Tenaska Imperial Solar Hosts “Power On” Event

Joanna Schroeder

Tenaska Imperial Solar Energy Center South has added its latest solar project, located in Imperial Valley, CA, to the grid. The company held a “Power On” event to commission to solar project with more than 130 people in attendance. The energy produced will be delivered to San Diego Gas & Electric’s (SDG&E) Sunrise Powerlink. The project was the first under construction in the area and one of the largest commercially financed solar projects in the U.S. The ground mounted photovoltaic solar project will produce up to 130 megawatts of energy – enough to power nearly 44,000 homes.

“Today we celebrated delivering on our promise to send clean renewable energy to Californians,” said Bob Ramaekers, vice president of development for Tenaska. Tenaska Imperial Solar South Project“Reaching this milestone at our inaugural power solar project is confirmation that Tenaska’s 26 years of experience in energy project development and construction provide a strong foundation for the successful development of utility-scale solar.”

According to SDG&E, the newly completed 117-mile Sunrise Powerlink serves as the main catalyst for renewable energy projects, by fulfilling its goal as a renewable energy “superhighway” that will deliver green power generated in the Imperial Valley to the San Diego region.

“The Sunrise Powerlink is one of the largest and most significant projects in the history of San Diego Gas & Electric and we are thrilled that Tenaska is delivering its first energy from its Tenaska Imperial Solar Energy Center South project to our infrastructure,” said Jim Avery, senior vice president of power supply for SDG&E. “SDG&E is a leader in the acquisition of renewable energy and our partnership with Tenaska is an important part of meeting the state’s clean energy goals.”

Earlier this year, Tenaska Imperial South was awarded 2013 project of the Year from Imperial Valley Economic Development Corporation for its contributions to the region.

Alternative energy, Electricity, Energy, Solar

Everything That’s Wrong About Coal

Joanna Schroeder

Not a fan of Coal? Neither is the Sierra Club who has released a new video highlighting the dangers of mining, burning and disposing of coal. The goal of the video is to explain problems with coal-powered dirty fuels, the benefits of clean energy, and the need to move the country beyond coal.

“It’s clear that coal is a dirty, dangerous and outdated fuel source that is making kids sick,” said Mary Anne Hitt, director of the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal campaign. “From mining, to burning, to disposal, coal is wreaking havoc on our health and our planet. We hope this video helps viewers better understand the dangers of powering our country by burning coal, and why it is so important that we transition to clean, renewable sources of energy.”

Some examples of a clean, renewable energy future: solar and wind energy.

Clean Energy, Renewable Energy, Video

Biofuels, Farm Groups Applaud Pentagon’s Move

John Davis

coalition1Groups representing biofuels and farm interests are praising the Pentagon’s action to develop cheaper, drop-in biofuels. Michael McAdams, president of the Advanced Biofuels Association, says the $16 million awarded under the Defense Production Act is a significant step in supporting efforts to build commercial drop in fuels facilities:

“Biofuels offer outstanding performance and environmental sustainability, while also providing a diversity of fuels that increases security for the men and women serving in our armed forces. The vision of the military once again leads the world in the evolution of fuels, and is one that should be supported and admired by all.”

Another coalition of groups, including the Advanced Biofuels Association, as well as the Algae Biomass Organization, American Council on Renewable Energy, American Farm Bureau Federation, the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO), and the National Farmers Union, among others, echoed those sentiments:

“Adopting advanced “drop-in” biofuels will help the DoD and the nation achieve its broader national security goals,” the groups said. “As the largest institutional consumer of liquid fuels in the world, the U.S. military is incredibly susceptible to the volatile global oil market. The DoD estimates that every 25 cent increase in the price of a gallon of petroleum-based fuel costs the military $1 billion in additional fuel costs. It is increasingly important to find domestically produced alternatives to improve the country’s energy security, meet global energy demands, and provide jobs, while strengthening our military and domestic economy.

“By pursuing new processes and technologies for producing next-generation biofuels, we are working to accelerate innovation in a critical and growing sector that will help to improve U.S. energy security and sustain the U.S. military’s readiness.”

advanced biofuels, aviation biofuels, biofuels, Government

Souilly Wind Farm in France Commissioned

Joanna Schroeder

Enovos Luxembourg has officially commissioned its Souilly wind farm located in France. The wind farm consists of five Vestas V90 wind turbines with a power capacity of 2 MW each. The site has an estimated annual production of more than 22,000,000 kWh a year, enough to provide power to 5,500 households.

Souilly wind Farm“Over 10,000 tons of greenhouse gas emissions can be avoided every year thanks to the green energy produced by Souilly farm,” said Daniel Christnach, Head of Renewable Energies & Cogeneration at Enovos. “With the addition of this project, the company now has a total renewable energy production capacity of 271 MW in Luxembourg, Germany, Belgium, France and Italy.”

