Wednesday 29 December 2010

UK solar-powered pilotless plane breaks world record


The UK-built solar-powered Zephyr pilotless plane has been recognised as having smashed the world record for the longest time spent in the air by an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), after staying aloft for two weeks.

The 50kg craft, built by defence technology company QinetiQ, remained airborne for 14 days, 22 minutes and 8 seconds – 11 times longer than the previous record, according to media reports.

The world governing body for air sports records, the Federation Aeronautique Internationale (FAI), gave Zephyr three records including longest time aloft.

The FAI noted that Zephyr smashed the previous record for the absolute duration of an unmanned autonomous vehicle (UAV) flight - set by Northrop Grumman's Global Hawk in 2001 - by a factor of 11.

QinetiQ believes that Zephyr’s ability to fly higher and longer than any other current aircraft offers benefits to a number of potential customers in the military, academic, commercial and scientific arenas.

The record-breaking flight took place above a US Army site in Arizona for 14 days in the month of July, 2010.

Zephyr High-Altitude Long-Endurance (HALE) Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) is an ultra-lightweight carbon-fibre aircraft. It flies on solar power generated by amorphous silicon arrays covering the aircraft’s wings, no thicker than sheets of paper. It is powered day and night by rechargeable lithium-sulphur batteries that are recharged during the day using solar power.

The aircraft uses United Solar Ovonic solar arrays, a full flight-set of Sion Power batteries, as well as a novel solar-charger and bespoke autopilot developed by QinetiQ.

Thursday 23 December 2010

Traffic tip for Santa: reflective reindeer collars


Norwegian reindeer owners have a Christmas safety tip for Santa -- put reflectors on his fleet-footed animals so they won't get hit by cars.

About 2,000 reindeer have been fitted this month with reflective yellow collars or small antler tags to cut down on the car crashes that now kill 500 reindeer a year and pose a danger to motorists across Arctic Norway.

"It really works," Kristian Oevernes, the leader of the project at the Norwegian Public Roads Administration, told Reuters of the project in Finnmark, where the sun does not rise in mid-winter.

A test drive on a snowmobile showed that marked reindeer were far more visible in the dark than others. Several people are injured every year in car accidents involving reindeer, and one recent accident in Finland was fatal.

"I guess so," Oevernes said, when asked if Santa might take up the safety tip.

"This is the first time it (reindeer marking) has happened on this scale."

Sami herders had tried small experiments to attach reflective tape to the animals but the glue failed in the cold. Finnish herders had also tried a reflective spray, but it reduced the fur's ability to keep out the chill.

About 200,000 reindeer live in Norway, mostly owned by Sami indigenous people who raise them for meat, skins and antlers, according to the International Center for Reindeer Husbandry.

If the new project is successful, supporters say, reindeer owners or vehicle insurance companies might be interested in buying reflectors.

Eco-bulbs 'a health hazard for babies and pregnant women due to mercury inside'


Energy-saving light bulbs were at the centre of a fresh health scare last night after researchers claimed they can release potentially harmful amounts of mercury if broken.
Levels of toxic vapour around smashed eco-bulbs were up to 20 times higher than the safe guideline limit for an indoor area, the study said.
It added that broken bulbs posed a potential health risk to pregnant women, babies and small children.

The concerns surround ‘compact fluorescent lamps’ (CFLs), the most common type of eco-bulb in Britain, which are mini-versions of the strip lights found in offices.
The European Union is phasing out the traditional ‘incandescent bulbs’ used for more than 120 years and is forcing people to switch to low-energy alternatives to meet its climate change targets.
A CFL uses a fifth of the energy of a conventional bulb and can save £7 a year in bills. However, critics complain that CFLs’ light is harsh and flickery. Medical charities say they can trigger epileptic fits, migraines and skin rashes and have called for an ‘opt out’ for vulnerable people.
Incandescent bulbs do not contain mercury, along with other variants of energy-saving lights, such as LEDs and halogen bulbs. The study, for Germany’s Federal Environment Agency, tested a ‘worst case’ scenario using two CFLs, one containing 2 milligrams of mercury and the other 5 milligrams. Neither lamp had a protective casing and both were broken when hot.
Scientists at the Fraunhofer Wilhelm Klauditz Institute found that they released around 7 micrograms (there are 1,000 micrograms in a milligram) per cubic metre of air.The official guideline limit is 0.35 micrograms per cubic metre.
Federal Environment Agency president Jochen Flasbarth said: ‘The presence of mercury is the downside to energy-saving lamps. We need a lamp technology that can prevent mercury pollution soon.
‘The positive and necessary energy savings of up to 80 per cent as compared with light bulbs must go hand in hand with a safe product that poses no risks to health.’
During tests the German government agency’s researchers were alarmed to discover that some bulbs had no protective cover and broke when hot.
High levels of mercury were measured at floor level up to five hours after the bulbs failed.

A spokesman for the agency said: ‘Children and expectant mothers should keep away from burst energy-saving lamps.
‘For children’s rooms and other areas at higher risk of lamp breakage, we recommend the use of energy-saving lamps that are protected against breakage.’ However, the UK Government insisted the CFL bulbs were safe – and that the risk from a one-off exposure was minimal.
The Health Protection Agency says a broken CFL is unlikely to cause health problems. However, it advises people to ventilate a room where a light has smashed and evacuate it for 15 minutes.
Householders are also advised to wear protective gloves while wiping the area of the break with a damp cloth and picking up fragments of glass. The cloth and glass should be placed in a plastic bag and sealed.
CFLs are not supposed to be put in the dustbin, whether broken or intact, but taken as hazardous waste to a recycling centre.
A spokesman for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said: ‘The mercury contained in low-energy bulbs does not pose a health risk to anyone immediately exposed, should one be broken.’
Friends of the Earth said the switch to low-energy bulbs would reduce exposure to mercury from coal-fired power station


By David Derbyshire

Wednesday 22 December 2010

Co-op and Marks & Spencer named UK's 'greenest' supermarkets


The Co-op and Marks & Spencer are today named as the UK's "greenest" supermarkets in a new survey which rates retailers' progress in areas such as sustainable and ethical sourcing. Tesco, Asda and Netto were identified as the three worst performing companies.

As households stock up for the festive season, Ethical Consumer magazine urges shoppers to cut the environmental cost of Christmas by shopping from retailers with a proven track record of pursuing "green policies".

The environmental and ethical performance of 19 of the country's leading supermarkets and convenience stores were scrutinised in the survey, included detailed analysis of the companies' corporate social responsibility reports.

The results reveal a clear divide between the top two performing supermarkets – the Co-op and M&S – and the other 17 companies.

Policies praised at these two major high street chains include the Co-op's fish policy, whose goal is to operate its fish-sourcing policy in line with the aims and objectives of the Marine Stewardship Council. The Co-op also sources 98% renewable electricity in its 5,500 sites across the UK.

M&S was highly praised for its palm oil policies. It now stipulates the use of sustainable palm oil in many of its own-brand goods and is advised on the issue by WWF. M&S also scored well for its climate change policies which include a target of using non-crop derived biofuels in its fleet of vehicles.

Rob Harrison of Ethical Consumer, and co-author of the buyers' guide, said: "If you're lucky enough to live close to a local independent shop that has an ethical stocking policy then this is where we would recommend people to shop. However the reality is that the vast majority of us now shop in supermarkets and we would therefore urge shoppers to choose either the Co-op or M&S."

He went on: "These two companies have made genuine efforts to reduce the environmental and ethical impact of their operations and have demonstrated that they are setting the environmental agenda for supermarkets."

Tuesday 21 December 2010

Is night falling on classic solar panels?


A new breed of electronic solar cells that harvests power from heat could double the output of conventional panels

SOLAR cells that work at night. It sounds like an oxymoron, but a new breed of nanoscale light-sensitive antennas could soon make this possible, heralding a novel form of renewable energy that avoids many of the problems that beset solar cells.

The key to these new devices is their ability to harvest infrared (IR) radiation, says Steven Novack, one of the pioneers of the technology at the US Department of Energy's Idaho National Laboratory in Idaho Falls. Nearly half of the available energy in the solar spectrum resides in the infrared band, and IR is re-emitted by the Earth's surface after the sun has gone down, meaning that the antennas can even capture some energy during the night.

Lab tests have already shown that, under ideal conditions, the antennas can collect 84 per cent of incoming photons. Novack's team calculates that a complete system would have an overall efficiency of 46 per cent; the most efficient silicon solar cells are stalled at about 25 per cent. What's more, while those ideal conditions are relatively narrowly constrained for silicon solar cells - if the sun is in the wrong position, light reflects off a silicon solar cell instead of being absorbed - the antennas absorb radiation at a variety of angles. If the antennas can be produced cheaply, the technology could prove to be truly disruptive, says Novack.

Solar arrays of billions of the tiny antennas have an efficiency as high as 84 per cent
Unlike photovoltaic cells, which use photons to liberate electrons, the new antennas resonate when hit by light waves, and that generates an alternating current that can be harnessed.

To build an array that could capture both visible and infrared radiation, researchers envision multiple layers of antennas, with each layer tuned to a different optical frequency.

So far, two main challenges have stood in the way of fomenting a revolution in solar power. First, the length of the antennas must be close to the size of the wavelength being captured, which in the case of the solar spectrum can be very small - from millimetres down to a few hundred nanometres.

