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Alternative Energy Grows Wings

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Up to this point, we have witnessed several innovations in the use and implementation of renewable and alternative fuel sources in automobiles. Now the Commercial Aviation Fuels Initiative has begun testing biodiesel as a better alternative to conventional fossil fuel.  Darrin Morgan, Boeing Commercial Airplanes' director of environmental business analysis, said Boeing's work with Virgin Atlantic is now spurring the biofuels supply chain to consider the possibilities of aviation demand for Biofuels.  Up to this point, we have witnessed several innovations in the use and implementation of renewable and alternative fuel sources in automobiles. Now the Commercial Aviation Fuels Initiative has begun testing biodiesel as a better alternative to conventional fossil fuel.  Darrin Morgan, Boeing Commercial Airplanes' director of environmental business analysis, said Boeing's work with Virgin Atlantic is now spurring the biofuels supply chain to consider the possibilities of aviation demand for Biofuels.
Last Updated on Wednesday, 29 October 2008 20:45 Read more...
 

Green Jobs!

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T Boone Pickens is a Texas businessman who is investing in renewable energy by installing wind farms in Texas to take advantage of all that wind that Texas is famous for. Not only that, but Pickens has created a website with forums and groups abhout renewable energy. One of the groups is green jobs. Here you can can find jobs in renewable energy and in the eco movement. So whether you are an employee or an employer, check out Green Jobs Now! job board. And if you know of any green jobs, be sure and sign up so you can post them.
 

California Unveils Latest Plan to Curb Emissions

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SUNNYVALE, Calif. -- The California Air Resources Board (CARB) released a climate change plan Wednesday that will touch nearly every sector of the state's economy -- from the cars we buy to the places we live and the energy used power them.

The proposed scoping plan, which must be approved in December, aims to meet an overarching goal embodied in the Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006: reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the country's most populous state to 1990 levels by 2020.

"In a sense, this is just the beginning ... It's going to take the efforts of everybody in this room, and people beyond this room, to make it a reality because this is a plan that will take a lot of work and money to implement," Mary Nichols, CARB chairperson, told business leaders Wednesday at an event to launch The Climate Group's "Business Guide to the Low Carbon Economy: California."

Last Updated on Wednesday, 29 October 2008 20:44 Read more...
 

Renewable Energy Bill under fire in California

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Applied Materials' newly completed solar energy system at their Sunnyvale, Calif., research campus is one of the largest corporate solar power installations in the United States. (Business Wire)

With Prop. 7, California argues its energy future

The ballot initiative would mandate more renewables. So why are many environmentalists against it?

By Daniel B. Wood Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor/ October 16, 2008 edition

California, which leads the country in cutting the greenhouse gases that cause global warming, is trying to accelerate its “green revolution.”

But several leading research and environmental organizations warn that the latest attempt could backfire, reducing the state’s push to embrace renewable energy.

A citizen’s initiative – Proposition 7, which goes before voters Nov. 4 – requires all electric utilities to provide half of their electricity from solar and other clean energy sources by 2025. The initiative would double what utilities are now asked to do under the state’s Renewable Portfolio Standard. Currently, California utilities derive about 11 percent of their electricity from renewable sources.

Last Updated on Monday, 27 October 2008 04:02 Read more...
 

Jobs in Renewable Energy Expanding

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Jobs in Renewable Energy Expanding
by Michael Renner | July 8, 2008

Driven by the gathering sense of a climate crisis, the notion of "green jobs"-especially in the renewable energy sector-is now receiving unprecedented attention. Currently about 2.3 million people worldwide work either directly in renewables or indirectly in supplier indus­tries.1 Given incomplete data, this is in all like­lihood a conservative figure. The wind power industry employs some 300,000 people, the solar photovoltaics (PV) sector accounts for an estimated 170,000 jobs, and the solar thermal industry, at least 624,000.2 More than 1 million jobs are found in the biomass and biofuels sector.3 Small-scale hydropower and geothermal energy are far smaller employers. (See Figure 1.)

Renewables tend to be a more labor-intensive energy source than the still-dominant fossil fuels, which rely heavily on expensive pieces of pro­duction equipment. A transition toward renewables thus promises job gains. Even in the absence of such a transition, growing automa­tion and corporate consolidation are already translating into steadily fewer jobs in the oil, natural gas, and coal industries-sometimes even in the face of expanding production. Many hundreds of thousands of coal mining jobs have been shed in China, the United States, Germany, the United Kingdom, and South Africa in the last decade or two.4 In the United States, coal output rose by almost one third during the past two decades, yet employment has been cut in half.5

A handful of countries have emerged as leaders in renewables development, thanks to strong government support. A study commissioned by the German government found that in 2006 the country had some 259,000 direct and indirect jobs in the renewables sector.6 The number is expected to reach 400,000-500,000 by 2020 and then 710,000 by 2030.7

Spain also has seen its renewables industry expand rapidly in recent years. The industry now employs some 89,000 people directly (mostly in wind power and PV) and another 99,000 indirectly.8 Denmark has long been a leader in wind development. But with policy support there less steady in recent years, the number of domestic wind jobs has stagnated at about 21,000.9

In the United States, federal policies have been weak and inconsistent over the years, leaving leadership to individual state governments. Still, a study for the American Solar Energy Society found that the U.S. renewables sector employed close to 200,000 people directly in 2006 and another 246,000 indirectly.10

