14th of April

Development banks urged to put more energy into power for poor


Development banks urged to put more energy into power for poor

The World Bank and other major development banks are investing far too little in getting electric power to poor people around the globe, and should allocate at least half their energy budgets to such projects, environmental groups said on Thursday. Some 1.1 billion people, one in seven of the world’s population, still lack access to electricity. New global goals agreed this year set a target for everybody to have access to “affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy” by 2030. In a report issued as the World Bank spring meetings began in Washington DC, the Sierra Club and Oil Change International said top development banks had made little progress in their overall contribution to achieving that goal in the past two years. “For far too long, massive centralized power plants and expanding the grid have been the default approach in addressing energy poverty – a strategy which has clearly failed to reach the world’s poorest,” said Alex Doukas of Oil Change International. The African Development Bank and the Asian Development Bank dedicated the highest proportion of their energy portfolios to energy access, at just over a quarter each in the three fiscal years 2012 to 2014, according to the report. The World Bank allocated 10 percent of its energy investment to access over that period, while the Inter-American Development Bank’s share was just under 6 percent, the report showed. “There’s still time to reach the world’s goal of eliminating energy poverty by 2030 if these institutions act fast to rebalance their budgets toward what’s needed,” said Vrinda Manglik of the Sierra Club’s International Climate and Energy Campaign.

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Development banks urged to put more energy into power for poor

 

12th of April

Solar power, text messages fight maternal deaths in rural Cameroon


Solar power, text messages fight maternal deaths in rural Cameroon

Julianna Senze, 40, had been in heavy labor for eight hours when she arrived at the Idenau Health Centre in Limbe, on the southwest coast of Cameroon.

Like many women in the country, she had had no prenatal care, so what should have been a routine delivery was now a high-risk medical procedure. The nurses, looking worn and tired, rushed her to the delivery room.

“We had to get her here quickly from Batoke village, some eight kilometers away, after receiving an SMS message from the doctor on duty,” said her husband, his voice strained with worry. Less than an hour later, Senze safely delivered a healthy baby boy.

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Solar power, text messages fight maternal deaths in rural Cameroon

 

3rd of April

Haryana makes solar plants mandatory for housing societies, industry


Haryana makes solar plants mandatory for housing societies, industry

Haryana has made solar power plants mandatory for housing societies, industries and other specified categories of buildings.

“The notification has been issued in this regard to achieve higher trajectory for solar power generation and promote green energy,” principal secretary for renewable energy Ankur Gupta said.

Under Haryana’s solar power policy for 2016, the state government is providing various incentives including industrial status, exemption from change of land use approval and cess, free-wheeling and banking facility, exemption of T&D and cross-subsidy charges. Besides, the government has decided to purchase solar power over and above the solar Renewable Purchase Obligation (RPO), Gupta said.

He said 40 investors have signed memorandum of understanding adding to over Rs 98,000 crore with the aim of adding 8,531.75 MW of solar power, besides setting up of bio CNG, module or cell manufacturing, and research and development units in the state. Read more…

Haryana makes solar plants mandatory for housing societies, industry

31st of March

China-led infrastructure bank eyes first loans to India


china-led infrastructure bank eyes first loans to india

India hopes to receive one of the first loans issued by the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) later this year, as it looks to raise $500 million for solar power projects from the newly created lender, Indian officials said.

Funding for clean energy projects would allay fears of environmental lobbyists that the bank’s relaxed lending criteria could promote dirty fuels like coal in developing economies, like India, that are in a hurry to ramp up energy output.

The multilateral investment bank, which has authorised capital of $100 billion, plans to join global clean-energy initiatives, and could fund eco-friendly investment projects to avoid allegations of promoting pollution.

India, the bank’s second biggest shareholder after China, is looking to borrow from the AIIB, a senior official said, to back Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s plan of expanding installed solar capacity to 100 gigawatts by 2022.

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china-led infrastructure bank eyes first loans to india

 

30th of March

Devolving power


Devolving power

Roof top solar system, a dominant rural commodity in Nepal, which caters to the lighting needs of over 600,000 off-grid rural households in the country, is now slowly gaining new admirers in the urban centres as well. With the recent government’s decisions and declarations to increase its solar spending to appease urban consumers amid the severe power shortages in the country, a new debate has emerged on how the government regulations, policies and expenditures could be best employed for the growth of solar rooftop systems. Different views In Nepal, two schools of thoughts primarily dominate the rooftop solar market today. First, the government should boost the total solar energy demand through promotional activities and subsidy packages. This ‘Keynesianism’ has stimulated the growth of renewable infrastructures providing lighting and cooking needs through various green technologies in the far-flung rural hills and plains of the country for over a decade. Alongside, another school of thought is rapidly emerging and gaining supporters. It argues that the government should provide rooftop solar owners an opportunity to sell surplus energy to the Nepal Electricity Authority’s (NEA) electrical grid. As households and businesses in urban centres are already investing large sums in alternative energy facilities to cope with the routine power cuts, proponents of the second school of thought argue that both the awareness and the willingness to pay for the rooftop systems are sufficiently high. Besides, prices of solar or photovoltaic cells, which convert sunlight directly into electricity, are falling globally. With the technological advancements, best available and efficient systems are entering the market every next day. A recent study conducted by researchers at the Oxford University has shown that the cost of a watt of solar capacity has reduced from $256 in 1956 to about $0.82 in 2013—a drop in price by a factor of 2330.

