Times that Try Men’s Souls, but Shouldn’t

November 13, 2008

The case can be made that all times are times that try men’s souls.  Thomas Paine saw the revolutionary period in America as a particularly noteworthy—or quote-worthy—example of the effect, but we think a competent historian could label any period as a trying time for some, if not all, of a population.

Of course, compared to what we’ve been through in the last year in the name of renewable energy, we feel churlish in considering this politically transitional period as ‘trying’.  The candidate who described the most forward-looking and comprehensive renewable energy plan is the one who will move into the White House in January, a change of address that will encourage most clean energy advocates.  And his holding fast to that plan throughout the primary and general election seasons gives us reason to hope that his positions were true positions, not just seines for catching and releasing environmental voters. (more…)

Utility-Scale Solar Power Plant Planned for McCain’s State Needs Solar Tax Credits to Survive

February 22, 2008

Abengoa Solar Power Tower near Seville, Spain
A ‘power tower’ type of CSP plant
near Seville, Spain
; photo credit: Abengoa

Arizona Public Service Co. (APS) has announced plans for one of the world’s largest solar facilities – a 280-megawatt (MW) concentrating solar power (CSP) plant – to be built 70 miles southwest of Phoenix, near Gila Bend, AZ.

The project is enthusiastically supported by Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano. However, its viability is dependent on the long-term extension of investment tax credits for solar facilities, which have gone down to defeat twice since December in the U.S. Congress. On both occasions, ironically enough, Arizona senator and presidential candidate John McCain was absent for the crucial vote.

(more…)

Solar Citizen Spotlight

January 29, 2008

David Hall

dh.jpg

Crowding the bank of the lower Merrimac River in the northeast corner of Massachusetts, the small coastal city of Newburyport has seen its share of innovation since its incorporation in 1764. It hosted the first ever U.S. Coast Guard station, state mint and treasury, built the first clipper ship and carried out the first ‘tea party’ rebellion against the British tea tax. Today its identity is as an historic seaport with a vibrant tourism industry and a wealth of historic buildings. It organizes waterfront concerts in summer, an annual literary festival and a week-long ‘Yankee Homecoming’ festival.

The city also plays host to a downtown shopping mall, the Tannery, named after the business that was once housed in the restored mill complex on Water Street. And the Tannery can claim its own share in the Newburyport story of innovation, thanks to David Hall of Hall and Moscow, the management company. David has been instrumental in making the mall the largest user of solar PV power in the city, with 392 panels on the roof of two of the buildings and a highly visible pole-mounted 1.2kW tracking array in the main parking lot. The system is designed for a total capacity of 60kW, the most power that Hall and Moscow would be able to offset from the site under Massachusetts’ net metering laws. And in 2007, it produced a monthly average output of over 6 MWh. (more…)

We All Go Down Together

December 13, 2007

Complacency is a far more dangerous attitude than outrage
—Naomi Littlebear

…and in the end, complacency and self-interest ruled. Re-election campaign funds, local concerns tied to a fossil of a fuel industry, loyalty to party despite all common sense and compelling evidence of need; these were what ruled. We should note the date: December 13, 2007. It was on the morning of this day that the U.S. Senate failed by a single vote to include a tax title in the 2007 energy bill, ending the prospect of government support for renewable energy in America for the foreseeable future.

How will historians look back on, and write about, this episode in years to come? They may have difficulty in convincing their readers that, in the face of overwhelming evidence of destructive climate change, at a time of peak oil, and on the day conferees departed the Bali Global Warming conference vowing to fight climate change, the U.S. voted once more to fight the rest of the world instead.

No, that’s not overstating the case. For years, Australia shared the odium of being a non-signatory to the Kyoto treaty with the United States; as of this week, we hold that position in glorious isolation, apparently constitutionally incapable of seeing what the rest of the world sees clearly, and legislatively powerless to overcome our own complacency.

What’s left of the Congressional energy bill after almost a full year of development, debate, conferring and compromise will lead to eventual improvements in average fuel economy standards for automobiles and increased renewable fuel production, among other lesser benefits. But what was left out will lead to outcomes that should have been obvious to every Congressperson:

  • The stumbling growth of the solar energy industry will be set back just when distributed clean generation is needed most; many solar entrepreneurs could be forced out of business.
  • Much-needed large-scale renewable energy projects in the planning stage will be jeopardized by uncertainty over funding and viability.
  • Citizens and businesses looking for ways to reduce their carbon footprint by investing in solar energy cannot count on a cent of government help.
  • Foreign companies will continue to grow in strength and market share, making it next to impossible for American companies to have an impact in global markets.

