Login

Search

melaniepictures

Green TV

view-videos

Join Us on Twitter

Follow us on MySpace

Follow us on Facebook

JoomlaWatch Stats 1.2.9 by Matej Koval
Home Blogs Sustainable Projects Alternative energy news briefs

Alternative energy news briefs Print E-mail
Written by Bart Mihailovich   
Wednesday, 24 February 2010 09:46
2609162335_8a792cdbc6Wind power capacity on the rise. According to a new study, wind power capacity grew by 31 percent globally in 2009, with the steepest rise occurring in China. About 37.5 gigawatts of capacity were added last year, boosting the total capacity worldwide to 157.9 gigawatts, says the Global Wind Energy Council, an industry trade group based in Belgium.

 

It’s always sunny in… New Jersey… Forget jokes about the Jersey Shore, this sun-related story is DTE approved.  this month, William Paterson University of New Jersey will start building a 3.5-megawatt solar array, one of the largest solar-power projects among college campuses in the country.  The installation will be capable of supplying 3.5 megawatts of clean, low-cost energy. The first 3-megawatt phase is to be completed during 2010; the second 500-kilowatt phase is scheduled to go online in 2011.  Estimates show the solar panels saving the university $4.3 million in energy costs.

 

And another college looking at alternative energy sources. The College of Southern Nevada wants to install major photovoltaic power arrays at its three main campuses throughout the Las Vegas Valley, and recently hired JMA, a Las Vegas-based architecture, design and planning firm, to develop a comprehensive alternative energy plan that could cut the school’s electricity costs by half. Money saved from reduced power bills would pay for the project’s cost within 15 years.

 

A coal-free Northwest. We’ve been dreaming about it, we’ve been working towards it, and now there’s a roadmap for a coal-free Northwest. Kind of.  According to WattHead, “the coal industry in the Pacific Northwest received a heavy blow [last week] with the release of the Northwest Power and Conservation Council’s (NWPCC’s) Sixth Power Plan, describing how the region encompassing Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Montana can cost-effectively shut down at least half its coal plants (including coal plants outside the region that supply these states with electricity) by the year 2020.” Is this considered a victory for alternative energy and renewable resources?  Yeah, it is.  And WattHead thinks so too, “It’s a victory because a third-party government body has now clearly shown that a transition away from coal is possible. It’s a victory because it has shown climate activists in the Northwest the power we can have when we get organized. Now let’s take this victory and run with it.”

 

Source: Down to Earth



Add this page to your favorite Social Bookmarking websites
 
 

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

The thoughts, views or opinions expressed in these blogs are those of the blogger, and do not necessarily represent those of Four Green Steps or its staff.