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Old Dams = Opportunity for Smallscale Hydro?

I read a article (see below) recently about the state of the river dams in the US. The article quoted a number of something like 80,000 large dams. Article on Old Dams The author seems quite concerned in the wake of Katrina about the safety and replacement of aging dams. With good reason, as dating back to the 1800s Johnstown Dam disaster in Pennsylvania, aging dams have been a major concern in the US. The article is talking mainly about large dams, but it got me to thinking, if there is a similar issue in small dams as well, perhaps there is an opportunity to increase renewable energy production at a fairly low environmental cost by expanding small scale hydro.
A bit of power history for those of us who don’t think about it often, but for centuries, the major non-animal source of power was small scale hydro power, driving mechanical works, grain mills etc. The advent of electricity and fossil fuel generation, of course, replaced that in the early part of the last century.
Hydro power is by far and away the world’s biggest source of renewable electric power. But the primary knock today on hydro development as a major new renewable source is the large environmental footprint required. At the same time, just like wind turbine blade technology has advanced the efficiency of wind farms, water turbine blade technology as advanced the efficiency of hydro, including small scale.
For those of you interested, I’ve listed a few of micro hydro turbine manufacturers and information about a wide range of sizes below.

Micro Hydro Manufacturer

I do know that there are several small companies, including Southwest WindPower, which is venture backed by the guys at Altira, who are helping drive a renaissance in small wind turbines for home use. And while I know the likelihood of a similar renaissance in distributed hydro ever taking off is extremely small, aging dams or not, it’s always fun to think about.

How Energy Efficient Technology is Helping to Control Energy Costs

Practical experience reveals that energy is a firm’s third-highest cost. Businesses are looking for the means to reduce costs, increase profits and satisfy ever-increasing demands to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and preserve the environment.

With America’s commercial business sector leading demand, the cost of providing energy to the nation’s business and residential consumers is expected to easily exceed $200 billion this winter.

George Burnes, President of SmartCool Systems Inc. (OTC.PK: SSCFF; TSXV: SSC), said recently that the primary driver towards commercial energy efficient technology is a desire to reduce operating costs. The Dow Chemical Company (NYSE: DOW), understanding the need for reducing consumer costs, is committed to helping consumers reduce their energy consumption by producing products that help lower electric bills while making a positive difference for the environment.

Distributed Energy Systems Corp. (NASDAQ: DESC) delivers power to end users looking to supplement their grids, allowing for more control over their electricity supplies. “Technology is helping to achieve differentiated quality of service in a way that really wasn’t commercially viable even five or 10 years ago,” described Walter W. ‘Chip’ Schroeder, President of DESC. FuelCell Energy, Inc. (NASDAQ: FCEL), also sees significant value in being able to control power usage and costs through on-site systems to ensure that efficiencies are realized.

International Rectifier (NYSE: IRF) anticipates energy savings through advancements in power management technology as the desire for energy-efficient products continues to increase.

George Burnes, President of SmartCool Systems, Inc., explains “Recent geo-political instability in major fossil fuel producing regions has only served to increase public demand within North America to reduce dependence on fossil-fuelled electricity generation. This has resulted in cash and tax incentives being offered by utilities and local governments in many states and provinces to encourage industrial, commercial and institutional users to reduce electricity consumption through the installation of energy savings equipment.”

Steven P. Eschbach, spokesman for FuelCell Energy, Inc added that a powerful driver is the reduction of greenhouse gases. “Again, getting the high efficiency back into the equation, the more efficient you are, the less harmful greenhouse gases you emit.”

To Read the Full Report

Welcome to a New Blogger – Mark Bitterman, Editor of Superconductor Week

I want to welcome our new blogger – Mark Bitterman, the Editor of Superconductor Week.

Mark is the leading journalist and writer on the superconductor industry. He is the Executive Editor of Superconductor Week, which is the most comprehensive and widely read newsletter covering the technology and commercialization of superconductors. Superconductor Week does original reporting, exclusive interviews, and expert analysis on both low and high temperature superconductors. We are very active in the superconductor industry and consider it a key technology area of energy tech and cleantech, so I’m excited to have Mark join us!

Mark will be doing a Thursday blog column around strange and interesting news in superconductors.

Their website is www.superconductorweek.com.