In the USA, we like to voice our pride in our democratic system—checks and balances, proportional representation, and the ability to compromise on legislation. But the raw fact is that what we’ve always considered the strengths of our system are, in terms of the exigencies of planetary sustainability, fatal weaknesses. We cannot compromise on global warming mitigation, and a quick look around the world shows us that no-one else feels that way. We certainly cannot bow yet again to the demands of big oil, yet that is exactly what Congress has done today. That arm of government has shown itself incapable of governing from any platform except complacency.

You can read the full voting record on the tax title provisions (59-40, one vote short of cutting off debate) at the end of this article. Before doing so, you might note how two specific senators voted (or didn’t):

  1. John McCain, R-AZ, failed to cast a vote.
  2. Mary Landrieu, D-LA, was the only Democrat who voted against the tax title. Her reasoning? The bill “left Louisiana and America’s Energy Coast holding the bill.”

McCain’s apparent indecisiveness is difficult to rationalize for a presidential candidate from a state with perhaps more solar resources than any other. And to judge by Landrieu’s remarks, one can only conclude that she feels she has served her Louisiana constituents well; that they will take comfort from the knowledge that, as a result of her vote, all of America—not to mention the planet—is holding the bill.

________________________________________________________________________________

Republican Senators Voting ‘Nay’ on Cloture Vote for Energy Bill Tax Title

Stevens (AK), Sessions, Shelby (AL), Kyl (AZ), Allard (CO), Martinez (FL)
Chambliss, Isakson (GA), Craig, Crapo (ID), Brownback, Roberts (KS)
Bunning, McConnell (KY), Vitter (LA), Bond (MO), Cochran, Lott (MS)
Burr, Dole (NC), Hagel (NE), Gregg, Sununu (NH), Domenici (NM)
Ensign (NV), Voinovich (OH), Coburn, Inhofe (OK), Specter (PA)
DeMint, Graham (SC), Alexander, Corker (TN), Cornyn, Hutchison (TX)
Bennett (UT), Warner (VA), Barrasso, Enzi (WY)

Republican Senators Not Voting on Energy Bill Cloture Vote

McCain (AZ)

Democratic Senators Voting ‘Nay’ on Cloture Vote for Energy Bill Tax Title

Landrieu (LA)

Join Us Now!

Schwarzennegger Urges Bush to Extend Solar Tax Credits

December 11, 2007

arnold.jpgCalifornia’s Governor, Republican Arnold Schwarzennegger, went on record last week as a supporter of the energy bill making its tortuous way through Congress by appealing to President Bush to support solar tax credits. The energy bill has already run into a roadblock in the Senate, and the President has repeatedly threatened to veto the bill in the form passed by the House on December 6th.

In a letter to the President, Schwarzennegger described at length the programs under way in his state and pointed out how important tax credits would be to keeping them on track, not only in California but also in the country at large. He cited this year’s California Solar Initiative, under which 3,000 megawatts of solar projects would be installed to offset growing electricity demand, as well as the Solar Water Heating Efficiency Act due to launch next year.

The Governor’s letter spelled out the environmental, job-creation and economic benefits of these programs, and pointed out that they would be in jeopardy without federal tax credits.

“California,” the letter runs, “and other states cannot succeed in developing solar projects without the tax incentives until the industry has reached a critical scale of production and deployment and can compete with traditional utility energy services.”

An important need highlighted in the Governor’s letter is for tax credits to be extended for multiple years, because the larger projects can take several years from concept to building; investors need to know that the economic formula on which a project was based will still apply when the project qualifies for credit.

In closing, Schwarzennegger made reference to the fact that California had enacted an aggressive renewable portfolio standard (RPS) to increase the proportion of clean energy in the resource mix. This may have been a deliberate way of communicating to President Bush that his own opposition to a national RPS in the Congressional Energy Bill is ill-founded.