Second, the currents produced will be alternating at frequencies too high to be of use unless they are first converted into a steady direct current. The problem here is that silicon diodes, which are crucial to the conversion, typically don't operate at the high frequencies required, says Aimin Song, a nanoelectronic engineer at the University of Manchester, UK.

Both of these barriers are now being broken down. Earlier this year, Novack and colleagues perfected a technique for creating arrays of billions of antennas. Although these antennas were only just small enough to harvest energy at the far end of the infrared spectrum, Novack says it should be possible to modify the process and build smaller antennas to work with mid and near-infrared.

Meanwhile Song, and Garret Moddel's team at the University of Colorado in Boulder, have independently taken a significant step in tackling the current-conversion problem by creating novel diodes capable of handling high optical frequencies (see "The devil's in the diodes"). Both groups expect to combine the diodes and antennas into working prototypes within months. "There's a potential for this to be a real game-changer," says Moddel.

The devil's in the diodes
Semiconductor diodes act like valves, converting alternating current into direct current. To work with the novel antennas, they have to operate at the AC frequencies being received and match the conductive properties of the antenna.

Semiconductors are ill-suited for this, as they tend to become less conductive when shrunk to the size of the antennas. Several groups have tackled this problem, creating diodes based on different concepts. One is that at tiny scales, the physical geometry of the device influences current flow: by creating asymmetry in the geometry, electrons can be funnelled to flow one way only.

Monday 20 December 2010

Seasonal Greetings




Wishing you all Seasonal Greetings and
a Happy New Year from Brighton UK.


From Stuart Buchanan

Sunday 19 December 2010

'Groundbreaking' Paperless Eco Comics Announced by Mohawk Media


The first digital comic book from the Eco Comics range available now to download or view online is Heroic High, an adventure set on an island superhero community, written by Chris Bunting and drawn by Kit Wallis.


LONDON.- British publisher Mohawk Media has announced Eco Comics, a range of environmentally-friendly, paperless comic books.

The first digital comic book from the Eco Comics range available now to download or view online is Heroic High, an adventure set on an island superhero community, written by Chris Bunting and drawn by Kit Wallis.

Editor Stuart Buckley says: “Paper used in the production of comic books can have a damaging effect on the environment, and paying perhaps the biggest price is the tiger, whose habitat this threatens.

“As for sustainable forestry, world-leading environmental organisations have criticised its weak regard for social and ecological issues.

“We believe these downloadable, paperless comics are groundbreaking, having been deliberately designed to have a minimal carbon footprint.

“The added bonuses for the reader are lower cover prices for the same level of quality entertainment, while knowing that they’re being eco-friendly.”

To download Eco Comics go to mohawkmedia.co.uk/economics. Following a quick payment system, you can download or view the comics online in various formats, including a page-flip format. PDFs are also available and can be downloaded to iPad.

Buckley continues: “Buying Eco Comics only takes minutes. It’s much faster and easier than going to a comic book store! We hope Eco Comics is the start of an evolution, taking advantage of the latest technologies to help minimise the impact of comic production on the environment.”

Friday 17 December 2010

Chris Huhne changes his mind on nuclear power with complete intellectual conviction


Chris Huhne has gone nuclear. Mr Huhne used to say: “Ministers must stop the side-show of new nuclear power stations now.” But in those days Mr Huhne was a Liberal Democrat opposition spokesman, which meant he thought we could cut our emissions by relying on wind, wave and tidal power, together with carbon capture and storage.

How caustic Mr Huhne used to be about the people who built nuclear power stations: “The nuclear industry’s key skill over the past half-century has not been generating electricity, but extracting lashings of taxpayers’ money.”

Yet now that Mr Huhne is Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, he has decided to promote the building of nuclear power stations, paid for with lashings of electricity consumers’ money.

Most people in the Commons seemed to agree with Mr Huhne that this is the right thing to do. From the Opposition front bench, Meg Hillier supported him.

Only the Labour awkward squad tried to remind Mr Huhne of his former life, with Paul Flynn (Lab, Newport West) asking: “On what day in May was he bewitched by the Pied Piper of nuclear power?”

Kevin Brennan (Lab, Cardiff West) pointed out that there would be “no shortage of wind or gas” as long as Mr Huhne was around. It is true that the Energy Secretary is never at a loss for words, and enjoys demonstrating at some length his mastery of whatever topic happens to be under discussion. His sense of his own intellectual supremacy permits him to smile in a genial way at the puny efforts of lesser men to disconcert him.

Wednesday 15 December 2010

Carbon Metrics for Buildings


It's no secret that, regardless of how the world addresses the challenge of reducing global carbon emissions, buildings are going to be a central part of the puzzle. Buildings represent about one-third of emissions worldwide and provide some of the quickest and most cost-effective ways to reduce carbon emissions.


The problem right now is that it's hard to certify that an investment in energy efficiency measures for new and existing buildings will actually reduce carbon. For countries establishing long-term carbon reduction goals as well as corporations seeking business opportunities in the growing carbon management solutions market, that represents a major barrier.

National governments can meet their internal and Kyoto Protocol carbon emission reduction targets by establishing national policies and carbon reduction plans for buildings over which they have jurisdiction (i.e., buildings in their own country). But that leaves a lot of untapped investment opportunities in other countries that could actually be more cost effective.

Certification programs around the world, such as LEED, are starting to fold carbon considerations into their certification criteria to ensure that buildings keep carbon emissions down. But if, say, LEED measures carbon one way and HQE measures it differently, these programs may not serve as bulletproof ways to tie buildings into national carbon reduction plans.

However, a group of industry players, led by UNEP's Sustainable Buildings and Climate Initiative (SBCI) has been working over the last few years to address the inconsistencies in carbon measurement techniques around the world. The group has been working to develop clear and transferable carbon metrics (known as the Common Carbon Metric) that can be used to measure carbon reductions in buildings, whether it's a new office park in Mumbai or a retrofit program in Rio de Janeiro.

One of the group's recent breakthroughs was to enable Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) projects to use these new metrics in CDM building projects. The CDM is a program that allows Annex I countries (i.e., the majority of developed countries) to invest in carbon reduction projects in developing countries and claim the carbon reductions for their Kyoto Protocol carbon reduction targets.

While building projects have technically been eligible for CDM status for the last ten years, inconsistencies in the methods for measuring carbon from CDM projects have made CDM projects for buildings prohibitively expensive. By making the Common Carbon Metric a viable pathway to measuring and certifying carbon reductions, it will be much easier for developed countries to invest in carbon-reducing building projects in the future.

That also means that energy efficiency vendors and service providers can expect new business opportunities in carbon management to open up, particularly in the developing world. As buildings will represent some of the most attractive early entry points for carbon investment no matter where, they will figure prominently into the carbon management market going forward. About $3.8 billion will be invested in just the software and services associated with buildings across a variety of sectors by 2015 - not to mention the additional revenue streams created for the companies that actually install the efficient building systems that will provide those carbon reductions.

Tuesday 14 December 2010

Government department to manage energy smart meter plan


The plan to offer energy smart meters to every household in the UK by 2017 will be managed by the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC), it has been announced.

This is a change to the original plan which gave industry regulator Ofgem responsibility for the energy scheme.
The energy monitors are hoped to help households in the UK cut the amount of energy they use by as much as 20%.
The management announcement was made in an open letter from energy minister Charles Hendry and Lord Mogg, chairman of Ofgem's governing body, the Gas and Electricity Markets Authority (GEMA).

The letter said that the decision had been made given the scale of the programme and the "importance of government accountability for its delivery".
This announcement comes after the government was criticised by public watchdog Committee of Public Accounts for not being on track to meet its 2010 renewable energy targets.

Margaret Hodge, and said that the DECC needed a "greater sense of urgency and purpose".

Monday 13 December 2010

Around the World in 80 ‘Eco’ Days


Cancún (Mexico), After covering more than 25,000 kilometres across four continents, participants in the Zero Emissions Race received a warm welcome in Cancún, Mexico at the UN Climate Change Conference, having powered their way from Geneva in less than 80 days using renewable energy.

UN Environment Programme Executive Director Achim Steiner greeted environmentalist and adventurer Louis Palmer, the organizer of the marathon journey, saying this proved that green technologies to promote and catalyse low carbon transport, are available and reliable.

After their pit stop in Cancun, the teams from Australia, Germany and Switzerland will take to the road once more, with the electric vehicles aiming to arrive at the finishing line in Geneva by 22 January 2011.

“We have been following the Zero Emissions Race with interest and excitement since its inception. I am delighted to see that the same innovation and spirit which inspired the dreams of adventurers over 130 years ago, are still very much evidence as we cross another threshold, this time towards a resource-efficient Green Economy frontier,”said Mr Steiner.

The transport sector is responsible for approximately one quarter of all energy-related CO2 emissions, a figure set to rise to one third by 2050. Within that sector, it is estimated that in 40 years, the number of vehicles in the world will have tripled, with over 80 per cent of that growth occurring in developing countries.

Mr. Steiner added: “There is an urgent need to find a way to reconcile legitimate aspirations for mobility and an ambitious reduction in CO2 from cars. The technology underpinning electric cars, amongst others, needs to be harnessed, and markets and industries incentivized to support production and use of this kind of clean energy.”

“With an unprecedented growth in the use of vehicles over the next few decades, governments in both developed and developing countries need to act to stem the expected exponential rise in emissions and find alternative transport methods,” he said.

