Add Energy Renewable Romania
Webcast – Global Wind Report launch, 9 April, 2014
The state of play of the global wind industry and a five-year projection
Speakers:
Steve Sawyer, Secretary General of GWEC will talk about where the global wind industry is heading… what are the major bottlenecks, and the new emerging markets.
Henrik Stiesdal, CTO at Wind Power Division of Siemens Energy, sponsor of this year’s report, will provide his expert opinion on the Concept of the Society’s Cost of Electricity.
The government does not know who will pay for green certificates if exempt industry
According to him, there are three options: either consumers will bear the rest of the green certificates for the unpaid industry or budget or renewable energy producers do not receive money for such certificates. We must look to the sectors present in Romania where there are allowed exemptions, which are of interest and see … Read more
Sonnenschiff: Solar city produces 4x the energy it consumes
The self-sustaining city accomplishes this feat through smart solar design and lots and lots of photovoltaic panels pointed in the right direction. It seems like a simple strategy — but designers often incorporate solar installations as an afterthought, or worse, as a label. Designed by Rolf Disch, the Sonnenschiff (Solar Ship) and Solarsiedlung (Solar … Read more
Statement of renewable energy globally
In 2013, investments in renewable energy worldwide fell for the second consecutive year, reaching 214 billion, 14 % less than in 2012, shows new data released by Bloomberg New Energy Finance released at a summit that held in New York this week. While investment declined, as happened with the total amount of renewable … Read more
WWEC2014: Key Statistics of World Wind Energy Report published
World wind energy capacity reached 318’529 MW by end of 2013, after 282’275 MW in 2012. 35’550 MW of new wind capacity was added, the smallest growth since 2008, and after 44’609 MW in 2012. The growth rate reached only 12,8%, the lowest level since modern wind power utilization has started around the world. Wind … Read more
Confidence boost for Europe’s renewable energy industry as Heads of State show support
In a last minute addition to the European Council’s conclusions, leaders stated the need for a “supportive EU framework for advancing renewable energies.” Despite delaying on an agreement, European Council President Herman Van Rompuy said in a press conference that the Council would have a deal on the climate and energy framework by … Read more
Expo Arad International ENREG 2014 – Renewable Energy / PV Platform
— >> click pentru download << — Despite a decline in real investment in renewables, there are optimistic signs showing that the sector remains attractive to Romania. This decrease reflects a maturing of the industry, and now the focus should be on maximizing investments and implementation of new projects, especially as the renewable … Read more
Wind Industry’s New Technologies Are Helping It Compete on Price
The wind industry has gone to great lengths over the years to snap up the best properties for its farms, often looking to remote swaths of prairie or distant mountain ridges to maximize energy production and minimize community opposition.
Now, it is reaching for the sky.
With new technology allowing developers to build taller machines spinning longer blades, the industry has been able to produce more power at lower cost by capturing the faster winds that blow at higher elevations. This has opened up new territories, in places like Michigan, Ohio and Indiana, where the price of power from turbines built 300 feet to 400 feet above the ground can now compete with conventional sources like coal.
And efforts to capture the wind could go even higher. In perhaps the most extreme example, a start-up called Altaeros Energies is preparing to introduce its first commercial pilot of an airborne wind turbine in Alaska.
Known as the BAT — or Buoyant Airborne Turbine — the enormous, white helium-filled doughnut surrounding a rotor will float about 1,000 feet in the air and feed enough electricity to power more than a dozen homes through one of the cables tethering it to the ground.
Ben Glass, the co-founder and chief executive of Altaeros Energies, which developed the BAT, at the old Loring base in Maine. Credit Altaeros Energies
But the skyward expansion has already taken flight throughout the wind industry, transforming parts of the Midwest once shunned into wind powerhouses.
Six years ago there, the wind speeds at 200 feet were not strong enough to make wind development make sense, said Elizabeth Salerno, chief economist and director of industry data and analysis at the American Wind Energy Association, the industry’s main trade group. But as turbine hubs — which sit atop the towers — have risen above 200 feet and included longer blades, that has changed.
In Michigan, for example, there were no utility-scale wind farms operating in 2008, Ms. Salerno said. Now, there are enough to produce 1,000 megawatts of electricity, which could power hundreds of thousands of homes.
Prices have fallen so low — in some cases to about 4 cents per kilowatt-hour — that utilities have been increasing the amount of wind energy they want to buy through long-term contracts, with regulators saying it is their cheapest option. At the same time, though, the push has spurred some opposition in these new areas from residents who object to the tall, industrial wind turbines.
“It’s not just more wind in the windy places that we already know about,” Ms. Salerno said. “It’s opening up, potentially, regions like the Southeast or others where maybe it’s not quite economic today but it could be in the future. That’s where we’re headed.”
Airborne wind takes that dynamic even further, though for now it can compete only in places where the price of other options, like diesel, is much higher.
Other companies besides Altaeros have tried to develop airborne wind systems.
For example, Makani Power is working on a winged turbine that, according to its website, flies in circles. It was acquired by Google last year, but the technology has yet to be perfected.
In Alaska, though — as in other remote regions, representing a multibillion-dollar market Altaeros hopes to tap — energy costs run so high that even a promising but largely unproven technology is cost-effective, officials say.
