Category:
Impact on Economy
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Does wind power really provide more jobs than coal?
January 31, 2009 by Eoin O'Carroll in Christian Science Monitor
January 31, 2009 by Eoin O'Carroll in Christian Science Monitor
Fortune's eco-blog, Green Wombat ran a story under the headline, "Wind jobs outstrip the coal industry." ...But it's a bogus comparison. According to the wind energy report, those 85,000 jobs in wind power are as "varied as turbine component manufacturing, construction and installation of wind turbines, wind turbine operations and maintenance, legal and marketing services, and more." The 81,000 coal jobs counted by the Department of Energy are only miners.
Also filed under [
USA]
Concerns emerged this week over the effectiveness of carbon trading in encouraging alternative energy development after a tumbling carbon price made investment in projects more expensive.
The price of carbon has fallen by nearly 70 per cent since reaching a high of €32.90 in April 2006 to a new low of €10.81 last week, although it recovered this week to just under €12.
Also filed under [
Europe]
Damaged rotor blades and forex losses caused the world's fifth-largest wind turbine maker Suzlon Energy post a consolidated net loss of Rs 34.90 crore for the quarter ended December 2008 against a Rs 142.8 crore profit in the corresponding previous quarter. ...Cracks were detected in 170 of the 1,250 blades for 400 turbines of the S88 V2 model supplied by Suzlon in 2007 to two of its major clients in the US -- Edison International and John Deere.
Also filed under [
Structural Failure|
Asia]
Falling demand for railcars, wind farms costs 381 jobs in Oklahoma
January 29, 2009 by Debbie Blossom in The Oklahoman
January 29, 2009 by Debbie Blossom in The Oklahoman
The closure this month of Trinity's Tank Car Inc.'s freight railcar manufacturing plant in Oklahoma City affected about 250 hourly and administrative employees. Tulsa-based Trinity Structural Towers Inc., which produced towers for wind farms, closed Jan. 16. About 130 hourly and administrative workers lost their jobs. Employees at both facilities were given a 60-day notice, the company said.
Also filed under [
Oklahoma]
Gargantuan London Array offshore wind farm in doubt as E.ON questions economics
January 26, 2009 in Power Engineering
January 26, 2009 in Power Engineering
According to the Financial Times, E.ON UK, the British arm of the German energy group, said the viability of its London Array project, a planned 1000 MW wind farm in the Thames estuary, had been called into question by the falling prices of oil, gas and carbon dioxide emissions permits. ...Centrica, the owner of British Gas, estimates that each megawatt of wind power capacity costs about £3m to build: more than the equivalent cost for a nuclear power station.
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
UK]
It has been reported today that the £1.5bn London Array project, which would plant 270 turbines in the Thames Estuary off Thanet, may be jeopardised by funding doubts. ...Consortium members are likely to ask the Government to raise its level of subsidy, arguing that the private sector should not bear so much risk from a scheme that is in the national interest.
London Array has been in the planning stage for years, and a team of engineers have been working on it for some time.
Also filed under [
UK]
Stalled out: Efforts to bring a renewable energy plant to the region have encountered stiff out-of-state competition
January 24, 2009 by Cyndy Cole in Arizona Daily Sun
January 24, 2009 by Cyndy Cole in Arizona Daily Sun
If they could demonstrate there was a desire for renewables here, perhaps Arizona Public Service would sign a contract with an entrepreneur to start a solar, wind or biomass energy project in northern Arizona and create new jobs here, they reasoned. That didn't happen -- APS spent that money on renewable power elsewhere. But backers aren't dismayed and say they will continue the project this coming year.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
Arizona]
Wind turbine blade maker to cut jobs in US and Europe
January 19, 2009 by Richard Higgs in Plastics & Rubber Weekly
January 19, 2009 by Richard Higgs in Plastics & Rubber Weekly
Wind turbine blade maker LM Glasfiber Group has announced that it will lay off up to 600 workers at plants in Europe and the United States. The Danish company plans to cut a fifth of its domestic workforce - 450 employees - and to close one of its two blade plants in Little Rock, Arkansas, with the loss of 150 jobs. ...Despite this, the company stressed it is confident in the long-term outlook for the wind turbine business.
Utility wants to hike rates: NYSEG says it will also cut spending to save money
January 16, 2009 by Larry Rulison in Times Union
January 16, 2009 by Larry Rulison in Times Union
New York State Electric & Gas Corp., acquired last fall by a large Spanish utility, wants to increase rates and plans to reduce capital spending this year as it faces serious financial issues. ...It is unclear how any rate increase sought by NYSEG would be impacted by the $275 million that the PSC has ordered Iberdrola to return to upstate customers as a condition of the merger.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
New York]
Ex tourist boss backs wind farm protest; Turbines will damage business, says former VisitScotland man
January 8, 2009 by Craig Borland in The Buteman
January 8, 2009 by Craig Borland in The Buteman
The former head of tourism in Argyll and the Islands is to appear as a professional witness at two public inquiries into the refusal of separate wind farm proposals for hills opposite Rothesay Bay.
James Fraser, formerly VisitScotland's area director for Argyll, the Isles, Loch Lomond, Stirling and the Trossachs, will give evidence against the plans when developer West Coast Energy appeals against refusal of its proposal at an inquiry which begins at the Queen's Hall in Dunoon on January 20.