2007 Energy Bill down to the Wire

December 5, 2007

As of today, much of the work done over the past year on the Congressional Energy Bill (several different versions thereof) comes to a head. The U.S. House of Representatives is to vote this afternoon on a package that, we are informed by Washington sources, contains the following provisions:

  • Long-term extension of investment tax credits for solar energy and fuel cells This extends the 30% investment tax credit for solar energy and fuel cell development for eight years, and removes an existing limitation that prevents public utilities from claining this credit.
  • Long-term extension of production tax credits for renewable energyProduction tax credits, available to developers of renewable energy facilities for energy produced, are extended until the end of 2012. This would include wind, biomass, geothermal, some hydro, and landfill gas.
  • Long-term extension of residential energy-efficient property credit This extends the credit for residential solar property until the end of 2014. It also increases the annual credit cap to $4000, and allows the credit to be used to offset alternative minimum tax.

The costs associated with these measures amount to some $7.5B over the next ten years. Other measures in the bill address carbon capture and sequestration demonstration projects (incentives of nearly $2B), production credits for cellulosic alcohol fuel (nearly $500M) and biodiesel ($200M), and a one-year extension of credits for energy-efficiency improvements to homes ($400M).

The bill, if passed by the House, still has to face a stern test in the Senate. There the influence of powerful lobbies such as the oil and gas industry has made itself felt more than in the House, and the resultant bill still has to survive threatened veto action by the President. But for the House to be voting on a bill that, in its present form, could actually give the nascent renewable energy industry in America some traction is a mark of progress in itself.

The Senate is expected to take its vote within a few days.  We’ll keep you updated on the progress of the energy bill as the news comes in from Washington.

At Least the Turkey Knows its Fate…

November 19, 2007

So now our congresspersons are back in their home districts, presumably enjoying—in different ways—their families and their turkeys.

U.S.Capitol

But unlike the turkeys, who know exactly what to expect come Thanksgiving, the 2007 Congressional energy bill was left with an uncertain fate when legislators locked their office doors last Friday night.

(more…)

Australian Town Targeted for Total Dependence on Solar Power

November 6, 2007

from Reuters

The Australian town of Cloncurry, which holds the record of having experienced the hottest day in the country’s history (53 degrees Celsius/127 degrees Fahrenheit, in 1889), has been chosen as the site for a  solar thermal power station that should provide 100% of the town’s power within two years.

Read the complete article here. 

Join Us Now!

U.S. Dept. of Energy Looking for 2008 Solar America Cities

November 5, 2007

The U.S. Department of Energy is launching the 2008 Solar America Cities program, a funding opportunity for up to twelve cities that demonstrate their commitment to building a sustainable solar infrastructure.

The program could provide up to $2.4M in financial assistance to city-based projects, and up to $3M in assistance on issues ranging from technical integration to regulatory practices and education.

Cities that benefited from the program in 2007 include Ann Arbor, MI; Austin, TX; Berkeley, CA; Boston, MA; Madison, WI; New Orleans, LA; New York, NY; Pittsburgh, PA; Portland, OR; Salt Lake City, UT; San Diego, CA; San Francisco, CA; and Tucson, AZ.

For more information on the Solar America Cities program click here.

Netherlands Team wins Solar Car Race across Australia

October 31, 2007

EERE Network News

For the fourth time, the World Solar Cup has been won by a team fr07_10_31_nuon_finish.jpgom the Netherlands. The Panasonic World Solar Challenge, which ended over the weekend, pits teams from around the world against each other in a race from Darwin on Australia’s north coast to Adelaide in the south—a distance of some 1870 miles.

The 38 vehicles in the trans-continental race are no ordinary racecars; they are either completely powered by the sun or are specially engineered for extremely low emissions. The winning Nuna4 car completed the course in 33 hours of driving, at an average speed of about 56 mph.

Belgian and German teams took second and third place in the race, while a car from the University of Michigan finished seventh in the Challenge Class.

You can read all about the World Solar cup event here.

Solar Tree Planned for NREL Parking Lot

October 26, 2007

Denver Business Journal

2_540×360.jpgAt the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) in Golden, Colorado, a very special Toyota Prius like the Cal-Cars vehicle shown is being given a very special parking spot of its own.

NREL’s gas-electric hybrid car, which the lab. has converted so that its battery can be recharged from a mains power supply, will soon be able to park under a solar ‘tree’: a canopy of PV panels with a plug for connecting to and recharging the car’s battery…

Read more about NREL’s Solar Tree here.

« Previous PageNext Page »