Posts Tagged ‘photovoltaic’
November 18, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “The U.S. Government Has Invested $34 Billion in Renewable Energy – and It’s Making a Profit” Is the United States government a savvier investor in green technology than Silicon Valley’s masters of the universe? It sure looks like it. A report shows that the DOE has far fewer failures than a typical venture capital firm, and is earning money for taxpayers. [TakePart]
World:
¶ The Leader of the US Senate says that under the China-US climate deal, China can “do nothing at all for 16 years.” That turns out to be the very reverse of the truth. China is already leading the world in greening its energy supply, and has committed to add a massive 1.3 GW of renewable power capacity every week for 15 years. [The Ecologist]
¶ In a huge victory for local communities, public health, and the rule of law, yet another enormous proposed coal plant has been denied clearance in India. In another major setback for the expansion of the coal industry, a panel of judges rejected the environmental clearance for a 3,600-MW coal-fired power plant in Tamil Nadu, India. [Energy Collective]
¶ As critics of the Energiewende like to point out, in 2013, Germany’s emissions rose to 952 million tonnes. Nevertheless, while that is an increase, it is actually 23% lower than its figure for 1990, which is the baseline year adopted by nations who signed the Kyoto Accord. By comparison, the world’s emissions are now 61% higher than 1990 levels. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Russia and China have signed two large natural gas deals in the last six months as Russia turns its attention eastward in reaction to sanctions and souring relations with Europe, currently Russia’s largest energy export market. But the move has implications beyond Europe, and will have effects on the natural gas producers in the US. [Resilience]
¶ Australian senators opposed to wind energy are set to establish yet another inquiry into its alleged effects on power prices, human health and wildlife. The new inquiry, the latest in a long list of investigations into renewable energy and wind power, is proposed by senators who have favored abolishing the renewable energy target. [The Guardian]
¶ The groundbreaking ceremony for the construction of a 71-MW c-Si solar panel manufacturing facility in the San Juan province of Argentina was attended by a number of important politicians. Completion is currently expected sometime next year, with the first solar panels coming off the lines sometime in late 2015. [CleanTechnica]
US:
¶ Coal-fired power plants have been the backbone of US electricity production for decades, but 25% of them will be retired by the end of this decade. Some of their replacements will be fueled by LNG. Others will make way for a disruptive technology that can “switch from charging to discharging in less than 1 second” and has a “significantly higher capacity use factor.” [CleanTechnica]
¶ Ikea, the largest furniture retailer, made its biggest renewable-energy investment to date by buying a 165-MW wind farm in southern Texas. Apex Clean Energy Inc is building the wind farm, which will have 55 Acciona SA 3-MW turbines. Ikea plans to invest a total of $1.9 billion in wind and solar power by the end of 2015. [Businessweek]
¶ SunEdison can continue its growth even without the support of tax credits in the US, the company said on Monday, as it agreed to a $2.4 billion deal for privately owned First Wind that will make it the world’s largest developer of wind and solar power. First Wind has wind farms in several states, including Maine, New York, and Vermont. [Financial Times]
¶ Earthjustice released an interactive map displaying where states currently stand on renewable energy in light of the Obama Administration’s proposed Clean Power Plan. It shows that many states can readily comply with the Clean Power Plan, and some are already aimed at achieving even achieve greater emissions reductions. [AltEnergyMag]
¶ The Electric Reliability Council of Texas anticipates that implementation of the US EPA’s proposed rule for reducing greenhouse gas emissions will result in the retirement of up half of ERCOT’s coal generation capacity, raise retail energy bills up to 20% and lead to a greater likelihood of rotating outages. [Platts]
¶ Altus Power America, Inc. announced a long-term solar Net Metering Credit Purchase Agreement with the Town of Belchertown, Massachusetts. The 20-year contract will help Belchertown save up to $160,000 annually with estimated savings of $2.7 million over the duration of the 20-year term. [Virtual-Strategy Magazine]
¶ Ratepayers have sued Southern California Edison Co and state electric power regulators for $3 billion in federal court. They allege the defendants have illegally collected millions in monthly electric bills from more than 17 million customers since a nuclear power plant was shuttered last year. [PennEnergy]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 17, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “Missing The Big Picture About California’s Low Electric Bills Again” Despite all the facts, the myth that Californians pay a lot of money for their electricity every month continues to be perpetuated. This time around, it was a Forbes blog contributor who fell for the same misconception. [Energy Collective]
World:
¶ In Australia, the Victorian Labor Party is underlining its renewable energy credentials by vowing to help the town of Newstead, near Bendigo, to become 100% renewable energy by 2017, making it the state’s first “solar town”. The effort will focus primarily on solar power and battery storage for reliable 100% renewable power. [RenewEconomy]
¶ Dutch energy companies, farmers and other operators of renewable energy want to demolish and replace 172 recently built mega windmills in order to collect an additional subsidy. Wind turbines that are still in working order are being replaced with new ones as operators do not receive subsidy for the old ones. [NL Times]
¶ Transparency Market Research, in its latest research report, says the global geothermal power generation market will grow significantly. It was valued at $2.5 billion in 2013, and is expected to reach a figure of $8.9 billion by 2019. This is a compound rate of growth of 23.58%. [GlobeNewswire]
¶ The region Australians call New England may become the first region in the country to be powered 100% from renewable energy sources. The Northern Tablelands Greens candidate Mercurius Goldstein says this would provide energy security while keeping the region free from Coal Seam Gas mining. [The Inverell Times]
¶ The Indira Paryavaran Bhavan, a central government building in New Delhi, is India’s first net zero energy building that has been constructed with adoption of solar passive design and energy-efficient building materials. The building has a number of features reducing environmental impacts aside from energy. [eco-business.com]
¶ Power generation in Nigeria will receive a boost with the addition of 1200 MW by American investors. This follows on the heels of a Memorandum of Understanding signed between a consortium of American investors and the federal government. The project is to be completed within two years. [Leadership Newspapers]
¶ Brazil will surpass the United States as the world’s top market for biopower, research firm GlobalData reported. The US remains the world’s global biopower leader for now, but Brazil is expected to increase its countrywide biopower installed capacity from 11.51 GW in 2013 to an estimated 17.1 GW by 2018. [International Business Times]
¶ Speaking to BusinessLine from London after release of IEA’s World Energy Outlook 2014, the chief economist of the International Energy Agency said softening of crude oil prices will not last forever and signs of stress must not be ignored. US tight oil output will level off, and non-OPEC supply will fall back in the 2020s. [Hindu Business Line]
US:
¶ Electric cooperatives are facing a new challenge that centers on how today’s members view renewable energy. “For the first time, we see cooperative members who want to talk about and want to see renewables and clean power, and they see that as more important than reliability and cost. And that’s a major change.” [Electric Co-op Today]
¶ A renewable energy program in San Francisco could create more that 8,100 construction jobs by building $2.4 billion worth of proposed solar, wind and geothermal projects, a new report says. That refutes many criticisms made by Mayor Ed Lee when the city killed a previous version of CleanPowerSF. [SFGate]
¶ The giants of the tech world are at the forefront of clean energy right now. Rapidly advancing technology is a cornerstone of sustainable energy; the latter is predicated on the former. One company, however, doesn’t seem to be riding the clean energy wave, and they’re slightly bigger than your average start-up: Amazon. [RYOT]
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Tags: photovoltaic, PV, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 16, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “Japan’s 21st-century tsunami stones” A familiar sight along Tohoku’s Sanriku coastline are the tsunami stones erected by past generations that alert residents to the high-water mark of previous tsunami and the perils of building any closer to the sea. There have been four investigations into why the possibility of tsunami was ignored in the nuclear safety culture. [The Japan Times]
Science and Technology:
¶ Solid-state batteries capable of delivering on a 400+ mile range per single charge are a real possibility and possess “great potential” according to Volkswagen’s Chairman of the Board Dr Martin Winterkorn. If such a battery can be economically manufactured, then that would more-or-less turn the industry upside-down. [CleanTechnica]
World:
¶ The UK’s Junior Minister for Energy and Climate Change, Amber Rudd, recently made a rather blunt statement that solar farms “are not particularly welcome in the UK.” This follows closely on the heels of comments by the UK’s Environment Secretary that she didn’t want English farmland to have “its appearance blighted by solar farms.” [CleanTechnica]
¶ With India getting ready to give a big push to tap solar energy in the next six to eight years, the Indian prime minister pushed for a global effort to make clean energy available to all. In his statement on energy at the G20 summit in Brisbane, Australia, he stressed the major economic opportunity for all countries. [Times of India]
¶ Serbia’s Minister of Mining and Energy Aleksandar Antic opened the largest solar power plant in Serbia in Kladovo on Saturday. It is owned by a Serbian company that invested €3 million in it. Renewable energy sources account for 21% of Serbia’s power production currently and that share will go up to 27% by 2020, he pointed out. [InSerbia News]
¶ Danish developer DONG Energy has been named as the preferred partner to create a wind farm off the coast of the Isle of Man. It could accommodate up to 100 turbines and potentially generate 700 MW of electricity for the UK, generating an income of at least £5 million per year for the Isle of Man Government by 2023. [Isle of Man Today]
¶ Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott may have thought he left global climate change off the agenda for the G20 summit in Brisbane, but US President Obama and UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon put it in the spotlight through a series of actions in the past few days. Obama ensured climate change was front and center before he even got to Australia. [Mashable]
US:
¶ The Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s microgrid project, the “Complete System-Level Efficient and Interoperable Solution for Microgrid Integrated Controls,” aims to standardize the toolkit for managing and controlling an effective, reliable, and safe microgrid. It is now two years in, and the fruits of the labor are starting to show. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Arizona Public Service Co. recently opened a solar power plant near Gila Bend that brings the state’s largest utility closer to its renewable-energy goals. The Gila Bend Solar Power Plant is the newest in APS’ AZ Sun program, which now includes seven solar-energy plants around the state. Two more solar plants are in the permitting and planning stages. [azcentral.com]
¶ Another big renewable energy project is coming to Redstone Arsenal in Alabama. Thursday the Army Corps of Engineers Engineering and Support Center in Huntsville hosted a pre-proposal conference for companies interested in building and operating a large combined heat and power project on Redstone Arsenal. [AL.com]
¶ President Barack Obama will pledge $3 billion to a United Nations climate-change fund that’s intended to help poor nations boost renewable energy and counter the ill effects of global warming. With pledges in place from Germany and France, and one coming from Japan, the Green Climate Fund is nearing its goal of securing $10 billion in pledges. [Businessweek]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 15, 2014
Resilience and Sustainability:
¶ The first article in a new series in The Guardian about individuals helping to make cities more resilient: There are many lessons to be learned from Alex Wilson’s farm in Vermont. Building durable, well-insulated buildings with simple, redundant systems out of easy-to-fix local, renewable materials in strong, caring communities makes sense just about anywhere. [The Guardian]
Opinion:
¶ “Dark Money Makes The Utility World Go ‘Round” A so-called consumer advocacy group from with ties to the fossil fuel-loving Koch brothers recently submitted 2,500 signatures from Wisconsin ratepayers to the Wisconsin Public Service Commission asking for rate increases and a hefty tax on solar-powered consumers. [CleanTechnica]
¶ “Watching the Watchdogs: 10 Years of the IEA World Energy Outlook” The IEA World Energy Outlook has gradually moved from rosy to what may be called “increasingly reality-based.” Nevertheless, it seems that politics continues to play a strong role in what is allowed to be published. [Resilience]
World:
¶ India’s Energy Minister Piyush Goyal has announced that India plans to completely stop coal imports within 2 to 3 years. India, China, and the US account for about ¾ of the world’s coal consumption. China and the US are both cutting use of coal, so the Indian announcement looks bad for coal exporters. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Quebec is looking to update its 10-year energy plan, with a new wind energy policy being a vital part of it. Quebec’s Natural Resources and Energy Minister is reopening consultations on a new ten-year energy plan. One information source is a report advocating a further push in clean energy, including wind energy. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The China-US climate agreement between the world’s top two polluters puts pressure on India to become more energy efficient and use more renewable energy. “The international community will now expect India to make some firm commitments,” said a former head of India’s Environment Ministry. [Longview News-Journal]
¶ The Asian Development Bank and the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs today signed an agreement to fund the South Asia Sub-regional Economic Cooperation Power Expansion Project with a grant of approximately $60 million. The grant will be used to address problems in Nepal’s energy sector. [Himalayan Times]
¶ Gaelectric launched its £58 million Dunbeg Wind Farm in Northern Ireland. The 42-MW wind farm comprises 14 Enercon wind turbines, with the capacity to generate up to 3 MW. It will generate sufficient renewable power to meet the electricity demand of nearly 24,000 homes on an annual basis. [PennEnergy]
¶ World’s first renewable energy plant to combine geothermal and biomass is underway after Enel announced the biomass unit has begun construction adjacent to existing Cornia 2 geothermal plant in Tuscany. The biomass unit will be fed with locally sourced forest biomass to fuel a 5-MW boiler. [CSP World]
US:
¶ Republicans in the US approved legislation, 252-161, for the ninth time to authorize construction of the Keystone XL oil pipeline. The Senate is expected to vote Tuesday on the bill. If it overcomes a 60-vote threshold it will head to President Barack Obama’s desk where he will either sign it into law or veto it. [Great Falls Tribune]
¶ The much-maligned Department of Energy loan guarantee program that funded solar manufacturer Solyndra and electric vehicle maker Fisker Automotive is now making money for U.S. taxpayers. Further losses are not expected, and interest on the loans will ultimately net up to $6 billion for taxpayers. [Utility Dive]
¶ Google, Yahoo and Microsoft are part of a growing number of tech and other major companies that are entering into long-term “power purchase” agreements (PPAs) with wind farms to ensure a steady stream of power, at a fixed cost, over a period as long as several decades. [Independent Online]
¶ In great news for the US wind industry, the latest data shows it leads the world on wind energy production. Even though China has a third more wind turbines installed, US wind farms are pumping out 20% more electricity, accounting for over 5% of US electricity this year for the first time. [SustainableBusiness.com]