The company also has a second wind farm in France with a total output capacity of 12MW. In addition, they have three wind projects in Germany with a total output capacity of 27.8 MW and five wind projects in Luxemburg with a total capacity of 48.6 MW.

“As a supplier of electricity and natural gas, we are aware of the limited availability of fossil fuels,” added Marc Reiffers, COO Enovos. “We want to contribute to the supply of sustainable energy and actively protect the climate through sizeable investments in renewable energies, and in this instance it is wind turbines. Our investment in the Souilly wind farm, developed by ABO Win, Wiesbaden, proves our commitment to renewable energy sources that respect the environment.”

Alternative energy, Electricity, Energy, Wind

Siouxland Energy Steps Up to Step Down Gas Prices

Joanna Schroeder

e85-ethanolAs gas prices continue to rise, the ethanol industry is taking a bold step to ensure consumers save at the pump. While E10 and E15 are saving drivings money with each gallon, now flex fuel drivers who use E85 can save even more money. Siouxland Energy and Livestock Cooperative (SELC), a 60 million gallon per year ethanol plant in Sioux Center, Iowa, is now offering E85, a fuel blend of 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gasoline, directly to retailers and is passing in the RIN value generated by blending ethanol directly to them. The hope, the retailer then passes their saving on to consumers.

According to OPIS, recent prices for E85 at Iowa terminals were about $2.69 per gallon, while SELC listed the price for their E85 at only $2.17 per gallon. Last week, Absolute Energy of St. Ansgar, Iowa announced the implementation of the same program.

“Here at Siouxland Energy, we’re passing on the RIN savings to the consumer, and it’s making for some very attractive E85 prices,” said SELC Commodity Manager Tom Miller. “I think ethanol plants are growing tired of watching a middleman pocket the RIN value to the detriment of consumers. Our plant wants consumers to understand the real value of homegrown ethanol, so we’ve cut out the middleman and we’re selling E85 directly to retailers at a much greater discount.”

A RIN, or renewable identification number, is a free credit earned by the blender of ethanol that can then be sold on the open market to oil refiners, which use the credits to demonstrate compliance with the federal Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS).

Alternative energy, E15, E85, Ethanol, RINS

BioEnergy Bytes

Joanna Schroeder

  • BioEnergyBytesDFThe Georgia Alternative Fuel Vehicle Roadshow is taking place in Georgia this June beginning in Athens on June 3, 2013. The events are free.
  • In the state of Queensland, Australia, Conergy recently commissioned a 100 kilowatt rooftop to the grid that operates without any feed-in tariff.  The retirement nursing home “Casa d’Amore” in South Brisbane solar system contains 400 Conergy PowerPlus modules on 6,888 square feet producing 146 megawatt hours of power each year.
  • Save the date for The RIN Academy on Monday, August 26, 2013 in Des Moines, Iowa. Hosted by EcoEngineers, Iowa State University and the American Coalition for Ethanol (ACE), the RIN Academy is a one-day workshop. Topics include: RFS mandates; higher blends of ethanol & breaking through the blend wall – Opportunities & Challenges;  2013-2014 RIN & commodity pricing trends; the regulatory frontier: RIN QAP, new fuel pathways, emerging technologies; meeting the D5 mandate: sugar ethanol or biodiesel?
  • The 5th Annual OPIS RFS2, RINs & Biodiesel Forum will be held October 17-18, 2013 in Chicago. Top biofuels experts will guide attendees through the RFS from every angle. Participants will learn how to survive the RIN crunch by hedging risk, strategies for optimizing RIN allocations, specific attestation best practices, the nitty gritty legal details of the RFS, implications of California’s Low Carbon Fuel Standard, and more.
  • Natural Power has announced the establishment of its 14th office in Halmstad, Sweden. The new base widens service provision into Scandinavia, expanding on the company’s existing client base. Ex-Triventus employee Mikael Palmqvist joins the company as Senior Technical Manager responsible for the new office.
Bioenergy Bytes

EU Hits Argentine, Indonesian Biodiesel with Duties

John Davis

eu-flagAfter several weeks of threatening, the European Union has pulled the trigger and hit biodiesel from Argentina and Indonesia with anti-dumping duties on biodiesel from the two countries. NASDAQ reports the new taxes on the imported biodiesel come after the European Biodiesel Board filed a complaint nearly a year ago:

EU biodiesel makers have long complained that subsidies and incentives for biodiesel makers in Argentina and Indonesia give them an unfair advantage.

Argentina’s Foreign Ministry denounced the duties as an attempt to shield EU companies from more competitive Argentine producers.

“This is a protectionist decision that lacks technical justification,” the ministry said in a statement Tuesday.

Argentina is the world’s top biodiesel exporter, but production and exports have dropped off sharply since September, when the government modified the industry’s export tax incentives. Biodiesel exports fell 11% on the year to $1.85 billion, according to Argentine data.

Argentine officials say they want to have consultations with the EU over the dispute.

