China’s Offshore Wind Market Expected to Grow to US$16 billion

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SHANGHAI, Feb. 27, 2013 /PRNewswire/ –Despite the considerable challenges and bottlenecks faced by China’s…

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

Some industry analysts expressed concerns around the government’s goal of reaching an installed offshore wind power capacity of 5 gigawatts by 2015. Yi Yuechun, deputy general engineer at China’s Design General Institute of Hydropower and Water Resources Planning, dismissed these concerns, saying that in addition to concession projects, several demonstration and other projects are on the verge of going live. All that is needed is for the government to be clear about its policies and for the preparatory work in process to come to a state of completion, and the sector should see a huge acceleration in the development of the industry.

See on www.prnewswire.com

Alstom to close two wind power plants in Spain – Power Engineering

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Alstom recently proposed a restructuring plan for its Spanish onshore wind power business that would result in the closure of two plants and the loss of 373 jobs in the country.

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

The restructuring is necessary to adapt to the “profound crisis” in the wind power sector in Spain, according to the company. Citing an economic crisis and absence of a stable regulatory framework slowing down internal demand as well as limited exports to other markets because of local production requirements and global overcapacity, the company said the changes the changes will help its wind power energy business in Spain adapt to “the new market reality” and guarantee its future sustainability.

See on www.power-eng.com

Wind Power to Compete With Fossil Fuels by 2015, Make Says

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Onshore wind power will become competitive with traditional fossil fuels in Europe, the U.S. and Asia by 2015, Danish researcher Make Consulting said.

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

London-based analyst Bloomberg New Energy Finance estimates onshore wind currently has a global average levelized cost of energy of about $85.11 per megawatt-hour, a level similar to coal and about 10 percent higher than gas. It puts the cost of offshore wind at $225.80.

 

Offshore wind power, with its more expensive infrastructure, is still likely to be close to grid parity in the Asia-Pacific region in 2020, according to Make. In Europe, it may reach that benchmark in 2023, and in the U.S., it’ll take until 2026, Make said.

See on www.bloomberg.com

Biofuel Bust: Cooking-oil thieves caught on camera

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Florida firm reportedly catches two women diverting cooking oil to an alternative energy competitor

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

"We lost about 10-20 thousand (dollars) a month from people stealing this oil from behind our restaurant," Lesperance said.  Lesperance said the women use a special apparatus to siphon the used oil from the top of a barrel.  "We call it an octopus, which has small tubes that go in between the grates to then extract the oil," he said.

See on www.cbsnews.com

Surplus wind power could cost Ontario ratepayers up to $200 million: IESO | Toronto Star

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Surplus wind power could cost Ontario ratepayers millions and compromise power system, says electricity system operator. It says renewable energy market rules must change

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

“It is not unusual for the wind to fall off in the morning at the same time as the morning load picks up,” says the IESO.

 

At present, the IESO can’t control the flow of wind and solar onto the system in the same way it can control the output of other generators. It all flows onto the grid, and is paid a fixed price.

 

When there’s more power than the system can handle, the IESO sells it to neighbouring provinces and states — sometimes at a loss, and sometimes actually paying them to take it.

See on www.thestar.com

Hemp has untapped market as biofuel, Pikeville businessman says | Business | Kentucky.com

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Roger Ford, CEO of Patriot BioEnergy in Pikeville, said hemp could be a huge boon to the one thing Eastern Kentucky has relied on for decades for economic prosperity: coal.

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

"We’re looking at this as an energy crop," Ford said. His company, which is planning to build energy plants to process biofuels, has looked at sweet sorghum but doesn’t think the yield would be profitable enough. Instead, he has turned to hybrid sugar beets, which will give him sugars that can be turned into ethanol, plastics and flavorings.

 

But the advantages from hemp would be exponentially greater, Ford said, because hemp oil from seeds could be used for aviation fuel and biodiesel. Other parts of the plant — such as the "hurds" from the woody middle of the stalk — could be used for cellulosic ethanol.

 

[…]

All the technology exists, said Katherine Andrews, a biochemist who is consulting with Ford on his project.

