Archive for February 5th, 2010

Nuclear power “renaissance” not the expansion boom the industry expected

The Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI), an Ottawa think tank founded in 2002 by Research In Motion co-CEO Jim Balsillie, says we shouldn’t expect any major expansion of the nuclear market before 2030. After that, the future of the industry is no more certain.

After three and a half years of extensive study, which included exhaustive consultation with industry experts and review of peer-reviewed literature, the policy think tank released a report yesterday that says the nuclear industry will have a hard enough time just replacing older reactors in the existing global fleet. Fact is, nuclear’s contribution to the global power mix since 2000 has fallen, as has the number of reactors in the fleet. Meanwhile, 2008 was the first year since the mid-1950s that no new nuclear reactor was connected to the grid. There have been refurbishments and life extensions, and there has been a lot of talk about building new reactors, but so far the massive, fast-paced expansion the industry has touted simply isn’t materializing. There will be some modest growth, but CIGI doesn’t expect nuclear will play a major role in combatting climate change before 2030. Between now and then, it also says alternatives — solar, wind, energy efficiency, conservation, smart grid technologies — will gain momentum and may ultimately prevent nuclear projects from getting a foothold. “Research and development is proceeding at such a pace for most of these alternatives that improvements in performance and cost will likely arrive faster than for nuclear technology,” the study concluded.

Think about it: by 2030 it’s quite possible we’ll have energy storage breakthroughs that give intermittant renewables baseload characteristics, but instead of deploying them in massive multibillion-dollar chunks, they could be part of a distributed energy system that locates power closer to consumers, and deploys it quickly and when needed.

CIGI lists a number of issues that have held back expansion of the nuclear power market:

  • High upfront cost — reactors that can cost up to $10 billion a piece.
  • Labour shortages resulting from boomer retirements and lack of investment in training and education.
  • Long construction lead time.
  • High risk of cost overruns and delay.
  • High reliance on government subsidies and public backstopping.
  • Ongoing concerns with waste management.
  • Alternatives becoming increasingly more competitive.

Now, the nuclear industry isn’t oblivious to these issues, and indeed, there is a move underway to build smaller reactors that can be built more quickly, on time, and at a more manageable cost and pace. Also, these mini reactors would fit better into a distributed generation model, and attempts at developing small thorium-fuelled reactors would address waste management and nuclear proliferation concerns. CIGI acknowledged these developments, but said we’re not likely to see thorium reactors or mini-reactors being adopted in any significant way before 2030 — again, too late to be relied on for climate-change mitigation.

All this said, there will be growth — in China, in India, and a handful of other countries — and there will be refurbishments. This should keep the industry busy for the next couple of decades. No jobs are likely at risk here. Over the long term, however, the future of the nuclear industry would appear more uncertain.

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Japanese Thermoelectric Modules Aim Reaching Record of 11% Efficiency



A new test will be performed by Showa Denko on Feb. 15, 2010. The thermoelectric device is designed to be attached to the exhaust pipe of a car and supply electricity to the car’s air conditioner, thus improving the fuel mileage.


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2009 Global Wind Power Report (by Country): Wind Up (Despite Economy) and China & US Up Big

For the 5th year in a row, China has doubled its installed wind power capacity. Wind power capacity in the world grew 31% in 2009.

The Global Wind Energy Council released a report on new global wind power statistics this week and these are some of its main findings.

In total, 37.5 GW of wind power were added in 2009, bringing total worldwide installations up to 157.9 GW. One third of these new installations were in China.

The US, despite projections that wind power would drop due to the recession, continued to see growth and remains on top in total installed capacity (but who knows for how long).

“The continued rapid growth of wind power despite the financial crisis and economic downturn is testament to the inherent attractiveness of the technology, which is clean, reliable and quick to install. Wind power has become the power technology of choice [for] a growing number of countries around the world,” said Steve Sawyer, GWEC’s Secretary General. “Copenhagen didn’t bring us any closer to a global price on carbon, but wind energy continued to grow due to national energy policy in our main markets and also because many governments in [sic] prioritised renewable energy development in their economic recovery plans.”

