At the University of Guam, a 1 kW wind turbine was installed. It is being used as a demonstration of how the island of Guam can reduce its reliance on imported fuels.

The University of Guam’s sustainability director for the Centre for Island Sustainability, Elvie Tyler, said the turbine is being used by students as an educational tool to collect data and study renewable energy application on Guam. It is also powering an electric car.

The turbine was installed at the Sustainable Model Home at UOG’s house No. 32 in the Dean’s Circle, according to Tyler.

That house was also equipped with a solar oven, solar panels, and a rainwater harvesting system.

Source: Guampdn.com

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According to a Photovoltaikzentrum report, the cost of turnkey photovoltaic solar  power plants decreased by 40% from 2001 to 2012.

Photovoltaic Solar Power Plant

Solar Power Plant – Obtained with thanks from Bert Van Dijk on Flickr.

Turnkey solar power plants are pre-built with the equipment necessary to operate so that installers can just connect them and they will work, as opposed to traditional solar power plants, which contain many separate parts  such as an inverter, batteries, charge controller, separate solar panels, that have to be set up manually, and some of them even have to be built on site, such as mounting equipment.

Turnkey solar power plants are important because they reduce the amount of labour required to assemble solar power plants. The labour cost of building solar power plants is extremely high (near the cost of solar panels themselves).

Source: PV-Magazine.com

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Hospitals and basic health units in Pakistan are among those that will receive electricity due to the installation of a 300 MW (300,000 kW/300 million watts) solar power plant in Pakistan.

This plant is to be built in on 1,500 acres of land in Khuchlack and Pishin to provide electricity to underdeveloped regions that are suffering from electricity shortages, and communities without electricity. Read about the importance of electricity.

The plant will be near Quetta, which is Balochistan’s largest city.

There are also 220 kV (220,000 volts) electricity transmission cables being built in Loralai DG, and Dhadu-Khuzdar which are to be completed next year to help reduce the need for load-shedding.

Load-shedding is literally the shedding of electricity loads. Buildings are loads, and they are shed by shutting off their power during electricity shortages to prevent electricity grid voltage sag, which causes brownouts and blackouts. Voltage sag is a voltage decrease caused when electric current is drawn from a power supply.

Additional electricity transmission lines can help this by connecting more power plants to the electricity grid to assist the overburdened ones.

Source: PV-Magazine.com

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The Notrees wind farm of Texas has now been equipped with what was called “the world’s largest energy storage system”. It is a 36 MW bank of batteries, which equivalent to the power consumption of 12,000 houses.

Sayda wind farm in cloudy weather.

Sayda Wind Park – Obtained with thanks from Eclipse.sx on Wikimedia Commons.

Duke Energy Renewables, a part of Duke Energy, is the company that owns the Notrees wind farm and chose to have Xtreme Energy, an Austin-based company equip this particular wind farm with the batteries because it is large and spacious (wind farms are always large and spacious, but, apparently, this one is particularly spacious).

The wind energy storage industry is in it’s infancy, and several years ago, there was almost no wind energy storage in use anywhere. The first few projects that store wind energy on a large scale are important proof-of-concept to prospective wind farm developers, power plant operators, the Department of Energy, and everyone else that is uncertain about the viability of wind energy storage.

This is a project that received $22 million of funding from the U.S Department of Energy (a matching grant), translating to a cost of $0.61 per watt of energy the system can provide.

Although energy storage systems, including this one, are very expensive, they do have to be tested, and the need for them is growing. Even traditional coal, natural gas, and nuclear power plants are not adjustable enough. Nuclear power plants are virtually nonadjustable, natural gas and coal plants take 3 hours to start, and cannot respond to sudden changes of electricity demand.

At night, when electricity demand drops, they still produce as much electricity as they did at daytime, and pass the cost of that surplus electricity, which goes to waste, onto consumers. Batteries like these help all of these power plants to store the surplus energy so that it can be used to meet increased electricity demand during peak hours (electricity demand often peaks in the afternoon, partly due to air conditioner usage).

Almost all power plants can benefit from energy storage, as they are not virtually uncontrollable (except hydroelectric power plants), and this battery is not only an important test, but it also helps to back up the electricity grid in the event of power shortages.

Source: Duke Energy

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According to a New Mexico Public Regulation Commission document, there is a PPA (Power Purchase Agreement) between First Solar and El Paso Electric Company under which First Solar will sell solar power from its thin-film solar panels for 5.8 U.S cents ($0.0579) per kWh to El Paso Electric Company.

