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U.S. Shift Toward Renewables Is Most Evident in GOP States

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 10, 2016  /   Posted in solar, wind  /   No Comments

U.S. Shift Toward Renewables Is Most Evident in GOP States

Michael Biesecker for the Associated Press:

Wind turbines and solar panels accounted for more than two-thirds of all new electric generation capacity added to the nation’s grid in 2015, according to a recent analysis by the U.S. Department of Energy. The remaining third was largely new power plants fueled by natural gas, which has become cheap and plentiful as a result of hydraulic fracturing.

It was the second straight year U.S. investment in renewable energy projects has outpaced that of fossil fuels. Robust growth is once again predicted for this year.

And while Republican lawmakers in Washington have fought to protect coal-fired power plants, opposing President Barack Obama’s efforts to curtail climate-warming carbon emissions, data show their home states are often the ones benefiting most from the nation’s accelerating shift to renewable energy.

Leading the way in new wind projects are GOP strongholds Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas, home to some of the leading critics of climate science and renewable energy incentives in Congress. Republican-dominated North Carolina trails only California in new solar farms, thanks largely to pro-renewables polices enacted years ago under a Democratic legislature.

The most dramatic change has been seen in the plummeting cost of emissions-free wind energy, which has declined by two-thirds in the last six years thanks to the availability of cheaper, more efficient turbines. An annual analysis by the investment firm Lazard determined that wind energy is now the lowest-cost energy source, even before federal green-energy tax incentives are factored in.

Billions of dollars in private equity are going to construct massive new renewables projects, especially in the Sun Belt and Great Plains. Thousands of miles of new high-voltage transmission lines are also under construction to send power from the wind and sun from the sparsely populated areas where it is collected to the urban centers where it’s needed.

Even with the surge in new projects, energy from such renewable sources as wind, solar and water accounted for only about a tenth of total U.S. power generation last year.

Still, the U.S. leads the world in wind energy with about 48,800 utility-scale turbines operating across the country, generating enough electricity to power about 20 million homes. By 2030, the Energy Department estimates wind will provide a fifth of the nation’s electricity.

“Wind energy is very low-cost and not subject to the fuel price risk that both natural gas and coal face,” said Michael Goggin, senior director of research at the American Wind Energy Association, an industry trade group. “Adding wind is cheaper than new gas or new coal. It is by far the lowest-cost resource.”

Coal has dropped over the last decade from providing half of all U.S. electricity to about one-third.

While new clean-air regulations and tax incentives for renewables are having a negative impact on coal, the plummeting cost of cleaner-burning natural gas made possible by fracking is largely driving the closure of many old coal-fired power plants. Exports of coal to foreign customers such as China also are down.

“We didn’t see the decline coming this fast and this deep,” said Luke Popovich, spokesman for the National Mining Association, an industry trade group.

Meanwhile, the long-promised potential of Clean Coal technology has yet to be realized. A model power plant in Mississippi designed to capture the carbon dioxide generated from burning coal has encountered repeated delays and multibillion-dollar cost overruns.

Closures mean America’s coal mines now employ about only about 56,700 people, down from a peak of more than 10 times that. By contrast, the fast-growing solar industry now employs more than 210,000 workers. Wind energy accounts for another 77,000 by federal estimates.

Political giving by the big coal companies and their executives has declined, but the industry still spends heavily to protect its interests in Washington. Pro-coal interests spent at least $11 million to influence the 2014 Congressional midterm elections, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics. More than 95 percent of that went to support Republican candidates.

Among them is Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, who rarely misses an opportunity to blame Obama’s “War on Coal” for killing mining jobs. Nearly all of the 27 states that have sued to stop the administration’s carbon emissions-cutting Clean Power Plan have GOP governors.

For Republicans from areas benefiting from renewable energy, the political calculus can be complicated. An increasing number of them try to balance criticizing Obama’s environmental efforts with quietly supporting the federal tax incentives helping drive investment in renewables.

GOP leaders compromised with Democrats and a growing number of pro-renewables Republicans to include a five-year extension of tax breaks for wind and solar projects as part of a federal budget agreement approved in December.

Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, among the earliest boosters of government support for wind power, points out that fossil fuels and nuclear plants have long benefited from tax credits. Last month, MidAmerican Energy announced plans to invest another $3.6 billion to add new turbines in Iowa, which already gets about a third of its electricity from the wind.

“We’ve seen the economic success story behind renewables up close and personal,” Grassley said as the new project was announced. “There are more than 6,000 good wind jobs in Iowa.”

Full article: GOP states benefiting from shift to wind and solar energy Video available with original article.


 

Follow Michael Biesecker on Twitter at https://twitter.com/mbieseck and find his work at http://bigstory.ap.org/content/michael-biesecker


 

Harvard Scientist and High-Profile Skeptic on Solar Power Has Changed His Mind

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 10, 2016  /   Posted in solar  /   No Comments

High-Profile Skeptic on Solar Power Has Changed His Mind

Joe Ryan for Bloomberg News:

David Keith, a Harvard University scientist, has long doubted solar energy’s potential to compete on cost with conventional power sources. Now he sees the light.

“I was wrong,” largely because the fundamentals of solar power have changed, Keith, a professor of applied physics and public policy, wrote in a recent essay. “One can now build systems in the world’s sunny locations and get very cheap power.”

His reversal reflects the steep declines in producing electricity from sunlight. Even without government subsidies, power from large solar farms in some regions is now significantly below $40 a megawatt-hour and is on pace to drop below $20 by 2020, Keith wrote. That would be the cheapest power on the planet.