¶ Facebook has a new data center in Iowa that is 100% powered by renewables. Rights have gone to Berkshire Hathaway’s MidAmerican Energy to own and operate it. Over 140 MW of renewable energy is added to the grid, which is more than enough to power the new Facebook Data Center. [InvestCorrectly]
¶ The Electric Reliability Council of Texas says that wind-powered generation recently set another record. The record was set at 10:39 a.m. on Nov. 2, when instantaneous output reached 10,301 MW, providing 33.4% of the power within ERCOT. The old record, set on March 26, totaled 10,296 MW. [North American Windpower]
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Tags: photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 14, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “OPEC Doesn’t Take Electric Cars Seriously” Just how dominant will oil remain? In the latest OPEC World Oil Outlook report, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries thinks that electric cars will have almost no impact on oil usage. I say let’s prove them wrong. [Gas 2.0]
¶ “More Lies From ALEC About Climate Change” I don’t envy Lisa B. Nelson, the new CEO at the American Legislative Exchange Council. If Nelson thought she was going to be able to quietly go about her business when she joined the secretive lobby group, she was sadly mistaken. [Huffington Post]
Science and Technology:
¶ Aquion Energy announced the second generation of its Aqueous Hybrid Ion battery and energy storage system technology. The new technology reportedly offers an increase in energy “of up to 40%,” without any increase in the size or weight of the S-Line Battery Stack or the M-Line Battery Module product lines. [CleanTechnica]
¶ A new kind of battery is by far the cheapest of a new generation of large, long-lived batteries enabling heavy use of intermittent energy sources for microgrids. It is produced by Aquion Energy, a company spun out of Carnegie Mellon University. It costs about twice as much as a lead-acid battery. [MIT Technology Review]
World:
¶ A cool summer and increased levels of hydro generation has resulted in a significant reduction in coal-generation in China over recent months, with coal consumption in August down by 11%. A large impact, has been on coal imports, which have fallen by half, with heavy impact on Australia. [CleanTechnica]
¶ A landmark lawsuit that challenges the lax regulation of hydraulic fracturing in Canada has just scored a major victory. An Alberta Chief Justice dismissed all key arguments made by the government of Alberta against the lawsuit, including the fear of a flood of lawsuits against a government dependent on hydrocarbon revenue. [Resilience]
¶ The UK’s Energy Secretary unveiled a £10 million fund to support community-owned renewable energy schemes in England. The Urban Community Energy Fund will give community groups in England the opportunity to bid for grants of up to £20,000, or loans of up to £130,000 to help kick-start their projects. [Click Green]
¶ Small Scale Power Generation Sector through renewable energy sources such as wind power, solar power and biomass sources has contributed effectively to the generation of electricity in Sri Lanka and the country expects to reach a target of 20% of the power supply by renewable energy by 2020. [Colombo Page]
¶ Reliance Power has commissioned a 100-MW concentrated solar power project in India by successfully synchronizing the grid and power generation. It is the world’s largest CSP project based on compact linear Fresnel reflector technology, provided by Areva Solar. [Business Standard]
¶ The UK’s first 2-MW lithium-titanate battery is to be connected to the energy grid as part of a new research project to tackle the challenges of industrial-scale energy storage. The project aims to provide tests of the technological and economic challenges. [The Guardian]
US:
¶ The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority is supporting research and development in the field of energy storage by partnering with nine companies. The program is designed to develop new clean technologies, create prototypes, bring them to be real-world applications. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The Ginna Nuclear Power Plant is losing money to the tune of $100 million over the past three years. A decade-long power purchase agreement between Ginna’s ower, Exelon and Constellation Energy and RG&E expired last month. The future of the plant seems uncertain. [WROC-TV]
¶ Energy developer Renewable Energy Systems Americas Inc. has announced two grid-scale energy storage projects near Chicago . Each will use lithium iron phosphate batteries with a 19.8 MW capacity, capable of storing 7.8 MWh. The two projects will be named Jake and Elwood. [JD Supra]
¶ Imergy Power Systems has landed its first battery order in the United States with Hawaiian renewable energy company Energy Research Systems. The company purchased four ESP5 vanadium flow batteries, which are capable of 5 kW of capacity and can store up to 30 kWh of electricity. [pv magazine]
¶ Babcock & Wilcox Nuclear Energy, a contractor based in Charlotte, North Carolina, says in a lawsuit filed Wednesday that Xcel has refused to pay the full cost for replacing a pair of massive steam generators at the plant’s Unit 2. The project was completed last December. [Minneapolis Star Tribune]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 13, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “China’s Climate Change Plan Raises Questions” Many questions surround China’s plans, which President Xi Jinping announced in Beijing alongside President Obama after months of negotiations. In essence, experts asked, do the pledges go far enough, and how will China achieve them? [New York Times]
¶ “Carbon Capture, Water, and the U.S.-China Climate Agreement” The agreement commits both countries to focus on reducing the negative water implications of carbon capture and storage. Here’s why we’re even talking about the issue, and what this accord says about it. [The Equation: Blog of the Union of Concerned Scientists]
World Energy Outlook report:
¶ Fossil fuels see about $550 billion a year in subsidies, dampening investment in cleaner forms of energy, the International Energy Agency said. Crude oil, coal and natural gas received more than four times the $120 billion paid out in subsidies for renewables, according to the annual World Energy Outlook. [Live Trading News]
¶ Renewable energy technologies are set to gain ground on fossil fuels rapidly as they are helped by falling costs and subsidies, according to World Energy Outlook 2014. It suggests that by 2040 world energy supply will be divided into four almost equal parts: low-carbon sources (nuclear and renewables), oil, natural gas and coal. [reNews]
¶ Such developing countries as China and India will lead a projected 60% increase in worldwide nuclear power generation capacity through 2040, while costs to decommission aging reactors in advanced nations will soar, the International Energy Agency said Wednesday in its World Energy Outlook report. [Nikkei Asian Review]
World:
¶ An integrated residential rooftop solar and electricity storage system will be launched in Germany in December. Hanwha Q Cells rooftop solar and Samsung lithium-ion batteries will be sold together so German citizens can produce their own electricity from the sun and store it at home. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Iberdrola Ingeniería, in a consortium with Gamesa, has completed the construction of its first wind farm in Kenya, the Ngong II project with an installed capacity of 13.6 MW. It was awarded by the state-owned Kenyan Electricity Generating Company Limited in a contract worth €21.4 million. [Your Renewable News]
¶ Danish manufacturer Vestas has won a deal to supply turbines for the 52-MW second phase of the Bayinzile wind farm in China. The contract with Inner Mongolia Huitong Energy Zhuozi Wind Power Company Ltd covers 26 V80 2-MW machines, which will be installed in the Wulanchabu area of Inner Mongolia. [reNews]
¶ According to the influential Carbon Tracker Initiative, developing economies seeking to provide universal energy access are more likely to step up investment in renewables than coal infrastructure, despite a coal industry claim that coal is “essential to meet the scale of Africa’s desperate need for electricity”. [Business Green]
¶ SunEdison has announced the signing of a joint framework agreement with Aboitiz Renewables to scope, develop and operate up to 300 MW of utility-scale solar PV projects in the Philippines over the next three years. They aim to develop the first in a series of utility-scale Philippine solar power projects next year. [Energy Matters]
¶ Ontario regulators have approved the 230-MW Niagara Region wind farm, one of the largest projects in the province, as the Environment Ministry has issued a renewable energy approval for the project. The project will employ 77 Enercon turbines, a mix of E82 2.3-MW and E101 3-MW machines. [reNews]
US:
¶ San Jose, California–based STEM, a company with a mission to help large organizations meet sustainability goals, has been selected for an 85 MW distributed energy storage system by Southern California Edison. 85 MW is a big system in terms of energy storage, and all of it must be operational by 2021. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Linc Energy recently received a research & development license for Underground Coal Gasification, the first issued in the USA in twenty years. Linc Energy is moving ahead with a demonstration phase project in Wyoming’s Powder River Basin, one of the country’s most active coal mining regions. [Energy Collective]
¶ Fort Hood is one step closer to bringing a large-scale renewable energy project that will save money and leverage solar and wind power for the post’s energy needs because of efforts by the Defense Logistics Agency, Energy, in coordination with the Office of Energy Initiatives and Fort Hood Directorate of Public Works. [The Fort Hood Sentinel]
¶ The nation’s largest solar provider and the U.S. Navy announced a deal Wednesday that will equip nearly 6,000 homes in the San Diego area with rooftop solar energy systems. Navy and Marine Corps housing in 27 neighborhoods from Imperial Beach to Vista will receive rooftop solar energy systems. [U-T San Diego]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 12, 2014
World:
¶ US President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping announced both countries will curb greenhouse gas emissions over the next two decades. The US would cut its 2005 level of carbon emissions by 26-28% before 2025. China would peak its carbon emissions and get 20% of its energy from zero-carbon sources by 2030. [CNN]
¶ The prime ministers of Pakistan and China are reported to have witnessed the signing of 19 agreements and memorandums mostly focused on the energy sector. China has pledged $42 billion funds of which $31 billions are dedicated to projects in the energy sector. Coal accounts for 80% of the new power. [Business Recorder]
¶ Despite pledging in 2009 to phase out the use of fossil fuels, G20 countries are spending $88 billion a year in taxpayer money to discover new reserves around the world, according to a new report published Tuesday by the Overseas Development Institute and Oil Change International. [eNews Park Forest]
¶ Yingli Green Energy Spain announced it has supplied over 5 MW of solar panels for Bolivia’s first solar power plant. Isotron, a subsidiary of Isastur, installed more than 17,000 solar panels in the 5-MW project, which is Bolivia’s largest solar project and the world’s largest storage-equipped hybrid PV-diesel project. [Your Renewable News]
¶ Natural gas could help reduce emissions until renewables deployment is more widespread, but investment in gas infrastructure could result in the fossil fuel outstaying its welcome, scientists have warned. They also accuse the British government of over-hyping the potential for a domestic shale gas industry. [Business Green]
¶ SolarReserve, a developer of utility-scale solar power projects, has announced that the 96-MW PV Jasper solar power project has completed construction and is fully operational. The power project, located in South Africa’s Northern Cape, is the largest solar installation in Africa. It was completed two months ahead of schedule. [BusinessTech]
¶ Negotiations to establish a bipartisan commitment to renewable energy in Australia have collapsed. The opposition Labor Party has walked away from talks with the government about generating 20% of the country’s power from renewable energy because of government inflexibility on a plan to cut the target dramatically. [eco-business.com]
¶ UK Energy secretary Ed Davey warns that the Conservative party’s opposition to onshore wind turbines risks undermining the creation of British jobs. Davey also said that the opposition to onshore turbines is driving up customer bills because wind is the cheapest clean energy. [The Guardian]
¶ The Isle of Man has selected DONG Energy, Manx Tidal Energy Ltd and Tocardo Tidal Energy Ltd to develop an offshore wind farm and several tidal energy projects. It is progressing offshore energy opportunities and working with the UK to help meet its renewable energy targets. [Renewable Energy Focus]
¶ In order to achieve its energy 2021 energy target providing electricity access to all residents, Bangladesh is seeking to more than double electricity generation to 24 GW, 10% of which from renewables. The country has installed more than 3.1 million systems since May with support from the World Bank and other agencies. [pv magazine]
US:
¶ In the face of an aging fleet of plants, new EPA regulations for pollution and carbon, and decreasing natural gas costs, coal plants may well become a thing of the past in Michigan. According to the Energy Justice Network and Crain’s Detroit Business, five more Michigan coal-fired power plants are slated for closures. [Detroit Free Press]
¶ Some utility companies are starting to encourage consumers to make the switch to plug-in electric vehicles. JEA, a utility company in northeastern Florida, recently began offering to its nearly half a million household and business electricity customers a rebate of up to $1,000 for the purchase or lease of a plug-in electric vehicle. [Huffington Post]
¶ Ford has this week announced innovative new plans that could see its dealers across the country become renewable energy hubs. Ford and Wind Energy Corporation partner to deploy solar panels and vertical axis wind “sails” at four Ford dealerships as part of a pilot programme. [Business Green]
¶ Six years ago, Wisconsin’s Gundersen Health System, which makes up a network of hospitals, medical clinics, nursing homes and other health facilities, set a goal to reduce energy consumption. It has more than reached that goal. Every day since October 14, it has produced more energy than it consumed. [ThinkProgress]
¶ Vermont and Entergy continue to disagree on how to pay the cost of decommissioning the Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant. Entergy, is now seeking permission from federal regulators to eliminate off-site emergency response planning about 15 months after the reactor stops turning. [vtdigger.org]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 11, 2014
Science and Technology:
¶ Grid operators may be able to use buildings to help regulate grid frequency as they integrate more renewable energy sources. Variable-speed drives used to run heating and cooling systems can be rapidly modulated by grid operators to keep the frequency of electricity on the grid within necessary tolerances. [Energy Collective]
¶ The Canadian public health department released its preliminary findings of a study on wind turbine noise and health, and an Australian court ruled on a challenge to a 105-MW wind farm based on wind turbine syndrome. In both cases, windpower was found not to have demonstrable adverse health effects. [Energy Matters]
World:
¶ The Kenya Electricity Generating Company decided to capitalize on their geothermal resources by adding 280 MW of geothermal energy to the national grid, and the power started feeding into the national grid in July. Kenya saved $100 million in the first three months of operation. [ESI Africa]
¶ Denmark’s government plans to have the country completely off of fossil fuels by 2050, including cars. One problem with this is that energy production from wind and solar plants cost very little to run, so the more they appear, the less energy will cost. This means energy companies will struggle to make any profit. [UPI.com]
¶ French renewable energy developer, Neoen announced that it is completing the financing for the project and starting construction of the developed facility located in the town of Cestas near Bordeaux. The facility will consist of several power plants with a combined power output of 300 MW. [PV Insider News and Analysis]
¶ A report by the Overseas Development Institute and Oil Change International says governments around the world are funding high carbon energy sources at the expense of renewable energy projects. Australian taxpayers subsidize exploration by coal and energy companies by as much as $4 billion every year. [ABC Online]
¶ Canadian Solar has finalized a deal to provide 4 MW of energy storage, to be used to support the electrical grid in Ontario, Canada. Ontario has a target to procure 50 MW of energy storage by the end of this year, of which 33.54 MW has already been procured by the Independent Electric System Operator. [PV-Tech Storage]