Reducing CO2 emissions from transport not only helps to combat climate change, but reduces the health hazards associated with vehicle emissions. The majority of developing and transitional countries used leaded gasoline in 2002. However, today only 6 countries are still using small amounts of leaded gasoline – the harmful effects of which are well documented in both children and adults.

Thursday 9 December 2010

World's largest solar-power boat arrives amid climate talks


CANCUN: The world's largest solar-powered boat has made a port call at the Caribbean resort of Cancun as negotiators from around the world struggle to work out a package of measures to curb global warming.

The 31-meter-long Turanor PlanetSolar, whose deck is covered with solar panels, is driven by solar-generated electricity alone and can cruise at maximum speeds of between 8 and 9 knots, according to its 64-year-old German owner, Immo Stroeher.

The boat, which has been on a voyage around the world, left Monaco in autumn and arrived Tuesday in Cancun, where a UN climate change conference is being held. It plans to complete the journey in the spring of 2012, he said.

"The theme of this ship and its around-the-world voyage is to create consciousness about what you can do with solar energy," Stroeher said, adding he wants to take his boat to the Japanese city of Hiroshima some day.

PlanetSolar, with six crew members but not the owner himself, is set to leave the Mexican resort on today for Cartagena, Colombia.

Delegates from nearly 200 countries at the 16th Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, or COP16, have until tomorrow to reach decisions after making little progress during the first week.

Wednesday 8 December 2010

Farmers set to cash in on solar boom


SOLAR energy could be the next major UK cash crop after a survey revealed eight out of ten farmers would consider installing solar photovoltaics on their roofs within the next three years.

The technology has become an enticing prospect for farmers attempting to guard against rising electricity prices and take advantage of Government incentives.

Farmers can earn up to £16,000 a year from solar energy and save over £1,800 in electricity bills, according to solar energy specialist Solarcentury, thanks to the Government’s green agenda which offers a feed-in tariff (FIT) of 31.4 pence per unit of solar electricity generated.

Even though capital costs can be as high as £200,000 for a medium-sized farm solar roof, Derry Newman, Solarcentury CEO, said the economic returns were becoming hard to resist for UK farmers hoping to get ‘a maximum return from their property’.

“Sustainable farming is at the core of a healthy future for the UK, and it’s great to see farmers recognising the opportunity they now have with solar,” he said.

Dr Jonathan Scurlock, NFU renewable energy advisor, agreed more farmers should follow in the footsteps of Michael Eavis, the host of Glastonbury Festival, who installed photovoltaics on his cow shed earlier this year.

“Agricultural and horticultural buildings present ideal platforms for solar PV, and small-to-medium sized roof-mounted systems are likely to be an attractive investment,” he said.

Tuesday 7 December 2010

Formula One to race eco-friendly hybrid engines



Formula One cars will be powered by smaller, more fuel-efficient hybrid engines from 2013, under an agreement reached by F1 bigwigs.

The 2.4-litre, eight-cylinder engines that power existing cars will be replaced by much smaller 1.6-litre, four-cylinder turbo-charged engines with kinetic energy recovery systems (KERS), designed to reduce fuel consumption by as much as 50 per cent.

Fuel consumption will be decreased by limiting the amount of fuel that flows into the engine, by reducing engine revs from 18,000rpm to 10,000rpm and by restricting fuel capacity.

The mini-engines will still deliver the same amount of power, however, as those used in today's F1 cars. Around 600bhp will eked out of the single-turbo engine itself, with a further 160bhp from the KERS power boost.

KERS, which had a mixed spell in F1 in the 2009 season, works in a similar fashion to the hybrid powertrain on vehicles such as the Toyota Prius. An electric motor inside the cars acts as a generator, capturing energy under braking and storing it as electrical energy in a battery pack. Under acceleration, the battery drives the electric motor, which supplements the engine power with an additional burst of performance.

The total power of 2013 KERS systems will be increased from the 60kW seen on the 2009 system to 120kW, and can be used at the driver's discretion via a button on the steering wheel. However, as before, this power can only be deployed for 6.7 seconds in total per lap, meaning drivers must choose whether to unleash the added performance all in one go, or in bursts at different stages of the lap.

The move to more fuel-efficient F1 cars should make the sport more sustainable and -- in the long run -- less expensive to take part in, but the changes should eventually benefit consumers too.

F1 is seen as the car industry's experimental workshop, with its technology often trickling down to ordinary road cars. If the engineers at the pinnacle of motorsport can concoct ways of extracting ludicrous amounts of power from engines that use very little fuel, it's only a matter of time before we see similar systems in everyday vehicles.

Indeed, earlier this year Ferrari announced a hybrid version of its 599 supercar known as the 599 HY-KERS, while Porsche said it would begin building its 918 Spyder hybrid, which does 198mph and manages a whopping 72mpg.

As excited as we are about these greener F1 engines, we do have our concerns. Revving to a mere 10,000rpm means they'll be considerably quieter than existing F1 cars, potentially diminishing the spectacle.

We're also concerned that the increased efficiency in cars won't make any real difference, as F1 cars are responsible for only a tiny fraction of the sport's total pollution and fuel use. The vast majority of CO2 emissions and fuel usage comes from transporting the cars, staff and equipment around the world every fortnight, not to mention fans travelling to and from the various circuits.

Still, good or bad, these changes are imminent and will certainly make the sport more of a talking point in the years to come. Let us know what you think in the comments below.

Sunday 5 December 2010

New generation of giant wind turbines planned for Britain


A new generation of giant wind turbines which will soar up to 500 feet above the ground are being planned across Britain.


The biggest of the proposed new turbines are almost three times taller than Nelson's Column and two-thirds the height of Canary Wharf Tower.

According to official industry documents seen by The Sunday Telegraph, two companies plan to build wind farms each with turbines about 493ft (150 metres) tall in Norfolk and in Lincolnshire – about 80 feet higher than anything currently in existence.

In all there are about 20 projects in the planning pipeline for turbines taller than anything which has been built so far onshore in the UK.

Campaigners, however, fear the new generation of wind farms are far too big and will blight the British landscape.

They argue that the turbines are only economically viable because of consumer subsidies made available by the last Government to encourage renewable energy projects.

Some are being positioned, claim campaigners, in areas of lower than average wind speed, forcing companies to build bigger structures to generate sufficient electricity.

Advances in technology have also meant the bigger turbines are cheaper to build, making them increasingly attractive for energy companies.

In Stallingborough in Lincolnshire, a German entrepreneur has lodged a planning application for two turbines which will be 493ft (150 metres) tall.

Laars Vilmar denied his wind farms would be an eyesore and insisted there had been no local opposition to his plans.

"I would rather have fewer turbines with huge heights and create more electricity and efficiency out of them," said Mr Vilmar.

In Tivetshall in Norfolk, residents have formed an action group to fight plans – submitted by German energy company Enertrag – for three, 493-ft tall turbines outside their village.

Battle lines have also been drawn up in Berkshire for new 426 feet tall turbines – higher than anything currently onshore in the UK – which would be visible for more than 20 miles.

A planning application for the new wind farm on the outskirts of Reading and close to the M4 has been lodged by Partnerships for Renewables (PFR), a company created by the taxpayer-funded Carbon Trust, to develop sources of renewable energy on public sector land.

But according to one energy think tank, the four turbines at Rushy Mead farm will receive almost £20 million in green subsidies over their 25-year lifespan despite estimates they will generate electricity for fewer than 3,500 households each year.

The subsidy is paid for by increasing all consumers' electricity bills.

An existing turbine at Green Park on the outskirts of Reading is rated one of the worst performing wind turbines in the country, coming 210th out of 218 for efficiency, according to the think tank the Renewable Energy Foundation.

John Constable, its director of policy and research, said: "It's not surprising they are this tall because the location is a long way south and a long way inland where there is not that much wind."

Jan Heard, spokeswoman for the local protest group Householders Against Rushy Mead, said: "The proposed wind farm at Rushy Mead is a prime example of excessive subsidies leading to the completely illogical placement of wind turbines.

"These turbines would be [among] the very biggest installed in the UK to date, far too close to hundreds of residential houses in Lower Earley, and would be a blight on all of the surrounding areas.

"Without the excessive subsidies, there would be no economic and power generation basis for putting industrial wind turbines in a low wind, inland river valley – common sense has left the building."

The wind farm is planned for a section of farmland, just south of the M4, owned by Reading University. The university will receive rent.

PFR is working with other universities and government agencies on other projects across the UK but the scheme at Rushy Mead is its first to get to the planning stage.

A spokesman for Partnerships for Renewables said: "We have been collecting wind data on the site for two years and have been able to build up a good understanding of the wind regime.

"We are confident that, by selecting the correct turbine for the site, a wind development at the location will generate a significant amount of electricity.

"This is important because any revenues generated will be directly related to the amount of electricity produced, the less electricity produced the less the revenue."

A spokeswoman for RenewableUK, the trade body for the renewable energy industry, said: "The increase in size is actually improving the economic benefits of wind energy since greater yields can be achieved, while maintaining the low environmental impact of smaller sized turbines.

"In other words, a larger turbine could have a marginally larger diameter, yet produce twice as much electricity per annum. This also means that to achieve a certain target for electricity production you need fewer turbines overall."

The spokeswoman added: "Those seeking to block wind farm developments on the grounds of aesthetics are actually preventing the flow of thousands of pounds of investment into their local communities."

