decommissioning Indian Point, saying it is about one seventh of the actual amount, arguing that the deficiency is sufficient reason to deny relicensing. [Poughkeepsie Journal]

¶   NRG Energy, which produces enough electricity to power 20,000,000 homes in the US, is starting to make significant profit from renewable energy.  Solar projects are being finished ahead of schedule, and the company is increasing investment in the field. [Recharge]

July 26 Energy News

July 26, 2012

Japan:

¶   A video featuring the manager of Fukushima Daiichi at the time of the disaster will be aired on August 11. He describes the workers who stayed at the plant to cool reactors down as “saints in hell.” [The Japan Times]

¶   Three reactors are being studied as potential candidates for restarting, but it is not clear how the restarts will proceed while a new nuclear regulatory agency is being founded. [The Daily Yomiuri]

¶   The Japanese government has chosen five candidates for leadership of the new nuclear regulatory agency. [Fox]

¶   Workers hired as cleanup contractors have been exposed to four times as much radiation as utility employees. [Asahi Shimbun]

US:

¶   Areva is building a new US technical center and cooperating with Northrop Grumman to provide cybersecurity support for nuclear facilities. [World Nuclear News]

¶   The TVA is considering using MOX fuel made from old nuclear bombs. [Power Industry News]

¶   S&P is downgrading Duke Energy because of lack of transparency in the replacement of the new CEO after the recent merger of Duke with Progress Energy. [Reuters]

July 7 Energy News

July 7, 2012

Opinion:

Was the Fukushima Disaster preventable? Not by human regulators.

Japan:

¶   «Asahi Shimbun» is calling for another review of all nuclear power plants because of the Parliamentary Report on the Fukushima Disaster. [Asahi Shimbun]

¶   Protestors in Tokyo are growing in numbers, and becoming increasingly critical of Prime Minister Noda. [Asahi Shimbun]

World:

¶   I am not sure how this is done.  On the same day, «Power Engineering» reports:
… (1) world nuclear production fell 4.3% because of the Fukushima Disaster [Power Engineering]
… (2) world nuclear production is at record levels, despite the Fukushima Disaster [Power Engineering]

US:

¶   Union representatives at Pilgrim agreed to bring the new Entergy contract offer back to the membership for a vote. [Boston Globe]

¶   This article, by a lawyer who has worked for the nuclear industry, discusses pros and cons of the possible NRC responses to the Appeals Court decision on waste.  It concludes that restarting Yucca Mountain will restore waste confidence and public trust in the NRC. [The Foundry]

¶   Gregory Jaczko argues that the current US program is flawed because many safety improvements are made on a cost-benefit basis which do not factor in the cost of lost real estate and displacements of people. [New York Times]

June 26 Energy News

June 26, 2012

Japan:

¶   Experts say the spent fuel pool of Unit 4 at Fukushima Daiichi is a disaster waiting to happen. [Radio Australia]

¶   TEPCO is finally admitting a slight lean in the Unit 4 building.  [NHK World]
…  (This has been reported without confirmation for over a year at ENENEWS, whom we thank for bringing the report to our attention.)

¶   According to NHK, a 92 hectare (227 acre) park in Tokyo is to be decontaminated because of radioactive fallout from Fukushima Daiichi. [NHK World].
…  (Again, thanks to ENENEWS.)

¶   Another earthquake at Fukushima could lead to a disaster ten times worse than Chernobyl. [Australian Broadcast Corporation]

¶   The number 3 reactor at Ohi will be restarted on July 1, and is expected to be producing at full power on about July 8-11. The number 4 reactor at the same plant is expected to be started on July 17-21, and to produce full power on July 24-31. [Reuters]

¶   Protesters say the restart at Ohi was rushed, and the plant was declared safe without considering difficulties evacuation would pose, or even infrastructure, which needs upgrades. [The Japan Times]

World:

¶   The government of Korea is getting proactive about construction of wind turbines. [REVE]

¶   The city of Beijing is considering a sister-city relationship with Copenhagen, partly because it may facilitate installation of 100 wind turbines. [REVE]

US:

¶   A shipment of two dry casks arrived by barge for Seabrook. They are in parts that will be assembled at the plant. Transporting them from the port to the plant requires use of two trucks, each with 100 tires on the trailer, which will move on the roads at 5 miles per hour. [Seacoastonline]

¶   The New Jersey legislature is considering a bill intended to avert collapse of the solar market in that state. New Jersey has seen a decline in the price of solar credits for owners of solar arrays earn for their investment, resulting from rapid expansion of solar production. [NJSPOTLIGHT]

June 10 News

June 10, 2012

US:

A Duke Energy wind farm will soon house a 36 MW storage battery. [Article in OA Online]

Opinion:

Johnny Johnson, Prairie Island tribal council president, spoke to the press about a decision made by an appeals court on Friday.  The decision instructed the NRC to review its practice of allowing in situ long-term nuclear waste storage.  He said, “Today’s court decision is a strong signal to the federal government that rather than avoiding its responsibility and looking for ways to legalize long-term radioactive storage at temporary sites, the federal government needs to comply with the law to build a permanent repository and remove nuclear waste from Prairie Island.”  The Federal Government needs to obey the law! Wow! The Federal Government needs to accept its responsibilities! Bravo!

The quote appears in an article in the Post-Bulletin, of Rochester, Minnesota.

Here, in New England, we have a lot of groups of people working to bring some sanity to the use of nuclear power.  The New England Coalition (NEC) puts efforts into legal and legislative battles, and is among those who represent science based sanity before public boards and the NRC.  The NEC has also provided legal and technical support to the states of Maine, Massachusetts, Vermont, New York and New Jersey, including support helping produce Friday’s court decision.  Pilgrim Watch has worked tirelessly in court and before the NRC to close the Pilgrim nuclear plant.  Many other groups, such as the Citizens Awareness Network, and Safe and Green, have worked to increase awareness among the public of the dangers they face for the sake of the profits of corporate owners and managers.

Johnny Johnson has eloquently reminded me once again that we are all in this together.  Vermont Yankee, Pilgrim, and Indian Point take up much of my attention.  Fukushima gives me bad dreams.  But there are groups fighting the same fight in Minnesota, and, indeed, all over the world.  Johnny Johnson has reminded me of the eternal and cosmopolitan nature of valuing responsibility and lawfulness, which our government and corporate leaders seem to have forgotten.

June 9 News

June 9, 2012

Japan:

TEPCO has put a 60-ton cover on the spent fuel pool of Unit 4 at Fukushima Daiichi. [News release from TEPCO]

World:

German solar power farms supplied 10% of the electricity used in Germany in May. [Article from Federal News Radio]

A 9000 GWh per year solar farm is being planned for Tunisia to sell electricity to Europe. [Article at Tunisialive]

US:

A federal appeals court ordered the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to redo environmental analysis that allows nuclear waste to be stored at plant sites for 60 years after the plant closes.  The order says that the NRC may not depend on an underground waste storage facility, like the one proposed for Yucca Mountain, because it might not happen. [Article at the Wall Street Journal]

Even if Yucca Mountain opened tomorrow, it would not solve the problem. [Article in the New York Times]

The NRC may not issue new licenses or renew old ones until the storage is worked out.  [New York AG Press Release]

Rep. Edward Markey is demanding answers from the NRC about how Pilgrim’s emergency response capability can be maintained while the plant’s full-time staff is off work during a labor dispute. [Article in Power Engineering]

Opinion:

Depending on nuclear power is like depending on narcotics. [geoharvey blog page]