2013 was a momentous year for the clean energy industries, markets and consumers. Here are some highlights worth noting.
Global private capital renewable energy investments are still above
$250 billion for 2013. While the final numbers are not in yet, 3rd
quarter global renewable energy investments, according to Bloomberg New
Energy Finance’s latest data on deals and projects, notes slightly lower
global investment than in 2012 due faltering “political will to
decarbonise energy mix.” They further note that the third quarter’s
decline in investment will push the year’s overall investment in
renewable energy and energy-smart technologies down below 2012's $281
billion. But $250+ billion ain’t shabby.
New electricity in the U.S. has more renewables — and in
fact, was the first time in history renewable sources created more NEW
electricity than any other resource. According to famed energy analyst
Ken Bossong from SUNDAY, “For the first ten months of 2013, compared to
the same period in 2012, new capacity from all sources has declined by
27.5 percent (from 17,008 MW to 12,327 MW).
Renewable sources now account for nearly 16% of total
installed U.S. operating generating capacity: water - 8.30 percent,
wind - 5.21 percent, biomass - 1.32 percent, solar - 0.59 percent, and
geothermal steam - 0.33 percent. This is more than nuclear (9.22
percent) and oil (4.06 percent) combined. This represents an increase of
5.22 percent compared to the same period in 2012 with non-hydro
renewables combined growing by 15.9 percent. By comparison electrical
generation from all sources (i.e., including fossil fuels and nuclear
power) dipped by 0.8 percent.
Biodiesel is growing significantly. On Oct 28, 2013, new
EPA statistics show again that the biodiesel industry has cracked the 1
billion gallon mark for the third consecutive year.
Solar installations are surging in the USA. Think progress
recently reported on the US solar industry’s growth, “2013 is likely to
be the first time in more than 15 years that the U.S. installs more
solar capacity than world leader Germany,” according to
GTM Research and the Solar Energy Industries Association. By the end of
the year, more than 400,000 solar projects will be operating across the
U.S. and installations will have grown 27 percent over 2012, with a 52
percent growth rate in the residential sector alone, according to GTM’s
forecast.”
The first marine energy connection to the USA utility
grid. Ocean Renewable Power Company, which after five years of planning,
installed an underwater turbine 2,200 feet from the Maine shore. The
$21 million dollar project funded almost equally between private and
public sources resulted in the first commercial tidal energy project
delivering 280 Kw of 24 hour power to the grid, first time anywhere in
the U.S. Marine energy technologies are growing in double digits.
Concentrated solar is on the path to over 1.3 GW of new
U.S. generation with Ivanpah and Solana now on-line and two more bring
built in 2013. The Solana 280 MW solar generating plant near Gila Bend,
Arizona, about 70 miles southwest of Phoenix, was completed in Fall of
2013. And the 377 megawatt net solar Ivanpah power tower is now on-line
50 miles from Needles, CA in the Mohave desert. Both solar generation
plants have 11 hours of storage for evening generation.
Brazil, Germany, Japan, and China distinguish themselves,
and including the United States account for most of the world’s use of
renewable energy.
Geothermal also heating up. As of August 2013, 11,765
megawatts of (gross) geothermal power are operating globally in addition
to several hundred MW in the final stages of construction. By the end
of 2013 the global geothermal market is expected to reach 12,000 MW of
geothermal capacity. GEA says currently there is 11,766 MW planned
capacity additions of geothermal power in the early stages of
development or under construction in 70 countries and territories around
the world. Additionally, developers are actively engaged with 27
gigawatts of geothermal resource globally. Projects in the 2013 pipeline
for global capacity could approach 14,000 MW, adding several thousand
megawatts, by the end of the decade with several hundred MW of new
geothermal power becoming operational per year. In 2013. some of the
first demonstration enhanced geothermal system (EGS) projects provided
electricity to grids in Australia and the United States.
Even in the face of attacks on the Renewable Fuel
Standard, cellulosic ethanol plants are coming online. Right now in
Emmetsburg, Iowa the nation’s largest maker of ethanol, Poet, is putting
the final touches on a manufacturing plant that will rely not on corn,
but on the stalks and cobs left behind. Poet and its joint venture
partner, the Dutch industrial giant and enzyme maker DSM, expect to
begin production of ethanol at the Emmetsburg plant in early 2014, at a
rate of about 20 million gallons a year.
Even in the face of attacks by Koch brothers-financed
ALEC, fighting to undercut State Renewable Energy Portfolio Standards
(RPS), no state has actually watered down its RPS. The ALEC agenda was
pushed in five States this year to weaken or remove state RPS’s, with
losses in all five including most notably Kansas, North Carolina, and
Arizona. The fossil industry and some larger electric utility players
are underwriting the effort including a well-financed disinformation
campaign. So far, no one is being fooled and shows again the old maxim,
“money can’t always buy love.”
Georgia, home of Southern Company one of the more negative
renewable energy electric utility companies, had its all-Republican
public utility commission vote for a 500-MW solar generation goal
spearheaded not only by the usual solar industry and environmental
groups but by the state’s Tea Party.
California leads the states notably for “on bill”
financing energy efficiency and renewable energy, and in September
becoming the first state to mandate electricity storage on the grid. Not
to be seen as weak-kneed, the state PUC set a 1.3-GW mandate for energy
storage on the grid by 2020. Battery technologies are in an upswing, as
is pumped hydropower, and compressed storage.
National, regional and state polls are moving “our” way
again. During and after the global economic meltdown, national and
regional polls addressing climate change and renewable energy began
sinking — because people, understandably, were nervous about economic
survival. Now that the economic collapse has eased and the global
economy has stabilized, attitudes are changing. Renewable energy has
always had a strong reservoir of public support , and numbers are up
again regarding public perceptions on global warming.
In Februay 2013, researchers at Duke University's Sanford
School of Public Policy and Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy
Solutions conducted a national survey on climate change. "Whether in
response to extreme weather events like mega-storm Sandy or the improved
economy, public opinion has clearly rebounded from its low point of a
couple years ago," said Frederick Mayer, associate professor of public
policy and political science and poll conductor.
Other key findings of the poll include: The percentage of
Americans who agree there is solid evidence of a changing climate has
steadily increased since 2010. The Duke poll found 50 percent of
Americans are convinced the climate is changing and another 34 percent
say it is probably changing; this is an increase from other recent
polls. 54 percent feel climate change is primarily the result of human
activity (the highest level in the past couple of years).
In December 2013, Forbes reported on a recent poll. This
new analysis of 21 scientific surveys reflecting public opinions in 46
states showed that large majorities of Americans now believe that global
warming is a manmade problem and that the government should reign in
greenhouse gas emissions — especially at power plants. The surveys
showed that “majorities in every state surveyed said the government
should limit greenhouse gas emissions” and “in particular, by power
plants.” This includes eastern coal states like Pennsylvania, Ohio,
Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan. The story is the same in states like
Texas, Mississippi, Alabama, and South Carolina.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) recently concluded,
“Renewable energy sources could account for nearly half of the increase
in global power generation through 2035," according to its 2013 edition
of the World Energy Outlook. "Wind energy and solar energy could make up
45 percent of that expansion in renewables,” the report said.
So while Congress sustains is dysfunctionality, ocean
acidification and sea level rise increased, global temperatures and
megastorms surpassed earlier records, water pollution and waste
primarily due to energy extraction, conversion and waste is at an all
time high — don’t be too depressed.
Sure we have challenges as a planet — but our clean energy
industries are also making progress. So don’t despair; drink plenty of
egg nog (responsibly) this holiday season.
Source:- renewablenergyworld.com
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