Monthly Archives: December 2020

Energy Week #400: 1/7/2021

Visitors Please Note: This blog is maintained to assist in developing a TV show, Energy Week with George Harvey and Tom Finnell. The post is put up in incomplete form, and is updated with news until it is completed, usually on Wednesday. The source is geoharvey.com.

Within a few days of the last update, the show may be seen, along with older shows, at this link on the BCTV website: Energy Week Series.

Energy Week #400: 1/7/2021

Wednesday, December 23

Forest in China (zhang kaiyv, Unsplash)

¶ “The Tiny Forests Designed By Feng Shui” • Despite China’s grand environmental plans, its past reforestation efforts using non-native trees and fast-growing monoculture crops haven’t always been successful. Now, some scientists believe that forests based in feng shui, rich in biodiversity, could provide a blueprint for sustainable planting. [BBC]

After the Riverside Fire (US Forest Service image)

¶ “Climate Change: Oregon’s Western Cascades Watershed To Experience Larger, More Frequent Fires” • The Clackamas Basin rarely experiences the intense fire activity that burned there during the Labor Day fires, but research out of Portland State University shows such wildfires could become more common under a warming climate. [SciTechDaily]

Thursday, December 24

Aptera (Image courtesy of Aptera)

Baker Electric (From an ad ca 1905)

¶ “My Dream Electric Car” • A lot of people are not able afford today’s EVs, even used. If we are to get rid of the old, polluting cars around us, we need a new class of car for them. It would make sense to have medium-speed cars, designed for ordinary use by ordinary people, intentionally crafted for the greatest efficiency for local driving. [CleanTechnica]

Proposed offshore wind sites (Image via New Jersey Wind Port)

¶ “Shazam! Garden State Transforms Self Into $500 Million Offshore Wind Giant” • New Jersey is known for many things, and now you can add offshore wind to the list. Construction on a $250 million monopile facility will start in January. But that’s not all. New Jersey is setting itself up to be a major center for all facets of offshore windpower. [CleanTechnica]

Friday, December 25

GE Haliade-X turbine

¶ “GE’S Newest Renewable Energy Project Is A Giant Turbine That Powers A Home For Two Days With Just One Turn!” • GE’s Haliade-X prototype is the first wind turbine to generate 288 MWh of electricity in just 24 hour. Towering above Rotterdam, the 12-MW prototype was able to power 30,000 homes. Now, a 14-MW version is coming. [Yanko Design]

Saturday, December 26

Wind turbine (Alyssa Bossom, Unsplash)

¶ “Japan To Eliminate Petrol Vehicles By Mid-2030s” • The Japanese government announced that petrol vehicles would be phased out over the next 15 years as part reaching net zero carbon emissions by 2050. Japan will reduce battery costs by 50% to make cars more attractive, and it will incentivize offshore wind farms to power them. [Euro Weekly News]

Sunday, December 27

NREL wind turbines, 2008 (Hustvedt, CC-BY-SA 3.0)

¶ “The Resistance: In The President’s Relentless War On Climate Science, They Fought Back” • The scientists’ efforts were often unseen and sometimes unsuccessful. But over four years, they mounted a guerilla defense that kept pressure on the Trump Administration. Here is a story about how they fought back, keeping science alive. [InsideClimate News]

Monday, December 28

King tide in Morehead City, NC (King Tides, CC-BY-SA 2.0)

¶ “Rising To Meet The Tide Against The Threat Of Coastal Flooding” • As early as 2050, climate scientists predict, average high tides in the Norfolk, Virginia area will be equal to today’s king tides. They hope data collected by citizen scientists can help develop the ability to forecast exactly when and where damaging floods will occur. [Ars Technica]

Offshore oil platform (Dean Brierley, Unsplash)

¶ “2020 Was One Of The Worst-Ever Years For Oil Write-Downs” • Oil-and-gas companies in North America and Europe wrote down approximately $145 billion combined, roughly 10% of their market value, in the first three quarters of 2020. It is the most for that nine-month period since at least 2010, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis. [Livemint]

Tuesday, December 29

Artist’s Impression of urban farming under solar panels in Singapore (Terrenus Energy image)

¶ “Terrenus Energy And Facebook Sign Deal For 19 MW Of Singapore Solar Project” • Terrenus Energy and Facebook have signed an agreement for 19 MW of energy from a solar farm being developed at Changi Business Park. Terrenus Energy is implementing various innovative projects with the solar project, including urban farming. [The Straits Times]

