Lexus IS Coupe Planned For 2014, Plug-In Hybrid Due?

May 22, 2013  |  Electric Cars

Lexus has announced a coupe version of its compact luxury sedan, the IS, will go on sale in 2014. The company hasn’t confirmed whether a hybrid version will be made, though with the latest IS inspired by last year’s LF-CC concept, itself a hybrid, such a thing is likely. The coupe is expected to look very similar to the LF-CC concept, one of the…
Green Car Reports

German industrial associations against AD duties on Chinese PV imports

May 21, 2013  |  Solar Energy

The Federation of German Industry (BDI) and the Federation of German Wholesale, Foreign Trade and Services (BGA) have warned of the loss of thousands of jobs in Germany if the EU Commission imposes anti-dumping duties on photovoltaic products imported from China, according to a local newspaper.
pv-magazine.com

JA Solar’s shipments exceed Q1 target; narrows loss

May 21, 2013  |  Solar Energy

Despite an 11.5% decrease in shipments in the first quarter of this year, the Chinese PV manufacturer exceeded its previous guidance of 410 MW to 430 MW.
pv-magazine.com

‘Fatbergs’ choking London sewers to be used for energy

May 21, 2013  |  Green Tech

The world’s largest fat-fueled power station will generate some 130 GWh a year. And “fat icebergs” won’t end up in landfill sites.

Originally posted at Crave

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Eos Energy Storage Raises $15 Million, Gets Funding From NRG Energy

May 21, 2013  |  Alternative

Eos Energy Storage has released its second big announcement of the month, a funding boost that includes funding from NRG Energy, a major US energy company.

I just featured a long post on Eos Energy Storage less than a month ago, followed soon after by a post on its first pilot project (with Con Edison). Click that first one above for all kinds of details on the company’s energy storage technology. The essentials, however, are simply that Eos Energy Storage has developed a grid storage solution that is much cheaper than what has been on the market up until now. Of course, it has just launched its first pilot project, so we have to wait until it actually gets to market, but according to the company, that should be in 2014.

The Eos Aurora battery is projected to cost $  1,000/kW or $  160/kWh. The cycle life is 10,000 full cycles (30 year life). And the storage system has a 75% round-trip efficiency. As such, the LCOE is very competitive. (Click to enlarge.)

The Eos Aurora battery is projected to cost $ 1,000/kW or $ 160/kWh. The cycle life is 10,000 full cycles (30 year life). And the storage system has a 75% round-trip efficiency. As such, the LCOE is very competitive. (Click to enlarge.)

EOS Aurora battery

In the press release sent out late yesterday, Eos announced that it had raised $ 15 million Series B financing “with participation from a syndicate of 21 strategic and financial investors.” One very notable investor this round is NRG Energy. As the release notes, NRG Energy has “the nation’s largest independent power generation portfolio of fossil fuel, nuclear, solar and wind facilities.” Despite having its hands in some not so clean sources, it has been heavily focused on diversifying into clean energy and potentially disruptive technology solutions. This is the first time NRG has invested in an energy storage company.

“Eos’s technology is of strategic interest to NRG as we seek to enhance the value of our generation assets and evaluate novel energy storage business opportunities,” said Denise Wilson, NRG Executive Vice President and President, New Businesses. “We have confidence in Eos’s technology, its management team and the compelling value proposition the company will provide to the marketplace.”



Another investor Eos highlighted is Fisher Brothers, “a privately owned New York City-based real estate firm which also owns Plaza Construction, a contractor with experience building urban power plants and renewable energy projects.” The company is “a co-sponsor of the City Investment Fund (with Morgan Stanley), a founding member of Perella Weinberg Partners and a founding partner of Convergent Energy + Power, an energy storage asset development company with a pipeline of projects in New York, California and elsewhere.”

In addition to the Con Edison pilot project mentioned above, Eos says that it “is in advanced discussions with several states regarding the location of its pilot manufacturing facilities.” And it reaffirmed its goal of deploying Eos Aurora batteries in 2014.

Eos has now started its Series C investment round. This rund is aimed at raising funds to produce and deliver, in 2014, Aurora energy storage systems for the utilities with which it has lined up partnerships. There’s no word yet on who those utility partners are, but Eos mentions that they extend beyond the US, and announcements are supposed to be coming in late spring or summer.

