Thursday, February 9, 2012

Good article on concentrating solar power for SA


 What should be done about concentrating solar power
 
10th February 2012

 

For a long time, concentrating solar power (CSP) was seen as a cutting-edge renewables technology that would best meet South Africa's energy security needs and support the creation of new industries and technology innovation.

CSP was the thing to do. It still is. It is one of the few new renewables technologies that are pregnant with the capacity for diverse innovations, provided somebody is willing to take the risk involved in developing the full potential of CSP. If these breakthroughs are achieved CSP, can compete with gas, coal and nuclear in terms of baseload in the next 10 to 15 years.

Large-scale CSP roll-out was first envisaged in the long-term mitigation scenarios as a renewables technology pathway that would help reduce South Africa's emissions.

At least ten years ago, Eskom put forward plans to build a solar tower project with molten salt to increase the solar plant's capacity factor. This is now being funded through the Clean Technology Fund and other soft loan schemes under a deal struck when the Medupi loan was concluded two years ago.

Stellenbosch University has been doing work on CSP for the last two decades at least. The initial Integrated Resource Plan envisaged large-scale roll-out to 2030, but this has been trimmed down to a meagre 1 000 MW.

Suddenly, CSP is no longer sexy. While developers are eager to up the ante on CSP, investors are not that eager. Two things have come to work against CSP: cost reductions in photovoltaics (PVs) and investor cold feet – given the financial crisis inflicting Western markets, investors are more risk averse.

In South Africa, the push to get cheap electrons into the grid as fast as possible and the State's low appetite to provide loan guarantees for large CSP projects have stalled the pace at which CSP projects can be built in South Africa.

It is clear that just putting electrons into the grid is not enough to stimulate growth in CSP installed capacity, as CSP is currently not price competitive, compared with wind and PV, depending on the CSP technology option– of the four available– that one promotes and whether it comes with storage or not.

The general view is that CSP requires a lot more ramp-up and experience in the handling of the technology to assuage investor perceptions of technology performance risk and that the increased levels of complexity associated with the installation of solar power plants may lead to cost overruns.

In contrast, wind and PV are viewed as simpler to deal with, as both are mature and easier to ramp up because they are more modular.

Without exaggerating, wind and PV are like mass car manufacturing today – they are easy to roll off production assembly lines and pluck in the ground.

For countries looking to start new industrial ventures in wind and PV, these technologies have the do-it- yourself feel and involve far less effort and risk than CSP.

New technologies require significant government support in the form of research and development, tax write-offs and loan guarantees to ensure that the development of these technologies is done over the long haul.

Technologies that have yet to be proven on a large scale stir anxiety in already nervous investors, be they from the private sector or the public sector. It did not help that, in the US, government's bet on a solar technology promoted by Solyndra through generous loan guarantees went pear-shaped.

The US government's support was aimed not only at driving electricity generation from new renewables but also at making the US a leading pro- ducer of clean technologies, given the competition from China.

It is important that, when a country makes a strategic industrial choice, the level of effort and risk associated with developing the technology is understood.

CSP in South Africa requires a relook. The attempt to ramp up installed capacity on the back of the demand for electricity alone will not work unless the industrial case for CSP has strong economic justification and returns to back it.

CSP will continue to suffer from a lack of investor confidence, as investors are not willing to take the risk on their own, despite the fact that, two years ago, we saw strong market confidence in CSP, even though 90% of the pipeline of projects showed a tendency for troughs.

Sentiment has now shifted away from CSP. The CSP fraternity will have to do a lot more work than promise cost- effective renewables electricity when the technology development side and industrial case are still clouded in doubt.

The South African government is faced with the stark choice of investing precious funds in technology development for global breakthroughs, which it can ill afford, or waiting while others with better resources make these breakthroughs.

CSP has promise, but the industrial and economic cases have to be worked on. Further, innovative finance has to be secured from local and international sources to drive CSP's technology development.

It is best also that the CSP fraternity makes the case watertight because, at present, there is a lot of fanfare and talking up of CSP. But CSP promoters should also be honest about the tech- nology performance risks and what it will take to iron them out.

Edited by: Martin Zhuwakinyu

2012: A Breakthrough for Renewable Energy?

