07 May 2013

New Battery Efficiently Stores Solar and Wind Energy | The Daily Fusion

New Battery Efficiently Stores Solar and Wind Energy | The Daily Fusion

Scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory and Stanford University have developed a relatively cheap, long-life “flow” battery that can be used to mitigate power fluctuations from solar and wind energy plants, therefore enabling them to become major suppliers to the electrical grid.
...
These diagrams compare Stanford/SLAC’s new lithium-polysulfide flow battery design with conventional “redox” flow batteries. The new flow battery uses only one tank and pump and uses a simple coating instead of an expensive membrane to separate the anode and cathode. (Credit: Greg Stewart/SLAC)
...
The new Stanford/SLAC battery design uses only one stream of molecules and does not need a membrane at all. Its molecules mostly consist of the relatively inexpensive elements lithium and sulfur, which interact with a piece of lithium metal coated with a barrier that permits electrons to pass without degrading the metal. When discharging, the molecules, called lithium polysulfides, absorb lithium ions; when charging, they lose them back into the liquid. The entire molecular stream is dissolved in an organic solvent, which doesn’t have the corrosion issues of water-based flow batteries.
“In initial lab tests, the new battery also retained excellent energy-storage performance through more than 2,000 charges and discharges, equivalent to more than 5.5 years of daily cycles."

02 April 2013

Suntech Bankrupt and Bosch Dropping Out of Solar | The Solar Drop - DIY Solar and Solar Energy News

Suntech Bankrupt and Bosch Dropping Out of Solar | The Solar Drop - DIY Solar and Solar Energy News

Good news for consumers, but somehow frightening to watch how the companies which did the heavy lifting in making Solar PV affordable have to make way for others.
Well, who knows how strongly this was a matter of manipulation versus forces of the market?
Maybe a sign of what might happen to the fossil fuel industry some time down the track?

14 February 2013

Liberals to break up DEC if elected - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Break them up, send them away, make them ineffective ...

... so that the path to even more mining gets less and less obstructed by those at DEC who are nothing but an administrative pain in the neck!
Or so the Liberals' motivation seems to be. Why not send the Department of Mining and Petroleum in the country, to where the mining is?
Make them live and work right in the middle of the proposed fracking fields?

Do they really believe that one can eat money?

02 February 2013

On its way from Australia - even worse carbon emissions

The world's second largest contributor of new CO2 emissions from fossil fuels if fully realised

It is hard to believe but reality everyday: The more evidence we have that alternative energy production becomes cheaper and more and more available, the more conventional, fossil fuel production get pushed by politicians and, of course, conventional corporations.
Queensland and New South Wales have endured the sixth once-in-a-hundred-years event in 10 years in the from of floods, fires, storms and droughts. Yet the corresponding state premiers cut back on renewable energy incentives, undo projects and prefer to pay for damage done by these catastrophes over investing in preventive measures.
The NSW bill last year was around $800 million for damage on public property alone, preventive measures were paid for in the order of merely $8.4 million, of which most was research.
Pathetic!
One can only hope that if Canberra moves to protect Great Barrier Reef heritage status this would put a decisive stop to expansions in this respect.

Unfortunately I doubt it.
Maybe the campaign behind the following would work?

12 January 2013

Chilean authorities approve 3.1 GW solar project

Australian Authorities are still in love with king coal



© Gilberto Perez / Wikimedia Commons CC-by-SA

09.01.2013: A total of 3.1 GW of PV projects have been approved by the authority Servicio de Evaluación Ambiental (SEA) in Chile, according to the December report of the Chilean renewable energy research institute Centro de Energías Renovables (CER). The PV projects currently under examination for approval have a total capacity of 908 MW. The report notes that despite the increase in PV projects submitted during the last months, the country has only 2.4 MW of on-grid PV system power up and running, while 2.5 MW of projects are under construction. Furthermore, the report reveals that 4.8 MW of small-sized off-grid PV systems have been installed in the Chile. Source: Centro de Energías Renovables (CER)


http://www.cer.gov.cl
http://cer.gob.cl/boletin/diciembre2012/Reporte%20Diciembre.pdf
The complete press release can be viewed in PHOTON's archive using the following link:
http://www.photon-international.com/newsletter/document/72972.pdf

08 January 2013

STUDY: Renewables Can Supply 99.9% Power by 2030

STUDY: Renewables Can Supply 99.9% Power by 2030 - Solar Feeds

“Aiming for 90 percent or more renewable energy in 2030, in order to achieve climate change targets of 80 to 90 percent reduction of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide from the power sector, leads to economic savings,” said authors of the study.

How so? Just read the article published recently on Solar Feeds.
It only will not happen, as corporations of opposing interest are way too strong for a fledgling industry trying to kill the establishment. And eating their own lunch? Does anyone seriously believe that Chevron, Shell, Exxon etc would voluntarily transform their own business of printing money?

I don't.

The same thing goes for Australia where king coal is at the helm of energy politics. Beyond zero emissions have costet this scenario earlier for Australia.
If only the people weren't so phlegmatic in decisive numbers, they could at least try and influence at the course at the ballot box, but no ...

06 January 2013

Solar farm gets planning nod - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

30 MW solar power project approved near Kerang



… or at least the planning for it.

The shire's Jason Russell says while the development is not guaranteed, the planning approval will allow it to begin.

Read the full story on the ABC website.

Being a possible development in Victoria I am sure the established coal industry will fight nail and tooth to find reasons why this project and similar ones being looked at cannot go ahead.