Eos contends that it has a relatively short path to profitability, which is based on its deals with utilities and a capital-efficient manufacturing plan. We’ll see.

To keep an eye on all the latest Eos Energy Storage news, bookmark our Eos archives.

Eos Energy Storage Raises $ 15 Million, Gets Funding From NRG Energy was originally published on: CleanTechnica. To read more from CleanTechnica, join over 30,000 others and subscribe to our free RSS feed, follow us on Facebook (also free!), follow us on Twitter, or just visit our homepage (yep, free).


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PacLease, Kenworth and Blu to Offer LNG Truck Rental Program (USA)

May 21, 2013  |  Gas Market

Up until now, many fleets in the four western states have wanted to try liquefied natural gas-fueled trucks in their operations. But committing to a purchase or full-service lease agreement without…

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LNG World News

Proposed Fracking Rule Another Power Grab by Broken Bureaucracy

May 20, 2013  |  Energy Market

WASHINGTON D.C. — IER President Thomas Pyle released the following statement concerning the proposed federal regulations for hydraulic fracturing announced today by the Department of Interior:

“This regulation places an unnecessary additional burden on American energy producers, and ultimately on …

Institute for Energy Research

Power-One shareholders sue ABB

May 19, 2013  |  Solar Energy

Swiss power and automation technologies giant ABB announced on April 22 the acquisition of inverter manufacturer U.S. Power-One. But shareholders of the American company are claiming that the US$ 1 billion sale price is too low. On Tuesday they filed a class action against ABB.
pv-magazine.com

Electric Vehicle Sets Longest-Distance-Traveled Record…On Another Planet!

May 19, 2013  |  Electric Cars

A vehicle journey of just over 22 miles hasn’t really been cause for celebration since the dawn of the motor car itself, when low speeds and unpaved roads made it more arduous than it would have been on the equine alternative. But transpose that figure to another planet and well, it starts to look a bit more impressive. That 22 miles is how far…
Green Car Reports

SEIA report: U.S. military cuts casualties and costs with solar energy

May 18, 2013  |  Solar Energy

The U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) is one of the world’s largest energy consumers. In recent years, all American military branches have changed their focus from fossil fuels to renewable energies. According to a SEIA report released today, renewable energies can help cut war casualties and costs with solar energy.
pv-magazine.com

Tesla plans big announcement that Model S owners ‘will like’

May 18, 2013  |  Green Tech

The car company’s CEO Elon Musk takes to Twitter to let customers know that Tesla will make a strategic announcement on Friday that’s said to focus on service.

Originally posted at News – Cutting Edge

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South Korea May Launch World’s Most Ambitious Cap And Trade Market

May 18, 2013  |  Alternative

With roughly 18 months until launch, South Korea appears ready to create the world’s most ambitious cap and trade market, with the highest global price on carbon.

These findings jump from a Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF) white paper analyzing how potential market designs could affect the nation’s carbon price and market efficiency, and are a reminder that global cap and trade could still be integral to combating climate change.

South Korea’s government is finalizing system design, set to launch in January 2015, but BNEF predicts it could ultimately cover 70% of national emissions and reach $ 90 per ton of carbon.

Ambitious Goals Would Force Tough Cuts

Criticism of the EU emissions trading scheme (ETS) centers on if it actually forces industry to cut pollution, but that won’t be the case in South Korea. “If the government implements the scheme without any changes, it will have major implications for Korean companies,” said Richard Chatterton of BNEF.

Over 450 entities participate in the country’s existing greenhouse gas inventory, covering more than 60% of South Korea’s emissions. These entities are all large-scale emitters, and submit annual emissions and energy consumption data to the government, which then sets reduction targets for the subsequent year.

BNEF’s projections assume the same entities would be covered by the ETS, and are based on South Korea’s emissions reductions target of 30% below current trends by 2020. This goal will require a 19% reduction from 2010 levels, and compared to Australia’s 14% and the EU’s 5% reduction target, make the Korean system without equal.

In order to meet its goal, BNEF predicts South Korea would need to cut its emissions by 836 million tons (Mt) of carbon relative to business-as-usual between 2015 and 2020.

Demand for emission reductions would thus rise to 200 million metric tons per year (Mt/yr) by 2020 – almost double demand projected for the EU ETS, even though South Korea’s program is only 20% its size.

