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How much subsidy does solar need, and for how long?

January 25, 2019 by Schalk Cloete

Schalk Cloete presents his latest paper looking at what affects the profitability of an investment in a power sector. After reviewing onshore wind and nuclear, he now looks at solar. His analysis of coal and gas are to come. Intermittency, market share, maintenance, integration costs and other factors are modelled in detail to help predict solar’s future. *This article is brought to you via our new author platform. If you have an article you … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Renewables, Uncategorized Tagged With: integration, Intermittency, investment, market share, renewables, solar, subsidies

Electric metering should break its link with power consumed and create it directly with the costs of delivery

January 21, 2019 by Walt Patterson

In a world where electricity is generated from non-renewables (oil, gas, nuclear) our meters measure and charge us for electricity delivered, as if it was a fuel being consumed. Going forward, the cost should be measured against what is actually being consumed. In a renewables world – particularly 'run-of-the-river' hydro, wind and solar - that’s not the electricity. It’s the wear and tear on the infrastructure. Treating these types of renewable … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Policies, Renewables, Uncategorized Tagged With: electricity, Energy, hydro, investment, metering, minerals, policy, renewables, solar, wind

Nuclear power at the mercy of government subsidies while costs remain high

January 18, 2019 by Schalk Cloete

What affects the profitability of an investment in nuclear energy? What are the risks? Energy researcher and analyst Schalk Cloete presents his latest paper on the matter. He looks at the various effects on nuclear power investment, including the rise of other competing renewable energy sources, and the changing price of energy. *This article is brought to you via our new author platform. If you have an article you want to submit to us for … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Nuclear Tagged With: investment, Nuclear, solar, transition, wind

Report maps out the new geopolitical power dynamics created by renewables

January 15, 2019 by IRENA

A new report by the Global Commission on the Geopolitics of Energy Transformation says the new energy age will profoundly reshape relations between states and regions. It will bring “A New World” of power, security, energy independence and prosperity. It will also reshape the geopolitical map, just as fossil-fuels have done over the last 200 years. No nation will be unaffected. … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Climate policy, Energy, Oil, Gas & Coal, Renewables Tagged With: Africa, Americas, Asia, Energy, Europe, fossil-fuels, geopolitics, ghg, IRENA, minerals, renewable, solar, transition, wind

Britain has shifted 30% of its electricity away from fossil fuels in just nine years

January 14, 2019 by Grant Wilson and Iain Staffell

Britain’s extraordinary energy transition is in part down to increased energy efficiency: put simply, less electricity was needed, whatever the source. But coal is still essential during spikes in demand. Given coal generation is due to be phased out by 2025, the country will need to find alternative power sources to cope during extreme weather events. And that overall decline in electricity demand is sure to be reversed as more vehicles and … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Climate policy, Energy, Energy efficiency, Nuclear, Oil, Gas & Coal, Policies, Renewables, Uncategorized Tagged With: biomass, Britain, coal, efficiency, electricity, gas, generation, hydro, Nuclear, renewables, solar, transition, UK, weather, wind

Norway’s renewables exports to increase 8-fold by 2030

January 9, 2019 by Terje Osmundsen

Already, Norway’s renewable energy sector generates $1.2bn in export revenues today. Now an analysis of commitments by both private and state actors shows that that figure should rise 8-fold by 2030. Terje Osmundsen, CEO of Empower New Energy, adds up the numbers, identifies the key businesses and state operators, and shows how renewables exports can help both Norway and developing countries in danger of being left behind. … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Markets, Policies, Renewables Tagged With: Denmark, developing countries, emerging markets, exports, Norway, renewables, solar, Sweden, wind

Solar farms getting smaller, cheaper and smarter to overcome grid hurdles

December 18, 2018 by Giles Parkinson

The technical challenges and fast-changing regulatory requirements associated with installing and integrating variable RES capacity are inevitably holding up the transition to clean energy all around the globe. So the announcement of a new smart solar farm in Australia that seems to have overcome these hurdles is really good news. The situation has been neatly captured across a number of recent reports (summarised here) by Giles Parkinson of … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Innovations, Networks, Renewables Tagged With: australia, demand response, energy storage, energy transition, RES, smart grids, solar

Solar panels replaced tarmac on a road. Here are the results

September 27, 2018 by Dylan Ryan

solar roadways roads solar panels

Using roads for solar energy generation is one of those ideas that makes engineers frown but seems to capture the public imagination, with an Indiegogo fundraising campaign for the concept pulling in almost $2.3m in 2014. But now the idea is being put into practice it appears the engineers may have been right all along, according to Dylan Ryan of Edinburgh Napier University. Courtesy of The Conversation. … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Innovations, Renewables Tagged With: PV, solar, transport

Flexible printed solar cells – a new manufacturing frontier?

September 24, 2018 by John Mathews

Paul Dastoor of the University of Newcastle on CHEP's rooftop covered with the new printed flexible solar cells.

The University of Newcastle in Australia has unveiled a 200m2 rooftop solar array made from innovative flexible and printed solar cells that could further revolutionise the global use and manufacturing industry of renewables. According to Professor John Mathews of Macquarie University in Australia, this could be a giant step forward for solar cells. Courtesy Global Green Shift blog … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Innovations, Renewables Tagged With: energy transition, renewables, solar, solar power

Four scientific breakthroughs that can take us to a new, clean energy world

July 17, 2014 by Denis Kuznetsov

Discussions on the energy transition usually focus on the economics of renewables and cost comparisons with fossil fuels and other energy sources. What is usually ignored, are innovations in materials and chemical processes, which are nonetheless increasingly important as agents of change in the energy sector. Innovation watcher Denis Kuznetsov discusses four scientific breakthroughs in materials research that could shake up the energy sector in … [Read more...]

Filed Under: *, Energy, Innovations Tagged With: electricity, energy efficiency, energy storage, infrastructure, innovation, R&D, renewables, solar

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      Recent Posts

      Scaling up global grid-scale Storage to 80GW/year (it was 16GW in 2022)

      H2 Green Steel has raised billions in 3 years: a case study of Industrial Project Finance

      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

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