The Green Village News Tagged ‘renewable energy’

China Embraces Solar Energy To Fight Climate Change

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Solar energy in ChinaChina has promised to significantly increase renewable energy by 2020 by investing heavily in photovoltaic solar panels. This, along with other green energy initiatives, will see the proportion of  renewable energy in China’s energy mix raised from 1.5% to 6%.

An investment of £400 billion pounds will be put forward to ensure that solar energy is introduced throughout the country, from rooftops to full blown solar farms. Solar energy is a costly option, especially compared to the likes of coal, which is abundant in China, however the Chinese governing body responsible for energy has shown that climate change is becoming more and more of an issue that needs to be faced head on.

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Proposed Viking Wind Farm In Shetland Generates Controversy

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

shetland wind turbinesSitting at the top of Scotland with 22,000 inhabitants, Shetland receives more than its share of wind, making its small wind farm of 5 turbines, including Betsy, a 660kw turbine believed to be the world’s most efficient wind turbine in existence, very well placed.

Betsy reaches outputs of between 52 and 59% of the potential maximum output for the turbine; one reason why it is difficult to argue against the effectiveness of a full scale wind farm were it to be approved and built on Shetland. Not everybody is happy with the proposals for the Viking wind farm however. Although the proposed development could provide 20% of the energy needed to power Scotland, islanders have expressed concern about the detrimental effect the building of the site, including access roads and quarries, would have on the island’s environment.

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Has BP Moved Beyond Green?

Friday, May 15th, 2009

BPFollowing the decision to make safety a number one priority, oil company BP are the subject of much speculation about whether this means the end of their investment in green technology and renewables.

Since the new CEO, Tony Hayward took up his position in 2007, replacing Lord Browne who had been responsible for launching BP on the route to being a greener oil company, BP has received its fair share of criticism despite its investment in renewables. But when actions such as cutting investment in solar power, continuing to exploit tar sands; one of the planet’s biggest carbon sinks, and the plans they announced in 2008 that funding for monitoring of mangroves situated next to a gas extraction plant would be scrapped make up the track record, the criticism is pretty well deserved.

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London Array Spells Success For Wind Power

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

wind farmThe plans for the London Array, originally proposed in 2001 and which have stood in jeopardy for the last few years have finally been approved thanks to new funding secured by the UK government in last month’s Budget.

German energy giant, E.ON, the company responsible for the majority of Denmark’s wind power and for building half of the off shore wind farms in the world, DONG Energy, and an Abu Dhabi government controlled fund, Masdar, have come together to make the London Array a reality, investing £2.2bn in the development. Work on the onshore farm will begin this summer, with the offshore farm development due to begin in 2011.

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New Solar Tower Begins Commercial Production

Saturday, May 2nd, 2009

Solar technology company Abengoa Solar announced this week that their second solar tower in Seville, Spain, PS20, has begun commercial production with the capacity to power 10,000 homes, which will prevent 12,000 tons of CO2 being released into the atmosphere.

The solar power tower plant works through a field of 1255 heliostats, which are mirrored surfaces that can be turned to the direction of the sun’s rays, that reflect and focus the sun’s energy on a receiver mounted on a central tower. The radiation heats water or molten salts, which then produces steam that in turn powers a turbine affixed to a generator. The power could be stored in molten salt storage tanks, a further technology that Abengoa Solar are currently working on. This would then enable power to be supplied during the night and during cloudy weather.

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Isle of Wight Wind Turbine Factory To Close

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

wind turbineVestas Blades, Britain’s only wind turbine manufacturing factory, shut down operations and announced closure yesterday. The decision to close down has been blamed on a lack of demand for wind turbine parts in Northern Europe and the effects of the global financial problems currently affecting the world.

Workers at the plant have been given 90 days’ notice of the imminent redundancies, however environmental campaigners Greenpeace have questioned whether Gordon Brown could have done more to prevent the factory having to close down, commenting that although last week’s Budget commitment is a positive move, it is “too little too late”.

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Brown’s Electric Cars May Not Be The Answer

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Gordon Brown has answered the pleas of many by pledging to make next month’s Budget a greener budget in an attempt to try and draw Britain out of the recession and bring the economy back on track. One of the ways he is planning to achieve this is through greener transportation in the city, in the form of electric cars.

