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The Remarkable Progress of Renewable Energy

Tonopah solar plant could end up in bankruptcy, developer says | Las Vegas Review-Journal
The Crescent Dunes Solar Energy Plant could be heading toward bankruptcy, according to a lawsuit filed by the project’s developer.

On Wednesday, SolarReserve filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Energy and Tonopah Solar Energy. SolarReserve alleges the Department of Energy interfered with its “right to participate in the management” of Tonopah Solar Energy, the plant’s operator.

The lawsuit was filed two days before NV Energy provided a notice of termination on its renewable power purchase agreement with the solar project, citing “frequent and prolonged outages” from the project.
It's a concentrated solar power plant, with sunlight reflected off of heliostats, aimable mirrors, into boilers on towers. These boilers then power steam engines.
The solar project was approved by the Nevada Public Utilities Commission in 2010, but took significantly longer to construct than company officials initially predicted. It didn’t enter commercial operations until November 2015.

Less than a year later, it shut down for eight months for repairs after a small leak in a molten salt tank. According to a June application from NV Energy, the frequent and prolonged outages at the plant reduced the expected amount of energy and credits by 50 percent this year and 25 percent in 2020 and beyond.
It looks like a failure and it may be shut down outright before long. Photovoltaic cells can easily substitute for it, and they will likely end up doing so.

New catalyst recycles greenhouse gases into fuel and hydrogen gas
noting
Dry reforming of methane by stable Ni–Mo nanocatalysts on single-crystalline MgO | Science

It starts with CO2 and CH4 and makes H2 and it seems also CO:
CO2 + CH4 -> 2CO + 2H2 (synthesis gas)

I don't see how useful this is going to be, because it uses methane instead of hydrogen. The article notes that the researchers successfully avoided using expensive metals like platinum and rhodium, instead using molybdenum-doped nickel on magnesium-oxide crystals.
 
Blade recycling: a top priority for the wind industry | WindEurope
Most of a wind turbine can be recycled, happy to say.
But turbine blades represent a specific challenge. Wind turbine blades are made up of composite materials that boost the performance of wind energy by allowing lighter and longer blades. Today 2.5 million tonnes of composite material are in use in the wind sector globally.

The complexity of this composite material requires specific processes for recycling. Today, the main technology for recycling composite waste is through cement co-processing. The wind industry produces far less composite waste than other industries. It produces less composite waste than the building and construction sector, the electrical and electronics sector, the transportation sector, and the marine sector. And it does this, while also generating clean energy. Further development and industrialisation of alternative technologies like solvolysis and pyrolysis will provide the wind industry with additional solutions for turbine blades reaching their end-of-life, and will enable the industry to deliver zero-waste turbines.

Teck Resources Pulls The Plug On $15.5 Billion Frontier Oil Sands Project In Alberta | CleanTechnica -- good that they are backing off from that.

Autonomous Electric Trucks Could Upend Freight Operations | CleanTechnica
The process involves many low speed yard trucks that shuttle the containers around so they can be hitched to the road-going tractors that will haul them to distribution centers around the country. Tens of millions of containers get sorted and repositioned every year, which means a yard truck — frequently known as a donkey — has to hook up, move a container, then unhitch and start the process all over again tens of millions of times. In the vast majority of cases, those donkeys are powered by diesel engines that spew out large amounts of particulate emissions along with carbon dioxide and nitrogen compounds as they perform their routine chores.

Outrider, a startup based in Golden, Colorado, wants to change that. CEO Andrew Smith tells TechCrunch that distribution yards are ideal environments for autonomous technology because they are well defined areas. They are also complex, chaotic, and involve many manual tasks like hooking up electric lines and compressed air hoses.
It helps that such trucks will not get very far from their chargers in their normal operation.
 
Wind is now most-used source of renewable electricity generation in US
  • At the end of 2019, the country was home to 103 GW of wind capacity, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
  • Figures show that wind generation hit a little over 300 million megawatt hours last year.

Last year saw wind generation in the U.S. overtake hydroelectric generation for the first time, according to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).
Great.

The Real Reason The Middle East Is Pivoting Towards Renewables | OilPrice.com
The largest power firms in some of OPEC’s leading producers expand their international footprint, aiming to capture part of the booming global renewable generation market. At home, power companies invest in boosting electricity generation from clean sources in the Middle East, freeing additional barrels of crude oil—which is burnt for electricity in OPEC’s top producer Saudi Arabia, for example—for exports and for additional government revenues.

