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California wants renewable energy for half its power by 2030

ABC News reported that Mr Jerry Brown, Governor of California, dramatically increased California's climate-change goals, committing the state to use renewable energy for half its electricity and make existing buildings twice as energy-efficient in just 15 years.

Mr Brown, tried for an even stronger measure that also would have enforced a 50% drop in petroleum use by 2030, but was defeated by oil interests. He called that a short-term setback, and insisted that the world needs to wean itself off fossil fuels as quickly as possible.

"What has been the source of our prosperity now becomes the source of our ultimate destruction, if we don't get off it. And that is so difficult,"Mr Brown, said at a signing ceremony Wednesday at the hilltop Griffith Observatory, overlooking the haze of downtown Los Angeles.

California already has some of the world's toughest air quality standards, and set a mandate in 2006 to derive a third of its electricity from renewable sources such as solar, wind and geothermal by 2020. State regulators say they already hit 25% last year, as huge solar farms sprouted in the desert and towering windmills went up along mountain passes.

Mr Alex Jackson, said that "It's monumental," an attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council. "For an economy the size of California to commit to getting half of its power needs from renewable energy resources, I think, is a game-changer."

Few question whether the new goal of 50% is achievable by 2030, but critics worry that the complex regulations needed to speed the transition from fossil fuels will add unknown costs for consumers and businesses.

Republican state Sen. Jim Nielsen of Gerber predicts more expensive "energy, food and all things that require abundant affordable energy to produce and transport, particularly hurting those California families least able to afford it."

Just how California will meet the new goal isn't clear. Brown left the details to the state's Air Resources Board, Energy Commission and Public Utilities Commission. These boards are led mostly by gubernatorial appointees and have broad influence over economic life.

California's utilities favored the measure. They mostly use natural gas, nuclear energy and some coal, but solar, wind, geothermal and biomass are growing sources of electricity, and regulators are expected to allow them to pass some costs of the transition on to consumers.

The new law also encourages utilities to expand by building many more charging stations for electric vehicles, and provides for fines or penalties if utilities don't meet the goals.

Supporters say Californians can keep saving money through rebates and subsidies as they purchase electric vehicles, replace inefficient light bulbs and appliances, and install solar panels or double-paned windows.

Mr Brown, a Democrat, began this year with a vow to push the most aggressive greenhouse-gas emissions benchmark in North America through the Legislature. He took his campaign around the world, even meeting with the pope in July.

But he lost a key political battle among moderate Democrats in Sacramento amid intense lobbying by the oil industry, which financed a multimillion-dollar advertising campaign that raised fears of job losses if cuts in petroleum use were imposed.

Catherine Reheis-Boyd, president of the Western States Petroleum Association, thanked lawmakers who voted against the proposed cap for keeping California competitive.

Some lawmakers were willing to accept forced cuts in petroleum use if the Legislature could have more power over the Air Resources Board, which has been implementing the greenhouse gas emissions law.

But Brown refused to give up what he sees as his executive authority.

Both houses are controlled by Democrats, but on Wednesday, Brown squarely accused Republicans of failing to do enough to reverse global warming. He recalled that Ronald Reagan was California's governor when the state created the Air Resources Board in response to the Los Angeles smog, and that President Richard Nixon signed the Clean Air Act.

He said that "That was a time when Republicans really got it. We hope they are going to come back to the good old days of Reagan and Nixon, when people cared about clean air and clean water."

California's new goal builds on landmark legislation signed by Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger in 2006, which laid the groundwork for the first U.S. program to cap and trade emissions, aiming to reduce pollutants to 1990 levels by 2020.

That program, second only to the European Union's in size, enables polluters to buy and sell credits on a market, generating billions in revenues since the state held its first carbon auction in 2012.

Source : ABC News
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Power companies seeking power to force redundancies

Sydney Morning Herald reported that power supply companies will face workers in the Fair Work Commission on Friday over a proposal that would allow the companies to sack workers instead of seeking voluntary redundancies.

The Electrical Trades Union will on Friday appear before the Fair Work Commission to argue against publicly owned power companies Ausgrid and Essential Energy introducing policies that would allow the forced redundancies of 2500 workers across NSW.

Fair Work Commission Vice President Adam Hatcher will hear arguments from Ausgrid and Essential Energy about why they should be allowed to introduce forced sackings which the unions say is in breach of current employment contracts.

Mr Neville Betts, ETU deputy secretary, said that the union will argue against the validity of the push by Ausgrid and Essential Energy to introduce forced sackings.

Mr Betts said that "We believe that plans to introduce involuntary redundancy by Ausgrid and Essential Energy is in breach of their existing workplace agreement. These companies, presumably supported by the NSW government, are using taxpayer's money to hire expensive lawyers with the sole purpose of sacking thousands of frontline power workers from across the state.”

He said that "If Ausgrid and Essential Energy are successful in their bid to axe these highly skilled essential service jobs, hundreds of local communities will be devastated socially and economically in what can only be explained as avoidable job losses."