This is outstanding because the average retail price of electricity in the United States is twice that, 11.7 cents per kWh, and the cost to generate electricity (which is not the same as the retail price of it) from a conventional coal power plant, according to the U.S Department of Energy is 9.7 cents per kWh. The cost of electricity from a coal power plant with CCS (Carbon Capture and Storage, otherwise known as “clean coal”) is 13.8 cents per kWh.

Middlebury College’s Solar Panel Array (This was part of the 2011 American Department of Energy Solar Decathlon). Image obtained with thanks from Dept of Energy Solar Decathlon on Flickr.

Utility companies often purchase electricity from producers and resell it to residents.

The name of the power plant is Macho Springs Solar Park, and it is located in New Mexico.

Keep in mind that coal was never economical, or acceptable due to hidden costs which are mentioned below.

According to a Harvard study, the environmental and public health damage caused by coal power plant emissions and coal mining would double to triple the retail price of coal electricity to 19 cents per kWh or triple it to 29 cents per kWh, putting it above that of almost all electricity sources, including the expensive conventional utility-scale solar (21 cents per kWh) and wind power plants.

Also keep in mind that coal power plants with CCS do not compensate for all environmental damage such as mining, miner deaths, slurry-related issues, and the scattering of coal into the air and water bodies from MTR (mountaintop removal mining).

The true cost of an electricity source includes all costs it incurs both directly and indirectly, therefore, this should be always be considered.

“The public is unfairly paying for the impacts of coal use,” says Dr. Paul Epstein, the lead author of the report and associate director of the Center for Health and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School.”

Source: PV-magazine.com

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In the state of Chhattisgarh, India, a 100 MW (100,000 kW) solar power plant is to be constructed, and 10 billion rupees ($183 million USD) of that will be provided by Welspun Renewables Energy Ltd, who is backed by the Indian textile-to-infrastructure conglomerate Welspun Group to partly fund it.



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This means that Welspun is contributing $1.83 USD per watt or 100 rupees per watt of the project cost (divide the cost by the number of watts). The state government is assisting by facilitating the necessary approvals and land acquisition for the power station.

This project is slated to be built and commissioned in the next three years.

Source: Wall Street Journal

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Researchers at Stanford University developed a solar-powered generator made of purely carbon. This is also known as a photovoltaic cell, which is the most common type of solar-powered generator.

Stanford’s all-carbon solar cell. Image obtained with thanks from the Stanford website .

Photovoltaic cells are the electricity-generating parts of a solar panel. Solar panels are just a protective housing for solar cells, which are fragile semiconductor devices.

The significance of this invention is due to the abundance and low cost of carbon. Unlike typical silicon wafer solar cells which are often rigid, it is deposited onto a substrate (surface) from a liquid solution.

Thin film solar cells were invented long ago, but, this is just a perk which makes it easy to manufacture solar cells using small amounts of the semiconductor material required, and it facilitates the manufacture of flexible and non-flat solar panels in general.

Source: Stanford Website

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Jamaica Public Service (a utility company) partnered with the UTECH (University of Technology) to construct a solar energy facility to both provide the institution with electricity, and also to act as a learning tool for the students.

Middlebury College’s Solar Panel Array (This was part of the 2011 American Department of Energy Solar Decathlon). Image obtained with thanks from Dept of Energy Solar Decathlon on Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/solar_decathlon/

This is a pilot project. Early pilot power plants such as these are actually incredibly important to the local solar industry, because they provide proof of concept that it can work in the area (if it does) to those contemplating power plant construction. Seeing a real plant work is a major motive to go through with building their own.

This project is slated to be launched tomorrow, on October 8, 2012.

If you are unsure about the intermittency of solar energy, read about it here.

Source: Jamaica Gleaner

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According to research conducted by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, renewable sources of energy such as the sun and wind could become economically competitive with traditional sources of energy via the use of “liquid batteries”.

Sayda Wind Park – Obtained with thanks from Eclipse.sx on Wikimedia Commons: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Eclipse.sx

This is the first time that I have heard MIT announce that they officially have the answer to the solar and wind intermittency problem. They made many announcements in the past of inventions of theirs that could potentially be cheaper than traditional energy storage systems such as the lithium-ion or lead-acid batteries in use today, but never this.

Primer: The sun does not always shine, the wind does not always blow, wind speeds fluctuate, and the amount of sunlight we receive varies due to clouds. According to the United States Department of Energy 2011 Annual Energy Outlook, the average cost of wind power in the U.S is only 9.7 cents per kWh (kilowatt-hour) of electricity that wind farms generate.