Illustration of MOSE in operation (Credit: Technital)

¶ “The Long Struggle To Protect Venice From Worsening Floods (Video)” • After years of corruption, cost overruns, and delays, Venice has finally unveiled MOSE, its long-awaited flood control system, and put it to use. “Today, everything is dry,” the mayor said. “We stopped the sea.” It can stop today’s high tides, but can it stand up to climate change? [CleanTechnica]

Wednesday, December 30

GreenPower school bus (GreenPower image)

¶ “NY Governor Cuomo Unleashes New Electric Bus Initiatives” • Governor Andrew M Cuomo announced a series of initiatives to increase the number of electric buses in the state of New York. The new initiatives include $16.4 million in incentives for the expansion of electric bus usage amongst public transportation authorities. [CleanTechnica]

Thursday, December 31

Wind turbines and cacti (Don Stouder, Unsplash)

¶ “US Renewable Pipeline Poised To Add 172.5 GW Through 2024” • An analysis by S&P Global Market Intelligence shows a pipeline of 172.5 GW of wind and solar projects through 2024. Of that, 75.7 GW are wind projects while 96.8 GW are solar, the data shows. Wind and solar projects totaling 30.7 GW of capacity are currently under construction. [S&P Global]

Friday, January 1

Bomb cyclone (NOAA image)

¶ “‘Bomb Cyclone’ Is Bringing Big Waves To Central Coast. What Caused This Weather Phenomenon?” • 2020 ends with another weather record. On New Year’s Eve, a storm with record-breaking low pressure formed near the Aleutian Islands. Its development is what meteorologists call bombogenesis. And it is what they call a “bomb cyclone.” [San Luis Obispo Tribune]

Coal vs renewables (US EIA, “Monthly Energy Review”)

¶ “US Renewable Energy Consumption Surpasses Coal For First Time In Over 130 Years” • US annual energy consumption from renewable sources exceeded coal consumption in 2019, for the first time since before 1885, according to the Energy Information Administration’s Monthly Energy Review. In 2019, Coal was down nearly 15% from 2018. [CleanTechnica]

Saturday, January 2

Scientist launching a balloon (NOAA image, Unsplash)

¶ “Why Trump Failed To Derail National Climate Assessment” • The Trump administration’s failure to soften or bury the climate assessment shows the resilience of federal climate science despite Trump’s efforts to impede it. This article is based on interviews with current and former government officials and others familiar with the process. [Minneapolis Star Tribune]

Sunday, January 3

Tesla in Florida (CleanTechnica)

¶ “Tesla Roaring Into 2021 As Short Sellers Lose Record $38 Billion” • Last year was disastrous for people who bet against Tesla on the stock market. On the last day of the year, Tesla’s stock set a new high of over $700. Yahoo! Finance said the Tesla short sellers lost over $38 billion in mark-to-market losses in 2020. [CleanTechnica]

Monday, January 4

Massachusetts decarbonization plan Please click on the image to enlarge it.

¶ “Massachusetts Will Require All New Cars Sold Be Electric By 2035” • Governor Charlie Baker and his administration shared a plan that will deal a major blow to fossil fuel automakers while greatly cutting the state’s greenhouse-gas emissions. These changes include the mandate that all new cars sold in the state will be electric by 2035. [CleanTechnica]

Tuesday, January 5

Wind turbines (Noah Hogue, Unsplash)

¶ “In ‘Remarkable Shift,’ Four Out Of Five Texans Say Climate Change Is Real. Now What?” • A study published last month by the University of Houston found that 81% of Texans agree that climate change is happening. That result now matches the views expressed by the majority of Americans. But now we need to make everything electric. [Fort Worth Star-Telegram]

Wednesday, January 6

Block Island wind farm (Ionna22, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “Massachusetts Raises Offshore Wind Procurement Goal” • The Massachusetts state legislature increased the state’s offshore wind goal to 5,600 MW. An Act Creating a Next-Generation Roadmap for Massachusetts Climate Policy authorizes procurement of 2,400 MW more offshore wind capacity and raises the renewable energy target to 40% by 2030. [reNEWS]

Notes:

Energy Week #400: 1/7/2021

GE has a 14-MW wind turbine. Japan is eliminating gas-powered cars by the mid 1930s, and so is Massachusetts. Scientists in the US fought back on climate change. The oil industry suffered one of its worst years. Coal is producing less electricity than renewables. And there is more.