Biodiesel, International

New DoD Contract Looks to Crack $4/gal Biofuels

John Davis

dodshieldThe Pentagon has handed out a series of contracts for aviation biofuels totaling $16 million. Bloomberg reports the three refineries in Illinois, Nebraska and California that won the Department of Defense awards hope to make the green fuels for less than $4 per gallon:

The contracts will be matched by more than $17 million in investments by the contractors, Sharon Burke, assistant secretary of defense for operational energy, said today in a telephone interview. The companies will develop plans for refineries capable of supplying at least 150 million gallons of biofuel for less than $4 a gallon, she said.

“We see a national security benefit in global diversification of liquid fuels,” Burke said. The department hopes the effort will “catalyze greater production of these fuels across our economy,” she said.

The contractors are Emerald Biofuels LLC, based in Golf, Illinois; Natures BioReserve LLC in South Sioux City, Nebraska; and Fulcrum Brighton Biofuels LLC in Pleasanton, California.

The article goes on to say the biofuels will be made from animal fats, food-processing waste and oil-seed crops.

Meanwhile, Fulcrum Brighton Biofuels says it has perfected a process to turn municipal solid waste (“MSW”) – household garbage – into jet and diesel fuels, which could open up an 80 billion gallon per year fuel market:

“Fuel diversity adds an integral component to our innovative business plan, creating a platform to offer customers the product they want, in the market they want. Our process is now capable of producing jet fuel, diesel and ethanol from residential garbage that would otherwise be landfilled,” said E. James Macias, Fulcrum’s President and Chief Executive Officer.

biofuels, Government, Waste-to-Energy

Key Hydrogen Report on OpenEnergyInfo

Joanna Schroeder

As part of the Open Government initiative launched by the Obama Administration, Sandia National Laboratories’ Technical Reference on Hydrogen Compatibility of Materials has made its debut on the Energy Dataset of OpenEnergyInfo, or OpenEI. The work has been available on Sandia’s website for several years but the lab says this new site makes the work more widely available.

“The Technical Reference is a valuable tool for the hydrogen delivery and storage industries,” said Sunita Satyapal, director of the Fuel Cell Technologies Office, the Department of Energy (DOE) office that has sponsored Sandia’s work on the Technical Reference. “It can help eliminate R&D redundancies by providing extensive OpenEI wiki gateway hydrogencompatibility data to the broader industry. By sharing these crucial findings on OpenEI, the Technical Reference can increase the rate of progress towards overcoming the barriers of hydrogen delivery and storage and allow us to reach full commercialization of FCEVs sooner.”

The Technical Reference focuses on compatibility issues between hydrogen and other materials. Due to their small size, hydrogen molecules can seep into materials at room temperature. This high rate of diffusion can promote embrittlement in some of those materials and some materials can be downselected depending on the application and conditions.

To help overcome this challenge, the Technical Reference provides detailed information of the effects of hydrogen on the materials that might be used in equipment for storing hydrogen and delivering it to fuel cell electric vehicles. Developed and updated by researchers at Sandia, the Technical Reference consolidates results of extensive review of reports and journal publications, as well as new research conducted by Sandia, on a range of compatibility issues that must be addressed to increase the cost-effectiveness and ease-of-use of hydrogen vehicles and their infrastructure.

“The reviewed and tested data in the Technical Reference can help industry target and develop components and systems with fewer hydrogen compatibility issues,” said Sandia researcher Brian Somerday, who, along with Sandia colleague Chris San Marchi was a principal developer of the report. “This could potentially accelerate the timetable for the hydrogen-fueled transportation system.”

Alternative energy, Electric Vehicles, Hydrogen

BioEnergy Bytes

Joanna Schroeder

  • BioEnergyBytesDFYingli Solar along with Solar Roof Systems, Kingspan and Atama Solar Energy, have raised a total of 24,000 Euro for SolarAid, the London based charity using solar power to help education in Africa. The fundraising will support SolarAid’s ‘Lighter Learning’ programme to improve the education of children in Africa by providing lighting for classrooms in 12 schools across Zambia.
  • The MILENA technology to produce green gas, electricity or fluid fuels from waste and biomass, developed by Dutch energy institute ECN, is going going. The company has signed a license agreement with Royal Dahlman to implement the technology worldwide.
  • Pacific Green Technologies has entered into an agreement to acquire Pacific Green Energy Parks Limited, the sole shareholder of Energy Park Sutton Bridge Limited (EPSB). EPSB has obtained planning permission to develop a 49 MWe biomass power plant on land located at Sutton Bridge, Lincolnshire, UK.
  • ConEdison Solutions has launched a Government Energy Forum on its website. The forum allows public-sector professionals to post comments and exchange ideas with their public-sector peers about emerging energy issues and news affecting energy supply for government.
  • The Board of Directors of the American Solar Energy Society has named Seth Masia, currently director of communications at ASES, to step into the role of interim executive director. He assumes the duties of Susan Greene, who will leave her job as president of ASES on May 31.
Bioenergy Bytes