What this translates to: Wind power’s problem is no longer the cost to generate it. It is now mainly intermittency. Fluctuations in the amount of power generated by a wind farm can be compensated for by adjusting other hydroelectric, or fossil fueled natural gas, nuclear, or coal power plants. If a wind farm generates more than necessary, other power plants can be turned down to compensate for that, and back up again when there is less than enough wind power available.

The ability of fossil fueled power plants to adjust is very limited because they take long to make major adjustments in power production and energy storage enables wind farms to independently supply power without the help of other power plants.

This can be achieved with lithium-ion or lead-acid batteries, but these are too expensive. The cost issue associated with lead-acid batteries is because of their short lifespan and and inefficiency. They have to be replaced frequently, waste too much electricity, and this cost of these adds up.

According to MIT, liquid batteries are inexpensive and have a longer lifespan than traditional batteries. The three materials contained in the liquid batteries each settle in separate layers due to the difference in their densities, which, in this case, is a good thing. They have to be separate to work correctly.

This project was conducted with the importance of material availability and abundance in mind. All three layers of the battery materials used are abundant and inexpensive.

“We explored many chemistries,” Sadoway says. The negative electrode (anode) is in the top layer and is made of magnesium, the middle layer, which is the electrolyte consists of a salt mixture containing magnesium chloride, and the bottom layer which is the positive electrode (cathode) is made of antimony.

This battery operates at a temperature of 700 °C, which is 1,292 °F.

Discharging: The battery generates an electric current as each magnesium atom (this is in the negative electrode) loses two electrons, then they are magnesium ions which travel to the other antimony electrode. The magnesium ions then reacquire two more electrons and become magnesium again because of this. This causes an alloy to form with the antimony.

Charging: When the battery is supplied with an electric current, this process is reversed and the electrons are driven out of the antimony electrode, and back to the magnesium electrode.

As I say sometimes, batteries do not store electricity, they generate it. When you charge a battery,  you supply it with an electric current that drives a chemical reaction of which the one mentioned above is an example.  You reverse that process to make the battery generate electricity.

Source: MIT News Office

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In this article, I explain why wind turbines can be operated with a small physical footprint with a change of application.

First of all: The efficacy of a power source is heavily dependent on how it is applied. Wind farms are no exception to this rule. They are traditionally set up on their own land on which they are spaced hundreds of feet to ensure the turbines don’t interfere with each other.

This is why wind farms require large amounts of space, however, almost all of that space is unused and can be put to use for farming and many other activities.

Wind turbines, however, can be utilized in such a way that they require very little land. Below, i’ll explain why.

GE Wind Turbines with Honda S2000 – Obtained with thanks from kevbo1983 on Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/kevinwhite/

Example turbine:

A 2 MW (2,000 kW or 2 million watt) Ecotechnica (now Alstom Wind) E80 wind turbine has a tower width of 3.95 metres (13 feet). [Source - Page 2]. The amount of space that a wind turbine physically occupies on the ground is equal to the width of the tower.

This could power 500 homes, assuming that each of the homes consumes 4 kW and is capable of fitting in one person’s back yard, because it requires only 13 feet of space on the ground. Most of the horizontal space it requires is above ground because the blades are so long.

One 2 MW turbine that could power 500 homes could be setup in each neighbourhood that contains less than 20 people, for example and still generate enough electricity for 500 homes. Therefore, if a wind turbine this size was set up in every neighbourhood, they would generate far more than enough power for everyone.

In stagnant areas, it may be cheaper to use residential rooftop solar panels on the houses instead.

If the turbines are not being placed on private property, such as a person’s back yard, for example: The land could be leased to the power company or community purchase group by the government.

Reliability: The concept I mentioned is a form of distributed wind power. It entails spreading wind farms out over a wide area, without actually wasting much space because the land surrounding them can still be used for anything, including farming, and another benefit is that it won’t be polluted with smoke, and while generating very little noise most of the time.

When you space out wind turbines this much, you actually increase their reliability. The wind may slow down at one site where there are few turbines, but, it is actually very likely to pick up speed in another location where there are other turbines.

The turbines, in this case, actually back each other up. If all of the wind turbines were clustered into the area in which the wind speed slowed, or even stopped, which is how a traditional wind farm is setup, all of them will generate less electricity or none at all.

My idea entails that less energy storage will be required to back the turbines up, because of the high likelihood that the other turbines are generating electricity, because they are spaced out and scattered everywhere. If the wind is not blowing in one location, it is likely to be blowing elsewhere. If there is any shortage, existing power plants can scale production up or peaking power plants can be switched on within minutes to compensate for that.

This also means that the power plants backing them up would not have to generate as much electricity to do so.

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