George Harvey, blogger, author, and journalist for Green Energy Times and CleanTechnica, computer engineer

Tom Finnell, electrical engineer, transmission grid expert, world traveler, philanthropist, and philosopher

Energy, renewable energy, wind power, Solar, batteries, Nuclear, coal, oil, gas, Climate Change

Energy Week #399: 12/23/2020

Visitors Please Note: This blog is maintained to assist in developing a TV show, Energy Week with George Harvey and Tom Finnell. The post is put up in incomplete form, and is updated with news until it is completed, usually on Wednesday. The source is geoharvey.com.

Within a few days of the last update, the show may be seen, along with older shows, at this link on the BCTV website: Energy Week Series.

Energy Week #399: 12/23/2020

Thursday, December 17

New York City (Emiliano Bar, Unsplash)

¶ “New York City Will Begin Development Of 100-MW Battery Storage Project” • 174 Power Global and Con Edison announced that they signed of a seven-year dispatch rights agreement for development of a 100-MW battery project, the East River Energy Storage System in New York City. The battery will be built in Astoria, Queens. [Environment + Energy Leader]

Nobles 2 wind farm (Minnesota Power image)

¶ “Minnesota Power Reaches 50% Renewable Energy” • With activation of the Nobles 2 wind farm in southwestern Minnesota, Duluth-based Minnesota Power announced that it had reached its goal of 50% renewable energy. It is the first utility in the state to hit that renewable energy milestone, which it did ahead of its 2021 goal. [Minneapolis Star Tribune]

Bluewaters Power Station (Bluewaters.com.au)

¶ “Australia’s Newest Coal-Fired Power Plant Deemed Worthless By Japanese Owner” • In accounts for the six months to the end of September, released last month, the Japanese conglomerate Sumitomo said it had written off the “total amount” of its $1.2 billion investment in the Bluewaters power plant in Western Australia, built in 2009. [The Guardian]

Friday, December 18

Solaris Urbino 18 Electric Bus

¶ “Solaris Rolls Its 20,000th Bus Off The Line” • Solaris, a leader among electric bus producers in Europe, has passed a major milestone: It just rolled its 20,000th bus off the production line. The bus was produced in the Solaris factory in Bolechowo, Poland. Solaris has been producing environmentally friendly buses in Poland since 1996. [CleanTechnica]

Wind turbines (Callum Donovan, Unsplash)

¶ “Top 11 Clean Energy Developments of 2020” • This will be a year to remember. We will remember it for a global pandemic, wildfires, economic recession, racial justice protests, and locust swarms. But there are plenty of exciting and positive things that happened in the energy space this year. The Rocky Mountain Institute lists its top eleven. [CleanTechnica]

Landfill (Image: Onslow County Government, via NASA)

¶ “The Zero Waste Movement Is Finding A Resurgence” • The zero waste movement is trying to eliminate the net production of trash completely. Worldwide role models are reevaluating the way they perceive the concept of trash, and they demonstrate that we do have the ability to reduce the harmful effects of landfills. [CleanTechnica]

Saturday, December 19

John Kerry in Mongolia (US State Department, Wikimedia Commons)

¶ “Unlike Trump, Biden Believes In Climate Change – And His Nominees Prove It” • President-elect Joe Biden will restore to the presidency a belief that humans cause climate change. Biden made his commitment to science abundantly clear when he announced who he nominated for his economic, health, and environment teams. [CNN]

Wind turbines (Alex Eckermann, Unsplash)

¶ “Zero Emissions At Zero Cost? CleanTech Leads The Way” • A new McKinsey & Company report, “How the European Union Could Achieve Net-Zero Emissions at Net-Zero Cost,” lays out a societally cost-optimal pathway to the EU’s emissions targets. The transition could have net-zero cost and produce a net gain of 5 million jobs. [CleanTechnica]

BYD buses in the Netherlands (Image downloaded from bydeurope.com)

¶ “BYD Delivers 246 eBuses To Keolis In The Netherlands” • BYD has just delivered the initial 246 all-electric buses of the Europe’s largest ever electric bus order to the transit company Keolis for routes in the Netherlands. The order was placed in December of 2019. The buses were built in a BYD assembly facility in Hungary. BYD also has a facility in France. [InsideEVs]

