Posts Tagged ‘Energy’

Deep Ocean Windmills?

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

WindmillsSome days it seems there is just no good news to be found. Fortunately, lots of geeks keep their heads out of the news stream and immersed in their technologies of choice. It seems every other month a new wind power idea makes it off of someone’s drawing board. David Baker at the SF Chronicle does a good job of bringing some of them forward, though M.I.T.’s Technology Review is always filled with new items. Early in August the Chron’s front page showed an artist’s vision of deep-sea windmills, over the horizon from picky viewers and harnessed in large farms to under sea cables.

The National Renewable Energy Laboratory estimates that the wind blowing across California’s deep water could generate as much as 130 gigawatts of electricity. That’s roughly twice as much electricity as the state needs on a hot summer afternoon.

Principle Power, based in Seattle, last fall signed an agreement with the Tillamook People’s Utility District in Oregon to install the WindFloat off the coast of central Oregon as early as 2012. The project will start with a single WindFloat, capable of generating a maximum of 5 megawatts of electricity when running at full tilt. Megawatts measure the amount of electricity generated in any given instant, and one megawatt is enough electricity for 750 homes.

If all works as planned, the WindFloat project will expand into an entire offshore wind farm, covering 12 to 15 square miles and capable of generating 150 to 200 megawatts.

Read more:

There are plenty of questions to be answered, and asking the right ones comes first: what about loose electrical cables in the water? What about magnetic fields produced by electrical current? What is needed to get the cost down to compete with more at-hand sources? But it’s good that small armies of engineers and scientists are beginning to look. There isn’t a lot of time left to phase out the carbon crapped energy sources.

Geothermal Projects and Earthquakes

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

Very interesting article by James Glanz in the NY Times about new geothermal initiatives and their known relation to earthquakes.

There are generally two kinds of geothermal energy to be tapped. The first, which many are familiar with, is from close-to-the-surface water– heated by hot rising gases, deeper magma or hot rocks. The second is much deeper in the earth, as much as 2 miles or more. To use this energy deep holes are drilled and water is forced down into the super hot rocks, generating steam which then is used at the surface.

The problem is, in both cases but more significantly in the deep drilling, earthquakes. It’s not the drilling itself which causes them but pumping water into the rock. As the water expands it pushes out on the rock along all the tiny fractures inherent in the material, eventually setting off small, and some say, large, earthquakes.

The Times has a marvelous graphic of this which will explain it in about a minute. Click the Start button, here.

The reason this method is attracting interest is clear:

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Peak Coal?

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

There has been for some time a notion of Peak Oil — that new finds of oil and new technologies to extract deeper and cheaper have peaked. Now, the Wall Street Journal puts in its front page a major story about worries in the coal industry that, as a graph is titled, there may be “Peak Coal.”

WSJ front-page shocker: “U.S. Foresees a Thinner Cushion of Coal,” warns rosy U.S. coal estimates “may be wildly overconfident”

Mining companies report they have to dig deeper and move more earth to extract coal from aging mines, driving up costs. Utilities have grown skittish about whether suppliers can ship promised coal on time. American Electric Power Co., the nation’s biggest coal buyer, says it has stepped up its due diligence to make sure its suppliers can make deliveries after some firms missed shipments last fall. It even bought a mine to lock down supplies.

“We are very much concerned, and it’s getting worse,” said Tim Light, senior vice president for AEP.

via Climate Progress

invest in solar now….

Changing Culture: Cutting Energy

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

“Twenty-six students from some of the nation’s best business schools have taken on an unusual summer assignment: helping cut corporate America’s energy bills.

“They belong to an internship program organized by the Environmental Defense Fund that embeds MBA students with companies that want to use less energy, either to fight global warming or just to save money. The Climate Corps interns – drawn from such schools as Yale, UC Berkeley, Columbia and Michigan – will spend 10 weeks hunting for ways to trim the amount of power their host companies need.

“The Environmental Defense Fund has a history of partnering with businesses to tackle environmental problems. The internship, now in its second year, is the latest extension of that approach. Last year’s class of seven interns found enough savings to cut their host companies’ energy bills by $35 million over five years.

“…Before joining their host companies, the interns spend three days in the Climate Corps “boot camp,” getting tips on saving energy in different kinds of buildings and companies. Some sessions focus on saving power in heating and ventilation systems, lighting and data centers. Others focus on financing equipment upgrades. The students also learn how to overcome resistance from company executives and employees who don’t want to change.

“Real culture change is what we’re after,” Sturcken said. “And it’s so exciting to see business students who are so passionate about this.”

SF Gate

New Hybrid Car Debut in China: Buffet and Investor

Monday, December 15th, 2008

“Battery maker turned car company BYD Co. has launched China’s first homegrown hybrid vehicle for the retail market, seeking an edge over its crisis-stricken international rivals.

…The vehicle can run up to 100 kilometers (62 miles) on its electric engine, and when it runs low on power shifts to a back up gasoline engine. Its battery can fully charge in nine hours from a regular electrical outlet, or much faster at BYD’s own charging stations, the company said in a statement.

The car will sell for 149,800 yuan ($22,000), about the same as many Chinese-made mid-sized cars, it said.

…MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co., a unit of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., invested in a 9.9 percent stake in the company.”

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