Summary
The energy team at Google has been analyzing how we could greatly reduce fossil fuel use by 2030. Our proposal - "Clean Energy 2030" - provides a potential path to weaning the U.S. off of coal and oil for electricity generation by 2030 (with some remaining use of natural gas as well as nuclear), and cutting oil use for cars by 44%.
President-elect Obama announced his New Energy for America plan this past summer that is similar to ours in several ways, including a strong emphasis on efficiency, renewable electricity and plug-in vehicles. Similarly, the Natural Resources Defense Council, McKinsey and Company, and the Electric Power Research Institute have issued proposals that share all of these same elements. Al Gore has issued a challenge that is even more ambitious - getting us to carbon-free electricity by 2020 - and we hope the American public pushes our leaders to embrace it. T. Boone Pickens has weighed in with an interesting plan of his own to massively deploy wind energy, among other things. Other plans have also been developed in recent years that merit attention.
Google's proposal will benefit the US by increasing energy security, protecting the environment, creating new jobs, and helping to create the conditions for long-term prosperity. Some of the necessary funds will be public, but much of it will come from the private sector -- a typical approach for infrastructure and high technology investments.
Our goal in presenting this first iteration of the Clean Energy 2030 proposal is to stimulate debate and we invite you to take a look and comment - or offer an alternative approach if you disagree. With a new Administration and Congress - and multiple energy-related imperatives - this is an opportune, perhaps unprecedented, moment to move from plan to action.
This revised proposal was released on November 20, 2008. Check out Google CEO Eric Schmidt's energy speech at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco on October 1, and his energy speech at the Natural Resources Defense Council headquarters in New York on November 20.
Summary: What's New in Version 2.0
Since Clean Energy 2030 was first published on October 1, 2008, we have made several changes based on comments from readers and internal feedback, most notably:
- an analysis of job creation in the electricity sector
- an improved vehicle model which results in higher average fleet fuel efficiency (and significantly increased savings)
- a decrease in the price of gasoline from $4 to $3 per gallon (doubling by 2030), in light of recent economic changes
- a comment on why nuclear power was not expanded beyond the level in the baseline, and why coal with carbon capture and sequestration technology was not included
- an analysis of the precedent for rapid capacity build-outs in the natural gas and nuclear industries
- estimates of the required land area for wind and concentrating solar installations, and roof area for solar photovoltaics
- an analysis of the age of US coal and natural gas plants when retired under our proposal
- a more thorough analysis of the impact of accelerating the retirement of older vehicles
- a summary of the major activities Google is pursuing in the clean energy arena
Overall, we find a slight increase in vehicle fuel and economy-wide CO2 savings, and despite the decrease in fuel prices, a net economic savings almost as large as previously calculated, $820 billion over 22 years.
Summary: Reductions in Energy Use and Emissions
- Fossil fuel-based electricity generation by 88%
- Vehicle oil consumption by 44%
- Dependence on imported oil (currently 10 million barrels per day) by 37%
- Electricity-sector CO2 emissions by 95%
- Personal vehicle sector CO2 emissions by 44%
- US CO2 emissions overall by 49% (41% from today's CO2 emission level)
- Deploying aggressive end-use electrical energy efficiency measures to reduce demand 33%.
- Baseline EIA demand is projected to increase 25% by 2030. In addition, the increase in plug-in vehicles (see below) increases electricity demand another 8%. Thus, our efficiency reductions keep demand flat at the 2008 level.
- Replacing all coal and oil electricity generation, and about half of that from natural gas, with renewable electricity:
- 380 gigawatts (GW) wind: 300 GW onshore + 80 GW offshore
- 250 GW solar: 170 GW photovoltaic (PV) + 80 GW concentrating solar power (CSP)
- 80 GW geothermal: 15 GW conventional + 65 GW enhanced geothermal systems (EGS)
- Increasing plug-in vehicles (hybrids & pure electrics) to 90% of new car sales in 2030, reaching 41% of the total US fleet that year
- Increasing new conventional vehicle fuel efficiency from 31 to 45 mpg in 2030
- Accelerating the turnover of the vehicle fleet, resulting in maximum new vehicle sales of 21.5 million per year in 2020, a 30% increase over the baseline, and boosting fleet average fuel efficiency by 7.5 mpg.
Summary: Financial Bottom Line
Summary: Actions Required
- Renewable electricity
- A long-term national commitment to renewable electricity (e.g. national renewable portfolio standard, carbon price, long-term tax credits and incentives, etc.)
- Adequate transmission capacity (to support about 450 GW targeting mostly Great Plains and coasts for wind, and desert southwest for concentrating solar power)
- Adequate grid resources to manage large-scale intermittent generation
- Public and private renewable energy R&D and investment to achieve cost parity with fossil generation in next several years
- Energy efficiency
- Long-term commitment to energy efficiency by the federal government and states (e.g, national efficiency standard, aggressive appliance standards and building codes, "decoupling" of utility profits from sales, incentives for energy efficiency investments)
- Deployment of a "smart" electricity grid that empowers consumers and businesses to manage their electricity use more effectively
- Personal vehicles
- Public policies supporting the deployment of fuel-efficient vehicles, e.g. higher fuel efficiency standards for conventional vehicles, financial incentives to encourage efficient (especially plug-in) vehicle purchases, special electricity rates for "smart charging", and greater R&D
- Investment in infrastructure necessary to support massive deployment of plug-ins including charging stations and development of new power management hardware and software
Electricity Sector
Figure 1.