Sunday, December 20

Climate campaigners at Lloyd’s of London headquarters (Insure Our Future Global, via Twitter)

¶ “Under Pressure From Climate Activists, World’s Largest Insurance Market To Ditch Coal, Tar Sands, And Arctic Projects” • Lloyd’s of London, the world’s largest insurance market, has announced that it will no longer cover coal-fired power plants and mines, tar sands, or Arctic energy exploration activities from January 2022 onward. [Red, Green, and Blue]

Fighting a wildfire in California (Ben Kuo, Unsplash)

¶ “2020 May Be The Hottest Year On Record. Here’s The Damage It Did” • With just a few weeks left, 2020 is in a dead-heat tie for the hottest year on record. But whether it claims the top spot misses the point, climate scientists say. There is no shortage of disquieting statistics about what climate change is doing to the Earth. [Capital Public Radio News]

Mud pots near the Salton Sea (CTR image)

¶ “Geothermal Energy, The Forgotten Renewable, Has Finally Arrived” • Below the land at the edge of the Salton Sea lies a mineral-rich cauldron of hot water where temperatures can exceed 390°C. If California approves its permit, Controlled Thermal Resources will start operating its Hell’s Kitchen Lithium and Power project in 2023. [Quartz]

Monday, December 21

John D Rockefeller cartoon (J Campbell Cory, before 1907)

¶ “Rockefeller Foundation, Created By Oil, Ditches Investments In Oil” • The Rockefeller Foundation, set up in 1913 by John D Rockefeller, has decided to divest from fossil fuels and not make any new investment in the oil industry, the president of the Rockefeller Foundation, Rajiv Shah, told CNN in an interview published on Friday. [OilPrice.com]

Coastal flooding at North Carolina’s Outer Banks (NCDOT photo)

¶ “NC Will Pay For Climate Inaction: Report” • A report finds that if steps aren’t taken immediately to fight climate change in North Carolina, its citizens will pay the price of inaction over the next 20 to 30 years. The Environmental Defense Fund commissioned the report to look at the short-term financial ramifications of such a failure. [Coastal Review Online]

Mountaintop removal (Roston, Wikimedia Commons, public domain)

¶ “Montana Regulators Force $285 Million Cleanup Bond on Coal Company” • Montana environmental regulators forced the owners of a power plant to provide a $285 million cleanup bond, a move some local organizations hailed as a conservation victory. But Talen Energy, owner of the Colstrip Power Plant, called the amount “grossly excessive.” [Flathead Beacon]

Tuesday, December 22

Lightning (Sturmjäger, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “The Biden Administration Must Double Down On Science” • As President-elect Biden takes office, he will assume leadership of the US government’s scientific enterprise. Once the envy of the world, it has been battered and marginalized for the past four years, as the Trump administration steadfastly refused to follow the lead of science. [Scientific American]

Al Dhafra area (Anees Hamsa, Unsplash)

¶ “World’s Biggest Solar Power Plant Project In Abu Dhabi Secures Funding” • The funding is now in place for the world’s biggest solar power project, which is being built in Abu Dhabi. The 2-GW Al Dhafra Solar Photovoltaic facility is about 35 km from Abu Dhabi city. The project will provide electricity at Dh4.85 fils/kWh (1.32¢/kWh). [Gulf News]

Nucor Steel Texas facility (Nucor image)

¶ “Rebar Leader Nucor Switches To Renewable Energy For Texas Operations” • The top concrete reinforcing steel producer and rebar fabricator has signed a 15-year Virtual Power Purchase Agreement with EDF Renewables North America for 250 MW of solar energy in Texas. Construction is scheduled to begin in mid-2022. [Concrete Products]

Wednesday, December 23 – next week

Energy Week #399: 12/23/2020

George Harvey, blogger, author, and journalist for Green Energy Times and CleanTechnica, computer engineer

Tom Finnell, electrical engineer, transmission grid expert, world traveler, philanthropist, and philosopher

Energy, renewable energy, wind power, Solar, batteries, Nuclear, coal, oil, gas, Climate Change

Energy Week #398: 12/17/2020

Visitors Please Note: This blog is maintained to assist in developing a TV show, Energy Week with George Harvey and Tom Finnell. The post is put up in incomplete form, and is updated with news until it is completed, usually on Wednesday. The source is geoharvey.com.