The global market for wind turbine installations was worth about $63 billion (€45 billion) in 2009 and employs about half a million people now, GWEC estimates.

Top Countries in 2009

1) US: 35.2 GW of installed capacity (up from 25.2 GW in 2008, 26.5% increase)
2) Germany: 25.8 GW of installed capacity (up from 23.9 GW in 2008, 5.1% increase)
3) China: 25.1 GW of installed capacity (up from 12.1 GW in 2008, 34.7% increase)
4) Spain: 19.1 GW of installed capacity (up from 16.7 GW in 2008, 6.6% increase)
5) India: 10.9 GW of installed capacity (up from 9.7 GW in 2008, 3.4% increase)

For a full table, by continent or region and country, of installed wind power capacity in 2008 and in 2009 (and the growth in 2009, so you don’t have to do the calculations), as well as other charts and graphs, click here.

China

As discussed in several recent posts, China is looking to sprint ahead in the new clean energy race that is expected to determine who leads the world economy, even if it is not willing to commit to much internationally — or maybe that is part of its plan.

Here again, we see evidence of China’s commitment to become a (if not the) world leader in clean energy.

“The Chinese government is taking very seriously its responsibility to limit CO2 emissions while providing energy for its growing economy. China is putting strong efforts into developing the country’s tremendous wind resource. Given the current growth rates, it can be expected that the [sic] even the unofficial target of 150 GW will be met well ahead of 2020,” said Li Junfeng, Secretary General of the Chinese Renewable Energy Industries Association.

China looks to nail its target way ahead of schedule. Will the US and others do the same?

The US

The US is still on top with total installed wind capacity. It saw growth in wind power despite the great economic recession. Will that continue?

“Against all expectations, the US wind energy market installed nearly 10 GW in 2009, increasing the country’s installed capacity by 39% and bringing the total installed, grid-connected capacity to 35 GW. In early 2009, some analysts had foreseen a drop in wind power development of as much as 50%, but the implementation of the US Recovery Act with its strong focus on wind energy development in the summer reversed this trend.

“The U.S. wind energy industry shattered all installation records in 2009, chalking up the Recovery Act as a historic success in creating jobs, avoiding carbon, and protecting consumers,” said AWEA CEO Denise Bode (emphasis mine). “But U.S. wind turbine manufacturing is down compared to last year’s levels, and needs long-term policy certainty and market pull in order to grow.”

Europe

Europe saw better than expected growth in wind as well. 10.5 GW of wind power capacity were installed in 2009. Spain led with 2.5 GW, then Germany with 1.9 GW, and then Italy, France and the UK all added more than 1 GW as well.

“It is a remarkable result in a difficult year,” said Christian Kjaer, CEO of the European Wind Energy Association. “The figures, once again, confirm that wind power, together with other renewable energy technologies and a shift from coal to gas, are delivering massive European carbon reductions, while creating much needed economic activity and new jobs for Europe’s citizens.”

As in the US recently as well, wind was the fastest growing source of clean energy (or energy at all) in Europe in 2009. 39% of new power capacity was from wind in 2009, compared to 26% from gas and 16% from solar photovoltaics. Coal and nuclear capacity were decommissioned more than they were installed.

Wind is Up, CO2 Down

“Wind energy is already making a significant contribution to saving CO2 emissions. The 158GW of global wind capacity in place at the end of 2009 will produce 340 TWh of clean electricity and save 204 million tons of CO2 every year,” concluded Steve Sawyer. “As we see in Europe and the US, wind power is now often the most attractive option for new power generation, both in economic and environmental terms, and for improved supply security.”

Wind is on the rise. What will we see in 2010? If it’s anything like last year, current projections are unlikely to tell us.

Related Stories:
1) Wind Turbines based on Jet Engines 3-4 Times More Efficient & Coming to Market? [VIDEO]
2) Wow, China IS Serious About Clean Energy!
3) New Intelligent Wind Turbines “See” the Wind

Image Credit: Evan McKern via flickr under a CC license


Visit the original post at: Energy News

2009 Global Wind Power Report (by Country): Wind Up (Despite Economy) and China & US Up Big

For the 5th year in a row, China has doubled its installed wind power capacity. Wind power capacity in the world grew 31% in 2009.