A spokesman for Ausgrid said that the independent national regulator of electricity networks had approved significant funding cuts to businesses in NSW and the ACT. This meant the business needed to change its voluntary redundancy arrangements because it only had funding for 3750 staff 1100 fewer than its current workforce.

The spokesman said that "This is good for consumers it means a USD165 per annum average reduction in customer electricity bills."

He said that "But it also means that at Ausgrid the operational funding has been cut by USD 170 million a year and capital funding has been cut by USD 550 million over a 5th-year period. As a consequence this means that at Ausgrid there are 1100 jobs that are unfunded from 1 July 2015. We are borrowing USD 12.6 million per month to pay for these unfunded jobs. This is not sustainable."

Leaked internal Ausgrid documents last week revealed the organization's plans to pare back its network and field operations before the Baird government's partial sale of the state's electricity assets to generate USD 20 billion to fund new infrastructure projects.

Source : Sydney Morning Herald
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Solar and wind power just passes another big turning point

Sydney Morning Herald reported that Wind power is now the cheapest electricity to produce in both Germany and the UK, even without government subsidies. It's the first time that threshold has been crossed by a G7 economy.

But that's less interesting than what just happened in the world's largest economy, according to a Bloomberg analysis.

To appreciate what's going on in the US, you need to understand the capacity factor. That's the percentage of a power plant's maximum potential that's actually achieved over time.

Consider a solar project. The sun doesn't shine at night and, even during the day, varies in brightness with the weather and the seasons. So a project that can crank out 100MW hours of electricity during the sunniest part of the day might produce just 20% of that when averaged out over a year. That gives it a 20% capacity factor.

One of the major strengths of fossil fuel power plants is that they can command very high and predictable capacity factors. The average US natural gas plant, for example, might produce about 70% of its potential (falling short of 100% because of seasonal demand and maintenance). But that's what's changing, and it's a big deal.

For the first time, widespread adoption of renewables is effectively lowering the capacity factor for fossil fuels. That's because once a solar or wind project is built, the marginal cost of the electricity it produces is pretty much zero-free electricity while coal and gas plants require more fuel for every new watt produced. If you're a power company with a choice, you choose the free stuff every time.

It's a self-reinforcing cycle. As more renewables are installed, coal and natural gas plants are used less. As coal and gas are used less, the cost of using them to generate electricity goes up. As the cost of coal and gas power rises, more renewables will be installed.

Source : Sydney Morning Herald
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ABNL to develop solar power plants with Abraaj Group

Business Line reported that Kumar Mangalam Birla promoted Aditya Birla Group has announced a partnership with the Abraaj Group, a global PE investor, to build a large-scale renewable energy platform focused on developing utility scale solar power plants in India.

The partner companies would be building projects of over 1,000 MW in the country. Back of the envelope calculations suggest that they would require over INR 6,000 crore for setting up these plants.

ABNL in a BSE announcement said that the Aditya Birla Group would invest in the platform through Aditya Birla Nuvo Ltd and Abraaj would invest through one of its affiliates.

ABNL has entered into a definitive share subscription and shareholders agreement with an affiliate of Abraaj. According to the agreement, ABNL and the Abraaj affiliate will hold a 51% and a 49% of the paid-up share capital, respectively, in Aditya Birla Renewables Ltd, currently a wholly owned subsidiary of ABNL.

Aditya Birla Renewables Limited, the solar power platform, would also bid for projects tendered at national and state auctions. The company plans to develop and operate utility-scale solar power plants that can provide clean and cost-effective electricity to the national grids across several key states in India.

Source : Business Line
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Coal producer CIL plans to harness solar power

Times of India reported that if coal gets all the blame for pollution, the country's biggest producer of this fuel Coal India Limited has plans on clean energy. The PSU mining company has drawn up plans to generate 1,000MW of solar power, starting with Madhya Pradesh. The project will be eventually spread to other states like Maharashtra, Jharkhand, Bihar, Orissa and Chhattisgarh, where CIL has its subsidiaries.

Mr Sutirtha Bhattacharya, CIL chairman, said that Going solar is an effort to offset the pollution which coal creates in general. He was in the city to attend a seminar organized for young executives of the company. CIL is laying special stress on young manpower.

Mr Bhattacharya said that the Solar Energy Corporation of India is the consultant for the project. Wherever there is land available in mining areas, it will be used to fix photovoltaic panels for generating electricity. Most of the power generated in this way can be used for captive purposes within CIL itself,tThe project may begin in 3-4 months.

The CIL chairman said that about the cost by the current standards, a 1,000MW project requires over INR 630 crore or so. However, with the fast changing market dynamics it may happen that by the time the project is implemented, costs may come down.