Saturday 4 December 2010

Solar Boat Heads to Cancun


After more than two months at sea, a boat powered exclusively with solar power has crossed the Atlantic in record time and arrived in Miami, Florida. The boat and crew will rest for a couple of days before heading out to Cancun, Mexico. The developers of the boat hope to show delegates attending the UN Climate Conference, that renewable energy is the way of the future.

At more than 30 meters long, Turanor is the world's largest solar-powered boat, and it's crew of six is on a mission to show the world that clean, renewable power is no longer a futuristic dream, but a practical reality.

Raphael Domjan, developer of Turanor, said, "The idea is to show that today we have the technologies to change. Not tomorrow, but today we can change. Now, it is not a boat you can buy on the normal markets but it is possible that we can be optimistic for the future."

Turanor is powered by two large motors which run on electricity supplied by batteries located in the hold. The batteries, fed by photovoltaic solar panels on the deck, can store enough power to last three days. Turanor captain Patrick Marchesseau says the global voyage has been problem-free so far, although he admits the longer sections require some tactical thinking.

He said, "When you leave you have a certain quantity of energy in your batteries plus the sun but you do not have enough to reach the next port, to cross the Atlantic. So you have to deal, everyday to deal with the weather forecast to make sure you balance what you will consume and what you will receive."

Turanor has been at sea for more than sixty days. Marchesseau says that in another ten months, the crew will hopefully have achieved its goal when Turanor becomes the first solar-powered boat to circumnavigate the earth.

Thursday 2 December 2010

Vatican wants a solar popemobile


The Vatican said Pope Benedict XVI would gladly use a solar-powered electric popemobile as another sign of his efforts to promote sustainable energy and take care of the planet, but one has yet to be offered.

Cardinal Giovanni Lajolo, who runs the Vatican City state, said Benedict would certainly prefer an electric popemobile to a traditional, petroleum-powered one given the priority he has given to making the Vatican a leader in green energy.

His comments came during a presentation of a book on the Vatican's ecological efforts: The Energy of the Sun in the Vatican.

The book documents the 2008 installation of photovoltaic cells on the roof of the Vatican's main auditorium and the 2009 installation of a solar cooling unit for its main cafeteria.

The technology has won awards and garnered Benedict a reputation as the "green pope".

The Germany-based firm SolarWorld, which provided the photovoltaic cells on the auditorium, said it has discussed the idea of providing the pope with a solar-powered electric car.

SolarWorld marketing chief Milan Nitzschke said the main hurdle is to get the Vatican security apparatus to sign off on it, since some still have concerns - unfounded, he said - that electric cars don't accelerate as quickly as traditional ones.

"It's really no problem," he said, noting that electric cars can go from 0-100 kph in three seconds. "This is something we have to discuss with the people who are in charge of the security aspect, but of course this is possible and it would be a very, very huge symbol."

The Cardinal added: "If he's offered a functioning, efficient and appropriately sized popemobile, why not?"

When he is outside the Vatican, Benedict usually rides in a modified white Mercedes-Benz outfitted with bullet-proof windows; it has room for two passengers in addition to the pope, who sits on an elevated chair to wave to crowds.

Wednesday 1 December 2010

ELECTRIC EEL LIGHTS UP CHRISTMAS TREE


Each time the eel moves, two aluminum panels gather enough electricity to light up the 2-meter (6 ft 6 in) tall tree, decked out in white, in glowing intermittent flashes.

The aquarium in Kamakura, just south of Tokyo, has featured the electric eel for five years to encourage ecological sensitivity.

This year, it added a Santa robot that sings and dances when visitors stomp on a pad.

"We first decided to get an electric eel to light up a Christmas tree and its top ornament using its electricity," said Kazuhiko Minawa, on the public relations team for the Enoshima Aquarium. "As electric eels use their muscles when generating a charge, we also thought to get humans to use their muscles to light up parts of the tree and power Santa."

Visitor Sumie Chiba was fascinated with the display but questioned the practicality of eel energy for domestic use.

"If this was possible, I think it's very nice and extremely eco-friendly," she said.

Monday 29 November 2010

$20 mil. solar powered catamaran to cruise globe



A vessel seemingly straight out of a vintage James Bond movie slipped into Miami’s Government Cut sometime around 8 a.m. Saturday.

The craft, a strange mash-up of gleaming glass arrowhead, sleek flying saucer and knife-nosed catamaran, was not designed by an evil madman plotting world domination. It’s the brainchild of Raphael Domjan, a Swiss engineer and self-described “eco-adventurer’’ with a not-all-that crazy scheme to circle the world using only sunshine for fuel.

“We want to show what we can do with solar power,” said Domjan during a satellite phone interview last week as the world’s largest solar-powered boat cruised north of Haiti bound for a four-day stop at Miami Beach Marina, one of only two planned in the United States. “We have the technology to change the world, not tomorrow, but today.”



The 102-foot-long Turanor PlanetSolar -- which its team of Swiss-German builders says translates into “power of the sun’’ in the Elvish language JRR Tolkien invented for Lord of the Rings -- is far from the first boat to run on the sun.

Back in 2007, the 46-foot Sun21 catamaran arrived in Miami from southern Spain to complete the first Atlantic crossing by a solar boat. Dozens of domestic builders now offer small craft capable of plying lakes or Biscayne Bay. But the Turanor is the biggest, most advanced and easily most eye-catching design yet. It’s also built with the ambitious goal of circumnavigating the globe without burning a thimble of gasoline.

Complex course

Nearly two months into an Atlantic Ocean crossing that began in Monaco, Domjan said the sailing was mostly smooth for him and a five-member crew. Of course, in a solar-powered craft, charting a course isn’t as simple as plotting straight lines in the global positioning system. Instead, they study daily weather reports to steer toward bright sun and favorable winds.

“What we are doing now, nobody does this sort of navigation,” he said. “We have to find the sun to go as fast as possible.”

Built by a German yacht maker with weight and energy efficiency the foremost concerns, the Turanor’s deck is covered in 5,700 square feet of photovoltaic panels of thin glass that are still tough enough to withstand waves and the weight of crew members. Underway, the crew can extend more panels like wings, increasing the boat’s length to 115 feet and its beam, the nautical term for width, from 50 to 75 feet.

The solar cells generate power to charge to what is also billed as the world’s largest lithium ion battery. The builders say the massive 13-ton unit will hold enough juice to run the vessel’s electric motors, computers and navigation systems overnight and for up to three cloudy days -- or more if running on minimal power.

The catamaran also was constructed of light but strong carbon fibers with sharp-nosed ‘‘wave-piercing’’ hulls designed to both reduce ocean drag and electrical drain on twin motors.



Stroher said it didn’t take him long to jump aboard and bankroll a vessel he figures cost him about 15 million euros, roughly $20 million.

“I was really excited about the idea of going around the world,” he said.

Stroher doesn’t expect immediate profit from the PlanetSolar project, which has since added additional sponsors, but he hopes a voyage promoting the possibilities of solar will pay off in the long term -- for his companies and a planet with what he views as a damaging fossil-fuel addiction.



The savings“What you put on a boat, you can put on a car, you can put on a roof top, you can put in the desert and produce energy that in the end will be cheaper than any kind of other energy,” he said. Perhaps eventually. For now, nascent renewable sources typically run far more expensive than fossil fuel and nuclear -- though, as Stroher point outs, those calculations don’t factor in the costs of dealing with pollution and radioactive waste.

Though the Turanor’s design is extreme, much of the technology has practical real-world applications for marine and other industries, he said.



At anchorIt would require far too many panels to propel huge, heavy tankers but solar arrays might provide all the power a ship needs while at anchor, Stroher said, eliminating the need for running diesel engines that pump out foul fumes.

Many small boaters already use solar panels or wind vanes to charge batteries but improving technology that can put solar cells in flexible plastic promises expanded benefits, he said. In Australia, one company is even trying to tap two renewables at once by covering a hard sail with solar cells.

Still, for all its high-tech, the Turanor still has some serious limitations as an ocean-going vessel -- most notably in the speed department.

Its electric motors can pump out perhaps 130 horsepower at full power, Domjan said, but that would drain the batteries within 10 hours. Typically, the boat putts along powered by about 30 horses going to the twin props. The typical 14-foot whaler in South Florida boasts an outboard with more giddy-up.

For the Turanor, wind also can be boon or bane. With favorable conditions, the boat was breezing along at a 6.5 knot clip toward the Turks and Caicos Islands at midweek but at other points, the crew has had to fight the wind. Just off Monaco, the boat encountered squalls with 40-knot headways.



Feeling safe
Handling an underpowered vessel can be a nightmare, even downright dangerous, in rough weather but Domjan said the boat proved solid and “really safe.”

“We were sailing with the wind against us,” he said. “The boat was still going, not that fast, of course.”

In comparison, the typical sailboat puts that other renewable energy, wind, to far more efficient and less expensive use, easily matching the Turanor in speed. Some designs can routinely top the 20 mph mark and even hit 40 mph or more -- at least for short periods.

Stroher said he has heard that point raised more than once.

“Some people say, ‘You have built the most unnecessary vessel in the world because it is running without an engine,’ but that’s what people have done with sails for 3,000 years,” he said, laughing. “They are right, of course. It’s not my main purpose to have boats or ships run on solar but to show what renewable resources are able to achieve.”