Proposed measures to tackle the struggling economy include Brown offering incentives for makers of environmentally friendly vehicles, and also trials of electric cars and the installation of a network of charging points to support this proposed development. (more…)

Saltwater Technology To Power The Netherlands

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

The Netherlands is famous for its dams, dikes and floodgates that were installed across the country to bring an end to the potentially devastating floods that could wipe out thousands of humans and animal lives and reek damage on the buildings and infrastructures of the nation. The 75-year-old ‘Afsluitdijk’, built by Cornelus Lely, stretches from North Holland to Friesland that was installed following a huge tidal wage struck The Netherlands in 1916, and is being looked at as a site for generating renewable energy from saltwater.

The process, which would be a kind of reverse electrodialysis, works by extracting the energy that is generated when saltwater and fresh water mix. Scientists have been aware since the 1950s that electricity could be obtained by means of this process, but nobody had ever ascertained how efficient or viable this process could actually be on a large scale. Until now.

Bert Hamelers, an environmental engineer from the Sub-Department of Environmental Technology at Wageningen University in The Netherlands, together with Jan Post, a civil engineer and PhD student of Hemelers, would be working in conjunction with Leeuwarden research institute, Wetsus, to further develop knowledge and technologies around energy generation from saltwater/freshwater mixing.

One of the major attractions to the technology is not only the fact that it is renewable and clean, but it estimated that over 80% of the energy can be recovered. Compare this to the efficiency of coal, where between 38 and 50% of the energy released by the burning of this dirty, depleting fossil fuel is captured, and it doesn’t take a genious to work out how much more beneficial this technology could be across the world. Especially when the process occurs naturally at river estuaries across the globe, it seems that this opportunity to harvest clean, green, renewable energy is there for the taking.

Lack of Government Funding Could Lead to Crisis for Renewable Energy

Saturday, March 21st, 2009

Following the shocker from Shell last week that they will no longer be investing in renewable energy technologies, experts are now warning that the future could be far from green for Britain’s carbon emissions targets if the government doesn’t make a serious financial commitment, and soon.

John Constable, head of policy at REF (the Renewable Energy Foundation), voiced concerns last year that he didn’t think the government was being realistic about what could be achieved, and warned at the time that there had been too much “hype” around renewable energy projects. One of the main problems that has being picked out Andrew Mill, a member of the government’s Renewable Energy Board, is the lack of definitive information about the true state of the renewable energy company’s finances. He warns that because the initiatives are seeking funding and investment, they are not going to want to draw attention to any problems they may be facing as this would damage their chances of financial help.

The current economic downturn is also being blamed for its part in the potential problems facing renewables companies. Because of the drying up in funds available for borrowing, companies are not even able to turn to the banks for a boost. And this comes following the release of Age of Stupid to a number of independent cinemas across the UK, which has inspired thousands of viewers at its premiere last week alone. At a time where the issues of climate change, carbon emissions and reducing environmental impact are all high on (most) people’s agendas, let’s hope the government can be relied upon to do what it takes to keep Britain on track for a greener, renewable future, and not take the easy way out by approving plans for the proposed Kingsnorth Coal Power Station in Kent.

Shell Shock As Leading Oil Company Gives Up On The Environment

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

A recent press release published by Shell stated that renewables would no longer receive investment from the oil giant and that, instead, the company would focus solely on oil, gas and bio-fuels. The press release went on to say that renewables could not compete with other opportunities in their portfolio.

Shell could be shooting itself in the foot by not investing in renewables for the future of energy production. It is well known that Esso tried to keep climate change low on the government agenda, but some of Shell’s other competitors, such as BP are investing more aggressively in the renewables market, helping to secure the future of the world’s energy.

Between 1996-2006, Shell is said to have invested $1.25 billion into renewable energy schemes, much of which was wind power. To see that figure drop to zero is a huge blow to the future of energy. As Shell will no longer be spending this money in the wind, solar and hydro-electric sectors, the company will likely be focusing on Canadian tar sands as a source of future oil. This would be a devastating blow for the environment as it is one of the most polluting forms of fossil fuel and requires huge amounts of energy to extract and purify.

It seems that for all Shell has done to try and convince the public that they are not just an oil company but an ‘energy’ company, the money is much more important to them.