¶ Senvion has signed a contract to supply turbines for the 150-MW Mesgi’g Ugju’s’n wind farm in Quebec. The MU project is owned and developed in a 50-50 partnership between the three Mi’gmaq First Nations of Quebec and Innergex Renewable Energy Inc. Senvion will deliver a cold-climate-version wind turbines. [North American Windpower]
US:
¶ Massachusetts is currently considering extending its net-metering qualification guidelines to include small hydroelectric projects over 60 kW in capacity, in addition to those under 60 kW. This would put hydroelectric on level ground with solar energy, wind energy, and anaerobic digestion systems in the state. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Acer Americas is joining the growing ranks of US businesses meeting 100% of their electricity needs from renewable energy resources. The company has announced it is joining the EPA Green Power Partnership and has purchased enough green power to offset all of its carbon emissions from electricity in the US. [Triple Pundit]
¶ A 5-MW solar array could be in place by next spring in the hills overlooking Lake Sonoma under a cooperative venture announced Monday between the US Army Corps of Engineers and the Dry Creek Band of Pomo Indians. The system would be the largest in Sonoma County, California. [Santa Rosa Press Democrat]
¶ Traces of radioactive cesium-134, believed to have come from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Disaster, were detected 100 miles off the coast of Eureka, California, according to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. The isotope is present at 0.1% of the level allowed by the EPA for drinking water. [CNBC]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 10, 2014
Science and Technology:
¶ The Swiss Center for Electronics and Microtechnology recently announced it has made white solar PV modules to use in buildings, offering applications in several consumer-centered sectors. The technology can be used to modify any crystalline solar PV module to produce white or coloured modules. [CleanTechnica]
World:
¶ The Climate Council says foreign investors are going to other countries because Australia’s government has no clear renewable energy policy. Another damning report on the state of renewable energy in Australia said the country was losing out on valuable business. [eco-business.com]
¶ New renewable energy projects create 10 times more green jobs than similar-sized fossil fuel investments, new research has found. A study by the UK Energy Research Center taking data from the US, Europe, and China, suggests green energy provide a boost to employment, short term construction jobs and lifetime plant jobs. [Business Green]
¶ In Indonesia, geothermal power plant developer PT Supreme Energy expects to commence the first stage of construction of its 220 MW Muara Laboh project in West Sumatra as early as next year while working on land-related issues in two other phases of development. [Jakarta Post]
¶ The Green Investment Bank announced a £200 million lending program for community-scale renewable energy projects in the UK, the institution’s first investment in the sector, although energy from waste is not included. The program will be funded half by the GIB and half by global investment firm KKR. [Materials Recycling World]
¶ Wind farms have been paid £43 million to stand idle so far this year, a new British record. The payments were made to suppliers because the National Grid was unable to use their electricity. The sums paid in ‘constraint payments’ to wind farms have risen rapidly in the past four years, according to electricity market data. [Daily Mail]
¶ Osaka will seek to sell its shares of Kansai Electric Power Co, operator of the Ohi nuclear plant, to comply with a policy calling for less reliance on investment income. The mayor had pledged to rid the city of its holding in Kansai Electric should the utility ignore calls to stop using atomic power. [Businessweek]
US:
¶ Presumptive Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has promised to bring energy bills up for votes in the next Congress, and Senator Lisa Murkowski, who is likely to become the next chairman of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, isn’t waiting until January to start pushing fracking and pipelines. [Washington Times]
¶ Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft are part of a growing number of tech and other major companies that are entering into long-term “power purchase” agreements (PPAs) with wind farms to ensure a steady stream of power, at a fixed cost, over a period as long as several decades. The reason for that is largely long-term price stability. [Tonga Daily News]
¶ Arkansas’ burgeoning biomass industry got a big boost earlier this summer when in the space of 30 days two privately held investor groups announced multi-million dollar projects to produce commercially viable fuel from the state’s vast supply of forest dregs. Both are building wood pellet plants. [The City Wire]
¶ Today at Olympian High School, Sweetwater Union High School District and SunPower Corp are celebrating the installation of 9.3 MW of high efficiency SunPower solar power systems at 21 California district schools. The district estimates that the systems may offset about 60% of its utility grid demand. [AZoCleantech]
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November 9, 2014
Economics and Finance:
¶ A report from the Institute of Self-Reliance says locally owned renewable energy projects create more economic benefits than absentee-owned projects, and they are less likely to encounter community opposition. By enacting policies to support local renewable power, states stand to gain thousands of jobs and millions of dollars. [San Diego Free Press]
Science and Technology:
¶ Inspired by bamboo’s adaptation to wind, University of Vermont engineers developed a low cost micro-wind turbine. The small bamboo vertical axis wind turbine is combined with a solar panel. Bamboo has a tensile strength similar to steel, but without the weight, and it is grown rather than mined. [Energy Matters]
¶ As electricity is more intermittent, fuel-powered plants are kept idling to ramp up quicker when there is a need for more power. They take minutes to respond and, in many cases, it has taken more than 20 minutes to minimize the mismatch between generation and loads. Batteries can respond in seconds. [CleanTechnica]
World:
¶ To provide electricity for India’s rural population, the Rockefeller Foundation will provide 65% funding for a $100 million initiative to establish 1,000 mini power grids in the next three years. Generally, each mini power grid would provide power for 150-250 households with about 1,000 people. [indiatvnews.com]
¶ Norther Irish wind energy company, Simple Power officially launched seven new wind turbines on farms this week. This brings the total number of turbines erected over the past four months to nine and marks significant success for the company as it continues to progress with its development strategy. [Farming Life]
¶ The Philippine’s bid to wean itself off fossil fuels and tap its massive potential for renewable energy has received a big boost following the completion of the largest wind farm in Southeast Asia. EDC Burgos Wind Power Corphas commissioned its 150-MW wind project in Burgos, Ilocos Norte. [Yahoo Philippines News]
¶ ACWA Power, based in Saudi Arabia, is looking to secure money to pursue renewable energy projects valued at $7.4 billion. The developer currently has projects operating or under construction in several countries in the Middle East, Africa and southeast Asia, and is bidding for a 100-MW solar power plant in Mecca. [SmartMeters]
¶ ACME Solar has emerged as the largest successful bidder in the recently concluded solar power capacity auction in Andhra Pradesh. With this success on projects totaling 160 MW, the company claims that it is on track to have an installed solar power capacity of 1 GW in India by 2017. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Despite concerns from nearly all neighboring countries, including the European Union, about Armenia’s elderly Metsamor nuclear plant, Armenia and Russia before the end of the year will sign an intergovernmental agreement to extend Metsamor’s service life until 2026. [Silk Road Reporters]
US:
¶ For millions of Americans, and many more worldwide, rooftop solar is already cheaper than electricity from the grid, but until recently, utility-scale solar projects weren’t cheaper than other types of power plants (ignoring externalities, which we shouldn’t really do but we do). That has been changing. [Treehugger]
¶ The solar power industry, viewed more than a decade ago as a game-changing, jobs-producing juggernaut in California, took its lumps during the recession. But now it’s coming back with a vengeance, both here and globally. Some California solar system installers have work backlogs, and new deals are being announced regularly. [Sacramento Bee]
¶ PacifiCorp announced it is participating in an “energy imbalance market” with California’s independent grid operator. This could save customers $10 million to $65 million a year, improve grid reliability, reducing emissions, and enable use of far more renewable energy. It will also pay for itself almost immediately. [The Oregonian]
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November 8, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “Sendai nuclear plant should not be model for reactor restarts” The process leading to the reactivation of the idled reactors at the Sendai plant has raised serious doubts about the government’s approach to the issue. The government is moving toward restarting the Sendai plant’s reactors without sufficient accident preparations. [Asahi Shimbun]
Science and Technology:
¶ When researchers talk about “islanding,” or isolating, from the grid, they are discussing a fundamental benefit of microgrids, or small systems powered by renewables and energy storage devices. The benefit is that microgrids can disconnect from larger utility grids and continue to provide power locally. [Science Daily]
World:
¶ A small German town in southern Bavaria is participating in an interesting experiment proving that a high-renewables future is viable. Wildpoldsried (pop. 2,600) currently produces 500% more energy than it needs through renewable energy systems, and sells the surplus power back to the grid. [RenewEconomy]
¶ The UK’S largest single roof mounted solar panel array is to be installed at Marks and Spencer’s Castle Donington distribution center. The solar PV system will span the site’s 900,000 sq ft roof and will generate over 5,000 MWh of electricity per year, enough to power 1,190 houses. [LoughboroughEcho.net]
¶ Cuba’s National Electric Development program aims to increase the island’s electricity production capacity significantly. Cuba seeks to generate 24% of its electricity from renewable sources by 2030, which will save nearly $780 million annually on fuel. Cuba currently gets 96% of its electricity from fossil fuels. [teleSUR English]
¶ A 231-MW solar power plant broke ground in Okayama prefecture, western Japan. It is expected to be Japan’s largest solar power plant. The plant is located in a disused salt pan. It is scheduled to begin operation in the first half of 2019 with 920,000 solar panels installed. The project will cost $950 million. [Daily Times]
¶ The man responsible for maintaining India’s power supply says he wants the country’s coal production to double within the next five years. The Minister of State for Power, Coal, New and Renewable energy, says India needs to dig twice as much coal as it does today if it is to meet its soaring energy demand. [Truthdig]
¶ The UK’s High Court has refused an application for a judicial review of the Department of Energy and Climate Change’s decision to end subsidies under the renewables obligation scheme for solar farms with a generating capacity of more than 5 MW by 2015, two years ahead of the original schedule. [E&T magazine]
¶ Lightsource Renewable Energy, the UK’s largest solar developer, has connected a 6.1-MW solar farm near Ramsgate in Kent. Thorne Solar Farm is located to the south of Manston Airport and occupies just under 11 hectares (27 acres) of land and is predicted to generate enough electricity to power 1,800 local homes. [Solar Power Portal]
¶ The port of Ghent in Belgium will see the construction of the largest biomass power plant in the world, at 215 MW. Belgian Eco Energy selected Abengoa to develop the plant, which will be fueled by 100% raw material biomass such as wood chips and agro-residues. The project will cost over €315 million. [IHB]
¶ A solar eclipse next March will test European electricity grids because of the massive increase in solar power production on the continent, according to French power grid RTE. On the morning of March 20, 2015, an almost total solar eclipse will block direct sunlight over parts of Europe, North Africa and Russia. [TODAYonline]
US:
¶ About 26% of the electricity Boston-based Partners HealthCare buys this year for the facilities it owns will come from renewable sources. Its leaders wanted to reduce pollution from traditional fossil-fuel energy sources and the illness burden that pollution causes, as well as to reduce emissions that contribute to climate change. [ModernHealthcare.com]
¶ NStar became the second utility in recent weeks to deliver a winter shock to Massachusetts energy consumers, asking state regulators for an average 29% increase in electric bills starting in January. NStar provides electricity and natural gas to more than a million customers in metropolitan Boston and Cape Cod. [Boston Globe]
¶ A study conducted by the Minnesota Department of Commerce in coordination with the Midwest regional independent grid operator Mid-continent Independent System Operator found that the state of Minnesota could obtain 40% or more of its electricity from wind and solar energy without suffering any grid reliability issues. [CleanTechnica]
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November 7, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “What Happens When Solar Energy is Cheaper Than Local Electricity Prices?” There is an enormous battle behind the scenes over the nitty-gritty of everyday power plant operations, and making money from older, inefficient plants, as the price of solar power goes down. [The Equation: Blog of the Union of Concerned Scientists]
¶ “The End of the Big Oil and Gas Game Has Come” Sheikh Ahmed-Zaki Yamani said in 2000, “Thirty years from now there will be a huge amount of oil – and no buyers. Oil will be left in the ground.” A decade and half later and we are coming to the end of Big Oil. Why? Pollution, grid parity, and competition with zero marginal costs. [Huffington Post]
World:
¶ SunEdison has signed an agreement with the government of the Indian state of Rajasthan to set up 5 GW of solar power capacity over the next five years. The projects will be set up in increments of 500 MW. Rajasthan is particularly rich in solar resources and was among the first states in India to have a solar power plant. [CleanTechnica]
¶ GE plans to begin construction of a 100-MW wind power farm in Kenya early next year and expects it to be up and running within 18 months after that, a company executive said on Thursday. Kenya is pushing to expand its power generation capacity by 5,000 MW by 2017 from about 1,700 MW now. [The Standard Digital News]
¶ Quebec’s call for bids on 450 MW of wind energy received bids totaling 6627.5 MW. Hydro-Quebec Distribution received 54 submissions from 10 developers, including bids from established players such as EDF EN Canada, Boralex, Innergex, Invenergy and Northland Power. [reNews]
¶ Cost differences between renewables and fossil fuels have guided new renewable energy additions, especially in developing countries. Market economics often made new fossil fuel generation cheaper, but those days are ending. Renewable electricity is now just as affordable an option as fossil fuel in 55 emerging nations. [Energy Collective]
¶ There is more than enough geothermal energy in British Columbia to power the province’s grid, yet not one site has been developed. Geothermal energy has never been invited to bid on calls for power. In fact, with 150 known hot springs in western Canada, there isn’t a single developed geothermal site in the country. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Enel Green Power and Empresa Nacional de Electricidad SA have signed 20-year supply contracts for two wind power projects and 25-year contracts for three solar projects in Chile. The contracts are worth approximately $2.3 billion. The wind and solar plants will have 307 MW of capacity. [reNews]
¶ Regional authorities in Japan approved the restart of the idled Sendai nuclear plant of Kyushu Electric Power Co, paving the way for a revival of the stalled industry more than three years after the Fukushima disaster. This is a victory for the government of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. [Reuters]
US:
¶ Siemens Energy Management, Microsoft, and FuelCell Energy have produced the nation’s first zero-carbon, waste-to-energy data center in Cheyenne, Wyoming. The project uses biogas methane produced by common waste byproducts at the nearby Dry Creek wastewater facility to power the fuel cell system. [Broadway World]