Two of the largest and most influential OPEC members, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), already have long-term national renewable plans to cut reliance on crude for electricity generation. The biggest power companies in the two countries are also increasingly looking abroad to expand their renewable power operations in the most promising alternative energy markets.

The World Can’t Let Nuclear Energy Die | OilPrice.com

Nuclear Is Not A Catch-All Solution To Climate Change | OilPrice.com
Despite the ever-increasing number of voices calling for nuclear as a catch-all solution to climate change, however, there are still a lot of drawbacks to nuclear power to consider as well. Building new nuclear plants is extremely expensive, nuclear accidents--while very, very rare--are both expensive and difficult to remediate, and there is still a lot of public mistrust and political adversity when it comes to nuclear.
Also VERY time-consuming. Wind and solar energy are MUCH quicker to deploy.

The Holy Grail Of Clean Energy Is Closer Than Ever | OilPrice.com
Last summer, reps from the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), an intergovernmental project headquartered in the south of France, reported that they are a mere six and a half years away from achieving first plasma inside their tokamak--in other words: nuclear fusion by just 2025. Then, just a month later in August, 2019, Oak Ridge National Laboratory reported their own nuclear fusion breakthrough, which uses novel implementation of AI and supercomputing to successfully scale up nuclear fusion experiments and manage plasma.
However nice that might be, it will likely have become economically preempted by renewable sources by then.
 
Wind is now most-used source of renewable electricity generation in US

Great.

The Real Reason The Middle East Is Pivoting Towards Renewables | OilPrice.com


The World Can’t Let Nuclear Energy Die | OilPrice.com

Nuclear Is Not A Catch-All Solution To Climate Change | OilPrice.com
Despite the ever-increasing number of voices calling for nuclear as a catch-all solution to climate change, however, there are still a lot of drawbacks to nuclear power to consider as well. Building new nuclear plants is extremely expensive, nuclear accidents--while very, very rare--are both expensive and difficult to remediate, and there is still a lot of public mistrust and political adversity when it comes to nuclear.
Also VERY time-consuming. Wind and solar energy are MUCH quicker to deploy.

The Holy Grail Of Clean Energy Is Closer Than Ever | OilPrice.com
Last summer, reps from the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), an intergovernmental project headquartered in the south of France, reported that they are a mere six and a half years away from achieving first plasma inside their tokamak--in other words: nuclear fusion by just 2025. Then, just a month later in August, 2019, Oak Ridge National Laboratory reported their own nuclear fusion breakthrough, which uses novel implementation of AI and supercomputing to successfully scale up nuclear fusion experiments and manage plasma.
However nice that might be, it will likely have become economically preempted by renewable sources by then.

Except that no amount if clever engineering solutions will get rid if the fact that renewables suffer from law source energy density and thus will always need lots of land to viable, with geothermal as the only possible exception. We're A working fusion plant taking up one hectare is going to be producing more energy than a wind or solar park stretching over many square kilometres, even if the latter are 100% efficient, and maintaining the plant will require much more travel (much of which will still be accomplished in fossil fueled vehicles by 2025) for the latter.
 
Fossil fuels for power at turning point as renewables surged in 2019: data - Reuters
The use of fossil fuels such as coal and oil for generating electricity fell in 2019 in the United States, the European Union and India, at the same time overall power output rose, a turning point for the global energy mix.

Kaberger, who is also the chair of the executive board for Japan’s Renewable Energy Institute and a member of the board at Swedish utility Vattenfall AB, provided data covering more than 70% of the world’s power generation that showed for most of 2019 the amount of power sourced from fossil fuels dropped by 156 terawatt hours (TWh) from the year before. That is equal to the entire power output of Argentina in 2018.

The data also indicates that renewable power generation increased at a faster rate than the overall growth in power output for the first time, rising by 297 TWh versus 233 TWh for overall output, Kaberger said.
That is welcome. VERY welcome. Tomas Kaberger also expects renewable-made synfuels to undersell fossil-fuel oil and gas. Meaning also that we can still have plastics and fertilizers.

Cleantech News — #1 In EV, Solar, Wind, Tesla News | CleanTechnica - far too much for me to comment on, so I looked at how recent the more recent articles are.
  • Electric cars: 8 articles datelined today, March 4. The 25th article (bottom of page) was datelined March 2.
  • Solar energy: 25th article datelined February 23, a week and a half ago.
  • Wind energy: 25th article datelined February 13, three weeks ago.
  • Geothermal energy: 25th article datelined March 25, 2019, nearly a year ago.
  • Energy storage: 25th article datelined February 21, two weeks ago.
  • Smart grid: 25th article datelined September 16, 2019, half a year ago.
  • Energy efficiency: 25th article datelined January 19, a month and a half ago.
  • Hydrogen: 25th article datelined July 16, 2019, two-thirds of a year ago.
  • Ammonia: 25th article datelined May 21, 2018, nearly two years ago.
  • Liquid fuel: 25th article datelined January 7, 2018, a little over two years ago.
The last three were not in the top menus, but were searched for.
 
