Posts tagged renewable energy
Bloomberg: Global Spending on Renewable Energy to Hit $7 Trillion by 2030
Dec 2nd
Bloomberg: Global spending on renewable energy to hit $7 trillion by 2030
Bloomberg New Energy Finance’s new report, “Global Renewable Energy Market Outlook” predicts that global spending on renewable energy installations will have hit $7 trillion by 2030, according to Onyx Service & Solutions Inc.
The report names the Latin American market one of the big winners over the next 20 years, which bolsters ONYX’s decision to focus efforts in high-cost electrical markets there. The report predicts doubling from 2010’s record-breaking $195 billion, to $395 billion in 2020, before reaching $460 billion in 2030.
According to the report, 15.7% of the world’s energy (including hydropower) will come from renewable sources by 2030. The flourishing economies of Latin America, the Middle East, Africa and India are set to see growth rates of installed renewable capacity of 10-18 percent a year over the period 2010 to 2020, the report noted.
Total, Amyris agree to produce renewable fuels
Total and Amyris Inc. have signed agreements to expand their current research and development partnership and form a joint venture to develop, produce and commercialize a range of renewable fuels and products. Under the agreements, the companies will expand their ongoing R&D collaboration to accelerate the deployment of Biofene and develop renewable diesel based on this molecule produced from plant sugars.
Further, Total has committed to contribute $105 million in funding for an existing $180 million program. In addition, the companies have agreed to form a 50-50 joint venture company that will have exclusive rights to produce and market renewable diesel and jet fuel worldwide, as well as non-exclusive rights to other renewable products such as drilling fluids, solvents, polymers and specific bio lubricants. The JV plans to begin operations in the first quarter of 2012.
Canadian Solar delivers modules for 9-MW solar project in Spain
Canadian Solar has supplied its CS6P-P solar modules solar for a 9-MW solar power plant in the town of Ablitas, Spain. The solar project, being developed by OPDE Group, is scheduled for commissioning in the fourth quarter of 2011. Construction on the solar project was started in mid-October 2011.
JCM Capital, Hay Solar to develop 30-MW of solar projects in Ontario
JCM Capital will finance 30 MW of solar projects in the province of Ontario. Under an agreement with Hay Solar Holdings ULC, JCM Capital agreed to provide full development, construction and long-term equity financing for a 30 MW portfolio of modular 100 kW farm building solar installations located through out Ontario.
JCM focuses on financing and developing solar projects on large commercial and industrial buildings and large-scale solar farms across Ontario, utilizing the province’s Feed-in-Tariff program via solar power purchase agreements with the Ontario Power Authority.

San Francisco’s Community Choice Aggregation Plans
Nov 29th
Danielle Murray discusses what the city of San Francisco is doing to offer its citizens new ways to purchase renewable power.
| Danielle Murray: | My name’s Danielle Murray and I’m the Renewable Energy Program Manager for the San Francisco Department of Environment. We cover a range of topics everything from environmental education in schools to waste reduction, recycling, composting and again education on those, toxics reduction, green buildings and then the section I’m in is energy so we have a large energy efficiency as well as renewable energy that I work on. Got a couple of exciting things going on right now; one is that the Mayor announced a 100% renewable goal for the city last year, so we’re currently working with a task force of really excellent numbers from across the energy community and local stakeholders to come up with an actionable plan to get us to 100% renewable power for the entire city, not just the municipalities but the community as well. So, that’s under way now, look for that early next year come out with a recommendation report from the task force. The crux of that is community power and local control over power. If we want to get to 100%, we need to either have the help of utilities or our own local power system helping us meet that goal.One of the ways we’re hoping to do that is through Community Choice Aggregation, which is a bill that came out in the California legislature almost a decade ago now that enables local governments to aggregate their customers, residential-commercial customers within their area and source power for them. What we’re working on right now is contracting with a power supplier to provide a 100% green electricity supply for customers in San Francisco and it would be essentially an alternative to the existing utility PG&E, in terms of where people get their power from. The power still gets carried over the same line, re-distributed, transmitted over PG&E’s infrastructure but the power is sourced by the city or the city’s agents. As a result, we can say that as customers of this Community Choice Aggregation Program, which will be called CleanPowerSF, choose to take a 100% green power. That may involve a small cost premium but it’s something that, what we’ve seen from polls and from our local citizens is that they’re willing to pay a little bit more, a