Thanks Mark.

What Will Superconductivity Bring to Cleantech in 2006?

In 1986, high temperature superconductors (HTS) were discovered, capable of conducting electricity with zero resistance at a relatively warm -196 Celsius (-321 Fahrenheit). This presented the possibility of developing new generation of devices employing the extraordinary properties of superconductors using inexpensive liquid nitrogen as a coolant.

Since then, efforts around the world have worked to develop HTS wires and other materials for use in a host of devices for electric power systems, including: superconducting power cables, fault current limiters, flywheel energy storage devices, magnetic energy storage devices, transformers, motors, generators, and more.

The promise of such technologies devices is vast.

In the U.S., HTS is hoped to provide grid stabilization solutions that reduce costs and inefficiencies in downstream transmission and distribution infrastructure, facilitate bringing online fluctuating renewable resources such as wind and solar energy, and extend the life of an aging grid by delivering more power more efficiently. Outside the U.S., in addition to these benefits, HTS is also seen as an important technology to help reduce greenhouse gases emissions.

Driving the effort to realize the potential of HTS, venture capitalists, public shareholders, and government programs have poured countless millions into HTS R&D, yet commercial success has proven slow to materialize. Nonetheless, there are important indications of progress: more and more organizations are working to produce HTS wires, and major demonstration projects are underway around the world.

The key to understanding the status R&D in HTS power applications is to track all the technologies involved, including cryogenic refrigeration, dielectrics, and superconducting materials. In addition, because no single country dominates in HTS R&D, the effort must be viewed globally. Two decades after the discovery of HTS, 2006 is sure to bring some exciting new advances. It will also bring the achievements of last year into greater perspective.

Mark Bitterman
Editor, Superconductor Week

Mark Bitterman is the Executive Editor of Superconductor Week, the most comprehensive and widely read newsletter covering the technology and commercialization of superconductors. Original reporting, exclusive interviews, and expert analysis spans low- and high-temperature superconductors in small- and large-scale applications, from the proven growth of the MRI industry to the anticipated revolution of advanced power devices, from recent success in all-digital RF receivers to key advances in cryocoolers.

Subscribe online at www.superconductorweek.com.

Clean Coal: An Oxymoron?

To many people who are passionate environmentalists, the words “clean” and “coal” couldn’t be more polarized opposites. The thought of coal directly implies powerplant smokestacks belching carbon dioxide emissions and other pollutants.

Certainly, it is true that coal-burning powerplants have historically been largely responsible for high quantities of sulfur dioxide and nitrous oxide emissions that contribute to acid rain and local air quality non-attainment issues (e.g., haze, surface ozone). And, it remains true that coal powerplants continue to be perhaps the most important single contributor to global warming, by virtue of their high CO2 emissions.

But, is a no-tolerance anti-coal perspective justified on an environmental basis? In my mind, no. In fact, it is theoretically possible to reconcile the concept of zero-emissions coal utilization. This entails the use of an integrated gasifier coal combined-cycle (IGCC), along with carbon sequestration.

This is the vision of the FutureGen Alliance. FutureGen Alliance Announcement This initiative, announced in late 2005, embraces many of the largest and most important parties in coal-fired generation to develop a standardized coal-to-electricity technology that produces no air emissions. The combined-cycle part of the technology is well-understood, having been widely utilized for many years now. In contrast, there are two relatively new technologies that remain to be commercialized for the zero-emissions coal vision to be realized:

The first is gasification technology — converting coal to a synthetic gas (“syngas”) similar to natural gas for use in the combined-cycle. There have been a number of gasification technologies employed for decades, and they work reliably, but none have yet to achieve the holy grail of being deemed “commercially economical”.

The second is carbon sequestration technology — capturing CO2 emissions from the exhaust stream and then injecting it underground. Again, the science is well understood, but the economics of carbon sequestration have always been challenging, particularly because of the intensive energy requirements.

If these two technologies can be commercially improved, making sequestered-IGCC economically-viable, then our future energy and environmental situations are much more assured. We have plenty of coal to last for well more than 100 years, and if we can use it in an environmentally-benign way, it seems like a no-lose resource for us to employ, until we can get to some energy system (solar with storage? hydrogen fuel cells? fusion?) that can realistically serve the human species for millenia.

