Posts Tagged ‘Renewable Energy’
Two sides clash at public meeting – Woodstock Sentinel Review …
The public meeting is the first of two mandated by the renewable energy project regulations under the Green Energy Act , with a second one tentatively scheduled for May, two months before ProWind’s full application is submitted for …
MaRS Blog – Innovation and Commercialization in Canada » Blog …
The Green Energy Act has brought into being an entirely new class of financial asset: financing Feed-in Tariff based renewable energy projects. In easy terms: the FIT guarantees a good rate of return for wind, solar, hydro and biogas …
Wyden to Chu: Clean Tech Competitiveness Is the "Challenge of Our Time…Not Clear What the Strategy Is"
Originally Posted at The Breakthrough Institute U.S. clean tech manufacturers are losing global market share to their international competitors. What is the federal government going to do about it? That was the question posed last week to Energy Secretary Steven Chu as he testified before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee. Chu was speaking on the central role that energy research and development holds in any successful effort to mitigate climate change. During questioning, Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) quotes an earlier statement by Secretary Chu, calling it “the challenge of our time”: “The only question is which countries will invent, manufacture, and export clean technologies, and which countries will become dependent on foreign products?” Unfortunately, the United States is headed in the wrong direction. According to Senator Wyden, who chairs the Senate Subcommittee on International Trade, Customs, and Global Competitiveness, “80% of clean energy investments are going to take place outside the United States, even though global trade in environmental goods has doubled just in the last few years.” The Challenge of Our Time: Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) asked about the U.S. government strategy to boost U.S. clean tech competitiveness, but wound up with more questions than answers. A recently published report by Senator Wyden’s office shows that global exports of environmental goods (the majority of which are associated with clean energy technologies) more than doubled to $215 billion from 2004 to 2008. While U.S. exports have certainly benefited from the major expansion in worldwide demand for clean tech products, it has steadily lost international market share as other nations move more aggressively to capture competitive advantages in the burgeoning clean energy sector. In the United States, clean tech imports have grown faster than exports, and U.S. exports have not kept up with global demand or international competitors, leading to an erosion of market share for U.S. products. By contrast, other nations, particularly China, have dramatically boosted their exports over the five-year period with China experiencing the greatest value growth in clean tech exports of any nation in the world. Key figures from the report include: The United States is the largest import market of environmental goods (EG) as well as the fastest growing import market from 2004-2008 in terms of product value. In the last five years, the U.S trade deficit in renewable energy products increased by 1,400% to nearly $5.7 billion. The United States faces declining export market shares in virtually every regional market, while China has substantially increased its market share in every regional market, over the last five years. “It appears,” the report concludes, “that the U.S. is not fully seizing the economic opportunities that this situation provides.” The conclusions of the Wyden study are consistent with the findings in ” Rising Tigers, Sleeping Giant, ” a recent Breakthrough Insitute/ITIF report on international clean tech competitiveness. Rising Tigers: The United States is losing clean tech market share as Asian government’s aggressively invest in clean energy. The U.S. lacks a strategy to compete. That report finds that China, Japan, and South Korea have already surpassed the United States in the production of virtually all clean energy technologies and will out-invest the United States by 3-1 in clean tech over the next five years. Should this investment gap persist, notes the report, “the United States will import the overwhelming majority of clean energy technologies it deploys.” The report outlines a comprehensive strategy to regain economic competitiveness in clean energy built on three pillars: research and innovation, manufacturing, and domestic market demand. Chu alluded to the latter in a response to Senator Wyden: “You need local demand to encourage the manufacturing of these products here…if there is no local demand and it’s all abroad, they will build the factory abroad.” Spurred by massive government investment, the major demand for clean tech products in countries like China compels firms in the United States to construct facilities overseas. Chinese government investment in manufacturing and deployment led Applied Materials, the world’s largest producer of solar manufacturing equipment, to build its new state-of-the-art solar R&D facility in Xian, China. However, as “Rising Tigers” makes clear, the most successful national clean energy competitiveness strategy will include strong support not just for market demand – after all, America could simply meet demand by importing more foreign-produced products. Investments in research and development and manufacturing capacity are also critical to ensure continued American technological and manufacturing leadership. Ultimately, the back and forth between Senator Wyden and Secretary Chu left as many questions as it did answers about the U.S. government’s plans to remain competitive in clean tech markets. It is revealing, though, that with the Senate considering “comprehensive climate and energy legislation,” such questions about a clean energy competitiveness strategy need to be asked at all. Clearly, Senator Wyden does not see the current climate bills, which are essentially pollution reduction plans proposed by DC-based environmental groups and negotiated with incumbent energy interests, as a replacement for a real national clean tech competitiveness strategy. Under the leadership of public officials like Senator Wyden, this critical issue may soon receive the kind of public attention it deserves.
Making a connection: Wind transmission grid weakens west of Wisconsin
From an article by Melissa Rigney Baxter in The Daily Reporter: The multimillion-dollar construction projects to get the blades spinning won’t mean much if there’s no way to transmit wind farm electricity. So far in Wisconsin, transmission has been less of a problem than local approvals and harnessing the wind, but that could change as the state reaches farther west for renewable energy. “Connecting wind in Wisconsin is not very challenging at all,” said Michael Vickerman, executive director of RENEW Wisconsin. “Where you see all the wind projects in eastern Wisconsin, they are close to existing transmission lines.” We Energies considered 118 potential sites for the recently approved Glacier Hills Wind Park in Columbia County, said Brian Manthey, utility spokesman. We Energies considered many factors, including the most efficient transmission. Combined with access to wind and area demographics, transmission is a top priority when evaluating an area for wind turbines, Vickerman said. “Without transmission,” he said, “there is no product to sell.” While Wisconsin wind is easy to capture and transmit, that is not the case in the wind-rich areas in the Dakotas, western Minnesota and Iowa.
NewNet News – AV Concept and Boston Power partner to expand into …
‘Renewable energy and energy storage are both widely believed to be high-growth markets in China and across the globe,’ said So Chi On, CEO of AV Concept. ‘ Green energy storage solutions like Boston-Power’s are the key enabling …
How the Renewable Energy Community Can Help Haiti
The tragedy of Haiti continues to unfold, painfully and inescapably, in front of us. The need couldn’t be clearer, and there are two things we in the renewable energy community can do to help in the aftermath of last week’s devastating earthquake.
Energy Data Available Anywhere, Any Time
Having rapidly established itself as a “go to” site for transportation and other related energy information, the Virtual Information Bridge to Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy (VIBE) is expanding its reach to attract new users across the widest range of energy issues. A sister site to VIBE, called Open Energy Information, has been launched to allow organizations around the world to both post their own energy data and download data, for free.
McGuinty shakes things up | Canada | News | London Free Press
But it’s Smitherman’s old job the Liberal government needs to fill most desperately, as McGuinty wants the province to build on the Green Energy Act to promote Ontario as a centre for renewable energy and all the manufacturing and …
Smart meters and other dumb ideas « Blue Like You
… states (c) yelling at Stephen Harper to get ahead of Barack Obama in creating a North American cap-and-trade market and (d) forcing us to subsidize expensive and (as yet) unreliable renewable energy under his new Green Energy Act . …
REN-21 Launches Interactive Renewables Map
The Renewable Energy Policy Network REN21 has launched its Renewables Interactive Map, which contains information on renewable energy, including support policies, expansion targets, current shares, installed capacity, current production, future scenarios, and policy pledges.