couple of dollars a month, ten dollars a month, to have a completely green product coming into their house rather than what they’re getting off the PG&E grid right now, which should be meeting our renewable portfolio standards in California at 20% right now, but actually are lagging behind. So, this is the way to move our electricity supply into a greener space and actually make sure that we’re meeting those state mandates and going beyond even. So, this is a main way that we can do that and we obviously hope we can work with PG&E to get there also and to work with our local citizens to get more distributed generation in the city, on roofs, etc.We’re also looking at some local projects, like a wave power project off-shore, but this is the main way that, particularly citizens who don’t have the roof space for solar system, whether they’re renters or leasers or they’re businesses, they’re tenants in a building that they don’t own can actually buy green power through the CCA rather than only having the option of going with their utility and getting right now it’s about 16% renewable power.Marin County is a great proving ground for doing Community Choice Aggregation. It’s been a great success; they’ve had a lot of interest from their community members, high sign-up levels. They’ve actually got two products; a light green and a deep green product. They’ve got one that I think is 23 or 26% green, that’s their light green product. They’re also offering 100% green product, at a slight price premium over the average utility rates right now. It’s been great to see them move forward and to see the interest that they’re getting and also frankly they’re working out some of the kinks and have gone through the process of contracting and procuring the supply that we’ll have to do that on the line. So, we’re learning a lot of lessons, we’re watching them intently to see how things go and as I mentioned, we’ve opted to skip the light green product and go straight to 100% deep green renewable energy product because we think that there’s a demand for that here in San Francisco. Honestly, we found that the folks who are willing to take part in the program at all, who wanted to see more renewable power, didn’t just want to see 30% or 40% green. If they’re going to opt into this, they wanted to see 100% green power. So, they were willing to pay that very slight price premium in order to say not just I’m doing a little bit better than our utility, but we’re going all the way and we’re getting 100% green power from it. I think that climate change is really the most pressing issue facing the entire world right now. Honestly, I’m incredibly concerned about it. I have been since I was in college and first started hearing about it and learning from scientists the true effects going on in the world and just how dangerous it is and where we’re headed if we don’t change things right now. I think energy is at the core of this issue which is what motivated me personally to get into sustainable energy and I think that’s the driving factor for most people to support renewable energy and sustainable energy in addition to the health effects, which is previously what I was interested in, human health. The way that renewable energy impacts air quality, human health and ultimate sustainability and liveability of this planet is important. On the political side, government has to be there leading the way to encouraging the shift towards renewable energy, towards sustainble sources of power. As we’ve seen in the last few years, it’s very hard to move things forward on the international stage and there’s been a lot of action at the local level. I think working for a progressive city like San Francisco, in particular, has been a great opportunity to move things forward, to set an example and show that you can change the status quo and that it’s possible and can even be practical and financially sound to shift towards, not just renewable energy but all sorts of sustainable measures, like I was talking about in the department, that range from reducing toxics to shifting to green buildings, recycling and composting. So, we’ve seen financial benefits for the city from all of those and our constituents have supported those movements and it’s not because we just live in a fairyland where we think that everything should be good and green but because it makes financial sense for us and it makes sense for our health and for our well-being. It’s a great place to be doing the work and I think that other cities have been leading the way as well and there’s a lot of good work to be done at this level but again you need both the people and the administration in cities, like myself, as the bureaucrats might say and the politicians to be supporting that movement as well and listening to the constituents, who care deeply about these issues and taking that forward and creating positive change. |
Operation Technology Develop Power System Engineering Software for Renewable Energy Sector
Nov 21st
Operation Technology develops power system engineering software for renewable energy sector
Operation Technology Inc. has released newest version of ETAP enterprise software solution that includes a comprehensive renewable energy model for wind turbine generators, full scale power converters and photovoltaic array with manufacturer specific libraries of P-V and I-V curves.