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/manish-bapna/2012-a-breakthrough-for-r_b_1263543.html

2012: A Breakthrough for Renewable Energy?

by Manish Bapna
Interim President, World Resources Institute


Posted: 02/ 9/2012 11:00 am

In his annual State of the Union address, President Obama declared: "I
will not walk away from clean energy."

His words were a sharp rebuttal to critics harping on the Solyndra
bankruptcy and others making dire predictions about the downfall of
the renewable energy industry.

So, who is right? Will 2012 be a breakthrough year for renewable, or
will it collapse?

Despite conventional wisdom, there is a growing body of evidence
showing that renewables are no longer decades away from being a viable
and affordable alternative to fossil fuels. Instead, onshore wind and
solar photovoltaics are close to a tipping point to compete head-to-
head with coal and natural gas in many countries.

In fact, it's likely that 2012 could be the year when renewable energy
(not counting hydropower) will surpass fossil fuels, signaling a
profound shift toward a global clean energy economy.

Investors are leading the charge toward a clean energy future, betting
heavily on renewable energy. Global investment in clean energy
generation capacity reached a record high of $260 billion in 2011,
Bloomberg New Energy Finance announced last month. That was up 5
percent above 2010 levels and almost five times the 2004 total. The
United States, surprisingly, led the world in renewable energy
investment at nearly $56 billion, and China was second with more than
$47 billion.

Wind farms in China and solar panels on rooftops in Europe are the
biggest signs of growth. But the renewables boom is a global
phenomenon. In South and Central America, investments rose 39 percent
to $13 billion. In India, they rose by 25 percent to almost $4
billion; and in the Middle East and Africa, by 104 percent to $5
billion.

So what is getting investors -- from asset financiers to venture
capitalists -- so excited?

The answer is simple: wind and solar energy is becoming increasingly
cost competitive with coal and natural gas. In the past few years, the
costs of PV modules and wind turbines have tumbled, driven mainly by
technology innovations and a maturing supply chain. The results are
evident in falling clean energy prices around the world.

Take just a few examples:

� In the United States, the authoritative National Renewable Energy
Laboratory forecasts that solar PV residential electricity prices
could be cost competitive by 2015 across two-thirds of the country.
� In Italy, Spain, Greece, Portugal, and Japan, solar PV is on course
to match retail electricity fossil fuel prices next year, without the
benefit of subsidies, according to Pike Research.
� In Brazil, wind power plants undercut natural gas competitors in
bidding for government power contract tenders last summer.
� And in China, wind power prices are expected to be competitive with
coal within two years

But before rushing to invest your entire pension in clean energy,
there are some important caveats. Renewable power is not yet a
mainstream global industry. It made up only a little over 3 percent of
total world electricity generation, as of 2009.

While its future seems bright, the outcome may hang on how two key
issues play out:

First is the unpredictable effect of the shale gas boom. In countries
like the United States, where low electricity prices already make it
tough for renewables to become cost competitive, abundant and cheap
shale gas may drive energy prices down even further and divert
investment from wind and solar power. Low-priced natural gas is good
for consumers, but it could slow the growth of renewable. This could
have additional negative environmental consequences, including on
greenhouse gas emissions.

The second key issue is whether governments will keep up their
investor-friendly commitments to clean energy policy and incentives.
The BNEF report, Global Trends in Renewable Energy Investment 2011,
showed significant progress on that front. By early 2011, some 119
countries had policies or targets in place to support renewables, more
than half of them in the developing world.

But given the turbulent global economy, it is likely that fiscal and
political constraints will continue to bite across much of the globe
in 2012. Governments may see support for wind and solar as tempting
for budget cuts.

In the United States, for example, wind power developers are nervous
about the potential expiration of the Production Tax Credit in
December 2012. If Congress fails to renew or replace it, the
industry's robust growth will likely falter. President Obama
acknowledged as much during State of the Union, when he called on
Congress to extend support for wind power and solar power. So the
outlook for the year is still sunny, but not cloudless for renewables.