But Reducing Those Emissions Won’t Be Easy

However, BNEF expects South Korea will face challenges meeting these goals. The proposed system design restricts the use of carbon offsets to 28% of reduction requirements up to 2020, and starting in 2021 only offsets from domestic projects would be eligible for polluters.

This tight offset market means South Korea’s ETS could be painful for the country’s industrial sector as they’re forced to buy permits or cut emissions. 598Mt of emissions reductions – nearly 75% of total cuts – will need to come from the industrial and power sector, meaning the cost of electricity and manufactured goods would rise.

Further complicating matters, South Korea’s industrial sector is already fairly energy efficient as a result of historically high energy prices, exposure to international fuel price shocks, and national investment in energy efficiency programs.

Clean Energy Is A Clear Solution…But Not Short-Term

So if offsets are going to be at a premium, and much of the country’s energy efficiency potential has already been realized, where will South Korea’s emissions reductions come from? The clearest solution, as in most cases, is cutting coal-fired electricity generation.

BNEF sees the power sector offering the most abatement opportunities both short and long term. Short-term, the white paper estimates South Korea could reduce emissions in 2020 by up to 64Mt/yr by substituting natural gas for coal-fired power. This assumes natural gas generation utilization capacity rises from current projections of 27% in 2020 to 70%

South Korea has traditionally relied upon imported liquefied natural gas (LNG), but tight supply and volatile price swings lead BNEF to predict electricity generation will shift toward higher-efficiency fossil fuel or renewable generation, and overall energy efficiency measures will rise outside of the industrial sector.

In fact, BNEF predicts the ETS will feed into South Korea’s renewable portfolio standard to expand demand and boost renewable generation to 55 gigawatt-hours (GWh) in 2020 – a 700% increase from 2010.

Toward A Global Carbon Market Via South Korea

But the best way for South Korean polluters to comply with the ambitious reduction goals may not be within its borders – BNEF recommends linking to other functional carbon markets with an abundance of low-cost abatement options.

Two other mature markets will be operating in 2015 when South Korea’s system launches: the EU-Australian, and California-Quebec linked programs. BNEF predicts EU-Australian allowance prices will be below $ 40 per ton, and California-Quebec around $ 50 per ton in 2020.

Linking to these two systems would benefit all parties. South Korea’s ETS will create demand four times greater than California’s system, and 60% higher than the EU-Australia scheme. Thus, South Korea reduces abatement prices by accessing cheaper permits from other systems, while boosting demand and whittling away surplus permit supply in other carbon markets.

Perhaps most promising in this equation, BNEF’s estimates don’t even consider China’s fledgling market. Seven regional pilot programs began rolling out this year, and they will cover up to 1 billion tons of emissions by 2015 before the country launches its own national system in 2020. Remember China is by far the planet’s biggest emitter of carbon.

Oh Wait, Industry May Have Its Day

Of course, these rosy scenarios hinge on the ETS unfolding as originally proposed, and that’s far from a certainty. South Korea’s government is consulting with large emitters this month, and they have called for many revisions to loosen the strict allowance, offset, and reduction policies.

The ETS “Master Plan” is due to be published in December 2013, and it will provide the legal basis for emissions reductions until 2018.

So South Korea, it’s decision time. Stay on your ambitious path, and cut emissions 30% while helping create a truly global carbon market. Or, water down the system proposal, and watch your national emissions climb 28% by 2020, according to BNEF – no pressure.

South Korea May Launch World’s Most Ambitious Cap And Trade Market was originally published on: CleanTechnica. To read more from CleanTechnica, join over 30,000 others and subscribe to our free RSS feed, follow us on Facebook (also free!), follow us on Twitter, or just visit our homepage (yep, free).


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Southwestern Energy Closes Acquisition of Marcellus Shale Properties (USA)

May 18, 2013  |  Gas Market

Southwestern Energy Company announced that it has closed its recently announced acquisition of approximately 162,000 net acres in the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania. The properties were acquired…

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LNG World News

Hybrid Cars: Six Important Things Everyone Should Know (But May Not)

May 16, 2013  |  Electric Cars

Hybrid cars are increasing in popularity all the time in the U.S, but they still make only a small proportion of new vehicle sales, and as such some people still aren’t clued-up on their benefits. Hybrids use two powertrains–in the U.S, that’s generally a gasoline engine and electric motors. Together, they aim to reduce fuel consumption by using…
Green Car Reports

The Domestic Energy Bonanza and the Economy

May 16, 2013  |  Energy Market

A recent commentary on the Washington Post’s “Wonkblog” illustrates the ability of professional economics to collide with common sense. The article seeks to pooh-pooh the idea that America’s oil and natural gas expansion have contributed much to the (anemic) economic …

Institute for Energy Research

First wind-current power system to be installed off Japan’s coast

May 15, 2013  |  Green Tech

A Japanese company will soon test the first renewable energy source to harvest the power of the wind and ocean.