Within a few days of the last update, the show may be seen, along with older shows, at this link on the BCTV website: Energy Week Series.

Energy Week #398: 12/17/2020

Thursday, December 10

Harvesting cassava (International Center for Tropical Agriculture)

¶ “‘Rambo Root’ Could Help With Climate Action, Peace Building, And Environmental Issues” • The low-cost root crop cassava, called ‘Rambo root’ for its rugged appearance and resilient attributes, produces the highest amount of calories per hectare in most tropical countries. It can withstand increasing temperatures and thrives in poor soils. [EurekAlert]

Coal mine (Dominik Vanyi, Unsplash)

¶ “Falling Sales, Job Losses And Bankruptcies: Pain Spreads Across Coal Country” • President Donald Trump promised he would save the US coal industry. But as his tenure winds down, the industry is plagued by falling demand, bankruptcies and job losses. It has lost 8,000 jobs, or 15% of its workforce, over the last 12 months. [CNN]

Toyota electric SUV (Image courtesy of Toyota)

¶ “Toyota Says It May Finally Be Ready To Make An Electric Car” • Toyota, which is heavily committed to hybrid and fuel cell technology, announced that it has developed a flexible, scalable chassis for electric vehicles. The company will take the wraps off an all new electric SUV destined for European customers in a few months. [CleanTechnica]

Friday, December 11

NYPA battery storage system (Image: NYPA)

¶ “New York Power Authority’s Plan For 70% Renewable Energy By 2030 Approved” • A new strategic plan putting the New York Power Authority on the path to 100% carbon-free electricity by 2035 – five years earlier than the target set out in the US state’s policy goals – has been approved by the state public power organisation’s Board of Trustees. [PV-Tech]

¶ “Proterra Opens Next-Gen EV Battery Facility in Los Angeles, California” • Proterra recently sold its 1,000th electric bus in the United States. Demand for Proterra’s electric buses is growing strongly, and that has led to a new battery production line inside the company’s electric bus factory in Los Angeles County, California. [CleanTechnica]

Interceptor (Image courtesy of The Ocean Cleanup)

¶ “Ocean Cleanup Sets Its Sights On World’s Most Polluted Rivers” • After a little over a year of successfully dragging tons of plastic waste and pollution out of the world’s oceans, The Ocean Cleanup company has decided to tackle the primary source of ocean pollution: polluted rivers. They use a type of river vessel called an Interceptor. [CleanTechnica]

Saturday, December 12

Arctech solar trackers (Screenshot)

¶ “Arctech Solar Provides Trackers To Largest Single-Site Renewable Energy Project” • Arctech Solar, a solar mounting system company, provided the tracking mounts to a 3.2-GW solar park in the Qinghai province of China. The project was recently connected to the grid. The tracking mounts increase the site’s efficiency. [Solar Industry]

Progress in the lab: new vs older cells (Solid Power image)

¶ “Solid State Batteries – They’re Everywhere! They’re Everywhere!” • Solid state battery technology is supposed to give us lower priced EVs with more range and faster charging times. All of a sudden, in the labs, they are like Chicken Man. They’re everywhere! They’re everywhere! But they have to make it from the lab to the road. [CleanTechnica]

Atlantic City ( Bob Jagendorf, Wikimedia Commons)

¶ “Thousands Of NJ’s Affordable Homes Under Threat From Climate Change Flooding” • Sunny Day flooding is a constant, creeping threat in Atlantic City. These days, it only takes a particularly high tide for water to spill onto the city’s streets. The highest tides reach more than a foot higher than they did a century ago. [NBC 10 Philadelphia]

Sunday, December 13

Open pit mine in Germany (C M, Unsplash)

¶ “The End Of Coal? Why Investors Aren’t Buying The Myth Of The Industry’s ‘Renaissance'” • Three years ago, pictures of bulk carriers queued off the coast of Mackay in central Queensland were framed as evidence of a “renaissance” in the coal industry. Now, there are no ships waiting to load at all. Instead, they are waiting to unload at China. [The Guardian]

Aptera solar tool

¶ “Aptera Reveals Solar Calculator” • After CleanTechnica’s deep dive into Aptera’s technologies, one of the questions from readers was how much of a charge they can really expect from the Aptera’s solar cells. Aptera has come through on answering the question by giving everyone a useful tool to help get their answers. [CleanTechnica]