Slump dims alternative energy spark; Capital crunch starves new technologies
January 2, 2009 by Dan Healing in Calgary Herald
January 2, 2009 by Dan Healing in Calgary Herald
Lower prices for crude oil and natural gas may not have a lasting impact on expansion of the alternative energy sector in Western Canada-- but the current worldwide economic slowdown will, observers predict. ..."When push comes to shove in the budget process and you're concerned with funding people versus funding things, the short-run discount of protecting lives virtually always wins and investing in the future by building more renewables or encouraging more R&D in renewables tends to get less attention."
That translates into fewer direct or indirect subsidies and fewer regulations designed to encourage the use of alternative energy.
Also filed under [
Canada]
Xcel plan oversold in 2000; Investigation says wind overbilling went on for years.
December 27, 2008 by Andy Vuong in The Denver Post
December 27, 2008 by Andy Vuong in The Denver Post
Xcel Energy oversold wind energy credits as far back as 2000 for a program in which customers voluntarily pay a premium for wind-generated power, according to an investigation by Colorado Public Utilities Commission staff.
A settlement is looming related to Xcel's excess collections for the Windsource program from 2005 to 2007, which was disclosed earlier this week.
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Colorado]
Xcel overbilled for wind plan; Company balks at PUC suggestion to refund more than $1.5 million to program's funders
December 23, 2008 by Andy Vuong in Denver Post
December 23, 2008 by Andy Vuong in Denver Post
Xcel Energy overcollected more than $1.5 million from customers who voluntarily pay a premium for wind- generated electricity, according to the Colorado Public Utilities Commission staff.
From 2005 to 2007, the state's largest utility sold credits for more green power than it generated at the wind farms in its Windsource program.
Xcel knew it would have a production shortfall in the program but "failed to act".
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Colorado]
Durango "green power" program victim of budget cuts
December 21, 2008 by Associated Press in The Denver Post
December 21, 2008 by Associated Press in The Denver Post
The city of Durango is pulling the plug on green power because of problems with green -- or money. ...The La Plata Electric Association charges 80 cents more per 100 kilowatt hours for electricity from solar and wind power. LeBlanc says that adds $45,000 to the city's annual electric bill.
Also filed under [
Colorado]
Higher electricity bills in Redding's future
December 14, 2008 by Scott Mobley in The Record Searchlight
December 14, 2008 by Scott Mobley in The Record Searchlight
The nearly 8 percent rate increase Redding Electric Utility will seek Tuesday for next year and 2010 could be just the beginning of a long, steady and rather steep cost climb for customers.
Rate forecasts through 2014 show REU imposing identical 7.84 percent increases each year while still chewing through wads of cash. ...Redding has made up for the lost hydropower, in part, by commissioning a pair of large gas-fired turbines at its plant on Clear Creek Road. The utility has also entered long-term contracts for wind and biomass power.
The wind and biomass have allowed REU to meet state renewable energy mandates. But all three power sources cost more than twice as much as hydropower, adding $10.5 million each year on average to REU's fuel tab, Hauser said.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
California]
Green jobs' false promise? The problem with talking about jobs-per-kilowatt hour
December 12, 2008 by Joshua Zumbrun in Forbes
December 12, 2008 by Joshua Zumbrun in Forbes
The American Wind Energy Association claims it is wind power that creates the most jobs per kilowatt hour. One oft-cited statistic is that there are 27% more jobs per kilowatt-hour from wind than from coal, and 66% more from wind than from natural gas. ..."To the extent it's true, it illustrates these technologies aren't that efficient."
A power producer typically gets paid for the power it generates. In Texas, some wind energy generators are paying to have someone take power off their hands.
Because of intense competition, the way wind tax credits work, the location of the wind farms and the fact that the wind often blows at night, wind farms in Texas are generating power they can't sell. To get rid of it, they are paying the state's main grid operator to accept it. $40 a megawatt hour is roughly the going rate.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
Texas]
The alternative-energy sector has run smack into a credit crisis, probably a recession as well, and almost all industry experts think the fourth quarter is going to be worse. ...The reality today is that it's more expensive to produce renewable energy than it is from traditional resources, and consumers suddenly strapped for cash will start moving away, said Jerry Taylor, a senior fellow at Cato Institute.
Even proponents are slowing the move toward alternative energy, at least for the moment.
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
USA]
Xcel Energy has asked regulators to increase the amount it can charge consumers to help recover the cost of renewable-energy generation. ...If approved, the increase would take effect Jan. 1 and increase typical residential bills by 33 cents a month.
Also filed under [
Colorado]
The quest for answers - and compensation - for electrical pollution on the farm
November, 2008 by Kate Proctor in Better Farming
November, 2008 by Kate Proctor in Better Farming
Both animal and human health is suffering from stray voltage that can cause catastrophic problems in the barn. But nailing down the precise causes and where the responsibility lies has proved a long and difficult struggle
Driven out of business as a result of a raft of health and behaviour problems suffered by their herd, beef producers Ross and Darlene Brindley are suing Hydro One Networks Inc. and Edmonton Power Corporation (EPCOR) for a hefty $5 million. They claim that stray voltage from EPCOR's wind turbines not only destroyed their herd, but has also had a severe impact on their own health as well. And they are not alone.
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