CIL is also stressing on providing better quality coal to its customers. Officials from the subsidiary companies will be meeting state government authorities to chalk out plans in this direction. Various methods of providing better quality of coal are being explored so that there is no scope for disputes. City-based Western Coalfields Limited, a CIL subsidiary, has already begun talks with Mahagenco, the major consumer of this company. There are plans to soon offer crushed coal to the consumer. The samples are already being tested through a third party to get an impartial opinion

Mr Bhattacharya said that alternate routes to roadways also need to be explored for transport of coal. Mahanadi Coalfields Limited, which is located in Orissa, can use the seaport from the eastern coast. A large amount of coal can also be transported through river route.

The options are being worked out, for example, WCL has established a conveyor belt for transporting coal from one of the mines. This not only reduces chances of pollution but also prevents transit losses to a great extent.

Source : Times of India
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SunEdison won’t complete buyout of Latin America Power

The Wall Street Journal reported that reported that SunEdison Inc won't complete its roughly USD 700 million planned acquisition of Latin American Power as the US solar-energy producer’s woes mount.

The people said that Private-equity-owned Latin American Power walked away from its sale to SunEdison, which was to close September 30th, according to people familiar with the matter. SunEdison failed to make a roughly USD 400 million upfront cash payment.

A spokesman for SunEdison said that Latin American Power’s owners didn’t satisfy conditions required for the deal’s completion. He said that “While SunEdison is disappointed by this outcome, we remain committed to pursuing attractive opportunities in Latin America and working with partners in the region.”

Mr Michael B Carlinsky, a lawyer for Latin American Power of Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP said that “We reject SunEdison’s claim as baseless, We are confident that the record will show that SunEdison breached its contractual obligations.”

Whatever the precise cause of the deal’s collapse, it adds to a litany of difficulties for SunEdison, which is one of the world’s biggest operators of solar power projects. The company, which has been buffeted by rising expenses among other issues, said Tuesday it would lay off 15% of its workers and take a write-down of between USD 30 million and USD 40 million.

SunEdison shares fell 3.9% on the news to USD 8.69, giving it a market value of just under USD 3 billion. The stock is down 70% in the past 3 months, following a Q2 earnings report that was worse than analysts had expected.

As part of a recent acquisition spree, SunEdison agreed in May to acquire Latin American Power, an owner of wind and hydropower projects in Chile and Peru. The deal’s price tag wasn’t disclosed, but one of the people said it valued Latin American Power at more than USD 700 million, including future milestone payments.

According to regulatory filings, in all, SunEdison has struck about USD 6 billion in deals over the past year, including acquisitions of Vivint Solar Inc for USD 1.9 billion and First Wind Holdings Inc for USD 2.4 billion. They have helped boost the company’s debt from USD 7 billion at the end of last year to USD 10.7 billion as of June 30th.

SunEdison also has been hurt by the lackluster performance of TerraForm Global Inc, a portfolio of power projects it took public in July. TerraForm shares are down 52% since the initial public offering.

Further details of SunEdison’s cost-cutting plan are expected Wednesday during a conference call with its executives.

Source : The Wall Street Journal
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UK energy policy slammed as solar company collapses


Financial Times reported that one of the world’s biggest renewable energy investors has warned that ‘draconian’ UK subsidy cuts will kill solar power in Britain, blaming policy changes for a pullback that led to the collapse of a big installer and nearly 1,000 job losses.

SunEdison, the US-listed group, has rounded on ministers after Mark Group, a Leicester-based home insulation business it acquired only months ago, was put into administration on Wednesday after being sold back to management.

It said in a statement explaining its decisionthat “Based on the government’s stated desire to ‘unleash the UK rooftop market' and the programmes and support in place for solar, SunEdison believed that the UK offered long-term opportunities for solar energy.”

It said that “SunEdison took on the challenge of turning around by leveraging the company’s installation experience in the solar photovoltaic market. We are extremely disappointed that the draconian policy proposals made by the government in August will essentially eliminate the solar PV market in the UK and have made our plan unviable.”

Mark Group was acquired in July by SunEdison. However, its management team bought the company back on Wednesday morning, before appointing Deloitte administrators. Mark Group said ongoing losses had made administration the ‘only option.’

The collapse is the latest evidence of how green policy reversals since the Conservative general election victory in May have thrown investor plans into turmoil.

Just two weeks ago, the Drax power company said that it was pulling out of a £1bn UK climate-change plan because it was now too risky to proceed. It has abandoned five years of planning for a carbon and capture storage system next to its huge North Yorkshire power station. It also blamed critical reversals in government support for renewable energy.

The UK solar panel market has been hit hard by changes in the subsidy regime announced by Amber Rudd, the energy secretary. The government has proposed ending assistance as soon as January for small-scale renewable projects and cutting guaranteed prices paid for electricity generated by new rooftop solar installations by up to 87%.

In comments to Solar Power Portal last week,Mr Mark Babcock, a senior Sun Edison executive said that the uneconomic conditions created by the government’s policy changes would result in sector-wide lay-offs and a possibly tragic outcome.

The job losses on Wednesday night came as another installation company, Climate Energy, also called in administrators, saying it was unable at this time to pay unsecured creditors. Talks with a possible buyer were ongoing.