¶ Ice Energy today announced it has been awarded sixteen contracts from Southern California Edison to provide 25.6 MW of behind-the-meter thermal energy storage. Ice Energy’s proprietary Ice Bear system uses electricity at low-demand times to freeze water, which provides cooling during high demand periods. [Rock Hill Herald]
¶ ISO New England Inc, the operator of the New England power system and wholesale electricity markets, issued its 2014 Regional System Plan. The plan guides long-term power-system planning efforts in New England, including identifying grid areas needing transmission upgrades and market responses. [MarketWatch]
¶ Projections for a “death spiral” in the utility sector are premature, according to Moody’s Investors Service. The industry is being transformed by widespread adoption of distributed generation, but utilities, state lawmakers, and regulators are acting to refine utility cost-recovery models, decreasing the threat of disruption. [Platts]
¶ Vestas has received an order for 100 turbines for First Wind’s 200MW South Plains wind farm in Texas. The Danish manufacturer expects to deliver V100 2-MW machines in late 2015. The deal includes supply and commissioning as well as a 10-year service agreement. [reNews]
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November 6, 2014
World:
¶ The Scottish renewables are among the world’s best performing, and new data from WeatherEnergy has shown that October had them generating more than enough electricity from renewable sources to power the country. Windpower produced most of the power, but solar production was impressive. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The sulfur levels in marine bunker fuel are as high is 100 to 3,500 times what is permitted in diesel fuel for road traffic in China. As a result, one container ship cruising along the coast of China emits as much diesel pollution as 500,000 new Chinese trucks in a single day. [Energy Collective]
¶ As India grapples with power shortage problems, Power Minister Piyush Goyal is expecting an investment of $250 billion in the next four to five years. He says renewable energy will be a feed-in for power sector and government will engage top 250 tax payers to invest in solar and wind projects. [Moneycontrol.com]
¶ A $27 million investment from Spanish corporate, GRI Renewable Industries offers South Africa a giant leap forward in the provision of renewable energy alternatives with the facility capable of producing 150 wind towers a year. This is welcome news at a time when problems meeting electric demand are increasing. [Cape Business News]
¶ While Germany’s nuclear power phaseout seems to be going along fairly well, there have been some bumps in the road. Three of the four largest power companies, EON, RWE, and Vattenfall, have brought over 20 lawsuits demanding billions in Euros for compensation relating to the phaseout of nuclear power. [DigitalJournal.com]
¶ In Australia, Fotowatio Renewable Ventures and its engineering, procurement and construction contractor Green Light Contractors Pty Ltd broke ground on construction of the 70-MW Moree Solar Farm today. At the ceremony, the company noted the importance of the Renewable Energy Target. [Business Spectator]
¶ A dozen Canadian clean-technology companies, many of them nurtured by the government, accompanied Ontario’s Premier Kathleen Wynne, hoping to sell everything from environmentally friendly fertilizer to systems for cleaning ship exhaust as she met China’s Science and Technology Minister in Beijing. [The Globe and Mail]
¶ Oman’s Rural Areas Electricity Company is partnering with Masdar to build a $125 million wind farm that when fully operational will provide power to 16,000 homes. The company also estimates investments in solar, wind, and nuclear energy will reach $100 billion in the GCC region over the next five years. [SmartMeters]
¶ Wind generation hit a record high to provide 24% of the UK’s energy mix on October 20. The previous high of 22% was in August. Wind’s share of October’s electricity mix was 12.3% compared with 8% in October, 2013. Also, wind generated more power than nuclear for 11 full days during October. [reNews]
US:
¶ On Tuesday night in the US, Republicans – and particularly those who reject climate science and despite renewable energy, won big in the US Congressional elections. This is not good news for climate. The Senate is now in the hands of a group of people who make pro-coal Australian politicians look moderate. [RenewEconomy]
¶ Environmental groups lost big in the elections, but there was one surprising winner: The Northeast’s multi-state carbon-trading plan. Pennsylvania Governor-elect Tom Wolf, the sole bright spot for Democrats on the state level, has promised to move Pennsylvania to join the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative. [National Journal]
¶ The EPA says it is considering an extended time frame for reducing reliance on coal to 2029, giving utilities almost an extra decade to adapt. The EPA’s shift comes after intense lobbying by utilities, which want to wait until their plants reach the end of their natural life spans. [Businessweek]
¶ SolarCity, the largest US solar panel installer, reported a 20% rise in quarterly revenue and said it had cut system costs more than expected. The company said third-quarter revenue rose 20% to $58.34 million from $48.6 million a year earlier. Analysts were expecting revenue of $60.23 million. [Reuters]
¶ Not so long ago, Exelon, which runs six nuclear energy plants in Illinois, was extolling the merits of an open market for power as its profits rolled in. Now, with power prices plunging, Exelon has lost enthusiasm for the open markets and wants the Legislature to protect its profits, quite likely driving up utility bills. [Chicago Sun-Times]
¶ Southern California Edison today detailed how it intends to generate enough power to run nearly one million homes with a mix of technologies, including energy efficiency, renewables, and energy storage. Part of the solution is 85 megawatts from a distributed collection of refrigerator size batteries in buildings. [Xconomy]
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November 5, 2014
Science and Technology:
¶ The cost estimates for solar PV used by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in its latest report fail to take into account most recent cost reductions for the technology, reports Helle Abelvik-Lawson, and exaggerate financing costs. The result is to understate the importance of PV in a low carbon future. [The Ecologist]
¶ A new flow battery system from Imergy Power Systems can use vanadium extracted from fly ash waste rather than more expensive purified vanadium. That helps keep the cost of the vanadium flow battery to just $300 per kWh, almost half the current industry standard. [Sustainablog]
¶ Japan’s Eco Marine Power is developing a number of sustainable shipping technologies that harnesses both wind and solar power, and has been making steady progress towards a commercial system over the last few years. One example is a rigid sail capable of using both wind and solar energy to help power a vessel. [Ship & Bunker]
¶ Clean technologies could generate more growth in innovation and the economy than fossil fuel based technologies, Imperial College researchers report. Clean technologies include smart devices, renewable energy such as wind power and green transportation including electric cars. [Imperial College London]
World:
¶ Five towns in New South Wales have raised their hands to become the first zero net energy town in the state – and indeed in Australia. Walcha, Manilla, Tenterfield, Uralla, and Bingara all made applications to become a signature town of the 21st Century and center of green innovation. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Several of Egypt’s major cement producers have begun retrofitting their plants to run on energy from imported coal, beating high gas prices and energy shortages that have curbed industrial output this year. Supply from state-owned Egyptian Natural Gas Holding Company has been intermittent. [Reuters]
¶ In Cornwall, the Lanhydrock Estates Company has applied for a solar farm to be constructed on two fields at Newtons Margate. If granted planning consent, the 12,000 modules will provide 3 MW of electricity for Tulip Ltd’s food production factory at Bodmin, with surplus going to the grid. [cornishguardian.co.uk]
¶ In a growing grassroots movement, citizens of Berlin are banding together to try to buy back the electricity grid, in the hope of seeing more renewable energy used in the city. Berlin’s energy grid has 35,000 km of underground cable and more than 8,000 substations that feed electricity to more than 2 million customers. [Radio Australia]
¶ The Australian government has cut almost half a billion dollars from research into carbon capture and storage – which the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change deems crucial for continued use of coal – despite the prime minister insisting coal is the “foundation of our prosperity”. [The Guardian]
¶ TEPCO completed the removal of 1,331 spent fuel rods from the upper levels of the badly damaged reactor No. 4 building at Fukushima Daiichi on Wednesday. The No. 4 building was a source of concern during the disaster because of fears it would collapse in another earthquake, leading to exposure of the spent fuel. [AsiaOne]
US:
¶ According to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA), no new coal-fired plants came to service in the first 6 months of 2014, and only two small units are projected to come on line by the end of the year. The prospects for more coal-fired plants in the future look dismal for several reasons. [RenewEconomy]
¶ In New Mexico, anger has spread over news that the country’s largest methane leak, near the Four Corners region, is three times larger than originally reported. The methane leak is attributed to gas production. For many New Mexicans, the dangerous human health and environmental hazard is a wake-up call. [Deming Headlight]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 4, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “As Scientists Sound the Alarm on Climate, a Reason for Hope” The climate report paints a scary picture, but its most important message is that we still have time to turn the corner on climate change and we can do it affordably. As a matter of fact, it’s the cost of inaction that’s the true threat to our economy. [Huffington Post]
Science and Technology:
¶ The potential for saving electricity from used car batteries is growing steadily. The International Energy Agency estimates that there will be 4 million electric cars on the roads by 2015, rising to 20 million in 2020. An estimate of capacity could be 40 kWh, implying that used car batteries could provide storage capacity of 128 GWh by 2020. [Bellona]
World:
¶ Etrion Corporation, a solar independent power producer, announced it has completed construction of the 70-MW Salvador project in the Atacama region of Chile. Project Salvador is the world’s largest solar power plant-based on spot market electricity revenues and is the second-largest solar park connected in Chile. [Your Renewable News]
¶ Scottish wind turbines generated an estimated 982,842 MWh of electricity last month – with environmental group WWF Scotland suggesting this was enough to power 3,045,000 homes, the equivalent of 126% of the electricity needs of every home in Scotland, based on analysis of data from WeatherEnergy. [Scotsman]
¶ Progress is being made on the construction of a £100 million-plus power station on the site of the old Brigg Sugar Factory in North Lincolnshire. The straw-burning power station aims to generate 40 MW of electricity – enough to supply 75,000 homes – and is expected to open in December next year. [Scunthorpe Telegraph]
¶ The Indian power sector is heading for a $1 billion, or Rs 6,000 crore, saving in coal transportation cost and earnings of another Rs 3,600 crore by additional generation as the government plans to tweak fuel supply arrangements to ensure that coal from each mine or port is shipped to closest plant. [Economic Times]
¶ Fed up with constant electricity cuts and government-enforced “power holidays”, Indian IT firm ValueLabs has turned to the sun for help. In July, it finished building a 13 MW solar plant, enough to power 6,000 homes, to keep the lights on and computers humming for more than 3,000 employees at its base in Hyderabad. [Businessworld]
¶ In China, Nanyang Technological University will be building a hybrid micro-grid integrating multiple large-scale renewable energy sources. The hybrid micro-grid will test and demonstrate the integration of solar, wind, tidal-current, diesel, storage and power-to-gas technologies. [Asian Scientist Magazine]
¶ The UN’s IPCC has again urged the end of use of fossil fuels for power generation, but Australia appears to be thumbing its nose. With greenhouse gas levels at their highest in 800,000 years, brown coal’s share of Australia’s national electricity generation has risen BY 4% to 26% and black coal’s by 3% to 51%. [Energy Matters]
¶ India has called for effective international cooperation and responsible action by governments to strengthen nuclear security and prevent non-state actors from acquiring vulnerable atomic material. The amended Convention would make it legally binding for states parties to protect nuclear facilities and material. [Free Press Journal]
US:
¶ The DOE launched a new $2.3 million pilot program to accelerate the transfer of innovative clean energy technologies from the DOE’s National Laboratories into the commercial marketplace. Lab-Corps aims to better train and empower national lab researchers to move their discoveries into the private sector. [Today’s Energy Solutions]
¶ US Bank and Microgrid Solar have joined together to boost renewable energy and help non-profit institutions in the St Louis area save thousands of dollars in energy costs by installing new solar energy systems, financing the installation and operation of up to 120 solar PV systems to benefit 56 organizations. [REjournals.com]
¶ Apex Clean Energy has kicked off the Article 10 permitting process for the 201-MW Lighthouse wind project in upstate New York on the shores of Lake Ontario. The Virginia-headquartered developer has submitted a preliminary ‘public involvement program’ plan for review by the state Siting Board. [reNews]
¶ Utilities are generally pessimistic about their future role in the effort to expand the US electric grid and make it stronger. They believe they will see new competition become increasingly involved in the initiative. But they disagree strongly about what the future of energy transmission will look like. [Breaking Energy]
¶ The bipartisan Governors’ Wind Energy Coalition urged the US DOE to support FERC Order 1000, as the group says it could help bring more renewable energy to power markets. The 23-member group makes its call after the US Court of Appeals recently denied a rehearing a decision upheld the order. [North American Windpower]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 3, 2014
Climate Change Report:
¶ In its “synthesis report,” the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said that the hundreds of authors involved in the study were even more certain than before that the planet is warming and humans are the cause. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told reporters that action must come soon. [CNN]
¶ Climate change is happening, it is almost entirely man’s fault and limiting its impacts may require reducing greenhouse gas emissions to zero this century, according to the UN panel on climate science. The fourth and final volume of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s giant climate assessment offered no surprises. [Huffington Post]
Opinion:
¶ “China’s renewable energy revolution: what is driving it?” China now has the largest amount of installed electric capacity in the world at 1250 GW, exceeding the US 1160 GW power system. Around 30% of China’s capacity was renewable (water, wind, solar) in 2013, but fossil fuels, mainly coal, were 69%. [Japan Focus]
¶ “Meanwhile, down at the nuclear power plant, something’s going wrong” The EPA has recommended increased radiation exposure limits following major releases. It would save the industry a bundle to permit large human exposures, rather than shut down rickety reactors. [Las Vegas Informer]
World:
¶ In a report produced for the Liberal Democrat energy and climate secretary, Ed Davey, renewable energy trade bodies, community energy groups, and academics say that major future wind and solar farms should give communities the chance to invest and own as much as a quarter of projects. [The Guardian]
¶ French energy giant EDF has underlined its commitment to the offshore wind sector, announcing late last week that it has acquired the rights to develop the high-profile Blyth Offshore Wind Demonstration Site in Northumberland. The site is the largest consented offshore wind testing facility in the UK. [Business Green]
¶ When the European Commission came forward with its proposal for a 2030 energy and climate framework earlier this year, transportation was a missing piece. Transportation is responsible for around a quarter of EU CO2 emissions – a share that is increasing while CO2 emissions from other sectors are generally falling. [Business Green]