Given the significant strides the industry has made, it would be
unfortunate if governments and investors turned their backs now. If
they forge ahead, 2012 could indeed see global investment surpass that
for fossil fuels, crossing an important threshold toward a clean
energy future.
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Laos, Nam Ou: Hydropower projects to light up northern provinces

Laos, Nam Ou: Hydropower projects to light up northern provinces  February 9, 2012 Vientiane Times  Electricite du Laos (EDL) and Sinohydro Corporation Ltd of China yesterday signed a contract and memorandum of understanding (MOU) on four hydropower development projects in two northern provinces.  Among the documents signed were an engineering procurement and construction contract for the Nam Khan 3 hydropower project in Luang Prabang province, and a tariff MOU for the Nam Ou 2, 5 and 6 hydropower projects in Phongsaly and Luang Prabang provinces.  The signing was witnessed by Deputy Prime Minister Somsavat Lengsavad, Chinese Ambassador to Laos Ms Bu Jianguo, energy developers, and officials from various ministries.  The Nam Khan 3 dam, located in Xiengngeun district, will have an installed capacity of 60MW and will be able to generate 241 million kWH of electricity per year, according to a press release provided at the signing ceremony. The dam will take about 3.5 years to build, with developers expecting it to be fully operational in 2016, the press release noted.  "The Lao government will invest about 1 trillion kip (US$127 million) in the project through a low interest loan from the Exim Bank of China," EDL representative Mr Komonchanh Phet-asa said, adding that the project will provide farmers in Luang Prabang with more access to water for irrigation.  Nam Ou projects 2, 5 and 6 will have a combined installed capacity of 540MW and will be able to generate 2,092 million kWH of energy per year.  "The energy generated from the three power plants will be sold to EDL starting in 2018," Mr Komonchanh said, explaining that negotiations regarding a power purchase agreement will take place in the future. He said the electricity generated will mainly supply the northern provinces and the high speed Laos-China railway project, while the rest will supply the central and southern provinces.  "The three projects are expected to require investment of about 8 trillion kip (US$1,000 million) and EDL will hold 15 percent of shares," Mr Komonchanh said.  Investment in hydropower projects in the northern provinces is growing rapidly, which is helping the government to meet its plan to supply mains power to over 90 percent of families in the area by 2020.  Construction of three new projects officially began in December, namely the Nam Long project in Luang Namtha province, the Nam Ngiep 2 project in Xieng Khuang province and the Nam Khan 2 project in Luang Prabang province, with many more set to be built soon. "Only 65 percent of families in the northern provinces currently have access to electricity," Deputy Minister of Energy and Mines Mr Khammany Inthirath said recently.  "About 802,400 families living in 5,934 villages in 139 districts nationwide have access to electricity, which represents 76.9 percent of the total households in the country."  "By 2015 we want to increase the number of households with access to electricity to about 85 percent. We hope we can increase this number to more than 90 percent by 2020." 

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Most fish in the sea evolved in rivers

Most fish in the sea evolved on land
New Scientist, 8 February 2012, by Colin Barras
www.newscientist.com/article/dn21441-most-fish-in-the-sea-evolved-on-land.html

Family histories don't come much more bizarre. Three-quarters of the
fish in the sea can trace their origins back to a freshwater ancestor.
The finding highlights how important rivers and lakes are as a source of
new species, just as that supply is under threat from disappearing
freshwater habitats.

Fish first evolved in the sea. The oceans have been teeming with them
for almost half a billion years, so there is no reason to doubt that the
fish living there today did all their evolving in salt water - until you
take a closer look at their family tree.

Greta Vega and John Wiens at Stony Brook University in New York noticed
something peculiar while studying the evolutionary tree of ray-finned
fish, a mega-group comprising 96 per cent of all freshwater and marine
fish species on the planet.

They realised that all the fossils belonging to the ancestral group that
gave rise to ray-fins some 300 million years ago - known as the
polypteriformes - came from freshwater deposits. In fact, according to
Vega and Wiens's tree, the ray-fins may not have taken to the sea in
large numbers until about 170 million years ago. Their descendants now
make up three-quarters of all marine fish (see diagram).

We've seen this kind of topsy-turvy evolution before. Most whales,
dolphins and porpoises, live in the sea, but like the ray-finned fish,
they all evolved in rivers.