Mr Doug Parr, Greenpeace’s chief UK scientist, accused George Osborne of taking “a wrecking ball” to the clean energy sector.

He said that “Evidence is growing that the chancellor’s policies are putting people out of jobs, damaging investment, and harming one of the country’s most promising industries. This should be a wake-up call for David Cameron, who faces international embarrassment ahead of crucial climate talks.”

Source : Financial Times
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India's renewable energy targets may be overambitious

Business Standard reported that At 37,000 MW, renewable energy accounts for close to 15% of the total power capacity in the country. It sounds impressive till it is compared to the humongous target India has committed for the Paris climate change agreement 40% of the installed capacity by 2030.

Experts within the government calculate that 300,000 to 350,000 MW of renewable energy would have to be set up to meet this target. To put it in perspective, India is aiming to add 175,000 MW of capacity from clean energy sources by 2022: 60% from solar energy, 30% from wind and the balance from biomass and small hydro.

Considering where India started from in 2010, the growth of solar power in India has been phenomenal from 2 MW in 2010 to 4,200 MW at present. In wind energy, India is the world's fifth largest producer at 24,000 MW.

In wind power, growth has decelerated in the past three years. Seen as a tax haven, the investment in wind dropped once the government pulled the plug on the accelerated depreciation tax benefit for the sector in 2011. It was later brought back and then another 'generation-based incentive' was also introduced.

This, however, has not excited the power producers so far. From annual addition of 3,000 MW till 2011, it has dropped to 1,500-2,000 MW every year. In the current fiscal, against a target of 2,400 MW, only 644 MW has come up so far.

Solar power may have got greater policy impetus after the National Democratic Alliance came to power but ratcheting up capacity at rates no country has done before is a tough task when seen from where India sits at present.

Currently, on an average, the country is adding 1,000 MW of solar power annually. At this rate, 100,000 MW in 6 years looks farfetched even if one was to assume that India can match China which has added solar capacity at an ever increasing rate. The Union ministry of new & renewable energy pegs the annual growth of solar power at 15,000 MW. Privately, senior officers say the country would touch 6,000 MW by the end of this fiscal and close to 10,000 MW by next.

Mr Upendra Tripathy, secretary ministry of new & renewable energy is a confident man though.

Mr Tripathysaid that "We are on track to achieve 175,000 MW. We are inviting investment in both generation and grid capacity addition. I can't comment on the climate change targets but as for renewable energy, we will achieve the targets we have set for the country."

Source : Business Standard
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SkyPower to invest USD 1 bln in Panama solar power development

Power Technology reported that Canadian solar photovoltaic giant SkyPower intends to invest USD1bn in developing 500MW of utility-scale solar projects in Panama.

Over the next 5th years, the investment is expected to create more than 10,000 job opportunities in the country.

Prospective projects are also likely to broaden the scope in Panama for exporting locally manufactured solar panels.

Ms Emanuel Gonzalez Revilla, Panama Ambassador to US, said that "We welcome the announcement from SkyPower and look forward to working together to bring US investment dollars for clean energy and green jobs to Panama."

SkyPower also intends to set-up a solar and environmental research centre in Panama, which is likely to involve an investment of USD 50 million.”

He said that "The future of Panama looks bright, as the leadership of Panama is clearly focused on the need for clean renewable energy and has embraced solar."

The centre will be developed in partnership with several universities and research institutions and will be focused on solar photovoltaic innovations, as well as research and innovation in environmental sciences.

Once developed, the facility is expected to open access to significant licensing revenues in the country.

Mr Kerry Adler, SkyPower president and CEO, said that "SkyPower invests in countries that uphold environmental sustainability and preservation while advancing their economies and industries.

He said that "The future of Panama looks bright, as the leadership of Panama is clearly focused on the need for clean renewable energy and has embraced solar as a cost-effective means of addressing Panama's energy needs today, and as a critical part of its generation mix for its bright future."

The firm has agreed to form a joint venture in August with Mexican Grupo Uribe for developing integrated pipeline of utility-scale solar PV projects in Mexico.

Source : Power Technology
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California wants renewable energy for half its power by 2030

ABC News reported that Mr Jerry Brown, Governor of California, dramatically increased California's climate-change goals, committing the state to use renewable energy for half its electricity and make existing buildings twice as energy-efficient in just 15 years.

Mr Brown, tried for an even stronger measure that also would have enforced a 50% drop in petroleum use by 2030, but was defeated by oil interests. He called that a short-term setback, and insisted that the world needs to wean itself off fossil fuels as quickly as possible.

"What has been the source of our prosperity now becomes the source of our ultimate destruction, if we don't get off it. And that is so difficult,"Mr Brown, said at a signing ceremony Wednesday at the hilltop Griffith Observatory, overlooking the haze of downtown Los Angeles.