India's Suzlon is one of the world's leading wind turbine manufacturers, further strengthening its position through its 2007 takeover of Germany's REpower.11 Manufacturing of wind turbine components, production of spare parts, and turbine maintenance by Suzlon and other companies are helping to generate much-needed income and employment in India.12 Suzlon currently employs more than 13,000 people directly-about 10,000 in India, and the remain­der in China, Belgium, and the United States.13

China is rapidly catching up in solar PVs and wind turbine manufacturing and is already the dominant force in solar hot water and small hydropower development.14 According to rough estimates, close to a million people in China currently work in the renewables sector.15 To some extent, these numbers reflect China's low labor productivity compared with Western countries. This seems especially true in the solar thermal industry, which is thought to employ some 600,000 people.16

The leaders in renewables technologies can expect considerable job gains in the near future in manufacturing solar panels and wind tur­bines for both domestic and export markets. Jobs in installing, operating, and maintaining renewable energy systems tend to be more local in nature and could thus benefit a broad range of countries.

For instance, Kenya has one of the largest and most dynamic solar markets in the developing world. There are 10 major solar PV import companies, and the country has an estimated 1,000-2,000 solar technicians.17 In Bangladesh, Grameen Shakti has installed more than 100,000 solar home systems in rural communities in a few years-one of the fastest-growing solar PV programs in the world-and is aiming for 1 million by 2015, along with the creation of some 100,000 jobs for local youth and women as solar technicians and repair and maintenance specialists.18

Four countries-Brazil, the United States, China, and Germany-are leading in biomass development. Brazil's ethanol industry is said to employ about 300,000 workers.19 Indonesia and Malaysia are leading palm oil producers; a small but growing share is being diverted there to biofuels production. Malaysia has an estimated half-million people employed in the palm oil industry (and another million people whose livelihoods are connected to it)-many of them Indonesian migrant workers.20 Indonesia is itself planning a major expansion, and optim­istic projections speak of 3.5 million new plantation jobs by 2010.21

Following a wave of initial enthusiasm, there are now rising doubts about the environmental benefits and economic impacts of at least some types of biofuels, however.22 And the jobs that are being created need close scrutiny as well. Biofuels processing typically requires higher skills and thus is likely to offer better pay than feedstock production and harvesting. But most jobs are found at sugarcane and palm oil plantations, where wages and working conditions are often extremely poor.

The Brazilian sugarcane industry has historically been marked by exploitation of seasonal laborers and by the takeover of smaller-scale farms by large plantation owners, often by violent means.23 The prevailing piece-rate system leaves many Brazilian plantation workers earning a pittance, and some end up in debt bondage. Living conditions are often squalid.24 In Indonesia, too, poverty is common among plantation workers, who face unsafe working conditions, frequent denial of their rights, and intimidation by employers.25

The expansion of plantations for biofuels also threatens to come at the expense of rural jobs and rural communities. Oil palm companies seeking to acquire land in Indonesia's West Kalimantan, for example, have been found to hold out false promises of jobs for local communities.26 A 2006 study of the area found that small farming systems provided livelihoods for 260 times as many people per hectare of land as oil palm plantations did.27

According to the Woods Hole Research Center, India could create some 900,000 jobs by 2025 in biomass gasification.28 Of this total, 300,000 jobs would be with manufacturers of gasifier stoves (including masons, metal fabricators, and so on) and 600,000 would be in biomass production, processing into briquettes and pellets, supply chain operations, and after-sales services.29 Another 150,000 people might find employment in advanced biomass cooking technologies.30

While biofuels are now subject to more critical reviews on a number of fronts, the future looks promising for wind and solar. Global Wind Energy Outlook 2006 outlines three scenarios-conservative, moderate, and advanced-for future worldwide wind energy development, assuming different rates of investments and capacity expansion.31 (See Figure 2.) Global wind power employment is projected to grow to as much as 2.1 million in 2030 and 2.8 million in 2050 under the advanced scenario.32 Solar Generation IV, a 2007 report by the European Photo­vol­taic Industry Association and Green­peace International, similarly projects world­wide solar PV developments via three scenarios.33 By 2030, as many as 6.3 million jobs could be created under the best case scenario.34 (See Figure 3.)

Expanding the role of renewables helps make other sectors of the economy, such as transpor­tation and buildings, more sustainable-thus greening additional jobs to some degree.
 
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Newsflash

One of the many top issues with voters is renewable energy. Its actually right up there with the failing economy and high gas prices. California, Colorado and Missouri all  have measures on their ballots that deal with alternative energy sources, which include wind and solar power.  An initiative in California  would require utilities to obtain up to  half their power from renewable resources by 2025, setting the toughest standard in the United States. This is typical of California. California has always been the leader in reducing greenhouse emissions. Although this is a progressive move, it has also  drawn much opposition. Environmental groups which include  the Sierra Club, along with the Democrats and Republican parties both agree that the initiative has too many loopholes as it stands. This initiative would require the utilities to add two-percentage points to their renewable portfolio each year. As it stands these companies are not doing it now. The new law would seek to  fine the companies if they didn't add renewables to their portfolio. The new law, if passed,  would reign in municipal utilities that are  not even covered by the law. These municipal utilities are guilty of using some of the dirtiest fuel out there: Coal.  The state of California's public utilities commission projects  that California utilities will miss their target by at least three years as they are having trouble reaching these goals already. Another California proposal would allow for $5 billion in bonds to give rebates for alternative-fuel vehicles and to promote renewable energy.