More Cleantech News – Honda Enters the Solar Business

There is more bad news for cleantech startups looking for an easy time of it in the solar business. Honda has announced it is entering the solar business and will start shipping from a 27.5 MW plant next year.

Good news perhaps, for the industry overall, further validating that we are in a massive growth period that could bring solar into the mainstream (or else a solar manufacturing bubble). However, probably bad news for solar startups expecting to compete in what is becoming a more and more competitive market for solar panels.

Honda is the first car maker to enter the solar market, with what one report said would be an investment in the US$85 mm range. I’ve been saying for a while that US and European startups need to worry about the major industrials like GE, as well as the Japanese leaders in solar production, closing the window of opportunity for a new startup to build a significant position. Honda now joins the ranks of Kyocera, Mitsubishi Electric, and Sharp as major Japanese industrials leading the solar sector.

All that being said, at 27.5 MW and with no established distribution, Honda has a long way to go to become one of the big boys. By the way, all the notes I could find said that the cells would be non-silicon thin film manufacturing processes. I would be interested if anyone knows what the process is Honda is using, and where it was developed.

Article on Honda For another interesting new solar player, take a look at my previous post on the coming NYSE IPO of China’s Suntech.

2005 Recap

Ah, the usual pundit’s retrospective at the end of the year. Here’s my take on the top 10 most significant developments in 2005 for the cleantech industry, in the usual descending Letterman format:

10. The Energy Policy Act. Sure, it’s a dog’s breakfast of incoherent and often contradicting provisions. And, it’s the most painfully arduous and boring reading imaginable. Wikipedia Summary of EPAct. But, the EPAct will ultimately have numerous important ramifications on the cleantech sector. Biofuels mandates, extensions of the renewables PTC, accelerated tax depreciation, and gobs of grant pork. It will take years to sort it all out and see the effects trickle out into the market, but the aggregate impact will be significant. Unfortunately, not as significantly helpful as a well-thought-out energy policy would be, but alas.

9. Utility CEOs “getting” climate change. The CEOs of Duke Energy (Paul Anderson) and Cinergy (Jim Rogers) made news earlier this year when they took public stands in support of a clear government policy to address the growing concern of global climate change. (These two CEOs also made news by agreeing to merge their respective companies. Coincidence?) Clearly, most of the rest of the utility industry is scared to death of the climate change issue, as they are amongst the biggest contributors of greenhouse gas emissions. However, the fact that two prominent CEOs broke ranks suggests that the tide may be turning, albeit sooooooo slowly. Board resolutions on climate change by serious institutional investors are also helpfully putting pressure on the issue. Once a majority of utilities embrace the need to do something about climate change, something material will finally happen in the U.S. on this critical front.

8. The “Peak Oil” debate. An increasing number of observers are projecting that the peak of Saudi oil production (and hence the peak of conventional oil production) will occur in a rapidly approaching timeframe — by some estimates, within the next 10 years. Perhaps the most eloquent and credible of these observers is the oil/gas investment banker (and adviser to the Bush Administration) Matt Simmons, whose 2005 book Twilight in the Desert has received considerable notice. Twilight in the Desert. Personally, I believe the so-called “peak oil” debate is framed incorrectly in some important aspects, but its key point — that oil production as we now know it has a finite remaining duration — holds a lot of validity. And, the troubling implications of this conclusion have captured the imagination (fears, actually) of many influential people, with significant incipient benefit to those of us in the cleantech community.

7. $60 oil, $3 gasoline, $10 natural gas. High energy prices piss people off — and get them to take notice. “How can I cut my energy bills?” “What can I do to reduce my driving?” “Should I buy a hybrid?” The pocketbook can drive powerful changes in behavior, which should in the long-run have major environmental benefit. High energy prices also make economic room for new clean technologies, as well as provide impetus for further R&D and proactive public policy. For these reasons, let’s hope these high energy prices stay with us.

6. Katrina (and Rita). Hurricanes have been happening for millenia. Only now, it seems like there are more of them, and stronger ones. Hmmmm, could it have anything to do with climate change? Not provable, but worth considering — and many people are now beginning to connect the dots. Katrina was a truly dark tragedy for the U.S. on many levels, but perhaps something good can come from it if mass public thinking about environmental matters has been shaped positively.