California already has some of the world's toughest air quality standards, and set a mandate in 2006 to derive a third of its electricity from renewable sources such as solar, wind and geothermal by 2020. State regulators say they already hit 25% last year, as huge solar farms sprouted in the desert and towering windmills went up along mountain passes.

Mr Alex Jackson, said that "It's monumental," an attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council. "For an economy the size of California to commit to getting half of its power needs from renewable energy resources, I think, is a game-changer."

Few question whether the new goal of 50% is achievable by 2030, but critics worry that the complex regulations needed to speed the transition from fossil fuels will add unknown costs for consumers and businesses.

Republican state Sen. Jim Nielsen of Gerber predicts more expensive "energy, food and all things that require abundant affordable energy to produce and transport, particularly hurting those California families least able to afford it."

Just how California will meet the new goal isn't clear. Brown left the details to the state's Air Resources Board, Energy Commission and Public Utilities Commission. These boards are led mostly by gubernatorial appointees and have broad influence over economic life.

California's utilities favored the measure. They mostly use natural gas, nuclear energy and some coal, but solar, wind, geothermal and biomass are growing sources of electricity, and regulators are expected to allow them to pass some costs of the transition on to consumers.

The new law also encourages utilities to expand by building many more charging stations for electric vehicles, and provides for fines or penalties if utilities don't meet the goals.

Supporters say Californians can keep saving money through rebates and subsidies as they purchase electric vehicles, replace inefficient light bulbs and appliances, and install solar panels or double-paned windows.

Mr Brown, a Democrat, began this year with a vow to push the most aggressive greenhouse-gas emissions benchmark in North America through the Legislature. He took his campaign around the world, even meeting with the pope in July.

But he lost a key political battle among moderate Democrats in Sacramento amid intense lobbying by the oil industry, which financed a multimillion-dollar advertising campaign that raised fears of job losses if cuts in petroleum use were imposed.

Catherine Reheis-Boyd, president of the Western States Petroleum Association, thanked lawmakers who voted against the proposed cap for keeping California competitive.

Some lawmakers were willing to accept forced cuts in petroleum use if the Legislature could have more power over the Air Resources Board, which has been implementing the greenhouse gas emissions law.

But Brown refused to give up what he sees as his executive authority.

Both houses are controlled by Democrats, but on Wednesday, Brown squarely accused Republicans of failing to do enough to reverse global warming. He recalled that Ronald Reagan was California's governor when the state created the Air Resources Board in response to the Los Angeles smog, and that President Richard Nixon signed the Clean Air Act.

He said that "That was a time when Republicans really got it. We hope they are going to come back to the good old days of Reagan and Nixon, when people cared about clean air and clean water."

California's new goal builds on landmark legislation signed by Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger in 2006, which laid the groundwork for the first U.S. program to cap and trade emissions, aiming to reduce pollutants to 1990 levels by 2020.

That program, second only to the European Union's in size, enables polluters to buy and sell credits on a market, generating billions in revenues since the state held its first carbon auction in 2012.

Source : ABC News
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CIL plans to construct 1 GW of solar power projects

Coal India Limited is reportedly planning to construct solar power projects in a number of areas of India totaling 1GW of capacity. CIL wants to reduce its carbon footprint and plans to finish a 250 MW installation in the Madhya Pradesh area within twelve months.

A memorandum of understanding was signed between the Solar Energy Corporation of India and CIL, but one issue that might delay the remaining 750 MW of projects is finding appropriate sites. Orissa, Bihar, and Jharkhand have been suggested as possible locations, as have Chhattisgarh and Maharashtra.

It’s commendable that a coal mining company would seek to reduce its carbon footprint the thing is, it is basically being forced to. 1GW of solar is quite a large amount, but India is a massive country, one of the most populous on Earth. It has ambitious clean energy goals, and surely will achieve many of them, if not more.

Adding new solar capacity is not only about reducing climate change emissions, though. Solar power plants can be built faster than coal plants, so they have a value that coal plants do not, to fill in gaps in electricity supply. They also can help shore up electrical grids that are overburdened and serve somewhat as backups when there are disruptions.

Due to the decline in solar costs, they also simply make sense financially in some cases, where they are more cost-competitive than fossil fuels. They also don’t produce enormous amounts of harmful air pollution, and some urban centers in India have far, far too much of that already. It is very sensible of the government to require that its agencies and government-owned companies use cleaner energy.

Constructing solar power plants also creates a lot of new jobs and sometimes these new plants are located in areas with high unemployment, so they contribute to local economies by providing clean energy jobs.

Source : Clean Technica
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Enel Green Power to increase investment in Morocco

Clean Technica reported that Italy’s renewable energy developer Enel Green Power is looking to increase investment in Morocco.

Enel Green Power considers Morocco a pioneer in the renewable energy sector in Africa, having set impressive capacity addition targets and backing them with clear regulations.

Mr Francesco Venturini, CEO of Enel Green Power, said that the company has already set up a regional headquarters in Morocco, and is now looking to invest millions of dollars to set up several MW of renewable energy capacity.