Sunday 28 November 2010

Cheap energy hope with Wrexham university solar cells



A £4.4m project to develop new photovoltaic (PV) cells could result in cheaper, more efficient solar energy, says Glyndŵr University in Wrexham.



The university's Centre for Solar Energy Research (CSER) hopes to develop cells designed to collect solar energy from Wales' weather conditions.



Researchers will work with scientists from Bangor and Swansea universities.



Glyndŵr University says it has been estimated PV solar cells will provide 20% of Welsh electricity needs by 2050.



However, it says take-up has been slow due to high costs and the cells being unable to gain maximum efficiency from solar energy in countries with temperate climates like Wales.



The university said its research would help to tackle both challenges.



Its target is to create 50 jobs through the project: through the research itself, the supply chain and from companies benefiting from increased take-up of solar cells.



Professor Stuart Irvine, director of the CSER, in St Asaph, Denbighshire, said: "We have world-class facilities in St Asaph with the capability to see everything through from initial research to the production of small thin film solar cell modules.



"We're currently operating with cells of 5cm square but the aim is to get up to test modules of 30cm square - taking us much closer to a size of solar cell which can be used commercially to provide the future electricity needs of Wales."



The three-year project is part-funded by the Convergence European Regional Development Fund, which is distributed by the Welsh Assembly Government.

Saturday 27 November 2010

Prince Charles seeks 'big society' role in shaping UK towns and cities


Critics believe bid by prince's charity to play key role in neighbourhood planning system is dangerous and inappropriate

The Prince of Wales is attempting to extend his influence over Britain's towns and cities by taking a key role in the neighbourhood planning system under changes launched by the government.

The prince's aides have been advising the government on one of David Cameron's "big society" policies aimed at handing people, rather than officials, power over what is built in their neighbourhoods.

The Prince's Foundation for the Built Environment, a charity of which Charles is president, is lobbying to co-ordinate community groups that would set the planning vision for local areas, including what housing and public facilities should be built and how they should look.

The innovation is expected to be announced in the coming weeks as part of the localism and decentralisation bill and is meant to turn the planning system on its head with the public "collaborating" rather than simply being consulted on official policies.

Planning experts believe the foundation's involvement in steering meetings would mean more neighbourhoods shaped according to the prince's favoured traditional and conservative architectural values, and have warned it could embed his influence in the democratic planning system.

Will Alsop, one of Britain's leading architects, said the bid was dangerous and threatened to stifle architectural innovation, while campaigners opposed to Charles's influence over democratic processes branded it "grossly inappropriate".

The foundation's decision to press for the role comes amid a resurgence in Charles's influence over planning under the Conservatives. Last month his foundation proposed taking over the design review of major planning applications from the government design watchdog, which has had its funding slashed.

The charity has also been drafted in by the Qatari developers of a £3bn housing plan at Chelsea barracks after the developers scrapped the original Richard Rogers design amid fears that Charles's objection might influence the London mayor, Boris Johnson, who has the power to veto major developments in the capital.

The Conservatives are understood to be keen to involve the Prince's Foundation in the planning changes. John Howell, the Conservative MP who originally proposed the new approach to planning in a green paper, said the foundation's method of running community design sessions was "one which had a good track record and people will be interested in learning of its success".

The prince's charity has used its Enquiry by Design workshops to develop housing plans from East Ayrshire to Northamptonshire which have resulted in proposals that reject modern architecture and favour traditional approaches.

Under proposals expected to be included in the bill, local authorities will be required to adopt the outcomes of community workshops as a planning framework unless there is a significant problem with their legality or practicality. The plans would be drawn up at ward, parish or town council level and district and borough councils would be expected to stitch them together. Planning sources claimed the foundation was "gearing up its machine" to seize the opportunity to advance its philosophy."We were asked by [the Department for] Communities and Local Government for input into ways that community engagement could promote more sustainable development, and we have provided information about our Enquiry by Design process, and ways that similar processes could aid local planning," said Hank Dittmar, chief executive of the foundation.

"If the localism and decentralisation bill does enhance local planning through stakeholder engagement, the Prince's Foundation would be pleased to help local authorities to respond, by community planning training sessions and by conducting Enquiries by Design."

Dittmar recently denied promoting any particular style, saying: "Unlike the critical elite, with its allegiance to often vain statement buildings by famous architects, our bias is toward design in service of walkable, mixed-use neighbourhoods, linked by streets and squares and landscape."

That has not prevented criticism of the bid for increased influence. "It is grossly inappropriate for the heir to the throne to be involved in an organisation that wants to take such a central role in government business, especially in the controversial area of planning," said Graham Smith, director of Republic, the campaign for an elected head of state. "We know that Charles has deep prejudices on architecture and planning and it would be very worrying to have that influence spread across the country."

Will Alsop, winner of the Stirling Prize for architecture for Peckham library, said the prince's involvement in the often politicised planning system would breach accepted norms about the royal family keeping out of politics and would be "bad news for architecture".

"This is dangerous," he said. "We already know that the vast majority of people would favour the Prince of Wales's attitudes, but architecture, like all forms of art and science, thrives on the new and asking interesting questions as well as protecting the old. With the Prince's Foundation involved, the new would go out of the window."

Thursday 25 November 2010

Coalition calls on 'Big Society' to embrace small energy


Communities and businesses keen to take advantage of the UK's renewable energy incentives will from today be able to receive additional guidance from the government, after the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) launched a new website designed to help organisations generate their own energy.

Dubbed Community Energy Online, the new site offers local authorities and community groups detailed advice and case studies demonstrating how to select and deliver local low carbon and renewable energy projects.

The guidance aims to provide step-by-step advice on how to deliver community-scale renewable energy projects, including information on how to select the right technology, raise the necessary finance, qualify for relevant incentives such as the feed-in tariff and renewable heat incentive, and comply with regulations.

Announcing the launch of the new website at the Combined Heat and Power Association annual conference, climate minister Greg Barker said the government's support for community-scale renewable energy projects such as district heating systems or wind farms epitomised the government's 'big society' agenda.

"Community energy is a perfect expression of the transformative power of the Big Society," he said. "With the right combination of incentives and freedoms, community groups, businesses and organisations can get together to build a cleaner, greener future. They can generate their own heat and electricity, and their own profits, and as a by-product, help the UK to save energy and help to cut carbon emissions."

The new site is the latest in a series of measures from the government designed to accelerate the roll out of community scale renewable energy projects, which critics have long claimed have been neglected in favour of onsite and larger scale projects.

For example, the coalition recently overturned the ban on local councils selling electricity back to the grid in an attempt to make renewable energy projects on local authority land more attractive.

The push to promote community projects has been broadly welcomed by the renewable energy industry, although concerns remain that while the government has committed to launching the renewable heat incentive next year it could still scale back the feed in tariff scheme.

DECC said in the wake of the spending review that it would aim to keep incentives at their current level for the first phase of the scheme which runs until 2012. But speaking in the Commons earlier this month climate minister Greg Barker hinted that changes could come thereafter, signaling that the government was looking at changing the incentives for larger photovoltaic field arrays.

Wednesday 24 November 2010

M&S Makes Progress on 2015 Eco Goals


UK retailer Marks and Spencer says it’s on track to become the world’s most sustainable major retailer by 2015, reports Energy Efficiency News. The retailer expects to meet half of its 180 sustainability targets by April, well ahead of schedule, according to the company’s latest progress report.

As part of the retailer’s Plan A eco plan introduced in 2007, Marks and Spencer has introduced 399 aerodynamic ‘teardrop’ trailers that improve fuel efficiency by 10 percent and carry 10 percent more stock, which has reduced the company’s carbon footprint by 2300 tonnes a year, according to the article.

In June, Marks & Spencer announced that it had achieved a 20 percent reduction in food packaging, increased energy efficiency in stores 19 percent, used 417 million fewer carrier bags last year and invested over £50 million, or $73 million of profit from its Plan A activities back into the business.

The retailer also is addressing the environmental impact of its refrigeration systems across its portfolio of stores. Twenty-five stores are now using environmentally friendly CO2 refrigeration systems and a further 175 stores have been converted to refrigeration systems that use a cleaner HFC (R407a) gas that cuts emissions by 50 percent.

The company also is making progress towards its target of increasing recycling of operational waste at its stores, offices and distribution centers, which now stands at 92 percent, reports Energy Efficiency News. This is up from 53 percent reported in June. The company’s goal is to achieve zero waste to landfill by 2012.

Marks and Spencer also distributed 35,000 energy monitors to its employees to help reduce their energy use at home.

The retailer also stepped up its plans to sell only items that have at least one “eco” or “ethical” attribute, announcing plans in March that half of its products would meet this standard by 2015. By 2020, the goal is 100 percent.

Tuesday 23 November 2010

Industry gathers to fight large-scale solar threat


Following the recent media hype surrounding Greg Barker’s statement in the House of Commons on November 11, which alluded to the possibility that large-scale solar installations in the UK could be under threat, a meeting between representatives of the solar industry, including the Renewable Energy Association (REA), the Micropower council and the Minister has been set up for November 24.

The main objective of this industry meeting is to make the Minister aware of the very wide nature of developments in the market, including the significant amount of 5MW parks announced across the country, so that he could understand the implications of an early review of tariffs.

Several industry associations, bodies and solar companies have been briefed on this issue in order to form a response to this statement and to begin lobbying against it.

A feed-in tariff pre-meeting discussion and reception and speech by Greg Barker will take place tomorrow, November 23.