 

The renewable-fuel standards — including a push by the Navy for a "green fleet" with at least half of its fuel from non-petroleum sources by 2020 — give Kentucky a window of opportunity to get into biofuels, she said.

Read more here: http://www.kentucky.com/2013/02/26/2532443/hemp-has-untapped-market-in-biofuels.html#storylink=cpy
Read more here: http://www.kentucky.com/2013/02/26/2532443/hemp-has-untapped-market-in-biofuels.html#storylink=cpy

See on www.kentucky.com

IATA calls for biofuel sustainability, better air – The Nation

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IATA calls for biofuel sustainability, better air.  The aviation industry is responsible for 2 per cent of the world’s man-made carbon emissions, and governments’ assistance is being sought to…

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

At the Greener Skies Conference in Hong Kong yesterday, Tony Tyler, IATA’s director-general and chief executive officer, specifically cited the need for greater attention to be focused on the commercialisation of sustainable biofuels and improvements in air-traffic management.At the Greener Skies Conference in Hong Kong yesterday, Tony Tyler, IATA’s director-general and chief executive officer, specifically cited the need for greater attention to be focused on the commercialisation of sustainable biofuels and improvements in air-traffic management.

Since 2011, more than 1,500 commercial biofuel flights have been completed, but the cost is too high and the supply too limited, he said. – See more at: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/business/IATA-calls-for-biofuel-sustainability-better-air-30200785.html#sthash.9VfXG122.dpuf

 

Since 2011, more than 1,500 commercial biofuel flights have been completed, but the cost is too high and the supply too limited, he said. – See more at: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/business/IATA-calls-for-biofuel-sustainability-better-air-30200785.html#sthash.9VfXG122.dpuf

See on www.nationmultimedia.com

Futurity.org – For future biofuel, plant stores oil in leaves

See on Scoop.itGreen Energy Technologies & Development

MICHIGAN STATE (US) — Chubby caterpillars show that scientists have engineered a plant with oily leaves, an advance that could enhance biofuel production and lead to improved food for animals. – See more at: http://www.futurity.org/science-technology/for-future-biofuel-plant-stores-oil-in-leaves/#sthash.DkjX1RoM.dpuf

Research news from leading universities

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

Michigan State University is engineering plants to store lipids in leaves and stems for use as bio-fuel feedstock.

See on www.futurity.org

Show Me the Money – How Financial Innovations Can Accelerate Smart Grid Benefits | Smart Grid Library

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One of the most intriguing innovations in finance uses crowd-sourced funds to encourage large groups of retail investors like Joe and Jane to participate in renewable energy generation projects – not just large institutional investors.

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

[…] PACE loans remove the substantial upfront costs of energy efficiency projects and enable owners to upgrade and enhance the value of existing structures, save on energy costs, and create local jobs during the deployment phases of those projects.  By some industry estimates, the market for commercial PACE projects could exceed $180B.

See on www.smartgridlibrary.com

In Praise of Soil: A Conversation with the Founder of Coyote Creek Farm

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Farmer Jeremiah “Jerry” Cunningham’s neighbors are talking. Not just because his ponds fill and drain better than theirs, or because he can walk across his field without mud clumping on his boots. It’s his compost tea.

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

My soil is so well flocculated that it is like a thatched roof. It allows a clump of my silver-tipped bluestem grass to have as much as 25 miles of root system, and for every 25 miles of root system, it probably has 50 miles of mycelia or fungi that bring nutrients to that grass. I feed the microorganisms compost tea, which I learned how to make when I studied with Elaine Ingham from the University of Oregon, and now scientific director at Rodale Institute. She built on the work of Sir Albert Howard, the father of organic farming, from the U.K. I have two 250-gallon tanks in a special barn called the Tea Barn. I pull out the protozoa and the fungi, all of the biology out of the compost into a solution, just like making tea, then spray that all over my pasture. I did that four times a year for seven years, believing that was the way to a healthy farm, and it was. Now we only have to spray compost tea every other year.

See on slowmoney.org