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Devolving power

 

28th of March

Oman to encourage household generation of solar power


Oman to encourage household generation of solar power

Oman will encourage households to generate electricity with solar panels and feed it into the national grid, Qais al-Zakwani, executive director of the Authority for Electricity Regulation, said on Monday. The policy could put Oman in the forefront of Middle East nations promoting widespread use of solar power. Its finances severely damaged by low oil prices, the Omani government is seeking ways to save money, including a cut in electricity subsidies for commercial and industrial users. Zakwani told Reuters the authority aimed to have a mechanism in place by mid-year for households to generate power using solar roofing panels, and provide the power to the grid in exchange for cuts in their electricity tariffs.

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Oman to encourage household generation of solar power

 

24th of March

Why this new solar market could be set to explode


Why this new solar market could be set to explode

Right now, there’s an odd thing about solar in the United States (and elsewhere). It’s either really big — at the scale of massive solar farms with the capacity to generate tens or hundreds of millions of watts of electricity — or pretty small: on your rooftop, with maybe as little as 5 kilowatts, or thousand watts, of capacity. Solar has been growing extremely fast in these existing markets. But more and more, analysts say, there’s a middle-range market whose large potential is just becoming clear. It’s bigger than individual rooftop installations but smaller than vast solar farms. And it’s for a much broader and diverse range of people than fairly wealthy, suburban homeowners. It’s called community or “shared” solar, meaning that multiple people get electricity from a mid-sized solar array on the top of, say, a condo building, or in a lot centered in a community, or perhaps an array or resource designated by their power company. This means people living in more densely populated cities, who may not own the roofs over their heads or who may not have the best credit, could also participate in the solar wave — without having to purchase or finance panels themselves.

As of 2015, only a tiny sliver of all solar capacity in the United States fit into this category. But according to a new report from the energy think tank the Rocky Mountain Institute, the potential for community solar to expand is vast. The group said that as much as 30 gigawatts (or billion watts) of solar capacity, at the extreme upper end, could be added in this space by the year 2020, which would more than double all currently installed solar capacity in the United States. Granted, that also requires a redefinition of what community solar is — the group calls it “community-scale” solar to denote mid-sized arrays, whether owned by a group of individuals or by a power company.

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Why this new solar market could be set to explode

 

9th of March

Seeing no end to power crisis, Gazans turn to the sun


Seeing no end to power crisis, Gazans turn to the sun

Faced with power blackouts lasting anything from eight to 12 hours a day, residents and businesses in Gaza are increasingly turning to the sun to supply their energy needs.

Not only are solar panels more reliable and cheaper in the long run, but in some cases, including that of Tamer al-Burai, they have become essential to staying alive.

“To me, power is not just about lights or entertainment, it’s a matter of life and death,” said Burai, 40, who suffers from a severe sleep disorder that affects his breathing and has to be hooked up to an oxygen ventilator at night.

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Seeing no end to power crisis, Gazans turn to the sun

 

8th of March

Why Big Retailers Are Going Solar


Why Big Retailers Are Going Solar

It’s about economics, not just environmentalism.

Years ago, big retailers and tech companies installed solar panels as a way to take an environmental stance. But these days it’s often an economic choice that is fueled by the promise of lower and less volatile energy costs.

On Tuesday, Whole Foods WFM 0.78% said that it planned a huge project to cover nearly one-fourth of its stores with solar panels. After construction is complete, Whole Foods says it could be among the top 25 biggest commercial U.S. solar suppliers alongside Walmart WMT 0.37% , Walgreens WBA -0.48% , and Target TGT -0.51% .

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Why Big Retailers Are Going Solar

 

8th of March

Vivint Solar terminates $2.2 billion merger with SunEdison


Vivint Solar terminates $2.2 billion merger with SunEdison

Rooftop solar panel installer Vivint Solar Inc (VSLR.N) said on Tuesday it had terminated an agreement under which it would have been taken over by solar energy company SunEdison Inc (SUNE.N) after SunEdison failed to “consummate” the deal.

The cash-and-stock deal, worth $2.2. billion when it was forged last July, had faced criticism from hedge funds and other investors as SunEdison’s finances and share price weakened.

SunEdison shares were up 41 percent at $2.68 in premarket trading, while Vivint’s were little changed at $5.20.

Vivint said it intended to “seek all legal remedies available” as a result of the “willful breach” of the merger agreement by SunEdison.

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Vivint Solar terminates $2.2 billion merger with SunEdison