Nissan LEAF and Renault Zoe in Paris

¶ “Rising To The Challenge Five Years After The Paris Climate Agreement'” • A new report produced by the UN Environment Program – the Emissions Gap Report 2020 and the Production Gap Report – highlights the urgency of the task ahead. We know how to deliver a safer climate trajectory right now, but major action is necessary. [CleanTechnica]

Monday, December 14

The clock starts now (Credit: Oil Change International)

¶ “State Of New York To End Pension Fund Investments In Fossil Fuels” • Last week, New York State comptroller Thomas DiNapoli announced that the state would begin divesting its $226 billion employee pension fund from gas and oil companies if they don’t come up with business plans aligned goals of the Paris climate accord within four years. [CleanTechnica]

EAC-Whisper octocopter, AERO (Matti Blume, SA-BY-CC 4.0)

¶ “EV Battery Packs About 50% Cheaper Than In 2016” • It can be tough to analyze what is happening in the EV industry because we tend to be static thinkers. We see how things look today and it is hard for us to see how dramatically they can change. The story of EVs, however, is largely a story about how fast the costs of batteries can fall. [CleanTechnica]

Pump jack (Zbynek Burival, Unsplash)

¶ “Forget Oil Stocks: Renewable Energy Stocks Are Better Long-Term Buys” • With the pandemic and the growth of renewables, the oil industry’s future has dimmed considerably over the past year. That’s why it might be time for investors to forget about buying oil stocks and instead concentrate their efforts on the renewable energy industry. [Nasdaq]

Tuesday, December 15

Aptera (Chris Anthony, CEO, Aptera Motors Corp)

¶ “Aptera Is Getting A Lot of Orders For Its ‘Never Charge’ EV” • Aptera released its “Never Charge” electric vehicle a little over a week ago, and the company already has preorders for over $100 million. Aptera is also seeing lots of views for its launch video, with over 600,000 views on YouTube when this CleanTechnica article was published. [CleanTechnica]

Solar panels in Colorado (Jeffrey Beall, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “Renewables Were The Sole Source Of New US Generating Capacity In Last Quarter” • Figures from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission show that all new capacity added in June through September has been renewable. And for the first three quarters of 2020, renewables accounted for 64.1%, of all new utility-scale capacity. [RenewEconomy]

Sandhill cranes at the Platte River in Nebraska (Larry Crist | USFWS)

¶ “Trump’s Attacks On America’s Natural Treasures: In His Final Days, President Trump Is Selling Our Public Lands And Waters” • In his final days, President Trump is selling our public lands and waters to the highest bidder. The federal government holds these resources in trust, for the use and enjoyment of the people of this country. [CleanTechnica]

Wednesday, December 16

Wind farm in South Australia (Fairv8, Wikimedia Commons)

¶ “SA Envisions Becoming Clean Energy Exporter At 500% Renewables In New Climate Plan” • Already a renewables leader, the South Australian government supplemented its vision and investments by announcing 68 new actions and almost A$200 million in new funding as part of its Climate Change Action Plan 2021–2025. [pv magazine Australia]

Electric bus in Poland (Image courtesy of Solaris)

¶ “Public Transit Is In Crisis, But Essential To Our Recovery” • The pandemic continues to rattle every aspect of our lives, and millions of people are still traveling less for work and other trips. Since most transit agencies in the US rely on farebox revenues, this use gap caused an unprecedented budget shortfall for transit agencies nationwide. [CleanTechnica]

Indian wind turbines (Rajavel vanaraj, CC-BY-SA 4.0)

¶ “India Starts Construction Of World’s Largest Renewable Energy Park” •India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi officially launched construction of a megapark that will produce 30 GW of renewable energy and will be the world’s largest renewable energy facility. The Hybrid Renewable Energy Park is in the district of Kutch in Gujarat.[OilPrice.com]

Energy Week #398: 12/17/2020

George Harvey, blogger, author, and journalist for Green Energy Times and CleanTechnica, computer engineer

Tom Finnell, electrical engineer, transmission grid expert, world traveler, philanthropist, and philosopher

Energy, renewable energy, wind power, Solar, batteries, Nuclear, coal, oil, gas, Climate Change

Energy Week #397: 12/10/2020

Visitors Please Note: This blog is maintained to assist in developing a TV show, Energy Week with George Harvey and Tom Finnell. The post is put up in incomplete form, and is updated with news until it is completed, usually on Wednesday. The source is geoharvey.com.