Do they state how much renewable energy is produced during windless or low wind nights?

The wind is always blowing somewhere, even at night.
But more energy would likely be used moving the windmill across the country to where the wind happens to be at any time than the windmill would generate... and a damn long extension cord would be need to get that power back to the grid.
 
Do they state how much renewable energy is produced during windless or low wind nights?

The wind is always blowing somewhere, even at night.

"Somewhere" is a very big place. A winter anticyclone over Europe brings light winds to pretty much the entire continent for up to a week - and coincides with the coldest nights, and highest demand for nighttime electricity.

It would require a staggering feat of engineering, and a sizeable fraction of European GDP, to build and maintain a system that could cope with such conditions, whether it is based on storage, or importing of power from outside Europe.

Or you could just make like the French, and build a couple of dozen nuclear power plants.
 
Or you could just make like the French, and build a couple of dozen nuclear power plants.

Rule of thumb: Always trust advocates for nuclear power from a nation with large Uranium deposits and no nuclear power plants
 
Or you could just make like the French, and build a couple of dozen nuclear power plants.

Rule of thumb: Always trust advocates for nuclear power from a nation with large Uranium deposits and no nuclear power plants

I live in a nation with large Uranium deposits, and (sadly) no nuclear power plants.

I am from a nation with no significant Uranium deposits, and many nuclear power plants.

I was an advocate for nuclear power before I moved, and continue to be one now. I would be very happy indeed if a nuclear plant were to be built at Swanbank, which is an ideal site for such a facility (and is only about 15km from my house).
 
Do they state how much renewable energy is produced during windless or low wind nights?

The wind is always blowing somewhere, even at night.

southern australia.JPG
The majority of Australia's wind turbines, by number of units or power generated, are located in the area shown. Each year we will have some days, at least 3-4, where the turbines in that area, 1400 km across, will produce negligence power as the wind drops. Other days numbering greater than that will produce no power because the wind is too strong.
We need power 24x7x52, not 20x6x50 or any other combination.
And of course the solar arrays in that area are useless at night.
 
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-51852637

...
Coal power developers risk wasting hundreds of billions of pounds as new renewable sources are now cheaper than new coal plants, a report has said.

The shift is mainly down to the tumbling cost of wind and solar power, researchers from Carbon Tracker said.
They added that in 10 years it will be cheaper to close down coal plants and build wind and solar plants instead.
But the International Energy Agency (IEA) says coal will remain the largest global power source for years.
The report's authors say they looked at the economics of 95% of the world's coal-fired power stations.
In most countries, including the UK, it's already cheaper to build renewable energy generation than new coal-burning plants.
At 60% of coal plants in the world, the generating costs are higher than they would be from new renewables, the report said.

But the study goes a step further, forecasting that within 10 years the cheapest option in all countries would be to close down existing coal-fired power stations and build wind and solar power plants instead.
...
 
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-51852637

...
Coal power developers risk wasting hundreds of billions of pounds as new renewable sources are now cheaper than new coal plants, a report has said.

The shift is mainly down to the tumbling cost of wind and solar power, researchers from Carbon Tracker said.
They added that in 10 years it will be cheaper to close down coal plants and build wind and solar plants instead.
But the International Energy Agency (IEA) says coal will remain the largest global power source for years.
The report's authors say they looked at the economics of 95% of the world's coal-fired power stations.
In most countries, including the UK, it's already cheaper to build renewable energy generation than new coal-burning plants.
At 60% of coal plants in the world, the generating costs are higher than they would be from new renewables, the report said.

But the study goes a step further, forecasting that within 10 years the cheapest option in all countries would be to close down existing coal-fired power stations and build wind and solar power plants instead.
...

They are not interchangeable. A coal plant produces power when it's needed; A wind or solar plant produces power when it's possible to do so.

The appropriate comparison is not between the cost of coal generation and that of wind or solar generation; It's between the cost of coal generation and the cost of wind or solar plus the necessary storage to provide the same amount of 24x7 power as the coal plant.