The Global Wind Energy Council released a report on new global wind power statistics this week and these are some of its main findings.

In total, 37.5 GW of wind power were added in 2009, bringing total worldwide installations up to 157.9 GW. One third of these new installations were in China.

The US, despite projections that wind power would drop due to the recession, continued to see growth and remains on top in total installed capacity (but who knows for how long).

“The continued rapid growth of wind power despite the financial crisis and economic downturn is testament to the inherent attractiveness of the technology, which is clean, reliable and quick to install. Wind power has become the power technology of choice [for] a growing number of countries around the world,” said Steve Sawyer, GWEC’s Secretary General. “Copenhagen didn’t bring us any closer to a global price on carbon, but wind energy continued to grow due to national energy policy in our main markets and also because many governments in [sic] prioritised renewable energy development in their economic recovery plans.”

The global market for wind turbine installations was worth about $63 billion (€45 billion) in 2009 and employs about half a million people now, GWEC estimates.

Top Countries in 2009

1) US: 35.2 GW of installed capacity (up from 25.2 GW in 2008, 26.5% increase)
2) Germany: 25.8 GW of installed capacity (up from 23.9 GW in 2008, 5.1% increase)
3) China: 25.1 GW of installed capacity (up from 12.1 GW in 2008, 34.7% increase)
4) Spain: 19.1 GW of installed capacity (up from 16.7 GW in 2008, 6.6% increase)
5) India: 10.9 GW of installed capacity (up from 9.7 GW in 2008, 3.4% increase)

For a full table, by continent or region and country, of installed wind power capacity in 2008 and in 2009 (and the growth in 2009, so you don’t have to do the calculations), as well as other charts and graphs, click here.

China

As discussed in several recent posts, China is looking to sprint ahead in the new clean energy race that is expected to determine who leads the world economy, even if it is not willing to commit to much internationally — or maybe that is part of its plan.

Here again, we see evidence of China’s commitment to become a (if not the) world leader in clean energy.

“The Chinese government is taking very seriously its responsibility to limit CO2 emissions while providing energy for its growing economy. China is putting strong efforts into developing the country’s tremendous wind resource. Given the current growth rates, it can be expected that the [sic] even the unofficial target of 150 GW will be met well ahead of 2020,” said Li Junfeng, Secretary General of the Chinese Renewable Energy Industries Association.

China looks to nail its target way ahead of schedule. Will the US and others do the same?

The US

The US is still on top with total installed wind capacity. It saw growth in wind power despite the great economic recession. Will that continue?

“Against all expectations, the US wind energy market installed nearly 10 GW in 2009, increasing the country’s installed capacity by 39% and bringing the total installed, grid-connected capacity to 35 GW. In early 2009, some analysts had foreseen a drop in wind power development of as much as 50%, but the implementation of the US Recovery Act with its strong focus on wind energy development in the summer reversed this trend.

“The U.S. wind energy industry shattered all installation records in 2009, chalking up the Recovery Act as a historic success in creating jobs, avoiding carbon, and protecting consumers,” said AWEA CEO Denise Bode (emphasis mine). “But U.S. wind turbine manufacturing is down compared to last year’s levels, and needs long-term policy certainty and market pull in order to grow.”

Europe

Europe saw better than expected growth in wind as well. 10.5 GW of wind power capacity were installed in 2009. Spain led with 2.5 GW, then Germany with 1.9 GW, and then Italy, France and the UK all added more than 1 GW as well.

“It is a remarkable result in a difficult year,” said Christian Kjaer, CEO of the European Wind Energy Association. “The figures, once again, confirm that wind power, together with other renewable energy technologies and a shift from coal to gas, are delivering massive European carbon reductions, while creating much needed economic activity and new jobs for Europe’s citizens.”

As in the US recently as well, wind was the fastest growing source of clean energy (or energy at all) in Europe in 2009. 39% of new power capacity was from wind in 2009, compared to 26% from gas and 16% from solar photovoltaics. Coal and nuclear capacity were decommissioned more than they were installed.