Within a few days of the last update, the show may be seen, along with older shows, at this link on the BCTV website: Energy Week Series.

Energy Week #397: 12/10/2020

Thursday, December 3

Growth in energy storage (Wood McKenzie image, screenshot)

¶ “The US Just Smashed Its Record For Energy Storage” • The scale-up of storage has been steady, but slow over the last several years. But in the last three months, the US energy storage market has absolutely boomed, according to Wood Mackenzie’s latest data, giving renewables a major boost in the fight to displace fossil fuels. [Quartz]

Illustration of Vinyard Wind (Vinyard Wind image)

¶ “Major US Offshore Wind Farm Put On Hold” • Vineyard Wind will temporarily withdraw its application for federal approval to erect the first large offshore wind farm in the country. The move is an apparent attempt to pause the Trump administration’s review of the project days before it was scheduled to publish a final analysis. [E&E News]

Wind turbines (Mark König, Unsplash)

¶ “We’re At A Turning Point On Climate Change. But Most Countries Are Still Choosing Fossil Fuels Over Clean Energy, Report Says” • To limit global warming to 1.5°C (2.7°F), countries need to wind down their fossil fuel production by 6% every year between now and 2030, according to the 2020 Production Gap report. [CNN]

Friday, December 4

Microburst (NOAA image, Unsplash)

¶ “Slow And Steady Won’t Win the Climate Race” • Climate-related emergencies over the last two years have made it clear: the time for ambitious climate action in the US and abroad is now. NRDC’s Eighth Annual Energy Report digs into US energy trends over the last two years to understand what it all means for the worsening climate crisis. [CleanTechnica]

GE Haliade-X wind turbine (Image courtesy of GE Renewables)

¶ “Giant New GE Wind Turbine Can Power A Home For A Day In Just 7 Seconds” • The developers of the Vineyard Wind project off Massachusetts announced that they’ll be using GE Haliade-X wind turbines. That turbine recently got a capacity upgrade, from a world-leading 12 MW to a world-leading-by-even-more 13 MW. [CleanTechnica]

Volkswagen ID.3 (Image courtesy of Volkswagen)

¶ “Norway In November: EV Market Share At 80%, Fossils Disappearing” • Norway saw its plugin vehicle market share standing at 80% in November 2020, up from 60% in November 2019. Old school non-hybrid fossil vehicles saw their share fall to just 10.5%, from 27.1% a year ago. The overall auto market volume was up 25% year-on-year. [CleanTechnica]

Saturday, December 5

California cities banning natural gas (Image courtesy of PAE Engineers)

¶ “Breaking News! Oakland And Seattle Ban Natural Gas as Cities Continue to Lead on Electrification” • In mid November, San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors voted to ban natural gas in new buildings. On December 2, Oakland’s city council did the same. Now, Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan announced a proposal do the same thing there. [CleanTechnica]

Aptera soaking up the sun (Image provided by Aptera)

¶ “Aptera Announces First ‘Never Charge” Electric Vehicle’ • Aptera announced a solar electric vehicle that will not need to be plugged in for most regular uses, and has a 1,000 mile range on a full charge. “Our built-in solar array keeps your battery pack topped off and anywhere you want to go, you just go,” says co-founder Chris Anthony. [CleanTechnica]
You also might want to look at this article: [Wikipedia]

Tuk-tuks all set to go (Image courtesy of Gayam Motor Works)

¶ “Gayam Motor Works And Sokowatch Launch East Africa’s First Commercial Electric Tuk-Tuks” • B2B startup Sokowatch has partnered with Indian electric tuk-tuk manufacturer Gayam Motor Works on a first in Africa, in the commercial electric tuk-tuk sector for hyperlocal deliveries. The service offers much more than just deliveries. [CleanTechnica]

Sunday, December 6

Vermont solar array (MarkBuckawicki, Wikimedia Commons)

¶ “Solar energy saved Vermont $17 million in 2019” • From 2014 to 2019, small-scale solar in New England saved utilities and their customers more than $1.1 billion in wholesale power costs. These savings were enjoyed not only by people with solar, but everyone with an electric bill. Vermont saved $17 million in 2019 and $79 million since 2014. [Vermont Biz]

Sprouting plants (Francesco Gallarotti, Unsplash)