Friday 19 November 2010

Renewed UK Government business plan clarifies renewable energy scheme



As part of coalition changes, the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) has published a business plan confirming and clarifying commitments for the period up until 2015.

The Business Plan 2011 – 2015 provides details of how commitments will be implemented, including dates for milestones, coalition priorities and departmental expenditure.

Renewable energy generation
As before the DECC's overall aim is to obtain 15% of energy from renewable sources by 2020;
As previously announced the Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) scheme is due to start in June 2011.


The RHI scheme will provide support for renewable heat technologies, from household thermal panels to industrial wood pellet boilers. Full details of the scheme, including tariffs and technologies supported, are due to be announced before the end of this year;

A review of feed-in tariffs is scheduled for 2012 and the Government has identified scope to cut feed-in tariff costs by 10%;

There is only one reference to offshore renewable energy, which is that "proposals for tackling the regulatory, legal, planning and technical barriers to coordinated offshore grid development in the North and Irish Seas" are to be published in December 2012; and The plan highlights the importance the DECC places on international support for the UK’s low-carbon development and energy security objectives. Outlined in the plan are: Agreement plans for cooperation with “Norway on oil and gas, CCS and renewable”; launch of new energy dialogues with China and Brazil; and secure multi-country and business commitments on overcoming the barriers to deployment of CCS at the Clean Energy Ministerial to be held in Abu Dhabi.

Energy efficiency and smart metering
As previously announced, the Green Deal is due to be available from October 2012. The scheme will offer householders and businesses the opportunity to fund energy efficiency improvements through savings on their energy bills. The plan sets out the stages in the development of the Green Deal, including that a precursor to the Green Deal (an Early Green Deal) will be developed with potential providers and launched in December 2010.


Furthermore, an Energy Security and Green Economy Bill is due to be introduced to parliament in December 2010 that will create the legislation underpinning the Green Deal and the new energy company obligation;
The plan sets out a framework in which to establish a smart electricity grid which includes working with industry to develop a framework for smart energy standards.


Also, as part of the Electricity Market White Paper (due for publication May 2011) aims to “set out a strategy for future electricity networks to increase efficiency and reliability of the network; enable flexible demand management and the use of electric vehicles; and support integration of more local and wind-powered generation.”;

The implementation plan for smart electricity and gas meters is due in April 2011 with full roll out due to start summer 2012; and DECC is developing a National Energy Efficiency Data (NEED) framework that will include property level data on energy consumption and energy efficiency and fuel poverty for around 4 million properties.

Expenditure
The plan sets out annual DECC expenditure, broken down to administration spending, programme spending and capital spending; and
Spending is due to increase from a £2.9 billion baseline in 2010/11 to £3.7bn by 2014/15 although this rise is mainly due to capital spending for the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority.

The plan also includes a section on what the DECC will no longer fund, including "technologies unless [DECC is] confident that they are the most critical to meeting long-term decarbonisation and energy security objectives."

This implies that much stricter criteria will be applied to any grant funding or other financial support that is available, as well as having implications for the review of the feed-in tariff in 2012 and the review of the Renewable Obligation Certificate (ROC) banding in 2013.

Thursday 18 November 2010

Chris Huhne announces CRC consultation


The second phase of the CRC Energy Efficiency Scheme could be delayed until 2013, the secretary of state for energy and climate change, Chris Huhne, announced today. Speaking at the CBI Climate Change Summit in London, Huhne told delegates that a nationwide consultation into postponing the start of Phase II of the CRC has been published, adding that the extra time could allow the government time to reduce the administrative burden on businesses. He explained: "This will create a window for us to engage in a proper dialogue with participants about what we need to do to improve the CRC."

Huhne also announced that thousands of businesses will be exempt from the scheme. He said: "I can reveal that we are proposing to exempt over 12,000 information declarers from the scheme. We now have enough feedback from the first stage of the CRC to remove obligations on information declarers without compromising the scheme’s environmental aims."

The largely unpopular decision that funds raised from the CRC will not be recycled back to participating businesses was raised at the conference and was described as a 'debacle' by CBI's director general Richard Lambert. He said: "Those who feared that green taxes would simply turn into another kind of stealth tax have had their prejudices amply confirmed by the way the Carbon Reduction Commitment has been converted, without consultation, into just another source of revenue for the Treasury." When questioned about this decision by the summit's chair, Roger Harrabin, Chris Huhne said the revision to the CRC would simplify the scheme but acknowledged that tough decisions had been made as part of the comprehensive spending review (CSR).

Wednesday 17 November 2010

Costs could see UK left behind in smart meter market, expert suggests


Residential smart metering needs to be made cheaper for more people in the UK to take up the option, it has been suggested.

Recently-published figures from Datamonitor have revealed that the global market for smart metering is set to increase by 350 per cent over the coming years, reaching $5.7 billion (£3.54 billion) by 2015.

However, the study also showed that deploying the technology in the UK in order to keep energy bills down is currently more expensive than anywhere else in the world.

Jon Lane, energy director at Datamonitor, said: "The UK solution looks very expensive compared to, say, France where ERDF expects to drive down the cost of its meters to €32-35 (£27-29). The equivalent figure for the UK's meters is around €65.

"These higher costs are only acceptable as the government has used carbon savings and an anticipated reduction in demand in its calculations. If consumers don't reduce usage then the UK system becomes an expensive white elephant

Tuesday 16 November 2010

Renewable Heat Incentive funding confirmed

The government has recently announced as a result of the spending review, that over £800 million of funding will be put forward to the Renewable Heat Incentive throughout 2011-2012.

More precisely, George Osbourne has confirmed the total of funding will amount to £860 million and he provided certainty that the RHI will definitely be going ahead.

The increase this will cause in the production of renewable heat will be outstanding throughout the next ten years, the government has commented that it will result in "shifting renewable heat from a fringe industry firmly into the mainstream".

This advance has been welcomed by the Renewable Energy Association, viewing it as a massive breakthrough in the energy arena. Gaynor Hartnell, chief executive of the organisation has said that "we need to see the details but it looks like they're serious about supporting massive growth and employment in the UK's renewable energy sector."

Currently our heat usage results in 47 per cent of the UK’s carbon emissions. The previous government attempted to overcome this with a renewable heat levy, but the new coalition government is no longer going ahead with this.

By Www.greenenergy.uk.com

Monday 15 November 2010


Ground-mounted solar PV market under threat


The Government is considering making changes to the Feed-in Tariff (FiT) scheme to stop the development of ground-mounted solar photovoltaic (PV) field arrays, it emerged yesterday.Speaking in Parliament, yesterday morning, Energy Minister Greg Barker said the Government had inherited a FiT system that had failed to anticipate PV field arrays, which he said ran the risk of distorting the solar market.

The FiT incentive scheme was introduced in April to kick-start renewable energy generation in the UK. It guarantees an inflation-linked income for on-site renewable electricity projects under five megawatts (MW) in size for a period of up to 25 years. The attractive rates have led to a number of companies setting up to develop solar projects based on roof and land space across the UK. Private individuals are also investing in ground-mounted solar arrays on their property.

Yesterday, Barker said the Government would not act retrospectively, but that large field arrays should "not be allowed to distort the market" for roof-mounted PV or other renewables.

Warning to solar investors
The Renewable Energy Association (REA) responded to the statement by issuing a warning to potential investors in field arrays.

"The minister stated that the Government would not act retrospectively, so comfort can be gained that no project that starts generating will see its revenue diminished, but this statement is likely to worry potential investors in ground-mounted schemes," said Gaynor Hartnell, chief executive of the REA. "Those that have acted in good faith, and already made substantial investments on legal works and preparation of planning applications, will be feeling very uncomfortable indeed."

Ground-mounted solar investment
Within the last few months, two ground-mounted solar plants have been given the greenlight in the South West. 35 Degrees, a company with plans to invest in further solar PV arrays around the UK, won planning permission to build a 1 MW ground-mounted plant in Cornwall in September. Meanwhile, a couple was granted permission to build a 450 kilowatt solar array on private land in Somerset last month.

In all, 35 Degrees plans to build and manage 100 MW of PV in the UK and has already spent £500,000 on start-up costs on the 18 month-old Cornwall project. Its managing director Stephen McCable has already indicated that any changes to FiTs scheme would stop the company going ahead with its plans and put the whole industry at risk.

"Our business plan and the entire industry will be stopped in its tracks even at the suggestion that the Government is going to revise the Feed-In Tariffs," he toldGreenWise in September. "It will have a devastating impact on the industry – what is required is absolute certainty."

Other investors in the market include Vigor Renewables, which launched in March to partner with landowners and commercial property owners and managers to build, own and operate solar and wind power generating assets on roof and land-based sites across the UK.

REA said it would be "seeking clarity" from the Department of Energy and Climate Change on its policy for ground-mounted solar systems..

.

Source: Green Wise Business.

Friday 12 November 2010


In future, water also must be smart

For now, the focus in smart metering is mostly on electricity, though dual electric-gas smart meters have already made their way into some households across Europe and the US. Smart metering, though, will eventually train the spotlight on consumption habits for yet another precious resource: water.

It’s all part of the greater smart-grid/smart-city vision, where everything from ground-source heat pumps and plug-in cars to microturbine energy output and city-centre traffic congestion are monitored, measured and even controlled through a network of devices designed to reduce waste and maximise efficiency in every aspect of modern life.