¶ As its solar projects move forward, the joint venture of Bronzeoak Philippines and ThomasLloyd Cleantech Infrastructure Fund has announced a $90-million investment for a 20-MW biomass power plant in Negros Occidental. The plant will be located in San Carlos City. [BusinessWorld Online Edition]
¶ Staff at South Africa’s Majuba electric station noticed a crack in a coal storage silo on Saturday afternoon. Forty minutes later, the structure collapsed, causing the station’s output to drop from 3,600 MW to 1,800. Now there are rolling blackouts in Cape Town, Johannesburg, Pretoria and Port Elizabeth. [AllAfrica.com]
US:
¶ There are many important considerations when voters in Wisconsin go to the polls Tuesday, but the state’s largest environmental organization says party affiliation makes little difference to voters in one respect – all show support for renewable power in Wisconsin’s energy future. [Public News Service]
¶ The Northwest Grid’s Bonneville Power Administration has started to offer its customers the opportunity to schedule energy transactions in 15-minute increments, giving utilities a new measure of flexibility in responding to swings in power generation as they buy, sell and transmit energy. [Electric Co-op Today]
¶ A 750-mile interstate power line promises to deliver wind-generated electricity to Columbia, Missouri at nearly half the price the city now pays. Columbia would pay $20 to $30 less per megawatt-hour for electricity, according to Clean Line Energy Partners, the company behind the project. [Columbia Missourian]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
November 2, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “The Peak Oil Crisis: A Reality Check” For the last four or five years, we have been bombarded with a stream of stories about the “shale revolution.” What the stories about all this abundance fail to address, outside of vague generalizations, is just how long this upward surge is going to last and what happens then. [Resilience]
¶ “How You Can Fight Climate Change and Make Money Doing It” No matter what your belief is on what is causing climate change or who is responsible there’s really only one thing within our control that will fix it. The good news is that the solution is becoming more of a reality every day. [Nasdaq]
Science and Technology:
¶ The United Nations’ expert panel on climate science on Saturday finished a report on global warming that the UN’s environment agency said offers “conclusive evidence” that humans are altering the Earth’s climate system. The document is scheduled to be released on November 2. [Phys.Org]
¶ A completely functional 3D-printable graphene battery was recently developed by researchers at Graphene 3D Lab. The new prototype 3D-printable graphene battery was unveiled at the recent Inside 3D Printing Conference that took place in Santa Clara, California. [CleanTechnica]
World:
¶ Through the effective implementation of existing policies India’s wind energy capacity could double over the next five years, latest estimates of the Global Wind Energy Council show. According to the report, India could increase its installed wind energy to almost 50 GW by the end of this decade. [CleanTechnica]
¶ A huge power outage in Bangladesh left tens of millions of people nationwide without electricity for hours. It began around 11 am Saturday, causing widespread disruption across the nation of more than 160 million people. Power started to come back around 11 pm Saturday. [CNN]
¶ South Australia Premier Jay Weatherill and Environment Minister Ian Hunter have switched on the second stage of the Snowtown wind farm, adding 90 turbines increasing the farm’s capacity by 1350 GW. The Premier has also warned such projects are at risk if the federal government scaled back the Renewable Energy Target. [Sky News Australia]
¶ Seventies-style blackouts could become a reality as the threat of worsening stormy weather looms over Wales’ ageing electricity infrastructure. Fires in three fossil fuel plants have caused them to go offline for repairs, and two nuclear plants are down because of reactor cracks. [WalesOnline]
US:
¶ Plans for what will soon be the biggest municipal fleet of electrified vehicles in the nation were recently pushed through in the City of Indianapolis, through a new initiative dubbed the “Freedom Fleet.” The EV fleet of 425 EV or PHEV sedans is expected to be deployed in early 2016. Police will continue with gas-powered cars. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The latest monthly numbers on new electric capacity have been released by FERC. The result is another big month for renewable energy… and natural gas. Wind power accounted for 61% of new power capacity. Natural gas accounted for 19%, nuclear uprates 12%, and solar 7%. Natural gas still leads for the year. [CleanTechnica]
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November 1, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “What Would Republican Control Of Senate Mean For The Energy Industry?” Tuesday’s elections could well see a major upheaval in American politics, with Republicans possibly achieving control of both the House and Senate. (Obama can still veto legislation, and it’s not clear how reluctant or enthusiastic he will be.) [Forbes]
¶ “Learning the tragic lesson of Fukushima: No nuclear restart at Sendai” In March 2011, Japan suffered the worst nuclear catastrophe in a generation, with triple reactor core meltdowns at Fukushima Daiichi. The catastrophe was a stern warning about the perils of depending on nuclear power. [Greenpeace International]
Science and Technology:
¶ A multidisciplinary engineering team developed a new nanoparticle-based material for concentrating solar power plants designed to absorb and convert to heat more than 90% of the sunlight it captures. The new material can also withstand temperatures greater than 700° Celsius and survive many years of weather. [ScienceDaily]
¶ The Vertiwind will be part of EDF-EN’s offshore wind farm project called Inflow, which the European Commission is helping fund. It is a vertical axis wind turbine of 2 MW. There are a number of reasons why such a turbine might be used in a variety of locations, including urban areas. [Windpower Engineering]
World:
¶ Australian households and businesses have installed more than 1 GW of rooftop solar since July, 2013, with the rate of installations growing in the last few months due to uncertainty about the future of the renewable energy target. Queensland the biggest market, followed by Victoria, NSW and South Australia. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Brazil finally entered the solar power sector on Friday, granting contracts for the construction of 31 solar parks as it tries to diversify its sources of generation amid an energy crisis caused by the worst drought in eight decades. The 31 solar parks will have a combined installed capacity of 1,048 MW. [Reuters]
¶ Barbour ABI has released new data revealing that a total of 405 renewable energy projects are in the pipeline for the UK. The projects represent investment of more than £81 billion. These projects account for approximately 47% of proposed UK infrastructure projects before 2025. [H&V News]
¶ A solar plant built on a disused airfield in the United Kingdom is now meeting the energy demands of 10,000 average homes, energy company RWE said. RWE announced its Kencot Hill solar park was completed and connected to the British grid, adding 37 MW to the regional power sector. [UPI.com]
¶ A roof section of a structure covering the No. 1 reactor at TEPCO’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant was removed Friday, and another panel may be removed today. The utility will then confirm the effects of the antiscattering agents it applied and conduct a thorough examination of the rubble’s condition. [The Japan News]
US:
¶ Renewable energy development and implemented energy efficiency measures are responsible for 70% of the drop in US carbon dioxide emissions seen since 2007 (when a slow decline began), according to a new report from Greenpeace. The findings argue against detractors of renewable power. [CleanTechnica]
¶ When Debbie Dooley became solar energy’s most vocal champion in Georgia last year, solar advocates in other states began wondering how they could replicate her efforts. They may have an answer as Dooley is testing the waters in Florida, Virginia and Wisconsin. South Carolina, Louisiana and Kansas may be next. [Energy Collective]
¶ National Grid’s 37% price hike takes effect for electricity in Massachusetts takes effect on November 1. Rhode Island customers could also face higher rates by the start of the new year. The reason is that New England has become increasingly reliant on natural gas, but pipelines are being built slowly. [Providence Eyewitness News]
¶ More than 100 people rallied in support of a wind farm proposed off Long Island’s coast at a meeting of the Long Island Power Authority board. Ratepayers, community activists, labor and political leaders convened outside the utility’s headquarters, and once inside the building, they packed the conference room. [Long Island Press]
¶ Pattern Energy notched a 94% rise in proportional electricity sales to 710 GWh in the third quarter of 2014 as it continued to add to its owned wind fleet. Sales over the nine months ended 30 September were 2,026,233 MWh compared with 1,331,149 MWh in 2013. [reNews]
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October 31, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “Green Tech Can Soon Meet 100% Of Global Energy Needs” We don’t need fossil fuels anymore. Many would argue that the reason we can’t stop burning fossil fuels and address climate change is that our modern civilization can’t continue without them. This is a myth that must be busted soon, given the rapid advance of climate change. [Huffington Post]
World:
¶ Solar energy is a must for Saudi Arabia if the kingdom wants to maintain its high standard of living, according to the Executive Director of the Saudi Electricity Company. He said if Saudi Arabia continued on its present consumption rate without developing solar power, a great opportunity to develop renewable energy would be lost. [Chinatopix]
¶ Northern Power Systems of Barre, Vermont has commissioned four of its NPS 100 wind turbines as part of a South Korean island hybrid energy project. The 100 kW turbines are in a hybrid system with solar, storage, and diesel to provide power at $.25 per kWh, a substantial saving for customers. [AltEnergyMag]
¶ Earlier this year, the Denmark’s leadership announced that it planned to phase out coal by 2030 and run its economy entirely on renewable power by 2050. Soon after, the Danish government reported that wind was becoming far cheaper than fossil fuels. Now, it says it wants to kill coal in ten years, not fifteen. [Motherboard]
¶ Siemens’ Wind Power and Renewables Division has received two new orders for onshore wind projects in Ontario, Canada. The contracts include the supply, installation and commissioning of a total of 137 wind turbines rated at 2.3 MW. Pattern Development will receive 91 turbines and Suncor Energy will take 47. [AltEnergyMag]
¶ GDF Suez has struck a deal with a community wind farm on the Isle of Lewis, off the coast of Scotland, to buy all the electricity generated from it. The Power Purchase Agreement with Beinn Ghrideag windfarm is the first such agreement of its kind with a community owned renewable generator. [Energy Voice]
¶ Preparatory works for the installation of the 7-MW oil pressure drive-type wind turbine on the three-column semi-sub floater at Onahama port, Fukushima, are almost completed, and delivery of the floater from Nagasaki to Onahama started on Thursday as part of the second term of the project. [The Maritime Executive]
¶ The UK Secretary for Energy and Climate Change, the chairman of Iberdrola, and the energy executive vice president of Dong opened West of Duddon Sands offshore windfarm. The €2 billion wind facility, developed Iberdrola subsidiary ScottishPower Renewables, was commissioned over two months ahead of schedule. [Your Renewable News]
¶ Renewable energy projects reached an installed capacity of 4,725 MW in Romania. Wind parks totaled 2,805 MW, along with 1,245 MW of solar, 574 of micro-hydropower, and 101 MW of biogas. New projects have added some 400 MW of installed capacity in the first nine months of the year. [Romania-Insider.com]
¶ The French Interior Minister said the government has begun investigating drones flying above as many as 10 French nuclear power plants this month. The French office of the environmental activist group Greenpeace has denied any connection to the drone flights and denounced the lack of security. [Ars Technica]
US:
¶ To make the Model S more affordable, Tesla made a new deal with US Bank to offer more favorable lease terms, lowering the lease cost by as much as 25%. The new lease now comes with a “happiness guarantee” that lets customers return the car after three months if they’re not totally satisfied. [CleanTechnica]
¶ During the eight-month period from January through August, the Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System in the Mojave Desert generated 254,263 MWh of electricity, according to US Energy Information Administration data. That’s roughly 38% of the power output that had been anticipated. [RenewablesBiz]
¶ New Hampshire has approved Palmer Capital’s 14.25-MW Jericho Mountain wind project in Coos County. The state executive committee voted in favor of a $4 million bond to help finance the fully-permitted project, which will employ 5 GE 2.85-MW turbines. Jericho Mountain is expected to come online in 2015. [reNews]
¶ The next step in a years-long drive for North Myrtle Beach to become the offshore wind energy capital of South Carolina will begin next month, when Coastal Carolina University, the University of South Carolina, and others begin assessing the quality of areas in off the coast of South Carolina for the development of wind farms. [SCNow]
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October 30, 2014
Thoughts on Science and Technology:
¶ “Wind Power Is Cheaper, More Reliable, Than Natural Gas” There is a lesson to be learned from the debate in Australia and the analysis it produces: Not only is traditional fossil generation intermittent – and dangerously so – but the intermittency of some renewables is simply not a problem. [CleanTechnica]
World:
¶ British energy regulator Ofgem announced Monday its plans to allow £1.1 billion in funding for a new subsea transmission link in the north of Scotland to connect 1.2 GW of renewables capacity to the grid. The plan calls for a new subsea cable to be installed under the Moray Firth with completion expected in 2018. [CleanTechnica]
¶ A 10-MW canal top solar power plant has been installed in the Indian city of Vadodara, over a Narmada river canal branch. The total capital cost of the system has been about $15 million. The same engineering firm that managed design and construction provide operation and maintenance for 25 years for $1.6 million. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Siemens Canada Limited has confirmed an agreement to supply turbines to Suncor Energy’s 100-MW Cedar Point wind farm in Ontario. The manufacturer will deliver and install 46 SWT 2.3-MW 113 direct drive turbines to the project. The deal includes a two-year service and maintenance agreement. [reNews]
¶ JinkoSolar announced that it will supply 19 MW of solar modules for a PV project in Chile’s Atacama Desert region, which has one of the highest irradiation levels in the world. The 19 MW solar power plant is expected to generate about 50,000 MWh of electricity annually, about what 30,000 local households use. [AltEnergyMag]
¶ Germany can expect to see its greenhouse gas emissions fall this year as a result of a drop in energy demand and increased renewables investment, according to researchers at AG Energiebilanzen. They predicted that energy consumption in 2014 in Germany will be at its lowest since the country’s reunification in 1990. [Business Green]
¶ Germany is considering removing some of its coal plant capacity as part of a raft of new policies to help meet greenhouse gas emissions goals. On 3 December, Chancellor Angela Merkel’s cabinet is to decide on a programme that is likely to include steps to boost energy efficiency and possibly reduce coal generation. [EurActiv]
¶ In the first-ever delay in the plans to dismantle reactor 1 at TEPCO’s stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, the government and the utility have agreed to postpone the removal of fuel rods from the spent-fuel pool by two years from the initial plans, NHK reported Thursday. [The Japan Times]
US:
¶ Xcel said last week that it has made deals with three energy developers to build as many as three huge solar power farms in Minnesota, which could result in almost 200 MW of new power coming online by 2016. Xcel is the biggest power company in Minnesota, with 1.2 million customers. [Hydrogen Fuel News]
¶ The future of rooftop solar energy in Louisiana could hang in the balance in the November 4 election race. The chairman of the Public Service Commission is a favorite of utility companies, which give his campaign hundreds of thousands of dollars. His opponent is a renewable energy advocate. [Alexandria Town Talk]