¶ “Three Simple Steps To Boost Soil Health And Help Tackle Climate Change” • The British Society of Soil Science, based at Cranfield University, is promoting three simple steps to boost the health of the nation’s soils and help fight climate change: remove pavers, use cover crops so the soil is not bare, and don’t use peat-based compost. [Cranfield and Marston Vale Chronicle]

North Sea oil platform (Erik Christensen, CC-BY-SA 3.0)

¶ “Denmark Announces An End To Oil And Gas Exploration In North Sea” • A report from the Washington Post says the Danish Parliament voted to end offshore gas and oil extraction, which had started in 1972 and made the country the largest producer in the EU. The Danish government says it is “now putting an end to the fossil fuel era.” [CleanTechnica]

Monday, December 7

Solar array in Guilford, Vermont (Beyond My Ken, Wikimedia Commons)

¶ “Solar Jobs, Solar Installations, And Homes Powered by Solar in Top 10 US Solar States” • Here is a look at the numbers of solar jobs, solar installations, homes the in the state solar powers, and percent of the state’s electricity coming from solar for the top ten states in terms of solar power per capita. Two of the top ten states are in New England. [CleanTechnica]

GE Haliade-X turbine (GE Renewable Energy image)

¶ “Massive 853-Foot-Tall Wind Turbines Are Coming To The East Coast” • The Vineyard Wind 1 project’s colossal Haliade-X turbines are the world’s largest and most powerful. They will stand 853 ft (260 m) high, as tall as an 85-story building, with a 722-foot (220 m) rotor. Because of their size, they capture 45% more energy than other turbines. [New Atlas]

Alps without snow (Image: Aberystwyth University)

¶ “Climate Change Threatens ‘Most Alps Glaciers'” • Up to 92% of glaciers in the Alps could be lost by the end of the century due to climate change, say researchers from Aberystwyth University. The university’s research covers the entire European Alps region and is based on 200 years of climate records and forecasts that cover 1901 to 2100. [BBC]

Tuesday, December 8

Home in Cameron, Louisiana (Ryan Kellman | NPR)

¶ “Much Of The 2020 Hurricane Season Can Be Chalked Up To Climate Change – And There’s No Quick Fix” • For those living on the Louisiana coast, the summer ranged from merely anxiety-inducing for some to totally devastating for others. Is this climate change? Is this the new normal? We got answers from some of the top hurricane scientists. [WRKF]

Pollution (Ella Ivanescu, Unsplash)

¶ “Washington Post And New York Times: EPA Declines To Adopt Stricter Regulations On Soot” • The EPA has declined to adopt stricter regulations on particle matter pollution, going against the recommendation of its own scientists to implement tougher standards, according to reports in The Washington Post and The New York Times. [CNN]

Charging a Nissan LEAF (Nissan courtesy image)

¶ “Electric Cars Could Save California’s Power Grid” • California is doubling down on EVs. Critics say more plug-in cars will strain the power grid. Here’s why they’re wrong. EVs can charge up when demand is low, making use of surplus wind or solar power that might otherwise go unused, and they can unplug when demand peaks. [CleanTechnica]

Wednesday, December 9

QuantumScape battery (QuantumScape image, screenshot)

¶ “QuantumScape Releases Performance Data On Its Solid-State Battery Technology” • For almost a decade, QuantumScape, based in San Jose, California, has been working to perfect the solid-state lithium battery, replacing the electrolyte with a thin strip of metal. Now, QuantumScape has released performance data for its lithium metal battery. [CleanTechnica]

Zero Labs skateboard (Image courtesy of Zero Labs)

¶ “Zero Labs Reveals Universal EV Platform For Classic Car Conversions” • After more than five years in extensive R&D, Zero Labs has unveiled its most disruptive product yet. It’s a fully realized electric vehicle platform, called a skateboard, to turn a classic car, truck, or SUV into a thoroughly modern, thoroughly electric vehicle. [CleanTechnica]

Offshore windpower (Nicholas Doherty, Unsplash)

¶ “Irish West Coast ‘Can Become 70-GW Offshore Hub’” • Up to 70 GW of offshore wind could be generated off the west coast of Ireland to make the country a net exporter of power and provide a huge boost to the local supply chain, according to a study. It says the Atlantic Seas have massive untapped potential, mainly for floating windpower. [reNEWS]

Energy Week #397: 12/10/2020

Energy, renewable energy, wind power, Solar, batteries, Nuclear, coal, oil, gas, Climate Change