ETAP 11 enables designers and engineers to conceptualize wind and solar collection, determine renewable energy penetration levels and perform grid interconnection studies. In addition, ETAP 11 offers a graphical user-defined dynamic modeling module that is completely script free for fast and reliable simulations taking the guess work out of control systems.
HyperSolar working to making renewable natural gas
HyperSolar Inc. has disclosed more information from its patent application for a process to produce renewable natural gas using sunlight, water and carbon dioxide. Inspired by the photosynthetic processes that plants use to effortlessly harness the power of the Sun to create energy molecules, the company is developing a novel solar-powered nanoparticle system that mimics photosynthesis to separate hydrogen from water. The free hydrogen can then be reacted with carbon dioxide to produce methane, the primary component in natural gas.
The company’s patent application is entitled, “Photoelectrochemically active heterostructures, methods for their manufacture, and methods and systems for producing desired products.” It discloses the company’s novel low cost manufacturing techniques, nanostructure innovations for high efficiency, and the use of freely available sunlight, waste water and carbon dioxide to produce hydrogen, methane, and other valuable chemical products.
Mass Megawatts completes low-cost, “off-the-grid” wind power system
Mass Megawatts Wind Power Inc. has completed the construction on its first wind power system delivered for use at an agricultural or home-based location that is not connected to the utility power grid. The wind power system is located nearAspen,Colorado.
The wind power system, in conjunction with a small solar photovoltaic system, is producing enough electricity to power a home. The surplus electricity is stored in batteries, providing power during times of low-wind and sun exposure.
As many remote locations do not have access to traditional utility-power, the wind power system offered by Mass Megawatts provides a cost-effective solution for onsite power generation. Mass Megawatts Wind Power is currently in negotiations with agricultural, mining and resort locations that are seeking an efficient, low-cost, power source.
How Imperative Energy Helps European Union Companies Generate Bio-Energy
Nov 20th
Joe O’Carroll, Managing Director of Imperative Energy, discusses what responsibilities his company offers when they help companies decide how to become more responsible about energy use.
Empire State Building Gets EPA Award for Buying 100% Renewable Energy
Nov 17th
Empire State Building gets EPA award for buying 100% renewable energy
The Empire State Building, which is the world’s most famous office building, has received a 2011 Green Power Leadership Award from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for purchasing 100% renewable energy. The annual awards recognize the country’s leading green power purchasers for their commitment to renewable energy and contribution to helping advance the development of the nation’s voluntary green power market.
The 2.85 million square-foot officeEmpireStateBuildingis purchasing 55 million kWh of wind power annually from Green Mountain Energy Co. under a two-year contract. The building’s renewable purchase is enough green power to meet 100% of the building’s purchased electricity use.
SolarWorld supplies solar panels for 2-MW solar system in Massachusetts
SolarWorld has supplied high-performance solar panels for a 2-MW solar project atBerkshireSchool, a private boarding high school inSheffield,Mass.The solar project will occupy 8-acre area and is expected to come go online this fall.
The ground-mounted system is composed of 8,332 of SolarWorld’s crystalline silicon solar panels; 8,020 are installed on fixed racking and 312 on a solar-tracking system. In addition to generating about 45% of the school’s energy needs, the system will also serve as a cutting-edge educational resource for the study of photovoltaic and other renewable-energy technologies.
Washington Gas Energy Services receives 2011 green power supplier award
Washington Gas Energy Services has received the 2011 Green Power Supplier of the Year Award in the non-utility category from the U.S. Department of Energy. The award recognizes non-utility providers for outstanding efforts, initiatives and programs that significantly advance the development of green power sources.
Washington Gas Energy Services is one of the largest and most experienced competitive energy suppliers in the mid-Atlantic region and has a history of innovative green energy leadership, according to DOE. The company was the first company in the area to include wind power in their 2002 standard electric offer, buying renewable energy from the first wind farm to come online in the local region.