Michael Benton of the University of Bristol, UK, says that combined with
what we know about whales and dolphins, the new study may point to a
more general pattern: that most major groups of vertebrates came from
land-based ecosystems. But we'll need many more studies to confirm that,
he says.

What could be driving such a pattern? Wiens says it is possible that
seas may be more prone to extinctions than land, rivers or lakes; while
rivers and lakes form an "arc of survival" that can reseed the oceans
when marine species are lost.

"I don't think our results show that seas are strongly inhospitable, but
they may become so at certain points in time," he says. Unfortunately,
the strong ocean acidification that is predicted for the near future
means we may be heading for one of those times now, he adds.

Today, however, rivers and lakes may not be healthy enough to help
re-supply the oceans. "Freshwater ecosystems suffer from a higher rate
of species loss than any other major ecosystem," says Peter Bosshard,
policy director at International Rivers, a non-profit NGO based in
Berkeley, California. "This study shows that by damming, diverting and
polluting the world's rivers, we may deplete the seed bank of future
generations."

Journal reference: Proceedings of the Royal Society B, DOI:
10.1098/rspb.2012.0075

(For the full research paper, see
www.stonybrook.edu/sb/docs/diversity.pdf. For an International Rivers
blog post on the topic, see www.internationalrivers.org/en/node/7160.)
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China alters controversial Poyang dam plan

China alters controversial Poyang dam plan
Xinhua News
February 3, 2012

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/china/2012-02/03/c_131390703.htm

NANCHANG, Feb. 3 (Xinhua) -- China has altered a plan to build a
hydropower dam on the Poyang Lake after the plan was criticized by
academicians for its potential damage to the already fragile ecology.

But officials with the eastern province of Jiangxi, where Poyang,
China's largest freshwater lake, is located, said they would still
search for other water control facilities to halt water levels of Poyang
declining, as the lake is a key water supply source for about a million
people and a natural habitat for numerous migratory birds and aquatic
species.

Over the past years, reduced rainfall, rampant sand dredging, and the
building of about 29 dams at the upstream parts of the Yangtze River,
have caused the size of the Poyang Lake to rapidly shrink, from 4,000 sq
kms at its peak to 200 sq kms in January, with water levels plunging to
a six-decade low of 7.93 meters.

"We now plan to build only sluice gates at the mouth of the lake where
water flows into the Yangtze," said Zhu Laiyou, head of the Poyang water
control projects construction office. "The gates will help maintain
Poyang's water levels during the drought season."

Zhu said the project would improve the wetland ecology, boost fishery,
and help develop tourism -- all being threatened amid the continuous
decline of water levels during the drought seasons over the past few years.

The original water control plan was canned after 15 academicians
submitted a report to the State Council opposing the proposal to
construct a dam.

"The dam and its hydropower stations will bring disastrous damage to
Poyang's ecology and wildlife," said Cao Wenxuan, a biologist with the
Chinese Academy of Sciences and one of the leading signatories.

Cao said he also had doubts about the government's latest plan as the
sluice gates would still narrow the lake's mouth by one third and result
in rapid water flows that might disrupt the activities of fish.

Dai Nianhua, a backer of the project, said the issue at the table is not
whether a water control project was needed but what to build and how to
build it.

"People are talking about the ecological impact that a massive water
control project might have on the wildlife but the problem is if the
lake is left to continue to shrink, the fish and birds will lose their
habitat already," said Dai, a fellow with the provincial academy of
sciences of Jiangxi.

Poyang Lake is considered a major destination of migratory birds in the
region, attracting more than 500,000 birds of 52 species including
endangered hooded cranes and white-naped cranes, in the winter of 2011.

The lake is also home for near-extinct Yangtze river dolphins and many
other endangered fishes. Some environmentalists estimate that about 70
percent of Poyang's fishery resources had been wiped out in the past
three decades.

Chen Fu, a deputy head of Poyang fishery bureau, said at least five
Yangtze River dolphins were found belly up in Poyang Lake last year.

The historic low water levels had forced lakeside residents to look for
alternative water supplies and fishermen out of business.

Liu Guibao, a 46-year-old fisherman from the lakeside county of Duchang,
said his income shrank by more than three quarters last year as only two
months, instead of traditionally six, were good for fishing.