¶ Rooftop solar PV systems have reached grid parity – which means it costs the same or less than getting electricity from the power grid – in 10 US states. According to the latest report of the solar energy analyst at Deutsche Bank, by 2016, solar rooftop will reach grid parity in all 50 US states. [Treehugger]
¶ Exelon Corp has stepped up lobbying in its effort to have state legislators reward the company’s six nuclear plants in Illinois for producing electric power without emitting greenhouse gases. Three of the plants could be closed because of competition. Environmentalists, however, say nuclear power is not clean. [Chicago Tribune]
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October 29, 2014
Words to Remember:
¶ “Everything is impossible until it is done,” says an official of the German region of Rhein-Hunsruck. The district uses wind, solar, biomass and hydro supply 177% of its electricity, and sells the surplus. C02 emissions have fallen by 64% since 1990 and the economy has $50 million per year more than it had. [Edmonton Journal]
Science and Technology:
¶ A draft of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Synthesis report warns of severe, pervasive and irreversible impacts. To keep the temperature from rising above the 2° threshold, net global emissions of carbon must drop 40-70% by 2050, hitting zero by the end of the century. [International Business Times UK]
World:
¶ The results of India’s latest solar auction are in, and it is bad news for developers of Australian coal projects – solar PV is cheaper for Indian users than the electricity price needed to pay for imports of coal from Australia. The low bids were below $0.09/kWh, at a price at which coal imports are not economically viable. [RenewEconomy]
¶ China is on course this year to build four times the total wind power installed in all of Denmark as developers push to build the turbines ahead of cuts to incentives originally designed to spur the industry. The nation may add as much as 20 gigawatts of wind power in 2014 and maintain that pace next year. [Businessweek]
¶ While home owners in regional locations of Australia often make a choice to go off-grid, particularly those who have to pay a high connection fee for new homes, it is becoming increasingly clear that taking some towns and villages off the grid may also be a better solution. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Poor nations are adding capacity from renewable energy projects at nearly twice the rate of developed countries, a new interactive report found. The surge reflects the economic advantage that cleaner technologies have in emerging markets with expanding populations and economies. [International Business Times]
¶ Europe is on track to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 24% by 2020 from 1990 levels, four percentage points higher than its goal, the European Environment Agency reported. The bloc was also on its way to meet the target of having renewable sources account for at least 20% of energy needs by 2020. [Channel News Asia]
¶ With increasing integration of wind power and conversion of CHP plants to use biomass, around 71% of Denmark’s electricity supply will be renewable by 2020, compared to 43% in 2012. Denmark is also close to meeting the Danish national targets of reducing carbon emissions by 40% by 2020. [Copenhagen Capacity]
US:
¶ The Post Carbon Institute has released a report, “Drilling Deeper,” which examines Energy Information Administration’s forecasts for 12 shale plays that together cover 82% of tight oil and 88% of shale gas production. It says the EIA is almost certainly overstating the amount of oil the plays can produce. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Renewable energy sources accounted for 40.61% of all new US electrical generating capacity put in service during the first three quarters of this year, according to the latest Energy Infrastructure Update report from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. Only natural gas provided more new generating capacity. [North American Windpower]
¶ NRG Energy and MGM Resorts International announced that the world’s largest rooftop PV array on top of a convention center has been successfully completed. The 6.4 MW installation covers an area of 8.1 hectares on top of the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, generating enough energy for over 1,000 US homes. [PV-Tech]
¶ September was the biggest month ever for Tucson Electric Power’s Renewable Energy Department. Over 500 applications for new solar connections came in and October seems to be keeping apace. What’s driving this surge? Better financing options for consumers and better information. [Arizona Daily Star]
¶ Utilities see themselves losing ground to new competitors as the US strives to significantly expand and strengthen its electrical grid, according to a Mortenson Construction survey of utility executives, engineers, and suppliers at the 2014 IEEE PES Transmission & Distribution Conference. [PR Web]
¶ New Jersey’s Public Service Electric and Gas Company has started construction of its largest solar project to date, an 11.18-MW project atop the closed Kinsley Landfill. Kinsley is the utility’s third project to transform the state’s landfill space into solar farms under the Solar 4 All initiative. [reNews]
¶ A lawsuit claims that the NRC and Pacific Gas and Electric Co changed a key element of the Diablo Canyon plant’s license related to seismic safety without allowing public input as required by law — or even notifying the public at all. The changes concern the strength of earthquakes that the plant can withstand. [SFGate]
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October 28, 2014
Science and Technology:
¶ A new policymaking tool to discern the most efficient and effective means within the multiple choices and better enable the shift to renewable energy has been developed by researchers at the University of California–Berkeley. It facilitates assessment of economic and environmental implications of policies. [CleanTechnica]
World:
¶ Laos plans to quadruple its hydropower generation capacity from current levels by the end of the decade and step up electricity exports to its neighbouring countries, its vice minister of energy and mines said on Tuesday. Laos is among Asia’s poorest countries but has big ambitions to become the “Battery of Southeast Asia.” [Daily Mail]
¶ The UK’s Department of Communities and Local Government has upheld the resolution to grant planning permission for a six turbine wind farm near Carlisle. The city council had granted permission, but was appealed. Now, assuming no legal challenge in a six-week period, the project will begin construction in 2015. [BQ Live]
¶ New data highlights the catastrophe of the Australian Coalition government’s campaign against renewable energy. In a period when possibly 1,000 MW of solar projects should have been commissioned, just 10 MW of solar projects have been committed in 2014, almost one third of them on IKEA’s rooftops. [RenewEconomy]
¶ GE announced it will supply equipment and procurement contractor HydroChina and wind farm customer Sapphire with 33 GE 1.5-82.5 wind turbines for the Sapphire Wind Power farm in the southeastern Pakistani province of Sindh, located outside the provincial capital of Karachi. [The Nation]
¶ The growth rate of wind farms and solar plants in China, India and an array of smaller developing countries is starting to outpace that in many of the world’s richest nations. Wind and solar equipment manufacturers are helping drive a major shift to green energy, a year-long study of developing countries’ energy use suggests. [Financial Times]
¶ Wind capacity could increase nearly seven-fold by 2030, reaching a total of more than 2000 GW and meeting almost 20% of electricity demand, according to a new report, the Global Wind Energy Outlook 2014. It says that while growth has been flat at about 40 GW per year, conditions are likely to improve. [Business Spectator]
¶ A new political party has been established which supports the current Renewable Energy Target and seeks to increase Australia’s emission targets. The Australian Progressive Party seeks to provide certainty for an industry currently suffering from the “inconsistency and short-sightedness” of successive governments. [Climate Control News]
¶ The state of Saxony-Anhalt in Germany is investing in electricity storage by developing a 30 MW lithium-ion battery there. It will be built by SK Innovation Co Ltd, a South Korean company. About €9 billion have been invested in solar power infrastructure in Saxony-Anhalt since 1991. [CleanTechnica]
¶ A town in southwest Japan became the first to approve the restart of a nuclear power station on October 28, one step in Japan’s fraught process of reviving an industry left idled by the Fukushima nuclear crisis in 2011. Satsuma-sendai, a town of 100,000, has long relied on the Sendai nuclear power plant for government subsidies and jobs. [Asahi Shimbun]
US:
¶ UC Merced leaders say the campus could be completely powered through renewable energy by the end of 2016, sooner than originally planned. The campus already gets about 15% of its power from its solar panels, and will get 60 percent from a Fresno County solar site in the next couple of years. [Merced Sun-Star]
¶ A new Alevo factory in Concord, North Carolina will produce shipping containers loaded with Alevo batteries to provide 2 MW of power (1 MWh of energy) to be attached to grids at strategic locations. These units will also provide a range of services to deliver efficiencies and eliminate waste. [Renewable Energy Focus]
¶ Broken Bow II, a 75-MW wind farm developed by Sempra U.S. Gas & Power Co, in central Nebraska, was dedicated Monday. The farm’s 43 turbines generate enough power for about 30,000 homes. Nebraska Public Power District has bought all of the wind farm’s electricity under a 25-year contract. [Lincoln Journal Star]
¶ The states of New York, Connecticut, and Vermont and the Prairie Island Indian Community in Minnesota filed separate appeals to challenge the NRC’s review on nuclear storage. They contend that federal officials did not conduct a thorough analysis of the long-term risks of dry-cask storage. [Minneapolis Star Tribune]
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October 27, 2014
Science and Technology:
¶ The risk of severe winters in Europe and northern Asia has been doubled by global warming, according to new research. The counter-intuitive finding is the result of climate change melting the Arctic ice cap and causing new wind patterns that push freezing air and snow southwards. [The Guardian]
World:
¶ A2Sea has installed the first turbine at Dong Energy’s Borkum Riffgrund 1 offshore wind farm in the German North Sea. The Sea Installer erected the first of 78 Siemens 3.6 MW machines on 25 October. The wind farm has a total capacity of 312 MW. It is planned to be fully commissioned in the first half of 2015. [reNews]
¶ The chief executive of the UK’s £3.8 billion Green Investment Bank says that after months of uncertainty over support for renewable energy, confirmation of contracts for major offshore wind schemes and clarity around the Renewable Obligation support scheme should ensure projects could move forward. [Business Green]
¶ Cruise ships now have a green alternative when they dock at the Port of Halifax, Nova Scotia. There is a new shore power system that lets vessels plug in. The shore power jib lets ships shut down their auxiliary engines and connect to the electrical grid while docked. This shore power project is the first of its kind on the East Coast. [Globalnews.ca]
¶ An official from The Institute of Energy Economics of Japan says Russia may play an important role in Japan’s efforts on energy security, possibly through a direct gas pipeline. Japan needs to diversify as nuclear reactors are currently shut down following the Fukushima Disaster. [ICIS]
US:
¶ Over a dozen solar businesses in Ohio have sent a letter to the White House backing the EPA’s proposed Clean Power Plan. One organizer with Environment Ohio says leaders need to reverse the freeze on the state’s renewable-energy standards and strengthen clean-energy laws to make the plan work. [Public News Service]
¶ The Board of Public Utilities of New Jersey wants to award up to $3 million to energy-storage projects, a policy officials say could help government, commercial, and industrial facilities have a backup power source in the event the traditional power grid fails during an extreme storm. [NJ Spotlight]
¶ There has been some movement to apply pressure to Georgia Power to adopt more solar. Georgia is a conservative state, so there has been a resistance to disrupting the main utilities’ reliance on fossil fuels. However, the dramatic drop in solar power prices has made even a resistant utility begin to embrace it more. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The National Park Service is investing $29 million in 81 individual energy efficiency and water conservation projects at national parks throughout the greater Washington region. This move to reduce energy use and generate energy from renewable sources is the Interior Department’s largest so far. [National Parks Traveler]
¶ Speaking last week at a conference hosted by Georgetown University’s McCourt School of Public Policy, EPA administrator Gina McCarthy says the US has arrived at a pivotal moment in its pursuit of clean energy, a time on par with the very creation of the EPA almost 44 years ago. [Agri-Pulse]
¶ Solar giant SunEdison made several announcements last week in relation to major solar energy projects in California, as it completes major phases of project development. To date, the company has completed 382 projects in California in total, adding more than 489 MW of solar capacity in the state. [Energy Matters]
¶ Wärtsilä will supply a 50 MW Smart Power Generation power plant to Hawaiian Electric Company on the island of Oahu. The plant will help enable the integration of more solar PV generation on the island by providing backup power as needed. Wärtsilä is based in Helsinki, Finland. [FINNBAY]
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October 26, 2014
World:
¶ According to data published by the China Coal Resource, China’s coal use has dropped this year by 1.28%, a downward trend started in the second quarter of 2014 and continued in the third. This, despite the fact that electricity consumption has actually increased by 4% over the year to date. [CleanTechnica]
¶ In Germany, the tiny village of Feldheim is at the renewable energy movement’s vanguard. The hamlet was Germany’s first to leave the national grid, using 100% local, alternative energy. It has an excess of electricity from wind and solar, which it sells, and uses methane from a bio-digester for heat. [The Local.de]
¶ Australian Industry Minister Ian Macfarlane says the government hasn’t walked away from a 20% renewable energy target, but a drop in power consumption has required a “recalibration”. The government wants to adjust the RET to a “real 20%”, in effect slashing it from 41,000 GWh to about 27,000 GWh. [Yahoo!7 News]
¶ Korea’s Ulleung Island, with a population of 10,000, will be energy independent through using renewable energy sources from 2020, according to its governor. The governor took Samsø Island in Denmark as an example. In Samsø, 100% of the electricity comes from wind power. [Korea Times]
¶ In India, Rajasthan-based solar EPC firm Rays Power Experts plans to invest Rs 200 crore ($327 million) for developing independent solar power parks across the country and eyes Rs 1,000 crore ($1.635 billion) by FY ’16. The company expects to have 400 MW of operational capacity by FY ’16. [Economic Times]
¶ Solar Impulse representatives have arrived in Abu Dhabi to meet with local authorities in preparation for the plane’s arrival in January. The plane’s historic flight around the world, entirely on solar power, is scheduled to take off from Abu Dhabi next March. Pilots of the Solar Impulse 2 will conduct test flights in the meantime. [Emirates 24/7]
¶ The intensified demand for electricity from renewable sources has kick-started the hydropower development into a new era: An unprecedented number of dams for electricity production is currently under construction or planned worldwide. However, the boom will affect some of the most important sites for freshwater biodiversity. [AZoCleantech]
¶ Masao Uchibori, the only party-candidate running, won the Fukushima gubernatorial election, according to The Yomiuri Shimbun. While all six candidates aimed to decommission the all remaining nuclear reactors in the prefecture, Uchibori was the only one to back restarting other Japanese nuclear reactors. [The Japan News]
US:
¶ OneEnergy Renewables and Constellation announced the development of a 4.3 MW solar electric project on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. The is part of an electricity supply agreement between Constellation and the National Aquarium, which will receive about 40% of its power from the project. [AZoCleantech]
¶ DTE Biomass Energy today celebrated the completion of its 9.6-MW landfill gas-to-energy project at a landfill, which is owned and operated by Republic Services of North Carolina. Landfill gas at the site is used to generate renewable energy which is subsequently sold to Duke Energy Progress. [AZoCleantech]