To replace 1GW of coal power, you need about 0.8GW of nuclear power; Or about 3GW of wind power plus at least 250GWh of storage, capable of charging at 2 or 3GW, and discharging at 1GW, and of switching rapidly between these states. And a place where wind power generation never falls below the median generation rate for more than a week.

That storage is not just expensive; it's so expensive that it's completely unachievable with current technology - there's not enough lithium for all the batteries you would need, nor enough suitable sites for hydro storage, nor the infrastructure needed to hook such massive storage up to the generation technology.

Handwaving away this problem is the only reason why anyone thinks wind or solar are a plausible replacement for coal. But they are simply not.

It's possible (though hideously expensive) to install storage on a domestic level, as long as you don't mind at least some blackouts - how many and how often you can tolerate a blackout determines the cost, which increases exponentially as your tolerance for being without power falls away.

But domestic power consumption is a tiny part of the total. Industry and commerce require reliable power - and lots of it.

It's one thing to accept having to occasionally chuck out spoiled food from your home refrigerator; But it's quite another to envisage the local supermarket and their warehouse having to do the same - and just at the time when demand for that food peaks (because of all the domestic spoilage). And I don't see any Wall Street banks liking the idea that their trading day could be interrupted because the batteries are flat, and it's calm and cloudy.

The economics of intermittent power generation, with the intermittency outside our control, are impossible to make work, no matter how cheap the generators become. Intermittent power isn't a commodity that has a market. The market is for power on demand.

Intermittent power plus storage might, perhaps, one day be viable. But right now, we get intermittent power plus gas*. Which isn't a solution to climate change at all.






* Often hidden as 'other' or 'imports' - hint: gas power plants in neighbouring states or countries are still adding CO2 to the atmosphere, even if you hide that fact behind the description 'imports' in your reporting
 
Here in Texas, we have natural gas, which is cheaper and easier to implement that coal plants. We don't have to deal with toxic coal ash, etc. We either have nasty brown lignite, produced locally, or bituminous coal imported from Canada. Not cheap. But wind is now king here over coal. We are shutting down coal fired plants and building more wind projects.
 
Here in Texas, we have natural gas, which is cheaper and easier to implement that coal plants. We don't have to deal with toxic coal ash, etc. We either have nasty brown lignite, produced locally, or bituminous coal imported from Canada. Not cheap. But wind is now king here over coal. We are shutting down coal fired plants and building more wind projects.

Yeah. Except that natural gas is just as bad for the climate as coal. It's about half as bad from the point of view of CO2 emissions; But leaks (aka 'fugitive emissions') of methane make up the difference.

Wind isn't displacing coal - it's enabling its displacement by gas, for bugger all climate benefit. That's great if you're a Texan fracker who doesn't give two shits about climate change, but wants to outcompete Appalachian coal miners; So it's understandable that Texas loves this change - and that Texans love to invest in wind power. Not only does it boost gas sales, it also makes the state look like it is doing something about the environment. (spoiler: They aren't).
 
Here in Texas, we have natural gas, which is cheaper and easier to implement that coal plants. We don't have to deal with toxic coal ash, etc. We either have nasty brown lignite, produced locally, or bituminous coal imported from Canada. Not cheap. But wind is now king here over coal. We are shutting down coal fired plants and building more wind projects.

Yeah. Except that natural gas is just as bad for the climate as coal. It's about half as bad from the point of view of CO2 emissions; But leaks (aka 'fugitive emissions') of methane make up the difference.

Wind isn't displacing coal - it's enabling its displacement by gas, for bugger all climate benefit. That's great if you're a Texan fracker who doesn't give two shits about climate change, but wants to outcompete Appalachian coal miners; So it's understandable that Texas loves this change - and that Texans love to invest in wind power. Not only does it boost gas sales, it also makes the state look like it is doing something about the environment. (spoiler: They aren't).

Cheerful Charley should have expanded his comments to ambient energy harvesting so he could have included everything from devices exploiting electrostatic energy differences to to hunan motion and metabolism harvesting to wind and tide exploitation. What the hell. Here's a wiki on what I'm getting at:  Energy harvesting

I thought the capacitive storage technology piece in the article was interesting. Such can be regulated by selective impedance.


Yeah, your arguments are sound as always. Still when push comes to shove human nature can be redirected like now when we want to flatten the coronavirus curve so medical support systems don't crash. Of course there are risks to just adding time for mutation to something really awful.

Still the idea of harvesting from existing differences should be wide enough for us to wrap ourselves around comprehensive solutions.
 
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