The company has announced plans to participate in the 850 MW wind energy tender floated by the country’s utility, ONEE, though Enel Green Power will face competition from Acciona, ACWA Power/Gamesa, EDF Energies Nouvelles/Alstom, among others.

Morocco is already working on some of the largest solar power project in Africa. The Noor-Ouarzazate project will include several large-scale solar power projects and would be the mainstay of the country’s solar and renewable energy policy, with at least 510 MW of concentrated solar power capacity. The World Bank approved USD 519 million debt finance for the project last year.

Morocco is the largest importer of energy in the Middle East and North Africa region, and it also has significant renewable energy potential. The wind energy potential in the country is estimated at 25,000 MW and the Ministry of Energy expects 2,000 MW wind energy capacity installed by 2020.

The country’s Solar Plan targets 2,000 MW solar power capacity installed by 2020. The capacity will be spread across five sites with an aggregate coverage of 10,000 hectares. These projects include the Noor-Ouarzazate Concentrated Solar Power Project, other solar thermal power projects and solar photovoltaic power projects.

Source : Clean Technica
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EnviroMission ME solar tower development deal signed

Australia-based EnviroMission has executed a head of agreements (HOA) with Q Analytica (QA), to form a joint venture that will operate to commercialise its solar tower renewable energy technology in the Middle East and North Africa (Mena) region.

A statement said that the joint venture will provide EnviroMission with active involvement in solar tower development in the region and earn for EnviroMission a capital injection of USD 1.5 million from the placement of EnviroMission shares with QA, a USD 3 million development rights licence fee, an annual royalty and technology fee, and equity in all entities formed by QA for Solar Tower development under the licenced development rights.

It said that QA will subscribe and pay for a placement of EnviroMission shares at a price equal to the higher of the Australian dollar (AUD) equivalent amount of USD 0.20 cents and the current market price, to the AUD equivalent of USD 1.5 million cash to EnviroMission by November 30.

EnviroMission will grant the licence for solar tower development rights in the Mena region to QA on an exclusive basis after QA pays EnviroMission an initial, non-refundable, development fee of $3 million by December 15.

It will also be granted two board positions and a free, carried, 21 per cent shareholding in each joint venture ompany formed with QA for Solar Tower development in the region; this shareholding will never be diluted below 15%.

Meanwhile, EnviroMission will receive an annual royalty and technology fee in US dollars of an amount equal to the greater of one per cent of the total capital expenditure (including finance and development costs) and 10 per cent of gross annual revenue earned that year.

Source : TradeArabia News Service
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PTC India sign MoU with Solar Energy Corp.

Business Line reported that PTC India Ltd has signed a MoU with Solar Energy Corporation of India for the sale and purchase of power generated from 3,000 MW of solar projects.

The power from these projects will be sold onward on a long term basis for 25 years from the commercial operation date of each project to the state electricity distribution utilities.

PTC India Ltd statement said that "Under the said arrangement, SECI will facilitate development of 3,000 MW of solar projects at various locations on behalf of central public sector units or any other government/private agency. PTC will purchase solar power offered by SECI/project developers for onward sale to state utilities at tariffs to be determined by SECI through reverse auction process or any other competitive route."

Source : Business Line
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SkyPower Announces 500 MW of Solar Energy Projects in Panama


Kerry Adler, SkyPower President and Chief Executive Officer, and Panamanian President Juan Carlos Varela shake hands at the breakfast announcement in New York.

Caption: Kerry Adler, SkyPower President and Chief Executive Officer, and Panamanian President Juan Carlos Varela shake hands at the breakfast announcement in New York.



NEW YORK, USA, October 6, 2015

During the 70th United Nations General Assembly in New York, SkyPower, the world’s largest developer and owner of utility-scale solar projects, made a historic announcement with President Juan Carlos Varela, unveiling its plans to build 500 MW of utility-scale solar energy over the next five years in Panama, representing an investment of US $1 billion.

In addition to building 500 MW of solar projects in Panama, SkyPower will also construct a US $50 million world-class solar and environmental research centre in Panama dedicated to the advancement of solar photovoltaic (PV) innovation as well as advanced research and innovation in environmental sciences.

To be built in affiliation with several leading universities and research institutions, this research facility will clearly distinguish Panama as the definitive hub for new solar technologies and innovation in Central America, and is expected to generate significant licensing revenues for Panama.

Furthermore, SkyPower is proud to announce it will fund 250 scholarships for Panamanian students who are studying in the fields of solar technology and environmental sustainability, through an annual grant of 10 scholarships per year for each of the 25 years its solar projects are generating clean energy. This investment in the future of Panamanian students will begin with the first kWh of energy that SkyPower’s solar-energy projects will generate in Panama.

SkyPower is proud of its commitment to sustainability and educating youth, and has made a landmark commitment to sponsor a school for each megawatt it installs on Panamanian soil.