The extension of “smart” services from mere electricity to many other areas creates vast new opportunities again in a market reality already rife with opportunity. And smart metering firms with recognised names in the electricity niche aren’t ignoring the potential to branch out.

Switzerland-based Landis+Gyr, for example, has wrapped up a “total metering solution” for Denmark’s Energi Fyn and the utility’s 81,000 customers.



Similarly, Itron is working on an automated meter reading (AMR) project with the UK’s Severn Trent Water, which provides service to some 8 million customers. As part of the project, Itron expects to roll out some 400,000 smart water meters for households by 2013.

Echelon’s LonWorks system has even made possible a symbol not of conservation but of conspicuous consumption: the Las Vegas-based Bellagio Hotel’s 27-million-gallon lake and dramatic water display. Even in the setting of “Sin City,” a certain amount of frugality is critical: the hotel needed smart technology to ensure uninterrupted power, water leak prevention and real-time monitoring to ensure maximum performance efficiency.

It all goes to show that — on the consumption end as well as the production side (water is a critical resource in electricity generation, particularly in coal-fired and nuclear power plants) — managing water use will be as important an element of tomorrow’s smart cities as will be managing electricity or gas consumption. And today’s truly smart smart-metering companies recognise that.

What's Next For Renewable Energy?


What's Next For Renewable Energy?
by Energy Matters


Renewable energy sources like concentrated solar and photovoltaic solar systems are the most viable technologies likely to challenge the dominance of fossil fuel on the global energy scene, according to a report released by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG).

The report, entitled "What’s Next for Alternative Energy?" looks at seven of the most promising renewable energy technologies - advanced biofuels, electric vehicles (EVs), concentrated solar power (CSP), solar photovoltaic (PV - solar panels), onshore wind power, offshore wind, and so-called "clean coal" through carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) - and assesses their potential to make a market impact on cheaper, more conventional energy sources.

The report finds that for some of these technologies, solar energy in particular, the day is fast approaching when solar penetration will disrupt the status quo.
According to Balu Balagopal, a senior partner at BCG and a co-author of the report. "[A] few of these green-energy technologies will make their presence felt very likely within the next few years. Their costs are falling quickly and significantly, pushing them closer to where they can compete on price—without subsidies - against fossil-fuel-based sources."

Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) would be necessary to ultimately curb carbon emissions, but the BCG report concludes this technology is still decades away from realistic implementation, while photovoltaic solar would achieve cost competitiveness by 2015-2020 in sunny regions. For total deployment and market confidence however, scientific breakthroughs in large-scale energy storage would need to occur.

As for Concentrated Solar Power (CSP), it would also reach parity in the 2015-2020 time frame, and is uniquely able to provide on-demand power though cost-effective thermal storage.

As with all new technologies however, "their adoption will be constrained more by barriers such as the need for new supporting infrastructure. However, we believe these barriers will likely prove surmountable," added Balagopal.

Thursday 11 November 2010


Smart meter firm Bglobal loses 8.5% as chief executive leaves

The market never likes it when a company's chief executive suddenly leaves, as smart metering specialist Bglobal is finding out today.

Its shares have dropped 4p to 39p - an 8.5% decline - after it announced towards the end of a trading statement that chief executive Tony Barnes would leave immediately. He had apparently decided that "now is an appropriate time for him to leave the group in order to pursue other interests."

Strange choice of words because the company looks like it is in a crucial period at the moment. It said it was profitable and cash generative in the first half, but its installation of meters was below expectations in the first quarter, leading to additional costs as it ramped up capacity. The performance was stronger in the second quarter, but not enough to meet earlier forecasts. So it has cut its full year installation expectations by 10% and anticipates raising operating costs, which will hit its overall performance.

New chief executive Tim Jackson-Smith - the current commercial director and general counsel - said the company was confident of the outlook, and was preparing for the expected residential roll-out of smart meters expected to start in late 2012.

EU biofuels growth on hold as green benefits queried

(Reuters) - The European Union's biofuels industry is unlikely to expand until the debate about their impact on climate change is resolved and clear policies emerge, the head of major UK biofuels firm said on Wednesday

"The (biofuels) industry is being held back by a lack of robust discrimination between what is good and what is bad," Alwyn Hughes, chief executive of Ensus said, referring to the differing environmental footprints of biofuels.

The European Commission is due to report to the European Parliament later this year on a concept known as indirect land-use change (ILUC).

Biofuels are seen by advocates as a way to cut greenhouse gas emissions that contribute the climate change. There are concerns, however, that changes in land use caused by the expansion of biofuels may in some cases lead to the release of carbon stored in soil, offsetting any positive benefits.

Nine environment groups issued a report this week that concluded the EU's goal of getting 10 percent of transport fuel from renewable sources by 2020 could accelerate climate change as well as deprive the poor of food.

A major strategic review of the EU's energy policy was issued on Wednesday.

The clearance of rainforests to allow for the expansion of crops such as palm oil, which can be used to make biodiesel, is often cited as one example of when biofuels could have a significant adverse impact on climate change.

"The uncertainty around this (the ILUC debate) clearly puts question marks over the growth of the industry but it is equally clear there are some very good biofuels out there," Hughes said.

"The NGOs (environment groups) are really having a go at the people who are driving deforestation. I agree with them that they should be taken out of the (biofuels) mix," Hughes said.

Hughes said his company would need "a clear policy framework in order to allow us to invest."

"I think it is important the ILUC issue is resolved at the end of the year clearly and crisply," he said.

REFINERY OPERATIONS IMPROVING

Ensus runs one of Europe's largest biorefineries in north-east England which has the capacity to make around 400 to 450 million liters of bioethanol a year from about one million tons of feed wheat.

The refinery entered commercial operation earlier this year and now regularly runs near capacity, Hughes said.

"We are often running at above a one million ton (per year) wheat rate," he said.

"We are clearly running a lot better today than we were three, four months ago. Hopefully in 12 months time we will be running even better," Hughes added.

Wednesday 10 November 2010

Solar Powered blood pressure machine-

Third-world countries, with rapidly rising rates of cardiovascular disease (CVD), could benefit from a device that harnesses solar power to measure blood pressure.

The devices have been heralded by research published in medical journal Hypertension as an affordable way to help reduce rapidly rising rates of CVD in low-income nations.

According to the research, team lead author Dr Eoin O’Brien, a professor at the Conway Institute of Bimolecular and Biomedical research in UCD, by using solar energy to power these kinds of devices it cuts out the need for rechargeable batteries that can prove costly in remote areas where electricity and availability are scarce.

Tests in medical centres in Africa showed that the $32 (around €23) devices are "94pc in agreement" with the standard blood-pressure testing method for systolic blood pressure – a top blood pressure reading that represents the maximum pressure when the heart contracts.

Shane Hulgraine

A GLUT IN GAS - Why are we paying higher bills?

Gas glut threatens investment in renewables sector, IEA warns


• Liquefied gas capacity will shoot up 47% by the end of 2013
• Shell and Exxon-Mobil are repositioning as gas producers

by Tim Webb guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 9 November 2010

A global gas glut which could last a decade will act as a "major barrier" to the development of renewable energy, cleaner coal plants and nuclear power, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).

"The golden age of gas" will lead to cheaper gas prices for consumers, particularly in Europe. But the IEA added that it is also likely to result in a rush to build gas-fired power plants at the expense of much cleaner forms of electricity generation.

The IEA's chief economist Fatih Birol also said that "Big Oil" – oil majors such as Shell and Exxon-Mobil – are suffering an "identity crisis" because they find themselves increasingly shut out of regions like the Middle East where most of the world's remaining oil reserves lie. They are repositioning themselves as gas producers, which companies like Shell are marketing as a cleaner form of energy, he said. "In terms of climate change, gas is definitely a good solution compared to coal and oil. But it's not very innocent compared to renewables and nuclear."

The world faces a long term gas glut because of recent technical advances which have made possible the exploitation of previously untapped shale gas, coal bed methane and tight gas deposits, mostly in the US, China and Australia. The IEA, publishing its annual world energy outlook now estimates that 35% of the increase in global gas production to 2035 will come from such unconventional projects. Last year it estimated that unconventional gas production would account for 20% of the growth, although this covered the period 2007 – 2030. Gas is also the only fossil fuel for which it expects demand to grow by 2035.

The world is already awash with cheap gas because of a fall in demand after the global economic downturn and unexpectedly high production of shale gas in the US, despite fears that the industry would be held back by environmental regulations. This has coincided with a surge in the construction of new LNG facilities and equipment which liquefies gas so it can be shipped by tankers from remote areas to market rather than having to build new pipelines. LNG capacity will shoot up 47% by the end 2013, the IEA said. As a result of higher gas supplies and lower demand, globally only about two thirds of pipelines and LNG facilities will be full this year. The figure will be even lower in Europe, which could prompt energy companies such as E.ON to try renegotiating their long term contracts with exporters such as Russian firm Gazprom to get a cheaper deal.

The IEA said that the utilisation rate of pipelines and LNG facilities will still not have returned to 2007 levels by the end of the decade. This assumes that no new infrastructure is commissioned, which it said was extremely unlikely. It has cut its long term global gas price forecasts, by as much as 10% in the US after 2020.

