News
Category:
Denmark
Local councils in the country's 28 windiest towns are digging in their heels against a national plan that would cluster the next generation of high-efficiency wind turbines within their borders, Politiken newspaper reports. ...Facing the prospect of asking their residents to accept an average of 35 giant wind turbines, local councillors are already warning national politicians that they are preparing to put up a fight.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
Zoning/Planning]
America has an addiction. Denmark's alternative energy producers may have the cure
February 3, 2006 in The Copenhagen Post
February 3, 2006 in The Copenhagen Post
The excitement amongst Danish alternative energy producers was tangible late Wednesday night as US president uttered the words 'America is addicted to oil' and that something must be done about it.
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Technology|
USA]
Cap Gemini Ernst & Young launches European deregulation Index
October, 2002 by Cap Gemini Ernst & Young in European Energy Markets Deregulation Observatory
October, 2002 by Cap Gemini Ernst & Young in European Energy Markets Deregulation Observatory
In conclusion, this study has shown that in many countries deregulation is having the expected effect of increased competition leading to price reduction. However, it is evident that pricing in markets depends not just on the status of deregulation, but also on the broader aspects of competition. Key factors here include the balance of supply and demand, generation fuel costs, the learning process that new markets go through, competition within different market segments and the costs of access to transmission and distribution networks. Deregulation is a long-term process that requires sustained attention.
Danish Wind Industry Association managing director Jan Hylleberg said ‘Our surveys show there's a huge desire in the councils to construct more windmills ...however, the energy gained from any new wind turbines would almost be offset by the planned removal of older and malfunctioning ones by 2020.
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Energy Policy]
The nation that leads the world in wind-farm development is going cool on the environmentally friendly source of power.
Since the boom year of 2000, when as many as 748 turbines were erected, the number being built in Denmark has steadily fallen. So far this year, only six new wind turbines have been put up.
While many countries around the world are clamouring to buy Danish wind turbines, Denmark’s government is finding it difficult to convince its own population to accept an increase in the domestic use of the green technology.
Describing turbines as “poorly located, noisy and unsightly”, a number of local authorities, backed by grass-roots campaigners, are rejecting plans for new wind farms.
Danish developer pushes Massachusetts wind power
August 29, 2006 by David Kibbe, Staff Writer in South Coast Today
August 29, 2006 by David Kibbe, Staff Writer in South Coast Today
BOSTON — A Danish wind farm developer yesterday encouraged Massachusetts legislators to support off-shore wind power, saying concerns about navigation, the view and the environment could be resolved.
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General|
Massachusetts]
Danish island touts clean energy, but reality sets in
February 9, 2006 by Mary Jacoby in The Wall Street Journal
February 9, 2006 by Mary Jacoby in The Wall Street Journal
SAMSOE, Denmark -- In the late 1990s, Denmark set out to turn this farming and summer-vacation island in the Kattegat Sea into a showcase for clean energy. The government dangled generous financial subsidies. A former environmental studies teacher, Soren Hermansen, was hired to persuade residents to invest in wind turbines, solar panels, electric cars and giant straw-burning furnaces.
Also filed under [
General|
Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
Danish study says offshore projects pose few risks
February 11, 2007 by Jeff Montgomery in The News Journal
February 11, 2007 by Jeff Montgomery in The News Journal
Wind power lessons in the North Sea paved some of the road to a proposed 200-turbine wind farm off Delaware’s shoreline.
One of the most important findings recently shared from offshore projects in Denmark: Big wind farms can operate with few environmental risks to birds, fish and other aquatic creatures “under the right conditions.”
“Appropriate siting of offshore wind farms is an essential precondition for ensuring limited impact on nature and the environment,” the Danish Energy Authority reported in November.
Denmark released its report after plugging in what is now the world’s largest offshore wind operation: Two sites with 152 turbines located up to 12.4 miles offshore.
“Appropriate” is the key word to Susan Nickerson, a Massachusetts environmentalist who attended a conference in Denmark to mark release of the report last year.
“The big discussion that’s unfolding here is: How much data do you need preconstruction, and how much should this concept of ‘adaptive management’ be relied upon,” Nickerson said.
Denmark, a world leader in wind energy production and consumption, has built the world's largest offshore wind park in the North Sea as it aims to generate 75 percent of its electricity needs with wind power by 2025.
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General|
Energy Policy]
Denmark still leads the world in wind power per capita but experts are worried that its position is starting to weaken.
Statistics continue to support Denmark's claim to being one of the world leaders when it comes to wind energy, but experts are concerned over failure to erect new wind turbines, reports financial daily Børsen.