SURGE Accelerator Program Opens In Houston
Nov 14th
Kirk Coburn, Co-founder and Managing Director of the SURGE Accelerator in Houston, discusses the kind of start-up entrepreneurs that he’s looking for as he builds his team’s inaugural accelerator class. More >
The Impact of Germany’s Decision to Phase out Nuclear Energy
Nov 14th
On 30 May, in the aftermath of Japan’s Fukushima nuclear disaster, German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced that Germany would close all of its 18 nuclear power plants between 2015 and 2022, which produce about 28 percent of the country’s electricity.
Eight have now been taken offline, and with the winter coming on, Berlin is scrambling to make up the energy shortfall lest the country suffer blackouts combined with the need to import massive amounts of electricity.
Despite Germany’s Kreditanstalt fur Wiederaufbau (German Development Bank) being set to underwrite renewable energy and energy efficiency investments in Germany worth $137.3 billion over the next five years, Merkel’s government has now announced that in addition to going green, it will also build a dozen coal-fired power plants as part of the country’s future energy mix. In order to assure the energy transition, the government also plans to subsidize new natural gas power plants as well.
Now the consequences of the 30 June Bundestag law phasing out nuclear power are impacting. On 19 October Germany’s Minister of Economics and Technology Philipp Roesler somberly told Parliament, “The real work starts now,” adding that the ministry now had the goals “To ensure the security of the energy supply and to protect the environment, within acceptable financial conditions.” Afterwards, Environment Minister Norbert Roettgen told legislators at the same session, “Renewable energy and energy efficiency are the two pillars of the new energy policy.” The next day Roesler in the company of Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble in a joint press conference informed reporters that Germany had sharply lowered its 2012 growth forecast to 1 percent. In April, the month following Fukushima but before the German government decided to phase out nuclear power, the Economy Ministry had predicted a 2012 growth rate of 1.8 percent.
The government’s newly pragmatic approach contrasts with the hopes of many environmentalists, who believe that Germany now has an historic opportunity to embrace renewable power rather than pursuing the retrograde step of commissioning new coal burning power plants.
But government ministers are increasingly concerned primarily with ensuring the security of the nation’s energy supply, even though the 30 June legislation mandated that Germany’s share of energy from renewable sources must increase from 17 percent to 35 percent in 2020 and reach 80 percent by 2050. A modest start has already been made, as since the eight reactors were closed Germany increased its share of electricity produced from renewable energy sources from 17 percent to 20.8 percent.
But the renewable power sources will be costly. On 19 October the German Association of Industrial Energy and Power Users complained that electricity price had increased even though its quality has decreased and noted that next year its members will see their electrical power invoices increase by 9 percent.
As for the economics of the shift, electricity from conventional coal fired plants costs roughly $83 per megawatt-hour, the price increases roughly 50 percent to $124 per megawatt-hour for wind energy, $207 per megawatt-hour for offshore wind power, and $268 per megawatt-hour for solar, the last more than three times the cost of coal-fired electricity.
Despite the fact that renewable energy has such high differential costs, most Germans accept it. According to a recent TNS Infratest survey, 79 percent of Germans polled felt that the “new energy” fees were “reasonable,” with only 15 percent considering them “too high.” Germany Trade & Invest economic development agency photovoltaic-industry expert Tobias Homann said, “With the decision to abandon nuclear power earlier this year, it was clear that the road ahead would be challenging. But Germany is in a very promising position to be the first industrialized country to rely entirely on renewable energy.”
Despite the cost associated with renewable energy Germany is one of the world’s largest producers of wind power, with 27 gigawatts of generating power installed, roughly 16 percent of the world’s current wind power generating capacity in the world, making it Europe’s biggest consumer of electricity from wind power.
In the new austere Germany, the shift to renewable energy sources comes at a bad time for the exports-driven German economy, as increased energy costs can only add to the expensiveness of exports. Needless to say, despite Germany’s commitment to preserving the euro, further uncertainties are introduced into German economic long-range planning.
