solar power

US Dept of Interior Takes Own Advice, Dumps Solar Ban on Public Lands

US Dept of Interior Takes Own Advice, Dumps Solar Ban on Public Lands

As the Department of Interior's Bureau of Land Management (BLM) lifts its absurd moratorium on new solar projects on public lands -- a result of industry and public outcry -- it’s worth remembering that five years ago the BLM was campaigning for solar.

Yep. The BLM released a report in February 2003, arguing for heavy development of solar power and other renewables on public lands in the West. Straight from the agency's 2003 release:

Increasing our domestic development of renewable energy sources, will help to reduce our dependency on foreign sources of energy...As the report demonstrates, public lands have abundant opportunities for renewable energy development.

Roadmap: Solar Energy Cheap as Coal All Over US

Roadmap: Solar Energy Cheap as Coal All Over US

Here’s the latest on America’s solar energy potential from a well-reasoned new report by Clean Edge and Co-op America:

Solar could become ubiquitous as with earlier semiconductor-based revolutions.

Right now, solar makes up just one-tenth of one percent of the US total energy supply. But that could jump to ten percent by 2025 with a total investment of about $30 billion a year and a sharp turn in thinking from the nation’s utilities, according to the new roadmap to a solar future, Utility Solar Assessment (USA) Study (pdf).

It’s practical counsel when you consider that the utility industry spent $70 billion last year on traditional power plants and distribution. From the study:

Poll: 94% of Americans Want Solar Energy Future, 3% Want Coal

Poll: 94% of Americans Want Solar Energy Future, 3% Want Coal

The US Senate Republicans are trashing hopes for a booming home-grown solar energy sector. Oh, but that’s not news.

And neither is the fact that nearly all Americans – across all parties – believe that a solar energy industry is vital to the United States. Ninety-eight percent of Independents. Ninety-seven percent of Democrats. And ninety-one percent of Republicans.

The survey findings were released by the SCHOTT Solar BarometerTM yesterday and were conducted by the independent polling firm, Kelton Research.

When asked which energy source they would support if they were president, 41 percent picked solar. Three percent chose coal. Together, solar and wind together were favored nearly 20 times more than America’s dirtiest fuel.

Best nugget of all?

BroadStar Wind Crosses $1 per Watt Barrier – Watch Out, Solar

BroadStar Wind Crosses $1 per Watt Barrier – Watch Out, Solar

Dallas-based BroadStar Wind Systems is about to turn a giant corner --- into $1 per watt wind, into urban windmills and into the global energy big league.

If, that is, its new wind turbine -- the "flexi-location" AeroCam -- can live up to all of it of its enormous claims.

No small task.

The company busted out of stealth at WINDPOWER 2008 with the announcement of its long-awaited AeroCam -- and this shocker of a double promise:

Sunrgi Makes Cheapest Solar Promise Ever: 5 Cents per Kilowatt-Hour in 1 Year

Sunrgi Makes Cheapest Solar Promise Ever: 5 Cents per Kilowatt-Hour in 1 Year

Hollywood-based start-up Sunrgi claims its solar will be as cheap as coal -- and soon.

The cost: 5 cents wholesale per kilowatt-hour.

When: 12 to 15 months for commercial production.

Craig Goodman, president of the National Energy Marketers Associations, says it would be a godsend to the world:

Solar power at 5 cents per kWh would be a world-changing breakthrough. It would make solar generation of electricity as affordable as generation from coal, natural gas or other non-renewable sources, without requiring any subsidy.

Gadget Watch: Inflatable Solar Panels and Eco-Laptops Have Arrived

Gadget Watch: Inflatable Solar Panels and Eco-Laptops Have Arrived

Blowing up over your water heater bill?

The UK-based engineering firm Industrial Design Consultancy (IDC) has plans to mass produce inflatable solar panels that will provide hot water at a fraction of the cost of conventional solar heaters.

First Solar, the “Google of Solar Energy,” Is Coming to America

First Solar, the “Google of Solar Energy,” Is Coming to America

Phoenix-based solar modules maker First Solar Inc. has been growing like crazy from its European clients.

In ‘07, its profits soared a mighty 686 percent. Revenue quadrupled to $200 million. And yesterday, it reported a nine-fold leap in its first-quarter returns and announced future revenues that might go north of $1 billion in ‘08.

And now it’s poised to enter the US utility market.

China Takes Lead in Solar Cell Production

China Takes Lead in Solar Cell Production

In the wake of the global investment surge in solar power, China is cashing in -- big time. And its clean energy progress is putting the US and others to shame.

China has now overtaken Germany as the world’s #1 producer of solar cells, according to numbers tallied by the German magazine Der Spiegel.

Last year, China reached a production capacity of 1,200 megawatts, while runner-up Germany – one of the industry’s pioneers and long-time leaders – produced 875 megawatts worth of solar cells.

One-year wonder? No.

The Big Missing Piece to the Wind-Solar Puzzle Is...

The Big Missing Piece to the Wind-Solar Puzzle Is...

A massive energy storage system that can guarantee uninterrupted power delivery.

Meaning: clean electricity all the time, even when the winds aren’t blowing and the sun isn’t shining.

And now there’s a battery unit being produced in Japan that claims it can provide just that.

They’re called sodium-sulfur systems. And they offer a way to store power from the sun and wind, and then dispatch it to the grid when demand is greatest.

World's Largest Solar Plant in AZ Hinges on US Congress

World's Largest Solar Plant in AZ Hinges on US Congress

America's prospects for a solar powered future just got much brighter.

The Spanish engineering firm Abengoa has announced that it's sealed a deal with the Arizona Public Service (APS) Company to build the largest concentrating solar plant in the whole world about 70 miles southwest of Phoenix, Arizona. It will be one of the first cases where a utility relies on solar power for its day-to-day operations.

And at a build cost of $1 billion, it will generate 280 MW of electricity and be capable of powering around 80,000 homes -- in just three years.

But. There's a catch.

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