Wednesday, July 19, 2006

China's Renewable Energy Boom

For the full article, see Planet Ark.

China is set to spend US$200 billion on renewable energy over the next 15 years. That amount would buy an oil firm the size of Chevron and leave change to fund the current renewables programmes of all Europe's top oil firms for 25 years.

Beijing wants a tenth of its energy to come from environmentally friendly sources by 2010 - a desire driven by soaring air pollution and chronic environmental degradation that is swelling medical bills and provoking discontent.

China's new renewable energy policy, unveiled in January, aims to create a system of financial and policy support for the use of renewable energy, including preferential tariffs for fuels such as biomass. Beyond 2010, China wants renewable sources to supply a fifth of its total energy needs by 2020, up from 7% last year, to slash reliance on imported oil.

Renewable energy will likely become China's next boom sector, with oil at historical high prices and more energy needed to support the country's GDP growth, hovering at around 10%. The compound annual growth rate of China's wind power capacity is estimated to be 39% in 2004-10 and 20% in 2010-20. This presents remarkable growth potential for manufacturers of wind turbines, but competition may force down prices and profit margins.

China - which claims already to be the world's top investor in renewable energy - could leverage the highest wind-power capacity potential on Earth. She aims to have 30 gigawatts of installed wind power capacity by 2020, up from just 1 GW last year, powering between 13 and 30 million households at full capacity.

The country's top economic planning agency expects that up to US$188 billion will need to be invested to reach the 2020 goal. Renewable energy projects will need intensive and long term government support. Beijing appears to have the resolve - and the need - to push ahead, but a proper system of tax or policy incentives could take years. (As we know in the UK.)

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

UK Energy Review is launched

The full text of the UK government review of its energy policy has just been launched. The full text can be found on the DTI website.

Monday, July 10, 2006

That Energy Review and (mainly) nukes

Some views from the UK newspapers over the weekend about the nuclear options for the country, likely to be proposed by the Energy Review (to be announced tomorrow, Tuesday 11 July)

In the on-line Guardian Unlimited, reporting an article in Sunday's Observer newspaper. A reasonably balanced article mentioning a variety of views: 'Energy review 'a sham' to back Blair on nuclear'

From Telegraph.co.uk short articles focussing on the funding of nuclear new build and the likelihood that the 'energy gap' to about 2015 will have to be plugged by more gas-fired generation. Interesting views but predictably anti-Blair - Sunday business comment, by Sylvia Pfeifer, Deputy City Editor: 'Blair's nuclear spin needs hard cash' and 'Power generation gap'.

Guardian Unlimited has a Special Report on the nuclear industry, majoring on articles from the Grauniad's stablemate, The Observer's, claimed sneak preview of the final draft of the Energy Review . 'Revealed: Blair's energy blueprint - Long-awaited government review stresses need for more renewables but critics blast nuclear plans'

This article is by Stephen Hale, Director of Green Alliance. 'Obsession with nuclear power is wrong for Britain, Mr Blair - The Energy Review will back the PM's push for atomic energy, but, says Stephen Hale, it won't deal with the challenge of global climate change

This article in the Independent reports a publication by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) saying the Government's energy review, to be published next week, should set a clear target of doubling the rate of improvement in energy efficiency, rather than go for nuclear new build.

Two articles from the Times Online:

'Standby buttons face axe to curb energy waste'. A good, if short, report on the issues, with plenty of statistics.

'Foreign groups to team up on nuclear power plants'. FRANCE’s EDF, Germany’s Eon and British Energy are considering teaming up to bid for multi-billion-pound contracts to build the UK’s next generation of nuclear power stations.

Hope these were useful. We will all know for certain tomorrow what the Review says.

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All views expressed here, unless otherwise stated, are my own.

John Cockaday