Economic teething problems aside, Germany’s abandonment of nuclear power and embrace of renewable energy will be closely watched around the world not only by nations but the globe’s nuclear and renewable power industries. While startup costs and transition problems have yet to be resolved, Germany is betting on its future, and future generations using solar and wind power will not have to bury energy wastes with a half-life of tens of thousands of years.
Written by. Dr. John C.K. Daly for OilPrice.com. The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author, Dr. John C.K. Daly. For more information on oil prices and other commodity related topics please visit http://oilprice.com
Is Occupy Wall Street occupying the wrong street?
Nov 1st
My Dad and I have a running joke when we’re in the car together. “Look,” he’ll say. “Gas is cheap. It’s down to $3.39.” Cheap, he means, compared with the month before when it was $3.79 per gallon.
The joke illustrates a good point. A few years ago we were flabbergasted by gasoline prices that exceeded $3 per gallon. Now we’re really happy when it doesn’t hit $4 per gallon.
When it comes to energy, we’re like frogs in water coming to a slow boil. We’ve gotten so accustomed to high oil prices, we don’t notice anymore that we’re cooked.
In my two decades writing about energy, this is one of the most poignant facts I’ve run across: Oil price spikes preceded 10 of our 11 last recessions. This statistic portrays in a nutshell the grip that petroleum holds on us.
Don’t get me wrong, I’m not letting the banks off the hook. But by focusing so much passion on the banks in casting blame for today’s economic downturn, is Occupy Wall Street letting a major culprit slink off unnoticed down the alley?
The Econbowser.com, source of the 10 out of 11 stat, says that in 2008 high oil prices caused a drop in overall spending, which served as “the knockout punch for an economy that was already wobbly.” The article goes on to say that “there’s no question that more favorable fundamentals are exactly what we would have had if the price of oil had never gone over $100 a barrel.”
But there’s good news too. When oil prices are high, the innovators emerge. And that’s what is happening today. Over the last few months I’ve run into some pretty intriguing – possibly game changing – new energy technologies. Here are a few.
This week I interviewed Riggs Eckleberry, CEO or OriginOil, a company that has found a highly efficient way to harvest algae and extract its oil, a process that takes advantage of algae’s sensitivity to electrical fields. The approach promises to save both energy and water in processing algae. As Eckleberry puts it, algae is a renewable “petroleum that is being made fresh instead of fossilized.” He sees algae becoming an important part of the energy mix in the short-term and a serious competitor to petroleum in the long term.
In working on an article for an upcoming issue of Renewable Energy World magazine, I learned about Dyesol, an Australian company that uses dye sensitive solar products to generate electricity. Dyesol describes the process as ‘artificial photosynthesis.’ It uses an electrolyte, in this case a layer of titania (a pigment used in white paints and tooth paste) and ruthenium dye sandwiched between glass in a window. Light strikes the dye and excites electrons that are absorbed by the titania to become an electric current many times stronger than that found in plant photosynthesis. The window creates electricity using both the artificial light in the building and the sunshine outdoors.
Meanwhile, Swapnil Shah, CEO of FirstFuel, described to me how his company conducts in-depth energy audits on commercial buildings without ever setting foot in the building. FirstFuel’s analytics software offers a “zero touch” alternative to cumbersome building energy audits. Already being used by several utilities, the software program also provides specific recommendations for efficiency improvements. To run its analytics, FirstFuel only requires easily accessible information about the building, such as its billing history and address. The program relies on the Web and GPS to obtain the rest of the data it needs. (More on FirstFuel in next week’s blog.)
Innovators like these folks worry that when oil prices drop, investors and policymakers will lose interest in finding energy alternatives. It’s a pattern we’ve fallen into before. Just as high oil prices precede recessions, low oil prices precede periods of apathy. Maybe we’ve been cooked enough this time to reverse the pattern.
Written by Elisa Wood; who is a long-time energy business writer. To read more of her articles on energy visit www.RealEnergyWriters.com.








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