|
| Thursday, December 16, 2010 | | · | Cleaner Coal Generation on Front Burner - FutureGen holds hope | | Wednesday, December 15, 2010 | | · | Electric Cars Pull In - But will they go anywhere? | | Tuesday, December 14, 2010 | | · | Natural Gas May Undercut Coal - But coal won't sit idle | | Monday, December 06, 2010 | | · | Big Oil Seeks Natural Gas Partner - Chevron-Atlas Deal a Precursor of Things to Come | | Friday, November 19, 2010 | | · | Nuclear At a Crossroads - Low Gas Prices, Economic Downturn Takes Toll | | Wednesday, November 17, 2010 | | · | Nuclear Renaissance Has Begun - TVA, Alstom, Westinghouse Forging Ahead | | Monday, November 15, 2010 | | · | Subsidizing Fossil Fuels and Green Energy - Subsidies Built Coal, Can they do the same for Wind? | | Friday, November 05, 2010 | | · | Soaring Natural Gas Use, Astronomical Energy Growth - New Insights into the Future of Electricity | | Friday, October 29, 2010 | | · | Coal Generation in Retreat - Natural Gas Use to Soar | | Monday, October 18, 2010 | | · | SMART GRID TRANSPORT - EVs and the Smart Grid |
Older Articles |
|
|
|
|
| Nuclear Energy's Presence |
|
January 9, 2008
The nuclear sector's prospects got a little brighter over the holidays. Congress passed legislation to provide loan guarantees to lenders of up to $18.5 billion to facilitate the development of next generation nuclear plants. But the thorny issue of where to store the spent fuel remains unresolved, leaving nuclear operators no option but to store that radioactive material on site.
With the world focused on lessening the level of greenhouse gas emissions, the subject of nuclear energy is gaining increasing attention. Both proponents and opponents of the $18.5 billion earmark reacted to the news, with the former saying it would go a long way toward ushering in a new era of electricity generation while the latter saying it diverts valuable resources away from cleaner and safer forms of energy.
|
|
Posted by webmaster on Wednesday, January 09, 2008 @ 09:13:02 MST (1701 reads)
(Read More... | 7834 bytes more | Score: 0)
Topic: Energy News
|
|
|
|
January 4, 2008
A small central Illinois town got some big news: It has been chosen as the site to build a 21st Century power plant that advertises itself as virtually emissions free and able to sequester and bury carbon dioxide that contributes to global warming.
"FutureGen" -- as the project is known -- won't come cheap. It's a nearly $2 billion investment funded mostly by American taxpayers, and roughly double that of the early estimates. In the end, though, proponents say that it is an essential undertaking, noting that coal is used to produce the preponderance of this country's electric generation and that every effort must be made to make it cleaner. It's particularly true as the global community grapples with how to reduce heat trapping emissions.
|
|
Posted by webmaster on Friday, January 04, 2008 @ 11:20:28 MST (1794 reads)
(Read More... | 8083 bytes more | Score: 0)
Topic: Energy News
|
|
|
|
January 2, 2008
It may be the final stretch of the Bush presidency. But it's just the beginning of new discussions to achieve more aggressive greenhouse gas cuts -- ones that would reach beyond the Kyoto Protocol that ends in 2012.
Talks among 192 nations ended last month in Bali, Indonesia that lay out a broad framework by which they would cut their heat trapping emissions. While no hard targets were set, the agreement does compel all nations to negotiate more precisely their plans beginning in 2009. For their part, developing countries such as India and China that have increasing emissions would receive assistance from richer nations as well as easier access to Western technologies to increase power plant efficiencies and reduce auto emissions.
|
|
Posted by webmaster on Wednesday, January 02, 2008 @ 12:21:08 MST (1599 reads)
(Read More... | 7293 bytes more | Score: 5)
Topic: Energy News
|
|
| FARMINGTON HILLS FIRM WINS ANN ARBOR LED LIGHTING WORK |
|
12/13/2007 - Farmington Hills-based Lumecon LLC said Wednesday that it had won a contract with the city of Ann Arbor to supply more than 1,000 LED retrofits in the city's move to 100 percent LED street lighting downtown.
Lumecon was founded earlier this year as the sales and marketing arm of Relume Technologies Inc., which was founded in 1994 as an LED research and development company.
The Relume LED retrofit system is based on XLamp LEDs from Durham, N.C.-based Cree Inc.
The city's contract was awarded after a 25-fixture evaluation installation showed a 50 percent energy savings and a 3.8-year payback on the initial purchase and installation price of the new lamps.
|
|
Posted by webmaster on Friday, December 14, 2007 @ 11:44:09 MST (2218 reads)
(Read More... | 1904 bytes more | Score: 4)
Topic: Energy News
|
|
| China's Nuclear Power Aspirations |
|
December 12, 2007
China's nuclear program may be a harbinger of things to come in the industry. That nation, which now uses coal to fuel two-thirds of its electric generation, says that its eventual goal is to obtain a third of its power from nuclear energy.
Mainland China has eleven nuclear power reactors in commercial operation -- six of which it has brought on line since 2002, five currently under construction and several others in the works. The aggressive build-out is a response to its reliance on coal and the clean air issues it is creating there. Without change, it will assuredly impact its bustling economy. Unlike western nations, China is unfettered politically with respect to forging ahead with its nuclear expansion. Its experience is therefore going to weigh heavily on the path that developed nations will take.
|
|
Posted by webmaster on Wednesday, December 12, 2007 @ 10:33:43 MST (1763 reads)
(Read More... | 7350 bytes more | Score: 5)
Topic: Energy News
|
|
|
| Michigan GREEN Newsletter |
|
|
|
|
|