5. Wal-Mart goes green. Everyone’s favorite whipping boy, Wal-Mart made a splash in October by declaring serious environmental commitments: 100% supplied by renewable energy, zero environmental waste, all products environmentally sustainable. These lofty goals come from a major policy statement on Wal-Mart’s future in the 21st Century by CEO Lee Scott. Wal-Mart’s 21st Century Leadership Speech. Being the commercial behemoth that it is, when Wal-Mart throws its weight around, the rest of the economy listens. If Wal-Mart is sincere about these environmental goals, and can light a fire under its entire supply chain to drive them to help Wal-Mart meet its goals, big things are afoot.

4. GE’s Ecomagination initiative. In the summer, GE’s CEO Jeff Immelt announced that products/services addressing environmental concerns would become a major platform and organizing theme for the company’s growth.Jeff Immelt on Ecomagination. This is a seismic shift from a company with unparalleled respect in and impact on the global industrial marketplace. GE probably figured that, if it can make a killing in the wind turbine market, there are lots of other opportunities to be found in cleantech. Good for them. Make it happen. If anyone can, GE can.

3. BP doubles down on renewables. As noted recently, BP is increasing its commitment to renewables by pledging to invest nearly $2 billion in the coming years on a variety of wind, solar and hydrogen initiatives. BP will form a new business unit called BP Alternative Energy to hold these initiatives, making more true the company’s tagline “Beyond Petroleum”. BP Alternative Energy Announcement.

2. Kyoto Protocol implementation. True, the U.S. stayed out of the Kyoto treaty. Nevertheless, Kyoto did go into effect early in 2005, and the signatories around the world are now “officially” (whatever that means) bound to its provisions. Accordingly, a robust carbon trading market is now beginning to emerge, especially in Europe. As carbon trading takes off, it will spur entrepreneurial developers to accelerate adoption of clean technologies for cost-effectively capturing trading value, while reducing carbon emissions. Somehow, some way, someday, the U.S. will get into the game too.

…and finally, the most important thing to happen to the cleantech sector in 2005…

1. The launching of Cleantechblog. Surely, this new forum for discussion will rapidly revolutionize the energy and environmental sectors! Kidding aside, congratulations and thanks to Neal Dikeman for his vision and leadership in launching this site this past summer. I appreciate the opportunity to contribute.

All in all, not a bad year for cleantech, but not good enough for my tastes. We still don’t have a sane energy policy that discourages pollution and promotes cost-effective efficiency and clean supply options, by eliminating egregious subsidies and protective barriers on mature segments of the energy sector and instead structuring market rules with appropriate pricing signals that reflect competitive forces while internalizing the economic costs of emissions and security risks associated with fossil fuel use. We still have enormous apathy by the American public on energy and environmental matters, and opposition by most consumers and many of the major energy companies towards anything but a “cheap energy” strategy — emissions be damned. We still don’t have enough private investment capital flowing to the sector — in part because we still haven’t had a big success story in cleantech like Microsoft or Dell.

While we’re moving in the right direction, let’s hope for better in 2006. Happy holidays everyone.

Chinese Solar Company Headed to the NYSE

Catching in on two booms – the boom in Chinese firms headed to the US stock exchanges, and the boom in solar IPOs, Suntech Power, has filed to list on Nasdaq.

They are raising $300 mm in ADRs, and reporting revenues of the last 9 months of $137 mm 13% profit. That puts them in the top 10 in solar production worldwide.

SEC filings

A couple of interesting comments:

  • It’s mostly export business, with Chinese solar sales maybe a fifth of total. So while the Chinese domestic solar business is growing, and solar is a part of the future power mix China is trying to build, the market there is still extremely small.
  • The firm is less than 5 years old, and has grown extremely rapidly. I have been espousing the danger the US and European solar manufacturers are facing from the major Japanese competitors for some time. Now it looks like we have to add Chinese manufacturers to the list.
  • The company was profitable at c. 25 MW/year of annual capacity. That is a lower volume breakeven than most the US firms have been able to achieve.

The long and the short of it is Suntech looks like a company to keep an eye on whether you are an investor looking to get in on the IPO, or a competitor trying to watch the fast changing market dynamics.