“SkyPower invests in countries that uphold environmental sustainability and preservation while advancing their economies and industries. The future of Panama looks bright, as the leadership of Panama is clearly focused on the need for clean renewable energy and has embraced solar as a cost-effective means of addressing Panama’s energy needs today, and as a critical part of its generation mix for its bright future,” said Kerry Adler, SkyPower President and Chief Executive Officer.

“We welcome the announcement from SkyPower and look forward to working together to bring US investment dollars for clean energy and green jobs to Panama,” said Emanuel Gonzalez-Revilla, Ambassador of the Republic of Panama to the United States.

“SkyPower’s estimated US $1 billion investment is expected to create more than 10,000 total job years in Panama, and create opportunity to export solar panels proudly made in Panama,” added SkyPower Chief Commercial Officer Charles Cohen.

SkyPower has a long history of working closely with local communities to produce hundreds of millions of kilowatt hours (kWh) of clean electricity every year, while ensuring that those closest to the developments reap the rewards of new jobs, education, skills training and opportunities for youth.



ABOUT SKYPOWER
www.skypower.com

SkyPower is the largest and one of the most successful developers and owners of utility-scale solar photovoltaic (PV) energy projects in the world. With roots dating back to over a decade, SkyPower’s global team possesses a vast track record of over 800 years of combined experience in power and large infrastructure projects.

The experienced and accomplished SkyPower team has built, assembled and acquired an extensive pipeline of over 25 GW worldwide – 9 GW of which were recently announced in bilateral agreements, and other contract awards, to be built on the continents of Africa and Asia over the next five years in Egypt, Nigeria, Kenya, Djibouti and India.

Over the past few years alone, SkyPower has secured over two dozen utility-scale solar PV Power Purchase Agreements (PPA) and Contracts, which in aggregate represent well in excess of ?US $80 billion worth of long-term renewable energy sales to leading utilities and governments around the world.

SkyPower is majority owned by CIM Group, a U.S.-based real estate and infrastructure investment firm founded in 1994 that has systematically and successfully invested in dynamic and densely populated communities throughout North America.
www.cimgroup.com

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For more information about SkyPower, please contact:

Hando Kang
Vice President, International Public Affairs
hando.kang@skypower.com
+1 647 478 2812

Maria Vorobieva
Director, International Public Affairs
mariav@skypower.com
+1 647 478 1149

Shamini Selvaratnam
Director, Corporate Communications
shaminis@skypower.com
+ 1 647 625 0997
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Breakthrough could lead to cheaper, cleaner solar cells - Report

Solar Daily reported that the researchers have worked on developing iron-based solar cell dyes for three years and are surprised by how quickly they found a dye that can capture sunlight as efficiently as this.

The hope is to develop efficient and environmentally friendly solar energy applications. Solar energy is an inexhaustible resource that we currently only utilise to a very limited extent. Researchers around the world are therefore trying to find new and more efficient ways to use the energy in sunlight.

The technique the researchers in Lund are working on is solar cells consisting of a thin film of nanostructured titanium dioxide and a dye that captures solar energy.

Today, the best solar cells of this type use dyes containing ruthenium metal - a very rare and expensive element.

Mr Villy Sundstrom, Professor of Chemical Physics at Lund University, said that "Many researchers have tried to replace ruthenium with iron, but without success. All previous attempts have resulted in molecules that convert light energy into heat instead of electrons, which is required for solar cells to generate electricity."

Researchers at the Chemistry Department in Lund, in collaboration with Uppsala University, have now successfully produced an iron-based dye that is capable of converting light into electrons with nearly 100 per cent efficiency.

Mr Kenneth Warnmark, Professor of Organic Chemistry at Lund University, said that "The advantage of using iron is that it is a common element in nature. It can provide inexpensive and environmentally friendly applications of solar energy in the future."

By combining the experiments with advanced computer simulations, the researchers are able to understand in detail required design concepts for the iron molecules to work. This knowledge is now being used for further developing the iron-based dyes. More research is needed before the new solar cell dye can be used in practice, but there are high hopes.

Mr Villy Sundstrom said that "The results of the study suggest that solar cells based on these materials can be at least as effective as those of today that are based on ruthenium or other rare metals."

The discovery could also advance research on solar fuels in which, like in photosynthesis of plants, water and carbon dioxide are turned into energy-rich molecules - solar fuel - with the help of sunlight.

Mr Kenneth Warnmark said htat "We envision that the new iron-based molecules could also drive the chemical reactions that create solar fuel."

The researchers have worked on developing iron-based solar cell dyes for three years and are surprised by how quickly they found a dye that can capture sunlight as efficiently as this.

Source : Solar Daily
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World’s first solar-powered portable air conditioner is going to enter Indian market soon - Report

Indian Power Sector reported that an innovative air conditioner is soon going to be available to the Indian consumers, allowing them to make their summer cool, relaxing as well as pleasant in a cost-effective and eco-friendly manner. A Russian company has developed this portable air conditioner that promotes personal hygiene and a great indoor air quality.