Wind is Up, CO2 Down

“Wind energy is already making a significant contribution to saving CO2 emissions. The 158GW of global wind capacity in place at the end of 2009 will produce 340 TWh of clean electricity and save 204 million tons of CO2 every year,” concluded Steve Sawyer. “As we see in Europe and the US, wind power is now often the most attractive option for new power generation, both in economic and environmental terms, and for improved supply security.”

Wind is on the rise. What will we see in 2010? If it’s anything like last year, current projections are unlikely to tell us.

Related Stories:
1) Wind Turbines based on Jet Engines 3-4 Times More Efficient & Coming to Market? [VIDEO]
2) Wow, China IS Serious About Clean Energy!
3) New Intelligent Wind Turbines “See” the Wind

Image Credit: Evan McKern via flickr under a CC license


Visit the original post at: Energy News

ODAC Newsletter – Feb 5

ODAC Newsletter – Feb 5

In a busy week for energy policy, UK energy watchdog Ofgem finally acknowledged what has been obvious for years: that liberalized markets cannot deliver energy security in the era of carbon reduction and resource depletion.

read more


Visit the original post at: Energy News

ODAC Newsletter – Feb 5

ODAC Newsletter – Feb 5

In a busy week for energy policy, UK energy watchdog Ofgem finally acknowledged what has been obvious for years: that liberalized markets cannot deliver energy security in the era of carbon reduction and resource depletion.

read more


Visit the original post at: Energy News

ODAC Newsletter – Feb 5

ODAC Newsletter – Feb 5

In a busy week for energy policy, UK energy watchdog Ofgem finally acknowledged what has been obvious for years: that liberalized markets cannot deliver energy security in the era of carbon reduction and resource depletion.

read more


Visit the original post at: Energy News

Federal RES Could Double U.S. Clean-Energy Jobs: Report
(none)


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Dow Chemical Eyes Michigan for Solar Shingle Facility
02/05/2010 – The Dow Chemical
Company
recently announced that Midland, Michigan has been
identified as the preferred site for the first full-scale production
facility for its DOW POWERHOUSE Solar Shingle, subject to finalizing
local, state and federal funding…


Visit the original post at: Energy News

Dow Chemical Eyes Michigan for Solar Shingle Facility
02/05/2010 – The Dow Chemical
Company
recently announced that Midland, Michigan has been
identified as the preferred site for the first full-scale production
facility for its DOW POWERHOUSE Solar Shingle, subject to finalizing
local, state and federal funding…


Visit the original post at: Energy News

SunEdison Activates First Phase of 16-MW North Carolina Solar Farm
SunEdison a subsidiary of MEMC Electronic Materials has activated the first phase of its 16-megawatt (MW) solar farm in Davidson County, N.C.The first phase of the project represents 4 MW of generation capacity and is comprised of more than 14,000 solar panels. The complete system is expected to go online by the end of the year.
Visit the original post at: Renewable Energy News – RenewableEnergyWorld.com

25 MW of Uni-Solar Laminates Headed for Italy
United Solar Ovonic (United Solar), a wholly owned subsidiary of Energy Conversion Devices Inc. (ECD) confirmed that it will supply up to 25 megawatts (MW) of Uni-Solar photovoltaic laminates to Enel Green Power for installation on a number of buildings owned by CIS-Interporto di Nola in Italy.
Visit the original post at: Renewable Energy News – RenewableEnergyWorld.com

Raser Closes Up to US $19M Financing with Fletcher International
Raser Technologies Inc. this week announced that it sold US $5 million of convertible preferred stock plus an additional $14 million in investment rights, in a transaction that closed on February 3, 2010. The shares are being sold to Fletcher International Ltd. Raser intends to use the net proceeds from the transaction to further its geothermal development program and for general corporate purposes.
Visit the original post at: Renewable Energy News – RenewableEnergyWorld.com

Trina Reaches 20-MW Deal with AE Photonics
Trina Solar Limited announced it has entered into an agreement with AE Photonics GmbH of Germany for 40 megawatts (MW) of PV modules to be delivered during 2010.
Visit the original post at: Renewable Energy News – RenewableEnergyWorld.com