Hundreds of fishing boats in Liu's village had been left lying idle on
dry lakebed since September.

Liu said that ironically he had to buy fish from the market this Chinese
New Year, the first time in three decades of working as a fisherman.

Editor: An
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Screening Africa's renewable energies potential

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-02/ecjr-sar020812.php

Public release date: 8-Feb-2012
[ Print | E-mail | Share ] [ Close Window ]

Contact: Berta Duane
berta.duane@ec.europa.eu
39-033-278-9743
European Commission Joint Research Centre
Screening Africa's renewable energies potential

The European Commission's Joint Research Centre (JRC) has published
today a study mapping the potential of renewable energy sources in
Africa. The report analyses the current energy consumption in Africa
and assesses potential of renewable energy sources - solar, wind,
biomass and hydropower - and their cost efficiency and environmental
sustainability. Its publication coincides with the official European
Launch of UN's Year on "Sustainable Energy for All" being held today
in Brussels.

The map of Africa's solar electricity potential, for example, based on
the JRC's Photovoltaic Geographical Information System (PVGIS), shows
that in many parts of Africa the same photovoltaic panel could produce
twice as much electricity as it would produce in Central Europe.
However, in order to assess the suitability of solar energy to provide
electricity in rural areas, this option has to be assessed against
costs for grid extensions and with the traditional diesel generators.
A combined analysis of photovoltaic systems, grid extensions and
diesel options shows for each area which option is the most cost
efficient.

In Northern Africa, the promising potential of renewable energies, in
particular solar and wind energy, has to compete with cheap fossil
fuel. Meanwhile the challenge in the Sub-Saharan regions is to improve
sustainability and efficiency of traditional biomass use and to
provide a suitable alternative to biomass overexploitation. This
alternative should be based on cleaner energy sources, particularly in
Sub-Saharan Africa where firewood and charcoal represent 80% of total
energy use and where most of the population lives in rural areas with
no access to electricity.

Small hydroelectric power plants have strong potential in Equatorial
Africa due to an extended network of permanent rivers and the fact
that most households are located closer to a river than to an existing
electricity grid.

Considering the current grid infrastructure, the report suggests that
wind energy is the most exploitable on a larger scale in northern
parts of Africa, in particular along the Mediterranean coast, and in
the most southern parts of the continent.

As for biomass, the report highlights a dramatic difference between
the EU and Sub-Saharan Africa in the efficiency of the production and
use of this fuel and discusses the development of a wood fuel
sustainability index and the unexploited potential of energy crops
like sugar cane.


###
About the JRC

The Joint Research Centre (JRC) is the European Commission's in-house
science service. Its mission is to provide customer-driven scientific
and technical support for the conception, development, implementation
and monitoring of European Union policies. The JRC serves the common
interest of the Member States, while being independent of special
interests, whether private or national.

For further information:

The report 'Renewable energies in Africa' can be downloaded at: http://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/111111111/23076

IP "Energy tops the Development agenda: Commissioner Piebalgs to
attend the European launch of the UN's Year of Sustainable Energy for
All" (Feb. 7): http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/12/104&format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en
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Tuesday, February 7, 2012

NTPC eyeing 9,750-MW Siang Upper hydropower project

India's NTPC eyeing 9,750-MW hydropower project
www.hydroworld.com/index/display/article-display/6644517620/articles/hrhrw/News-2/2012/01/india_s-ntpc_eyeing.html?cmpid=EnlHydroFebruary72012

ARUNACHAL PRADESH, India 1/31/12 (PennWell) -- India's NTPC power
company has submitted a pre-feasibility report for a 9,750-MW
hydroelectric project on the Brahmaputra River in Arunachal Pradesh.

The Siang Upper hydropower facility would be the second largest in Asia
after China's Three Gorges plant and would increase the state-owned
utility's overall production by more than a quarter.

Sources say NTPC's filing was partially prompted by reports of Chinese
plans to construct a hydro project upstream on the Brahmaputra (called
Yarlung Tsangpo in China).

The countries currently have a doctrine of prior appropriation, which
says the river's rights of first appropriation belong to whoever
utilizes it first.
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