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General|
Energy Policy]
The Liberal Party wants to cut state funding for land-based wind turbines in favour of financing biogas, hydrogen and solar cell development. Several parties oppose the idea. ...Party group chairman Kristian Thulesen Dahl said consumers had paid huge additional charges on their electric bills for almost three decades, based on an ideological desire to promote the development of wind turbines.
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
Dong Energy to proceed with Horns Rev II offshore wind farm
May 4, 2007 by Clare Watson in Energy Business
May 4, 2007 by Clare Watson in Energy Business
Danish utility Dong Energy has announced that it is to proceed with the development of the Horns Rev II offshore wind farm in the North Sea off Esbjerg. The new site will be situated to the north of the existing Horns Rev facility, and will require an investment of approximately DKK3.5 billion.
Also filed under [
General|
Zoning/Planning]
The country’s energy companies are not convinced that wind power is the way of the future.................
The companies believe that coal-powered electricity will still be the largest supplier of the nation’s energy, despite the trend toward environmentally-conscious sources.
‘Wind energy can’t solve the energy problem in the near future because it’s too unstable and possibly too expensive,’ said Anders Eldrup, chief executive of Dong.
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General|
Energy Policy]
Europe replaces old wind farms; More power from fewer, bigger turbines
January 1, 2009 by Peter Fairley in IEEE Spectrum
January 1, 2009 by Peter Fairley in IEEE Spectrum
The big challenge, wind developers acknowledge, is modifying site permits that restrict the spacing and height of turbines. Neighbors are often put off by the visual impact of the turbines themselves ...Wind developers face an additional hurdle to repower in Denmark, where legislation going into effect next year will require wind-park operators to compensate residents if wind turbines reduce their property values.
Exporters are smiling over the possibility of an EU requirement to more than triple the EU’s use of renewable energy
December 21, 2006 in The Copenhagen Post
December 21, 2006 in The Copenhagen Post
A sweeping plan to dramatically increase the European Union’s use of renewable energy sources by 2020 has Danish politicians and exporters looking towards a greener future.
Renewable energy use in the EU currently sits at 6 percent, but, according to Børsen financial daily, the European Commission’s forthcoming proposal for a common energy policy would increase that level to 20 percent within two decades.
Much of the increase will rely on sources such as wind and bio-ethanol, areas where the nation is already strongly represented on the world market. Exporters are seeing the proposal as an opportunity to increase their share of European sales.
Governments struggle to find policies that will spur renewable-energy industries — without coddling them
February 12, 2007 by Leila Abboud, Staff Reporter Paris bureau in Wall Street Journal
February 12, 2007 by Leila Abboud, Staff Reporter Paris bureau in Wall Street Journal
Since the oil shocks of the 1970s, governments around the world have paid plenty of lip service to renewable energies such as wind and solar power. But only a few governments have been able to engineer policies that have begun to bring alternative energies into wider use. Renewable fuels provided 18% of the world’s total electricity supply in 2004, according to figures from the International Energy Agency, a Paris-based intergovernmental organization. Almost all of that, though, came from hydropower, a source with limited growth potential because of geographic constraints. The use of wind and solar power is growing, but they still generated only 1% of global electricity production in 2004, the latest year for which figures are available.
Harnessing the power of sea will demand economic muscle
September 11, 2006 by Michael J. Strauss in International Herald Tribune
September 11, 2006 by Michael J. Strauss in International Herald Tribune
PARIS As recently as two years ago, few energy analysts believed that ocean power - harvesting electricity from tides and waves - had a future. Offshore conditions seemed too harsh, the costs too high.
The International Energy Agency, a Paris-based research body that advises western governments, dismissed the technology in one paragraph in a 570-page study of energy resources that it published in 2004, saying it was "still in its infancy."
But with crude oil heading to $80 a barrel, interest - from both investors and researchers - has surged.
High levels of energy production and low consumption have helped to give Denmark an energy surplus
September 25, 2006 in The Copenhagen Post
September 25, 2006 in The Copenhagen Post
A twin national focus on renewable energy and reduced consumption - combined with North Sea oil reserves, have helped to make Denmark the only EU country not reliant on imported energy, according to the latest statistics from Eurostat.
Also filed under [
General|
Energy Policy]
Parliament approved the construction of Denmark's largest offshore wind turbine park on Tuesday. The wind farm will be placed in the Kattegat strait of the North Sea between Jutland and the island of Anholt by 2012.
The turbines will be capable of producing 400 megawatts of energy ...Denmark has 5267 turbines, of which nearly 70 percent are located on Jutland.
Also filed under [
General]
At LM Glasfiber in Lunderskov, Helge Sander, the Danish Minister of Science, has inaugurated the world’s first wind tunnel custom-designed for research and testing of the aerodynamic properties of rotor blades.
Also filed under [
General|
Technology]
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