It’s a significant shift from his earlier stance, that high costs would relegate solar power to being “green bling for the wealthy.”

“Obviously the market was created by subsidies,” Keith said in an interview Tuesday. “But the subsidy-created market really did drive this supply chain innovation.”

Full article: Harvard Scientist, Longtime Solar Skeptic, Now Sees the Light

Hoosier Interfaith Power & Light (H-IPL) Seeking New Part-time Executive Director

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 09, 2016  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Hoosier Interfaith Power & Light

H-IPL Seeking Executive Director

Hoosier Interfaith Power and Light seeks a new Executive Director to be begin summer of 2016. This is a part-time salaried position (20-25 hrs./week). While H-IPL is a state-wide organization, the E.D. must be able to spend significant time in Indianapolis. The ideal Director will have

  • a passion for combating climate change
  • experience in skillfully managing programs, staff and volunteers
  • fundraising skills
  • communication skills
  • connection to a religious community
  • at least an undergrad degree (bachelor of arts or science) in a relevant subject

Application Deadline is May 13. Please email resumé and cover letter to board member Rev. Suzanne Wille at rector@allsaintsindy.org.

The Board would be grateful for any help you could give us in recruiting the best candidates during our search. Please consider those you know who might be interested in this position and email your recommendations, and/or questions, to board member Rev. Dennis Shock at dennis.shock@gmail.com.

Hoosier Interfaith Power & Light · 1000 W 42nd St, The HIVE at C.T.S., Indianapolis, IN 46208, United States

US DOE EIA Report: Indiana’s coal-power use falls 37 percent since ’07

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 09, 2016  /   Posted in wind  /   No Comments

Report: Indiana's coal-power use falls 37 percent since '07

  • By RICK CALLAHAN

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana's consumption of coal for electricity generation plunged nearly 40 percent from 2007 through 2015 as its utilities retired older coal-fired plants and increasingly embraced natural gas and renewable energy sources, a new federal report shows.

Indiana was among three states that saw big declines in coal consumption for electricity over that 8-year period, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Its report, release last week, found that coal used for power generation fell 37 percent in Indiana between 2007 and 2015, while Ohio's dropped 49 percent and Pennsylvania's fell 44 percent.

Jodi Perras, who is the Indiana representative for the Sierra Club's Beyond Coal Campaign, said the report offers the latest evidence that coal-fired power plants are on the way out in the U.S. amid a changing energy market and tightening federal regulations on the pollutants those plants release as they burn the fossil fuel.

Perras said the state's utilities are generally operating their coal plants less often and relying more on natural gas power plants that generate electricity at a lower cost than coal.

Wind farms are also becoming more common in Indiana, helping with the shift away from coal, she said.

"Coal is in decline. This is happening across the country because there are much cheaper and cleaner ways to generate electricity. These market forces are forcing coal out of the market," Perras said.

Indiana has long been dependent on coal to light its homes and power its factories.

But the percentage of Indiana's electricity generated by coal-fired power plants fell from 92 percent in 2000 to 79.7 percent in 2014, according to a March report by the Energy Information Administration, a branch of the U.S. Department of Energy.

There's no question Indiana's reliance on coal for power is decreasing because of pressure from natural gas, which has become cheap and plentiful as a result of hydraulic fracturing, said Bruce Stevens, president of the Indiana Coal Council.

But he said coal, which is abundant in Indiana's southwestern counties, will remain a top state power source for decades.

Stevens also said the new federal report provides a somewhat skewed picture of Indiana's declining reliance on coal for power because of the years it uses in its comparison. He said Indiana's winters in 2013 and 2014 were bitterly cold and both years the state's coal-fired power plants stocked up on and used significantly more coal to meet power demand.

But he said Indiana had a relatively mild winter and an unusually mild summer in 2015 which together reduced power consumption by homeowners and businesses because they needed to run furnaces and air conditioning units less often than normal.

"If you make the same comparison, 2007 with 2013 or 2014, the numbers would look significantly different," Stevens said.

Proposed Indiana Wind Farm Draws Opposition From Henry Co. (IN) Residents

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 09, 2016  /   Posted in Uncategorized, wind  /   No Comments

Proposed Indiana Wind Farm Draws Opposition From Residents

Proposed Indiana Wind Farm Draws Opposition From Residents
A Texas based corporation wants to build a windfarm in northwestern Henry County, but the move is drawing opposition from some local residents.

by  NICK JANZEN

A Texas based corporation wants to build a windfarm in northwestern Henry County, but the move is drawing opposition from some local residents.

The Calpine Corporation intends to build 80-100 turbines for a 200 megawatt wind farm. The proposed Big Blue River Wind Farm would include the townships of Greensboro, Jefferson, Harrison and Prairie.

But some Henry County residents oppose it.

Susie Eichhorn’s family owns a farm in the area. The Calpine Corporation wants to lease part of their property. But she says wind turbines can be noisy and sunlight can reflect off the blades, creating a strobe effect.

“And, you know, it would be hard to sit on your front porch and talk with friends,” Eichhorn says. “It would just impact your daily life, 24-7.”

So, Eichhorn started the group “No Wind Farms.” She says they need more regulations – like minimum distance from a neighboring property.

Windfarm regulations in Indiana vary from county to county. In this instance, the “setback” would be 550-feet.

Calpine Corporation is still seeking lease agreements from area landowners. From there, the Henry County Planning Commission would have to approve the project.

Two separate wind farms have already been approved in southern Henry County.

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