There are environmental benefits to a gas glut because cheaper gas-fired plants are more likely to replace old coal plants, which emit twice as much carbon. But gas plants' low operating cost will make it harder for wind farms and other renewables, including nuclear, to compete and attract investment. "From the perspective of renewables and nuclear it's not good news," Birol said. He also said that despite the £1bn recently committed by the UK government to develop a coal plant fitted with expensive carbon capture and storage technology (CCS), there may be less appetite to invest in CCS.

The IEA report also spelt out the predicament faced by international oil companies. Opec, the body that protects the interests of leading oil-producing countries is forecasting to increase its global share of oil production from a third to more than a half by 2035. State controlled oil companies will account for all of the world's increase in global oil production in the next 25 years, while total non-Opec production will start falling after 2025.

Birol added: "Big Oil face an identity crisis. They got used to being able to explore, produce and market oil. But they're not able to do this in the same way any more. Much of the world's oil reserves are out of reach to them. Therefore they have to redefine their business strategy. Gas becomes one alternative for them to redefine their strategy."

Black gold and greens
The International Energy Agency is estimating that average oil prices will hit $113 a barrel in 2035. This is some way short of the record of $147, set in 2008, and current prices are already close to $90. But the agency admitted that in practice, "short-term price volatility is likely to remain high" – in other words, prices could be much higher or much lower than $113 in decades to come.

The organisation, which advises companies and governments on future energy trends, was also scathing about the Copenhagen climate change summit last December.

It said that based on the extremely loose and uncertain commitments made, global oil production would peak soon after 2035. If governments took firm action to prevent the earth's temperature rising by more than 2C by 2050, it reckoned, "peak oil" would be reached before 2020.


A global gas glut which could last a decade will act as a "major barrier" to the development of renewable energy, cleaner coal plants and nuclear power, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).

"The golden age of gas" will lead to cheaper gas prices for consumers, particularly in Europe. But the IEA added that it is also likely to result in a rush to build gas-fired power plants at the expense of much cleaner forms of electricity generation.

The IEA's chief economist Fatih Birol also said that "Big Oil" – oil majors such as Shell and Exxon-Mobil – are suffering an "identity crisis" because they find themselves increasingly shut out of regions like the Middle East where most of the world's remaining oil reserves lie. They are repositioning themselves as gas producers, which companies like Shell are marketing as a cleaner form of energy, he said. "In terms of climate change, gas is definitely a good solution compared to coal and oil. But it's not very innocent compared to renewables and nuclear."

The world faces a long term gas glut because of recent technical advances which have made possible the exploitation of previously untapped shale gas, coal bed methane and tight gas deposits, mostly in the US, China and Australia. The IEA, publishing its annual world energy outlook now estimates that 35% of the increase in global gas production to 2035 will come from such unconventional projects. Last year it estimated that unconventional gas production would account for 20% of the growth, although this covered the period 2007 – 2030. Gas is also the only fossil fuel for which it expects demand to grow by 2035.

The world is already awash with cheap gas because of a fall in demand after the global economic downturn and unexpectedly high production of shale gas in the US, despite fears that the industry would be held back by environmental regulations. This has coincided with a surge in the construction of new LNG facilities and equipment which liquefies gas so it can be shipped by tankers from remote areas to market rather than having to build new pipelines. LNG capacity will shoot up 47% by the end 2013, the IEA said. As a result of higher gas supplies and lower demand, globally only about two thirds of pipelines and LNG facilities will be full this year. The figure will be even lower in Europe, which could prompt energy companies such as E.ON to try renegotiating their long term contracts with exporters such as Russian firm Gazprom to get a cheaper deal.

The IEA said that the utilisation rate of pipelines and LNG facilities will still not have returned to 2007 levels by the end of the decade. This assumes that no new infrastructure is commissioned, which it said was extremely unlikely. It has cut its long term global gas price forecasts, by as much as 10% in the US after 2020.

There are environmental benefits to a gas glut because cheaper gas-fired plants are more likely to replace old coal plants, which emit twice as much carbon. But gas plants' low operating cost will make it harder for wind farms and other renewables, including nuclear, to compete and attract investment. "From the perspective of renewables and nuclear it's not good news," Birol said. He also said that despite the £1bn recently committed by the UK government to develop a coal plant fitted with expensive carbon capture and storage technology (CCS), there may be less appetite to invest in CCS.

The IEA report also spelt out the predicament faced by international oil companies. Opec, the body that protects the interests of leading oil-producing countries is forecasting to increase its global share of oil production from a third to more than a half by 2035. State controlled oil companies will account for all of the world's increase in global oil production in the next 25 years, while total non-Opec production will start falling after 2025.

Birol added: "Big Oil face an identity crisis. They got used to being able to explore, produce and market oil. But they're not able to do this in the same way any more. Much of the world's oil reserves are out of reach to them. Therefore they have to redefine their business strategy. Gas becomes one alternative for them to redefine their strategy."

Black gold and greens
The International Energy Agency is estimating that average oil prices will hit $113 a barrel in 2035. This is some way short of the record of $147, set in 2008, and current prices are already close to $90. But the agency admitted that in practice, "short-term price volatility is likely to remain high" – in other words, prices could be much higher or much lower than $113 in decades to come.

The organisation, which advises companies and governments on future energy trends, was also scathing about the Copenhagen climate change summit last December.

It said that based on the extremely loose and uncertain commitments made, global oil production would peak soon after 2035. If governments took firm action to prevent the earth's temperature rising by more than 2C by 2050, it reckoned, "peak oil" would be reached before 2020.




Gas glut threatens investment in renewables sector, IEA warns

• Liquefied gas capacity will shoot up 47% by the end of 2013
• Shell and Exxon-Mobil are repositioning as gas producers

By -Tim Webb guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 9 November 2010 19.10 GMT

A global gas glut which could last a decade will act as a "major barrier" to the development of renewable energy, cleaner coal plants and nuclear power, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).

"The golden age of gas" will lead to cheaper gas prices for consumers, particularly in Europe. But the IEA added that it is also likely to result in a rush to build gas-fired power plants at the expense of much cleaner forms of electricity generation.

The IEA's chief economist Fatih Birol also said that "Big Oil" – oil majors such as Shell and Exxon-Mobil – are suffering an "identity crisis" because they find themselves increasingly shut out of regions like the Middle East where most of the world's remaining oil reserves lie. They are repositioning themselves as gas producers, which companies like Shell are marketing as a cleaner form of energy, he said. "In terms of climate change, gas is definitely a good solution compared to coal and oil. But it's not very innocent compared to renewables and nuclear."

The world faces a long term gas glut because of recent technical advances which have made possible the exploitation of previously untapped shale gas, coal bed methane and tight gas deposits, mostly in the US, China and Australia. The IEA, publishing its annual world energy outlook now estimates that 35% of the increase in global gas production to 2035 will come from such unconventional projects. Last year it estimated that unconventional gas production would account for 20% of the growth, although this covered the period 2007 – 2030. Gas is also the only fossil fuel for which it expects demand to grow by 2035.

The world is already awash with cheap gas because of a fall in demand after the global economic downturn and unexpectedly high production of shale gas in the US, despite fears that the industry would be held back by environmental regulations. This has coincided with a surge in the construction of new LNG facilities and equipment which liquefies gas so it can be shipped by tankers from remote areas to market rather than having to build new pipelines. LNG capacity will shoot up 47% by the end 2013, the IEA said. As a result of higher gas supplies and lower demand, globally only about two thirds of pipelines and LNG facilities will be full this year. The figure will be even lower in Europe, which could prompt energy companies such as E.ON to try renegotiating their long term contracts with exporters such as Russian firm Gazprom to get a cheaper deal.

The IEA said that the utilisation rate of pipelines and LNG facilities will still not have returned to 2007 levels by the end of the decade. This assumes that no new infrastructure is commissioned, which it said was extremely unlikely. It has cut its long term global gas price forecasts, by as much as 10% in the US after 2020.

There are environmental benefits to a gas glut because cheaper gas-fired plants are more likely to replace old coal plants, which emit twice as much carbon. But gas plants' low operating cost will make it harder for wind farms and other renewables, including nuclear, to compete and attract investment. "From the perspective of renewables and nuclear it's not good news," Birol said. He also said that despite the £1bn recently committed by the UK government to develop a coal plant fitted with expensive carbon capture and storage technology (CCS), there may be less appetite to invest in CCS.

The IEA report also spelt out the predicament faced by international oil companies. Opec, the body that protects the interests of leading oil-producing countries is forecasting to increase its global share of oil production from a third to more than a half by 2035. State controlled oil companies will account for all of the world's increase in global oil production in the next 25 years, while total non-Opec production will start falling after 2025.

Birol added: "Big Oil face an identity crisis. They got used to being able to explore, produce and market oil. But they're not able to do this in the same way any more. Much of the world's oil reserves are out of reach to them. Therefore they have to redefine their business strategy. Gas becomes one alternative for them to redefine their strategy."

Black gold and greens
The International Energy Agency is estimating that average oil prices will hit $113 a barrel in 2035. This is some way short of the record of $147, set in 2008, and current prices are already close to $90. But the agency admitted that in practice, "short-term price volatility is likely to remain high" – in other words, prices could be much higher or much lower than $113 in decades to come.

The organisation, which advises companies and governments on future energy trends, was also scathing about the Copenhagen climate change summit last December.

It said that based on the extremely loose and uncertain commitments made, global oil production would peak soon after 2035. If governments took firm action to prevent the earth's temperature rising by more than 2C by 2050, it reckoned, "peak oil" would be reached before 2020.