Originally posted at Crave

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Maryland vs Virginia On Solar Power (Infographic)

May 15, 2013  |  Alternative

A Twitter friend recently tweeted me the infographic below (or, to be specific, the Renewable Energy Corporation webpage where it was posted). It’s quite interesting; though, in this “solar smackdown,” the beautiful state where I lived for one year (Virginia) doesn’t compare to Maryland when it comes to solar power, solar jobs, etc. Maybe some Virginians could spread this around enough to stimulate better solar policies (hint: share this infographic).

virginia maryland solar infographic

Maryland vs Virginia On Solar Power (Infographic) was originally published on: CleanTechnica. To read more from CleanTechnica, join over 30,000 others and subscribe to our free RSS feed, follow us on Facebook (also free!), follow us on Twitter, or just visit our homepage (yep, free).


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Revenue from Iran Gas Exports to Surpass USD 10 Bln Per Year, Says Official

May 15, 2013  |  Gas Market

Iran’s revenue from natural gas exports is expected to surpass $ 10 billion per year, said Iran’s Deputy Oil Minister Javad Owji. Owji said that Iran would increase its gas exports to nearly 100…

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LNG World News

How’s Better Place Doing In Israel These Days?

May 13, 2013  |  Electric Cars

The Better Place electric-car system has not had a good run of news lately. But despite little attention, it has managed to boost the sales rate in Israel for its cars, along with subscriptions to its battery-switching service. Deliveries for all of 2012 were 518 cars. Roughly the first 100 were cars for internal use by Better Place itself…
Green Car Reports

PV wafer production forecast to grow 19% in 2013

May 12, 2013  |  Solar Energy

After falling 15% in 2012, photovoltaic wafer production is expected to grow 19% this year, passing 30 GW and reaching 2011 levels, due in large part to growing Japanese demand, according to the latest NPD Solarbuzz Polysilicon and Wafer Supply Chain Quarterly.
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Tesla eyes ‘autopilot’ partnership with Google

May 12, 2013  |  Green Tech

Tesla CEO Elon Musk says that while his company could build its own autopilot feature, it could also partner with Google for that.

Originally posted at News – Cutting Edge

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EV & Bike News Roundup

May 12, 2013  |  Alternative

Some more top electric car news from the past week or so:

Bikes

cpenhagen bicycle city index

cykno_ebike-2

bikes

 EVs

byd electric bus

More stories to share? Drop them below.

And don’t forget to check out our own bike and EV stories.

EV & Bike News Roundup was originally published on: CleanTechnica. To read more from CleanTechnica, join over 30,000 others and subscribe to our free RSS feed, follow us on Facebook (also free!), follow us on Twitter, or just visit our homepage (yep, free).


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Tangiers Approves CWH Farm-Out (Australia)

May 12, 2013  |  Gas Market

Tangiers Petroleum Limited announced that its Board has approved the final terms of its Farm-Out Agreement with CWH Resources Limited and Ansbachall Pty Limited covering two of Tangiers’ Australian…

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LNG World News

Interior Secretary To Continue Energy Embargo on Federal Lands

May 12, 2013  |  Energy Market

On May 7, Interior Secretary Sally Jewell testified before the Senate Appropriations Committee on the President’s 2014 Budget Request. In an otherwise unremarkable and perfunctory presentation, Jewell’s testimony provides further insight into the Obama administration’s hostilities to low-cost, reliable energy …

Institute for Energy Research

EU ProSun claims PV duties will create jobs

May 11, 2013  |  Solar Energy

In reaction to the news that photovoltaic AD duties will likely be imposed on June 6 by the EU Commission, EU ProSun says they will have a "positive effect" on solar growth and jobs. Conversely, AFASE believes tariffs will cause "severe damage" to the market.
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