The company is planning to launch the air conditioner in the Indian market any time next year.

Mr Eugene Dubovoy, CEO & Co-founder of the Company, said that “Evapolar consumes very less energy and we have both types of ACs to be run on electricity and solar batteries. The solar version of Evapolar has especially been developed for the Indian region that has a significant solar power potential.”

Mr Dubovoy however, said that didn’t disclose the price of the AC at which it will be available to the Indian consumer. It will be available at a reasonable price, besides it will bring a long-term cost savings because of its energy efficiency.

In India, where the summer season is invariably very long, this portable air conditioner can make people’s life comfortable and healthier. The country receives sunshine throughout the year and hence a solar-powered air conditioner will prove a more viable as well as a cheaper option for the Indian population.

Moreover, in the present scenario of global warming and climatic change, an energy-efficient and eco-friendly AC will not affect the environment as well. Besides, solar batteries make Evapolar a real portable air conditioner to enjoy personal air conditioning anywhere and at any time.

Source : Indian Power Sector
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NTPC to set up 50 MW solar power project in TN by next year

PTI reported that state-run NHPC Ltd will set up a 50 MW solar power plant at an investment of over INR 300 crore near Madurai in Tamil Nadu and expects it to get completed by March next year.

NHPC said that "Board of Directors of the company at its meeting held on October 12, 2015 has approved the award of EPC contract for 50 MW Solar power project in the state of Tamil Nadu."

A senior company official said that "The electricity produced from this 50 MW plant to be located near Madurai will be supplied to Tamil Nadu state. NHPC Ltd will soon sign a power purchase agreement for the purpose with Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corporation Limited."

The official said that company has planned to complete this project by the end of this fiscal.

Another official said that currently, the company company does not have any solar power generation capacity. The company did not divulge details about tariff of electricity to be supplied from this project.

Source : PTI
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En het 1000 ste bericht hier!

Voda, houd het allemaal in de gaten (op dit Energie forum) :-)

India signs MoU with Solar Energy Corporation

Economic Times reported that PTC India Limited has signed a MoU with Solar Energy Corporation of India for sale and purchase of power generated from 3,000 mw solar projects on long-term basis.

The contract will be valid for 25 years from the time these units start generating commercially and the power will be sold to state-based utilities.

Under the arrangement, Solar Energy Corporation will facilitate development of 3,000 mw solar projects at various locations in India on behalf of central public sector units, government and private agencies.

PTC, India's leading power trading company, will purchase solar power offered by Solar Energy Corporation or the project developers for sale to state utilities at a tariff that will be determined by the corporation through the reverse auction process or any other competitive route.

Mr Deepak Amitabh, chairman and managing director of PTC, said that "With rising power demand, the market is set to grow significantly in the next few years. This agreement with Solar Energy Corporation will allow us to undertake activities in solar sector and support each other in productive utilisation of solar resources and optimising energy usage."

Source : Economic Times
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China rules India's solar power market

As soon as a solar developer gets an order to set up a solar rooftop system in the city, they dial a Chinese company for the panels to be shipped to India.

Despite the distance and logistics, the panels are far cheaper--with a difference of INR 5 to INR 6 per panel--than what a manufacturer in Noida or any other part of the country would quote. It takes about 30 to 45 days for the consignment to be delivered, but there are still no takers for locally-made ones.

So, while cities like Delhi are gearing up for ambitious solar rooftop projects, the solar panel and cell manufacturing industry is dying a slow death. The manufacturers have recently petitioned the government to impose an "anti-dumping duty" on the cells and panels imported from China, US, Taiwan and elsewhere as they have flooded the market.

A solar cell manufacturing company based out of Delhi that has its factory in Andhra Pradesh has stopped making cells altogether.

Mr Arun Mishra, member of the Solar Energy Society of India and vice-president of a solar products manufacturing company, said that "We have the same technology. In fact, our products are of superior quality but the government has put no checks on imports. I read with great interest Delhi's draft solar policy --of installing 2 GW by 2025--but will it all be with imported panels? We have mailed the Delhi government our concerns."

Delhi's solar policy mandates all Delhi government buildings to install solar rooftop systems within three years of its notification.

A manufacturer currently developing rooftop projects on government buildings in Delhi said that "We, as developers, and even state governments will opt for the lowest bidder. Indian manufacturers are expensive. It will take a long time to bridge this gap."

China rules India's solar power market; preference for foreign-made panels has firms struggling

In fact, solar manufacturers have petitioned the ministry of commerce to impose an "anti-dumping duty" a second time.

Mr Rahul Gupta, secretary , Indian Solar Manufacturers Association, said that "The last time around, the ministry of commerce recommended our demand to the ministry of finance but it did not take action. We have filed a petition again in September. While the number of solar projects is rising nationwide, the import base is also expanding massively. It's a global phenomenon but US, Europe, China all have antidumping duty to address the problem."

Source : Economic Times
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