¶ Increasing numbers of Michigan homeowners are making an investment in renewable energy, especially as prices for the equipment come down and their electricity bills edge up, according to utility companies and solar proponents. Many want to act before the federal tax credit expires in 2016. [Detroit Free Press]
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October 25, 2014
Notable:
¶ Rick Piltz passed away. He was a prominent whistleblower during the George W. Bush administration, leaking internal documents, showing that the administration was actively obscuring climate science. A White House staffer later admitted to editing reports to downplay effects of climate change. [Scientific American]
World:
¶ Marks & Spencer is building the UK’s largest array of rooftop solar panels on a distribution center. Spread across 900,000 sq ft with more than 24,000 photovoltaic panels, the system will generate nearly enough energy to power the distribution center which handles all the goods M&S sells via its online store. [HITC]
¶ Iran is planning to produce 5,000 MW of electricity in the next five years using renewable energy sources, an Iranian official says. Due to its geographical and geological position, Iran enjoys enormous potentials for production renewable energies, including geothermal, solar and wind power. [News.Az]
¶ ABB is working with Vestas to provide rural communities in developing countries with affordable clean electricity. The two companies have announced plans to jointly deliver power technology and system integration solutions for remote off-grid and microgrid communities. [SmartMeters]
¶ Mainstream Renewable Power has reached full commercial operation at the 46-MW Oldman 2 wind project in Alberta. The Irish developer erected 20 Siemens 2.3-MW 101 turbines whose main components were manufactured in Kansas and Iowa. Oldman 2 is the third Alberta wind farm to come online this year. [reNews]
¶ Nuclear power generation will account for less than 30% of all electricity generated in Japan, according to the newly appointed economy minister. This is the first time a minister has referred to a specific rate for electricity generated at nuclear power plants since the Great East Japan Earthquake in March 2011. [The Japan News]
US:
¶ The Ford Focus Electric 2015 edition is getting a significant price cut of about $6000, down to $29,995, according to recent reports – thus finally putting it on competitive terms with the market leader, the Nissan LEAF. This is actually the second price cut for the Ford Focus Electric, which debuted at $39,995 four years ago. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The US Navy has committed to get half of its energy from renewable sources by the year 2020. It is looking to extract energy from tides, currents and waves to help with that goal, and has given the University of Washington an $8 million contract to develop marine renewable energy. [UW Today]
¶ The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Engineering and Support Center, Huntsville today released a request for proposals for a 25 MW Combined Heat and Power (CHP) renewable energy project at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama. The Redstone Arsenal project is a 30-year Power Purchase Agreement. [Greentech Media]
¶ Xcel Energy Inc. said Friday that it has signed deals with three Minnesota energy developers to construct up to three giant fields of solar panels near the cities of North Branch, Marshall and Tracy by late 2016 to comply with a new state renewable energy mandate. [Minneapolis Star Tribune]
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October 24, 2014
World:
¶ European leaders agreed to cut carbon emissions by at least 40% by 2030, in a move that could pave the way for a global treaty on tackling climate change next year. The wording means that the target could be raised to 50% in the event an ambitious emissions reduction deal is agreed in Paris next year. [Business Green]
¶ The United States has challenged the Japanese government over moves to ramp up exports of coal-fired power technology and to offer cheap loans to lure buyers, according to a U.S. source with direct knowledge of the matter. Japan’s shipments of the equipment soared to nearly $8 billion last year. [Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide]
¶ DuPont is part of a plan by the government of Macedonia to create a market for cellulosic ethanol in the Pelagonia region of that country. Ethanol Europe and DuPont will work toward building a market for the fuel in Europe, which would support a commercial-scale second-generation ethanol plant in Macedonia. [The News Journal]
¶ Japan warned that a volcano in southern Japan located roughly 64 km (40 miles) from the Sendai nuclear plant was showing signs of increased activity that could possibly lead to a small-scale eruption and warned people to stay away from the summit. The government is trying to get the Sendai plant restarted soon. [www.worldbulletin.net]
US:
¶ For years, the utilities responsible for providing electricity to the nation have treated residential solar systems as a threat. Now, they want a piece of the action, and they are having to fight for the chance. If utilities embrace home solar, their deep pockets and access to customers could be transformative. [Scientific American]
¶ County ballot issues to ban fracking could have a large impact outside those counties. And the campaign money being spent on both sides – but primarily by big energy companies – shows how much is at stake. The highest profile and most contentious ban is the one on the ballot in Denton, Texas. [Resilience]
¶ SunEdison, a leading solar technology manufacturer and provider of solar energy services announced today that it has closed on construction financing. The funds will be used to construct the 26 MW DC Vega solar power plant located in Merced County, California. [AltEnergyMag]
¶ Renewable energy experts Thursday credited Sonoma County with a leading role in the expanding green power industry, a sector combating climate change as it creates jobs – including economic growth fueled locally by one of the state’s first public electricity programs of its kind. [Santa Rosa Press Democrat]
¶ In its 2015 State Solar Panel Rankings Report, solar advocacy group Solar Power Rocks has graded states based on a complex set of criteria. New York and Massachusetts both get A+ grades, and Connecticut, New Jersey and Vermont each get a solid A. The rest of the nation, despite less cloudy skies, is mostly not doing as well. [Mother Nature Network]
¶ Maine’s Supreme Judicial Court upheld approval of the 39-MW Passadumkeag Mountain wind project by the Board of Environmental Protection after an appeal by a local opposition group. The court decision also clarified that the board has a broad power to review the decisions of state regulators. [reNews]
¶ The Solar Community initiative is the first nationwide bulk solar purchase program launched to give homeowners easy access to more affordable, clean, renewable energy. The initiative presents a new approach to purchasing, financing and installing solar panels at a uniform discounted price to anyone in the US. [WebWire]
¶ Wind energy is generating most of the dollars being invested in renewable energy in Michigan, according to a study released by the Pew Charitable Trust on Thursday, October 23. More than $2 billion was invested in renewable energy in the state between 2009 and 2013, according to the study. [The Ann Arbor News]
¶ Since Hurricane Sandy hit New Jersey, darkening swaths of the nation’s most densely populated state for days, a microgrid at Princeton University has emerged as a national example of how to keep power running for residents, emergency workers and crucial facilities when the next disaster strikes. [Princeton University]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 23, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “Scratch below the nuclear hyperbole” – Six reasons why nuclear is not the answer to climate change (without even mentioning Fukushima) – The nuclear industry is pouring money and political influence into selling the United States and Wall Street on the lie that nuclear power is the answer to climate change. [Commons]
World:
¶ The Ikea Group may be putting a price on carbon emissions and is making great strides to become more sustainable. It has committed to investing €1.5 billion until 2015 in renewable energy, mainly wind and solar power. Ikea aims to produce at least 70% of its energy consumption from renewable sources by 2015. [Triple Pundit]
¶ The Ugandan authorities have approved an additional nine renewable electricity plants – some of them under the Global Energy Transfer for Feed-in Tariffs program – to generate a total of 132.7 MW to boost Uganda’s transformation into an upper middle class country. Eight of the plants will go online by 2018. [Bernama]
¶ The public sector will play an important but secondary role in financing the French energy transition, according to a new study. The state-funded study says an additional investment of €20 billion per year is needed to complete the energy transition. The study gives an overview of France’s fight against climate change. [EurActiv]
¶ Australia’s Renewable Energy Target will not be scrapped, but the government is negotiating industry exemptions with the opposition. The government, led by coal advocate Tony Abbott, called for cuts, exemption for some mining industries, or a complete abolition. Labor rejected these but proposed further talks. [PV-Tech]
¶ One of Australia’s main wind turbine tower manufacturers has announced it will shed 100 staff after the federal government revealed its intention to seek a cut to the Renewable Energy Target. Continued uncertainty over the large-scale RET led the company to mothball “most” of its wind tower fabrication facilities. [Business Spectator]
¶ China’s installed wind power capacity will reach 100,000 MW by the end of 2014, a year ahead of the scheduled targets for the year outlined in the country’s 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-15), a senior official said on Wednesday. China’s installed wind power capacity had already hit 83,000 MW by the end of August. [ecns]
¶ The UK is way off track to meet its target to have 25% of heating provided by low carbon sources, such as heat pumps and biomass boilers, a new report from WWF has revealed. The Warm homes, not Warm Words report shows that just 2% of UK heating demand currently comes from low carbon sources. [Business Green]
¶ Former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, known as a firm opponent to nuclear power following the 2011 Fukushima meltdowns, on Wednesday criticized current Japanese leader Shinzo Abe’s policy to revive the country’s nuclear power generation. Last May Koizumi established a body to promote renewable energy. [GlobalPost]
US:
¶ Trash to fuel, the stuff of the 1980s sci-fi comedy movie trilogy “Back to the Future” is now a reality. The 2015 Bi-fuel Chevrolet Impala – not a tricked-out DeLorean – really can run on leftovers, table scraps and, oh yeah, grains from brewing beer, as Quasar Energy Group uses organic waste to produce biogas, which can fuel the car. [Florida Weekly]
¶ The US is reducing oil dependence, slowing the growth of electricity needs, and making energy services more affordable to all Americans – and our smarter use of energy is the single most important contributor to these positive trends, according to a report released today by the Natural Resources Defense Council. [AltEnergyMag]
¶ Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz announced more than $53 million for forty research and development projects that will aim to drive down the cost of solar energy, tackling key aspects of technology development in order to bring innovative ideas to the market more quickly. [Utility Products]
¶ New York Governor Cuomo today announced the first transactions of NY Green Bank to kick off clean energy projects across New York. Such projects are traditionally difficult for the private sector to finance because the financial industry has little experience with them and there is no way established way to evaluate risks. [InvestorIdeas.com]
¶ Satellite observations of huge oil and gas basins in East Texas and North Dakota confirm staggering 9% and 10% leakage rates of heat-trapping methane. Scientists evaluating this put the use of fracked gas in perspective. In short, fracking speeds up human-caused climate change, thanks to methane leaks alone. [ThinkProgress]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 22, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “When Grid Defection Makes Economic Sense (Graphs & Charts)” A Rocky Mountain Institute and Cohn Reznick report, “The Economics of Grid Defection,” addresses the question of when it makes sense to go off the grid in various parts of the US for those in the residential or commercial sectors. [CleanTechnica]
World:
¶ The UK’s wind farms generated more power than its nuclear power stations on October 21, the National Grid says. During a 24-hour period on that day, spinning blades produced more energy than splitting atoms. Wind made up 14.2% of all generation and nuclear offered 13.2%. [BBC News]
¶ The Australian clean energy industry and Labor Party have immediately rejected the Abbott government’s opening gambit in negotiations to find a bipartisan agreement on the future of the renewable energy target. Labor rejected it as a job-killing “phoney” offer before it was even announced. [The Guardian]
¶ The Cook Islands Prime Minister opened Infratec Renewables’ 960-kW Te Mana o Te Ra solar plant in Rarotonga. The panels are expected to produce about 5% of the Cook Islands’ electricity. The country aims to produce 50% of its electricity from renewable sources by next year, rising to 100% by 2020. [SundayNews.co.nz]
¶ Greece’s dominant power utility PPC won approval from the energy regulator to produce electricity at two wind parks it plans to build in northern Greece. The production licence opens the way for construction of parks of 106-MW capacity in Rodopi, a project which is estimated to cost €127.2 million ($161.47 million). [Reuters Africa]
US:
¶ The Department of Defense released its 2014 Climate Change Adaption Roadmap, outlining how the military plans to adapt to climate change. For the first time, the Pentagon discusses climate change as an immediate risk – a factor to be incorporated into how the military operates today. [Energy Collective]
¶ General Motors’ new 2.2-MW solar array at its Lordstown Complex will be complete by the end of 2014. It will be GM’s largest solar installation in the Western Hemisphere. GM remains on track to meet a company goal of 125 MW of renewable energy deployed globally by 2015. [Today’s Energy Solutions]
¶ Sharyland Utilities, a power transmission company, has filed an interconnection agreement with Unity Wind at the Texas Public Utility Commission. The filing covers a wind farm in Deaf Smith County with a capacity of up to 240 MW and a projected second phase of 100 MW of solar generation. [Amarillo.com]
¶ GE’s Distributed Power business, Western Energy Systems, and Phoenix Energy announced they have signed an agreement for GE to supply Jenbacher gas engines to power a series of bioenergy plants that Phoenix Energy plans to build around California. The plants will use biomass gasification for fuel. [AltEnergyMag]
¶ Cornell University expanded its renewable energy portfolio as Distributed Sun, Building Energy and ABM announced they successfully launched production for Cornell’s Snyder Road Solar Farm, consisting of a 2-MW array on eleven acres of Cornell property in the Town of Lansing. [AltEnergyMag]
¶ In the first program of its kind, 3M Co. is one of three large US companies that are offering assistance to employees who want solar panels at their homes. The program, called the Solar Community Initiative, promises discounts of 30% to 35% on solar-panel projects, and help on planning and installation. [Minneapolis Star Tribune]
¶ A new report from the US DOE’s Lawrence Berkeley and National Renewable Energy Laboratories on the price impacts of its SunShot initiative has found the cost of solar energy in America fell by up to 19% in 2013, with utility-scale PV systems falling below $2 a watt – 59% below what modeled pricing predicted in 2010. [Energy Matters]
¶ Ecoplexus Inc has closed financing and commenced construction on three solar PV projects totaling 21 MW and costing about $40 million. The projects have signed long-term power purchase agreements contracts with Duke Energy Progress and are expected to achieve commercial operations in 2014. [PennEnergy]
¶ Allison M. Macfarlane, chairman of the NRC, announced that she will resign to take a teaching job at George Washington University. She still has more than three years left in her term, but said she would leave January 1 and become director of the university’s Center for International Science and Technology Policy. [Washington Post]
¶ The US wind industry saw installations surpass last year’s total last month, according to new data published this week. The American Wind Energy Association announced that the total for the first nine months of 2014 was 1,254 MW. The installations for 2014 have now exceeded the 1,088 MW installed during the whole of last year. [Business Green]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 21, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “Oil decline: Price makes the story” When the world’s business editors sent their reporters canvassing to find out what is behind the recent plunge in the world oil price, they looked at normal economics in action. But the issue here has much more to do with politics than with supply and demand. [Resilience]