“Particularly for Alaska, eliminating the costs that are associated with power installation,” said Alan Baldivieso, program manager for hydrokinetics, geothermal and emerging energy at the Alaska Energy Authority, “makes this type of deployment very attractive.”
The authority awarded Altaeros a $1.3 million grant from its Emerging Energy Technology Fund to support testing the equipment over 18 months with the idea of expanding its use.
A BAT is launched in 2012. Its developers says it could supply power to a disaster area. Credit Altaeros Energies
“Our biggest focus is on cost just because it’s so, so expensive in parts of Alaska,” said Sean Skaling, deputy director of alternative energy at the authority. “A nice byproduct is that it’s also typically greener and cleaner if it’s less expensive.”
Ben Glass, chief executive of Altaeros, said he expected the company to be able to offer power at about 18 cents per kilowatt-hour, far too high for most conventional markets but still well below the 35 cents a kilowatt-hour often paid in remote areas of Alaska.
In parts of Alaska, prices can reach about $1 per kilowatt-hour, roughly 10 times the national average. Serving markets like that could help the company establish its business and lower costs to eventually compete for larger-scale projects.
Mr. Glass started the company in 2010 along with Adam Rein (and another partner who has since left) as the two were completing graduate programs at M.I.T., Mr. Glass in aeronautical and astronautical engineering and Mr. Rein in business at the Sloan School of Management. Mr. Glass, whose father had been a pilot in the Israeli Air Force, planned to pursue rocket science but strayed from that career path after an internship at SpaceX, Elon Musk’s rocket company, the summer before his senior year.
“I realized that to be a rocket scientist you kind of had to be a billionaire and have a rocket company or you were just going to be designing some little widget part of the rocket,” he said.
With an interest in clean energy, he turned toward wind and ended up designing an array of turbines for his senior project and putting his engineering skills to use on the airborne machine.
Borrowing from the technology of blimps used to hoist communications, surveillance and weather monitoring equipment high above the earth, the Altaeros system is able to adjust the turbine’s height and alignment in response to changing winds to maximize power production. That allows the machine to produce anywhere from two to three times as much electricity as its conventional tower-mounted counterparts, Mr. Glass said.
The company has raised more than $1 million in the last two years from angel investors and some state governments as well as the federal government, including the Energy and Agriculture departments. The technology could help provide power after natural disasters.
In the long term, executives say they hope to expand into the offshore market, particularly places like the Pacific Coast, where officials recently approved plans to test floating turbine platforms because the waters are too deep to sink conventional foundations and towers into the seabed.
But that is years away. For now, the team is focused on flying as many balloons as it can in areas that lack electricity or are dependent on expensive diesel fuel.
As far-fetched as a field of wind turbines swaying as high as 2,000 feet in the air may seem, the partners say the technology is relatively tried and true. Rather than inventing a whole new approach, said Mr. Rein, a former Bain consultant who dabbled in energy before meeting Mr. Glass through an entrepreneurship class at M.I.T., the partners looked to the most proven, least risky equipment to make a product as quickly and cheaply as possible.
Rather than going for, “a moon shot,” he said, “what we really tried was the safe shot.”
source: nytimes.com
5 reasons why you can become an Add-Energy Renewable Romania PARTNER
To register your Company as ADD ENERGY PARTNER , please access
For other informations click to
Flying turbines
Very soon, over the city of Fairbanks in Alaska, will be issued a wind turbine. It will use helium to remain suspended above the ground, without the need of a stanchion and its location adjacent land, inform theatlantic.com, taken on Tuesday. Giant balloon will be, according to Gizmodo, the first commercial floating wind … Read more
The government has limited the amount of energy produced from renewable sources
Reduction of part of a wider set of measures that the Government intends to implement this year to help industrial customers who have repeatedly warned that energy prices and gas could lead to production cuts and layoffs. According to the law approved Wednesday by the Board, the share of energy from renewable sources … Read more
How it become Romania a market of 1 gigawatt solar and what will happen next
Developers have begun to move into first Romanian market after cutting the largest photovoltaic market incentives, such as Germany, Italy and Spain. What happened next ? The Romanian government has reduced incentives, leaving investors with the eyes in the sun. This year, the Romanian program incentive for producers of clean energy has been … Read more
Top 2014 Solar Contractors Application on SolarPowerWorld Platform
This application allows Solar Power World to evaluate your company for inclusion on the 2014 Top Solar Contractors list. The deadline to apply is April 25, and the list will be revealed in August. The questions below are used in categorizing and describing your company. Solar Power World uses the contact information … Read more
Minister Nicolescu, a new support mechanism for renewable energy
He explained: " My interest is to be a burden as low as possible for consumers in terms of cost and that investments in energy, whether in the cogeneration or renewable energy support mechanism to have a sustainable, predictable and can be applied to long term. Generous schemes proved, in Europe and in Romania, not … Read more
Law no. 23/2014 approving Government Emergency Ordinance no. 57 of 04.06.2013 amending and supplementing Law no. 220/2008
Law no. 23/2014 approving Government Emergency Ordinance no. 57 of 04.06.2013 amending and supplementing Law no. 220/2008
A manufacturer of components for wind turbines move some production from China to Romania
The plan provides for " the transfer of the production capacity of electronic control systems for customers outside China at the company's factory in Suzhou China, to a new production facility in Timisoara, Romania ", said in a document sent by American Superconductor American scholarship. The factory in Romania should become operational during fiscal … Read more