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Developing World: cashflow analysis shows gas, coal far more profitable than clean energy

April 24, 2019 by Schalk Cloete

80% of future energy infrastructure will be built in the developing world. Schalk Cloete has already written for us on the purely economic viability of developed world onshore wind, utility-scale solar PV, nuclear, natural gas and coal. He now presents his detailed cashflow analyses of the major generator technologies applied to the developing world. Because costs tend to be much lower the returns are higher. But gas and coal still easily … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Oil, Gas & Coal, Renewables Tagged With: carbon taxes, China, coal, gas, grids, India, integration, Nuclear, solar, wind

German task force agreement on traffic emissions 1/3 off target

March 28, 2019 by Sören Amelang

During what was billed as the decisive meeting, the German transport commission charged with proposing emissions cuts for the sector could only reach consensus on measures that will lower emissions by around two thirds of the necessary amount. Pro-climate activists, disappointed with the results, nevertheless welcomed the recommendation to look into the introduction of a CO2 price. Meanwhile emissions have actually increased. And VW, siding with … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Transport and energy Tagged With: biofuels, carbon taxes, cars, emissions, synthetic fuels, transport, VW

Why does coal survive? A detailed real-world cashflow analysis

March 27, 2019 by Schalk Cloete

Everyone knows coal plants are bad for the environment. So why do countries still use them? Coal’s attractiveness comes from the relatively low up front capital investment required to start generating energy. On top of that, the rapid rise of variable renewables (solar, wind) need something to rise with it to fill the generation gap when the sun doesn’t shine and the wind doesn’t blow. In his final instalment - after his similarly detailed … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Oil, Gas & Coal Tagged With: carbon taxes, coal, discount rate, electricity, Intermittency, investment, renewables

EU election risk: policymakers should go for real decarbonisation now while efficiency savings can help

March 15, 2019 by Energy Post Premium

With elections in May, the balance of opinion in Parliament is a climate policy risk factor on the minds of many in Brussels. The national draft 10-year energy plans, just in to the Commission, project widespread growth in costlier renewables. But populists who see climate as a globalist rather than nationalist-first agenda may prove hard to bring on side with an expensive and disruptive transition. The public will be influenced by climate … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, EU Policy, PREMIUM Tagged With: carbon taxes, Clean Energy Package, coal phase-out, Czech Republic, energy efficency, energy union, EU elections, France, gas, Germany, gilets jaunes, just transition, NECPs, Nord Stream 2, Poland, populists, subsidies, UK

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  • Could big U.S. subsidies for Hydrogen create perverse incentives, raise emissions?
  • Belgium: commercially viable Rooftop Solar for social housing. No installation subsidies, lower bills
  • Concrete supercapacitor: works like a battery, much cheaper, easy to make
  • Agrivoltaics: GWs of solar power from farmland using strategically placed panels (and raising crop yields)
  • Industry’s EU ETS reforms and CBAM: how firms can turn the rising cost of carbon into competitive advantage
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        Recent Posts

        Could big U.S. subsidies for Hydrogen create perverse incentives, raise emissions?

        Belgium: commercially viable Rooftop Solar for social housing. No installation subsidies, lower bills

        Concrete supercapacitor: works like a battery, much cheaper, easy to make

        Agrivoltaics: GWs of solar power from farmland using strategically placed panels (and raising crop yields)

        Industry’s EU ETS reforms and CBAM: how firms can turn the rising cost of carbon into competitive advantage

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