Science and Technology:
¶ The technology for managing a distributed energy landscape includes smart inverters, advanced power electronics, other grid edge devices, communications networks and software platforms. Now, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the DOE’s ARPA-E program bring us microsynchrophasors. [Energy Collective]
¶ A new, somewhat clever means of managing and improving the efficiency of the power grid was recently unveiled by a coalition of some of the world’s largest automakers. It is in fact simply a technology that allows for the direct communication of utility companies and plug-in electric vehicles, via the cloud. [CleanTechnica]
World:
¶ A report from the EU on power prices is only the latest of a number coming to the same conclusion. Along with three earlier reports, it proved that “wind energy is one of the lowest cost options for reducing carbon emissions,” with each focusing on a different attribute of wind energy’s performance. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Renewable energy lies at the heart of a dispute between Spain and France: Spanish wind turbines easily produce more power than is needed in the domestic market but that energy is wasted because there are few transmission lines to carry it across the border to France, but France wants to protect its nuclear reactors from competition. [Financial Times]
¶ Global wind capacity could reach 2000 GW by 2030 and meet up to 19% of electricity demand, according to a report released by the Global Wind Energy Council and Greenpeace International. It also says that the sector could create more than 2 million jobs worldwide and cut CO2 emissions by more than 3 billion tonnes per year. [reNews]
¶ According to the Clean Energy Pipeline, global clean energy investment jumped 11% in the third quarter of 2014 over figures a year earlier, clearing $64 billion. The third quarter figures represent a 3% decrease on Q2 2014 numbers, but are still healthy growth over a year earlier. [CleanTechnica]
¶ Dutch power grid operator TenneT has signed a contract for a €150 million ($192 million) loan to finance a grid project to help connect offshore wind farms in the Netherlands. The Netherlands aims to build offshore wind farms with a total capacity of 3,450 MW by 2020. [Energy Live News]
¶ A portion of the Northwest Russian Karelian Republic’s boiler systems will gradually be shifted to local forms of fuel such as peat and lumber production refuse now that the region’s government has decided to transfer 35% (250 MW) of its heat generation to these sources. [Bellona]
US:
¶ In the next Vermont legislature, a renewable portfolio standard could be created to establish how much electricity generated from wind, solar and other renewable resources utilities must sell. Under the current voluntary goal, utilities are allowed to sell renewable power credits out of state to reduce electric rates. [vtdigger.org]
¶ The hot summer was the third in which Southern California went without 2,200 MW from the San Onofre nuclear plant. Drought reduced the state’s hydroelectric output by another 1,628. Despite these events, California did not have any major outages, primarily because of its increased renewable capacity. [KCET]
¶ Minnesota’s highways are poised to become green energy generators with up to five 1-MW PV arrays built on public right-of-way. If the pilot project proceeds as planned it would exceed the capacity of a solar installation expected to go online next fall that is touted as the largest in Minnesota. [MinnPost]
¶ Michigan wind turbines could be erected without regard for some local laws under recently introduced legislation. The bill would amend Michigan’s Right to Farm Act to include wind production. It would allow wind turbines to be constructed on agricultural land without zoning or building permits. [Michigan Capitol Confidential]
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Tags: nuclear, nuclear power, photovoltaic, renewable power, solar power, wind power
October 20, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “Is France’s Love Affair with Nuclear Over?” During the next 11 years, France will reduce the percentage of electricity coming from nuclear from 75% to 50%. To do that, estimates are that as many as 20 of France’s 58 reactors would have to be closed and replaced with efficiency and renewable sources of power. [OilPrice.com]
¶ “Germany’s Energiewende Proves Electricity can be Clean and Reliable” Since 2004, the year of the first major revision of Germany’s Renewable Energy Act, the country has added at least 35 GW of solar and 35 GW of wind to its electric grid – enough to offset upwards of 35 coal plants. [Environmental Defense Fund]
World:
¶ The Philippines will have its largest wind farm once Energy Development Corp completes the 150-MW Burgos Wind Project in November. Groundbreaking for the Burgos Wind Project took place in April 2013 while the Construction for the initial 87 MW capacity of the wind farm started in June 2013. [GMA News]
¶ Green Power Panay Philippines Inc is currently developing a 35-MW biomass power plant in Mina, Iloilo, Panay. Biomass are renewable organic materials, like wood, agricultural crops or wastes used as a fuel or energy source. Biomass can be burned directly or processed into ethanol and methane biofuels. [Rappler]
¶ The Turks and Caicos Islands deepened its commitment to advancing renewable energy by joining the Carbon War Room’s Ten Island Challenge. The Rocky Mountain Institute will provide a range of technical, project management, communications, and business advisory support services. [Turks and Caicos Weekly News]
¶ Morocco’s first solar energy plant will begin operating in 2015, as part of a project the oil-scarce kingdom hopes will satisfy its growing energy needs. Morocco expects to build five new solar plants by the end of the decade with a combined production capacity of 2,000 MW, at an estimated cost of $9 billion. [Peninsula On-line]
¶ Investors are seeking funding from the UK government for an ambitious plan to import solar energy generated in North Africa. The TuNur project aims to bring 2 GW of solar power, enough for 2.5 million UK homes, to the UK from Tunisia if the company wins a contract for difference. [BBC News]
¶ British farmers will no longer be eligible for any farm subsidies under the Common Agricultural Policy for land from January 2015. The Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs claims that the move “will help rural communities who do not want their countryside blighted by solar farms”. [Solar Power Portal]
US:
¶ Geothermal power was once king of California’s renewable energy, but the industry’s shortsightedness and slowness to innovate left it floundering for three decades as solar and wind energy grew. Now, industry leaders say it is poised for a renaissance, powered by new technology. [Los Angeles Times]
¶ Minneapolis council members approved a contract with Xcel Energy and CenterPoint Energy, while also creating a public-private board to pursue the development of renewable energy options. Some environmental activists say the arrangement is a big step forward, but some others are skeptical. [Minnesota Daily]
¶ Using figures from the US Energy Information Administration, a Greenpeace team has calculated that only around 30% of the country’s emissions reduction came from switching from coal to less carbon intensive gas. The news comes after a study in Nature suggested fracked gas could cause increased emissions. [Business Green]
¶ A recent Union of Concerned Scientists study found that America can nearly quadruple its renewable electricity in the next 15 years, reaching 23% by 2030. This comes in response to the Environmental Protection Agency’s proposal that America set a modest goal of 12% renewable energy by 2030. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The state of Vermont has won a nearly quarter-million-dollar grant to help promote connecting renewable energy projects to the state’s electric grid. The US DOE grant goes to a partnership being set up between the state Department of Public Service and Vermont’s largest electric utility, Green Mountain Power. [Daily Journal]
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October 19, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “Offshore wind can be our answer to region’s challenges” Wildlife and future generations are counting on us to build a set of solutions that match the scale of our environmental challenges. Responsibly developed offshore wind power can be New England’s greatest contribution to this goal. [Boston Globe]
Science and Technology:
¶ Researchers have developed a new catalyst that could lead to inexpensive and more efficient biofuels. Led by Professor Yong Wang from the Washington State University, the researchers mixed inexpensive iron with a tiny amount of rare palladium to make the catalyst. [Economic Times]
World:
¶ The International Energy Agency just released its second annual Energy Efficiency Market Report 2014 confirming energy efficiency’s place as the world’s “first fuel” and estimating the value of the energy efficiency market at between $310 and $360 billion and growing. [Energy Collective]
¶ Prudential is poised to become the key investor in a £1 billion tidal power station, securing the future of the infrastructure project. Its investment arm M&G is to inject up to £100 million in the Swansea Bay Tidal power station. The project is scheduled to open in 2018, and with Prudential backing is likely to get a go ahead. [Telegraph.co.uk]
¶ In Pakistan, the provincial government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has decided to embark on an ambitious plan for hydro and solar power projects to end the scourge of power load shedding. It has also approved a fund of Rs 10 billion ($97.24 million) for Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Oil & Gas Development Company Limited. [Business Recorder]
¶ Projects are beginning to grow renewable energy infrastructure in South Africa. The government has allocated about 70 renewable energy projects including 35 based on solar PV technology, with over 1,500 MW of capacity expected to be added. Wind energy and solar thermal power projects have also been allocated. [CleanTechnica]
¶ With the Small and Medium Enterprises playing a vital role in the economy of Sri Lanka, financing has become the biggest challenge, according to Syed Zed Al Qudsy, President of Malaysia’s SME Factors, speaking at a media conference held at the Kingsbury in Colombo on Wednesday. [The Sunday Times Sri Lanka]
¶ The switch has been flicked on New Zealand’s biggest solar energy installation, which is based in Whangarei. The 240-kW grid-connected solar electricity system will offset 80% to 90% of the air conditioning costs at the Tarewa Mega Centre, generating enough energy to power more than 40 homes. [Stuff.co.nz]
¶ India’s Ministry of New and Renewable Energy has released revised guidelines for auction of solar photovoltaic power projects with a significant hike in overall capacity. The government plans to add 15 GW of solar power capacity by Q1 2019. The first of the auctions will involve 1,000 MW of capacity. [CleanTechnica]
¶ A record 264,000 becquerels of radioactive cesium per liter has been detected in groundwater at Fukushima Daiichi, TEPCO disclosed Saturday. The sample was taken Thursday from an observation well near reactor 2 reactor of the plant, which was destroyed by the March 2011 quake and tsunami. [The Japan Times]
¶ Japan’s Economy, Trade and Industry Minister has asked the chairman of a power industry group to decide soon whether seven nuclear reactors that will reach their 40th year of operation by July 2016 should be decommissioned. The aging reactors tend to be small, so it is possible utilities will let them go. [The Japan News]
US:
¶ Michigan’s entire Upper Peninsula is facing an energy crisis. A regional electrical power grid authority has ordered We Energies to continue running a nearly 60-year-old, coal-fired power plant it wants to close. This triggered a more than $8-million-per-month cost to keep the coal-belching plant going. [Detroit Free Press]
¶ JinkoSolar Holding Co, Ltd, and sPower have announced details of their first partnership. JinkoSolar is supplying nearly 115,000 of its 305-W high efficiency solar PV modules to sPower for a 34-MW solar facility comprised of four separate projects located in Lancaster and Victorville, California. [IT Business Net]
¶ Siemens has landed a contract to provide Hutchinson-made wind turbines for a new wind farm in Iowa and small expansion of another. MidAmerican Energy announced recently it plans to spend $280 million on the project, which will include installation of 67 turbines in southwest Iowa. [Hutchinson News]
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October 18, 2014
Opinion:
¶ “Why Abbott’s faith in coal could be wrong – very wrong” In the baking expanses of the high desert near Reno, Nevada, a project is under way that could well make a mockery of Tony Abbott’s prediction this week that the coal industry will underpin Australia’s prosperity for decades. [Sydney Morning Herald]
World:
¶ Queensland network operator Ergon Energy wants to take some remote customers off-grid because of the cost of maintaining its sprawling grid network. New technology, such as solar and battery storage, costs so little it makes sense that some customers have stand-alone energy systems. [CleanTechnica]
¶ The decision by the Australian National University to end its investment in fossil fuels is a bellwether moment for Australia. It’s democracy up against crony capitalism, science up against ideology and renewable energy against the old polluting industries. Tony Abbott’s derision of ANU as “stupid” is a raw ideological refusal to face facts. [The Guardian]
¶ The Indian government said initial discussions have started for setting up an integrated power transmission grid connecting India with its neighboring nations including Bhutan, Bangladesh and Pakistan. Excess production of power in one region can easily be used to meet deficit elsewhere. [Economic Times]
¶ South African electricity utility Eskom has plugged its first wind farm into the national grid. The Sere wind farm, 350 km north of Cape Town, is the utility’s first large-scale renewable energy project. The farm is a major step towards reducing South Africa’s reliance on coal-powered energy. [South Africa.info]
¶ A report by SmartestEnergy’s Energy Entrepreneurs estimates that manufacturers in the UK increased their investment in commercial-scale on-site power by £53.3 million (US$91.4 million) to a total of £164.3 million (US$281.7 million). This represents a 36% jump in investment. [Cogeneration & On-Site Power Production Magazine]
¶ A prominent volcanologist disputed regulators’ conclusion that two nuclear reactors are safe from a volcanic eruption in the next few decades, saying such a prediction is impossible. He said a cauldron eruption at one of several volcanoes surrounding the Sendai could cause a nationwide disaster. [The Japan Times]
US:
¶ One year ago, Georgia Tea Party members joined forces with environmental advocates to force Georgia Power to procure more solar power competitively as they were upset about the $1.5 billion in cost overruns from the Vogtle nuclear power plant. Now, results of competitive bidding show solar is very cost-competitive. [Energy Collective]
¶ A $500 million biorefinery is one of only three commercially sized plants in the country that use only plant waste, such as stalks and leaves, for production and thus do not compete for food crops. The second-generation ethanol plant has the capacity to produce 25 million gallons of ethanol per year. [Hutchinson News]
¶ Debbie Dooley, co-founder of the Atlanta Tea Party and national coordinator for the Tea Party Patriots, plans to push for more solar in Florida as she has in Georgia. Her goal is to end utility monopoly control in Florida. She has launched Conservatives for Energy Freedom, with the first chapter in Florida. [Tampabay.com]
¶ The North American Smart Climate Agriculture Alliance will bring together California farmers, ranchers and foresters to collaborate with energy industry experts. The focus will be on sustainability, resilience to climate change, reducing greenhouse gasses and reviewing the latest science on climate change. [California Forward Reporting]
¶ The NRC issued a much-delayed report on Thursday on Yucca Mountain’s suitability for vast shipments of spent nuclear fuel, saying it would be safe for storing nuclear waste. The 780-page staff report concluded the site “with reasonable expectation” could satisfy federal licensing requirements. [The Fiscal Times]
¶ Officials with the soon-to-close Vermont Yankee nuclear plant said Friday it could cost up to $1.24 billion to decommission the reactor, and that they currently have about half that much in a fund dedicated to paying for that work. The figure was contained in a “site assessment study.” [Washington Times]
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