Renewables & efficiency - March 13
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
The report by the Clean Edge research firm shows the alternative energy industry at a turning point in 2008. After years of rapid growth fueled by rising oil prices and fears of global warming, the industry was finally making serious cash. Green businesses were hiring, with solar and wind companies accounting for a total of 600,000 jobs worldwide, according to the report. But as 2008 wore on, the world slid deeper into recession, the oil market crashed and banks stopped lending to green startups. As a result, the report's authors expect the industry's sales to flatline or fall slightly in 2009. And some green-tech companies won't live to see 2010.
In partnership with The Small Hydro Company, British Waterways said it intended to build 25 small-scale hydro-electric schemes with a capacity of 40MW, enough to power 40,000 homes.
... There are many benefits to building a smart, distributed energy system. One problem with distributed energy is that is people don't necessarily live where clean energy resources are most abundant; another is that wiring together many different parts can impose regulatory costs that could make deploying distributed energy more difficult, and can be a hassle for homeowners (one of the reasons various schemes to rent or lease people home solar power packages remain popular). That's why some smart folks argue for putting the power generation where the power resources are and then building a new international grid of transmission lines to carry that clean energy from wind farms and solar fields to distant cities. ... Given the severity of the crisis we face, when presented a choice between two approaches to providing clean energy, the answer must be "both, please." But in this debate, as in every other, there are trade-offs, and it's worth thinking about when we want our volts local, and when being hooked into the super grid makes the most sense.
The latest warning about the data center power crisis that threatens to disrupt global business as early as 2011 comes from Siemens AG (Symbol SIE), which found in a new survey of major companies that less than half are working toward improving the energy efficiency of their data centers. “If we do not start looking closely at our data centers now, 70% of the world’s data centers will have tangible disruptions by 2011 and the systems will experience world-wide brownouts over the course of the next five years,” Siemens warned. < |
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