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Hans De Keulenaer

How much money do wind subsidies add to domestic fuel bills? | Environment | guardian.c... - 0 views

  • RenewableUK, a trade association representing the renewable energy sector, says that 47% of this total can be attributed to wind. "So we normally say [that for wind power] the RO adds £10 per year to people's fuel bills," says a spokesman.
Hans De Keulenaer

Measuring energy use and behaviour change in the home | Housing network | Guardian Prof... - 0 views

  • Staff from the university have been working in partnership with a social landlord in the north-west of England to examine how new tenants of five typical, semi-detached three-bedroom properties respond to a range of interventions to make them more energy aware – and use the energy within their homes more wisely – over a period of two years.
Hans De Keulenaer

UK power blackouts now unlikely, research shows | Environment | The Guardian - 0 views

  • The severe economic slowdown and increased energy efficiency in Britain means widely feared power blackouts between 2015 and 2020 will be avoided, new research predicts.
Hans De Keulenaer

Kenya to build Africa's biggest windfarm as rains fail and hydropower falters | Environ... - 0 views

  • Some 365 giant wind turbines are to be installed in desert around Lake Turkana in northern Kenya – used as a backdrop for the film The Constant Gardener – creating the biggest windfarm on the continent. When complete in 2012, the £533m project will have a capacity of 300MW, a quarter of Kenya's current installed power and one of the highest proportions of wind energy to be fed in a national grid anywhere in the world. 
Hans De Keulenaer

UKERC: first predictions of how much electricity will cost upto 2040 | News | guardian.... - 0 views

  • Predicting how much our energy will cost is critical but not in the least bit easy. UKERC are working on it and have revealed their preliminary findings to the Guardian
Hans De Keulenaer

Higher energy bills for majority by 2020 despite government reassurances | Money | The ... - 0 views

  • But a deeper analysis requested by the Guardian shows that only one in three homes, or about 10.3m households, will see the predicted reductions in their combined bills as a result of installing one or more of the renewable energy or efficiency measures, or receiving the Warm Home Discount for low-income and vulnerable households. Meanwhile the majority of bill payers, 19.1m, will see an average increase in their bills, over and above the extra costs of rising fossil fuel prices and huge investment in the electricity grid.
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    With energy costs equivalent to 10% of the economy, and with lots of subsidies and taxes, the price consumers pay for energy is a grateful subject for spin doctors.
Hans De Keulenaer

UK climate watchdog warns against raising renewables targets - 1 views

  • The government's climate watchdog today urged the coalition to focus on hitting the UK's renewable energy targets rather than raising them higher.
Hans De Keulenaer

The Oil Drum: Europe | Energy: the fundamental unseriousness of Gordon Brown - 0 views

  • The Guardian reports this morning on a private report to Gordon Brown that suggests that Britain should oppose binding target for renewable energies in Europe (20% of all energy by 2020, as agreed earlier this year at this spring's EU Summit). The Guardian flags the juicy political bits ("work with Poland and other governments sceptical about climate change to "help persuade" German chancellor Angela Merkel and others to set lower renewable targets", "a potentially significant cost in terms of reduced climate change leadership"), but also provides some of the apparent underlying reasons provided, which are worth commenting upon: it undermines the carbon-trading scheme which "allows wealthy governments to pay others to reduce emissions"; it costs too much money (£4 billion a year to get to 9% by 2020); it does not help push for new nuclear plants as it "reduces the incentives to invest in other carbon technologies like nuclear power"; Let's say it plainly: each of these arguments is stupid, short-sighted and, quite simply, false. Let me take you through them in turn (under the fold).
Hans De Keulenaer

Nuclear expansion is a pipe dream, says report | The Guardian | Guardian Unlimited - 0 views

  • The Oxford Research Group paper, funded by the Joseph Rowntree charitable trust, says that the worldwide nuclear "renaissance" planned by the industry to provide cheap, clean power is a myth.
Hans De Keulenaer

50 people who could save the planet | Environment | The Guardian - 0 views

  • Stranded polar bears, melting glaciers, dried-out rivers and flooding on a horrific scale - these were the iconic images of 2007. So who is most able to stop this destruction to our world? A Guardian panel, taking nominations from key environmental figures, met to compile a list of our ultimate green heroes
Phil Slade

Rwanda harnesses volcanic gases from depths of Lake Kivu | Environment | The Guardian - 2 views

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    "Rwanda harnesses volcanic gases from depths of Lake Kivu Project could power Rwanda for decades, while reducing risk of disaster for 2 million people living alongside 'exploding lake'"
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    Good catch Phil. We like to see things in this group which are the first deployment of a new concept, pushing the boundary for sustainable energy.
Peter Fleming

James Lovelock - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 3 views

  • Climate and mass human mortality Writing in the British newspaper The Independent in January 2006, Lovelock argues that, as a result of global warming, "billions of us will die and the few breeding pairs of people that survive will be in the Arctic where the climate remains tolerable" by the end of the 21st century.[20] He has been quoted in The Guardian that 80% of humans will perish by 2100 AD, and this climate change will last 100,000 years.
brunodewachter

Universal mobile phone charger unveiled as industry gets greener | Business | guardian.... - 0 views

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    New device, announced at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, will include a 50% reduction in standby energy consumption + description of solar powered phone by Samsung
davidchapman

George Monbiot: B&Q's bluster on micro-wind power runs out of puff | Environment | guar... - 0 views

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    B&Q's decision to face facts and withdraw its useless micro wind-turbines is baffling only because it has taken so long
Hans De Keulenaer

Greenwash: Fred Pearce on the great green electricity con | Environment | guardian.co.uk - 0 views

  • But no. In fact, we are usually subsidising the power companies to do what they are required by law to do already. Worse, despite us paying through our green noses, they still can't meet their targets. Then they rub our noses in it by selling what "green electricity" they do produce over and over again.
Hans De Keulenaer

UK Starts World's Largest Algae Biofuel Initiative : Gas 2.0 - 0 views

  • While food-based biofuels are taking the heat for rising food prices, other solutions - like algae - are gaining a more serious following. For example, the UK’s Carbon Trust has announced plans for a project to make algae bio-fuels a commercial reality by the year 2020
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    By 2020, algae-based biofuels may be 'a commercial reality', but not to the extent to make a difference within this timeframe.
Hans De Keulenaer

EU's 'soft power' unprepared for resource conflicts « 3E Intelligence - 0 views

  • The EU is unprepared for future conflicts over energy resources, according to a new report written for the meeting of EU leaders on 13-14 March. The report, seen by the Guardian, predicts that global warming might lead to energy wars, mass migration, failed states and political radicalisation. The report highlights the “scramble” over natural resources from the thawing Arctic region as a potential new conflict area with Russia.
Glycon Garcia

UN-run carbon trading mechanism questioned amidst allegations of corruption | Environme... - 0 views

  • Discredited strategy Increasing allegations of corruption and profiteering are raising serious questions about the UN-run carbon trading mechanism aimed at cutting pollution and rewarding clean technologies, writes Patrick McCully, executive director of US thinktank International Rivers
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