The projected increase in nuclear generation (about a 15% increase over today's capacity) is unchanged from the EIA's projection, which assumes about 20 GW of new capacity offset by 5 GW of retirements in 2030. We did not pursue a more aggressive expansion of nuclear because of our concerns over cost, waste disposal and proliferation risk. Going forward, however, we are keen to explore all types of cutting-edge renewable sources of electricity including, perhaps, clean nuclear technology.
Another technology that is conspicuously absent from our proposal is coal with CO2 capture and sequestration (CCS). This technology has the potential to allow coal to be burned with minimal greenhouse gas emissions (about 10% of conventional coal plants), but the technical and legal challenges of storing billions of tons of CO2 underground have yet to be solved. If these issues can be overcome at reasonable cost, CCS would be a welcomed additional low-carbon energy solution.
The US Department of Energy (DOE) just completed a study looking at deploying 300 GW of wind by 2030, and concluded that the wind resource was ample for the task, and the impact on manufacturing was measurable but not overwhelming. An earlier study by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory explored more rapid scale-ups of wind capacity, and found that up to about 600 GW by 2030 was feasible. Our target, 380 GW in 2030, is therefore not at all unrealistic. This level of wind energy deployment would occupy about 170 x 170 square miles, or 10% of the land area of Texas, but less than 2% of that area (24 x 24 square miles, less than a quarter of the land area of Delaware) would be occupied by towers, roads and other equipment; the rest of the land would still be available for farming, ranching, etc.
Solar photovoltaics (PV) have been growing very strongly in recent years, topping 50% per year, but this technology still has a very small market share because of its cost. Concentrating solar power (CSP) may break through this cost barrier faster, and could deliver massive amounts of power. Studies by Navigant Consulting and Clean Edge indicate that capacities at least as high as envisioned in our proposal are possible. Our proposal would require a 20 x 20 square mile area to be installed with CSP technology, 34 million home roofs (25% of total) to be installed with solar PV, and a similar PV capacity installed on commercial building rooftops.[4]
Geothermal energy is perhaps the sleeping giant. Conventional hydrothermal resources have been quietly growing in recent years, with 4 GW in the pipeline and likely 15 GW developed by 2030. Last month we announced a significant initiative in enhanced geothermal energy systems (EGS). This technology, which has the potential to provide significant baseload power on a broad-scale basis, promises extremely rapid growth if key technologies can be proven in the next few years.
For wind and solar, where the lion's share of resources are located in the Great Plains and desert southwest - far from population centers - the biggest challenge is providing adequate transmission capacity to get the power to market. Extrapolating from the DOE study, about 20,000 miles of new transmission capacity would be required to support 300 GW of onshore wind and 80 GW of concentrating solar power generation in the Clean Energy 2030 proposal. About 200,000 miles of high-voltage transmission now exist in the US. By contrast, offshore wind is located close to cities on both coasts, solar PV is typically highly distributed near where electricity is consumed, and there are significant potential EGS resources from border to border and coast to coast.
Table 1. Electricity sector summary.
| | 2007 | 2010 | 2020 | 2030 |
| Wind-total (offshore) | 16 GW (0 GW) | 41 GW (0.5 GW) | 176 GW (18 GW) | 380 GW (80 GW) |
| Solar-total (CSP) | 1.0 GW (0.5 GW) | 3.1 GW (1.3 GW) | 69 GW (20 GW) | 250 GW (80 GW) |
| Geothermal-total (EGS) | 2.9 GW (0.0 GW) | 7.2 GW (0.1 GW) | 32 GW (20 GW) | 80 GW (65 GW) |
| Reduced demand from efficiency (per capita demand) | 0.0% (13.7 MWh) | 3.0% (13.4 MWh) | 18% (11.8 MWh) | 33% (11.4 MWh) |
| Increased demand from plug-in vehicles | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0.7% | 8.0% |
| Fraction of CO2 saved | 0.0% | 8.0% | 52% | 95% |
One might ask whether retiring all coal generation and one-half of natural gas generation (roughly one-third of standing capacity) would have an adverse financial impact, due to the premature retirement of undepreciated capital. The reality is that the the US fossil plant fleet is already fairly old, with half of coal capacity and a quarter of natural gas capacity built before 1973. Assuming the oldest plants are retired first, we calculate that a roughly linear progression of retired capacity would result in retiring 95% of coal and 100% of natural gas plants when they are at least 40 years old (see figure below). Forty years (or smaller) is the typical loan period for financing of fossil electric generation capital, so virtually all plants would be fully depreciated when they retire.
Figure 2.
Figure 3.
Figure 6.
| | 2007 | 2010 | 2020 | 2030 |
| Conventional new vehicle efficiency | 21.6 mpg | 23.0 mpg | 34.0 mpg | 45.0 mpg |
| Overall fleet efficiency | 20.2 mpg | 20.7 mpg | 27.0 mpg | 51.3 mpg |
| Plug-in fraction of fleet (annual sales) | 0.0% (0.0%) | 0.0% (0.7%) | 4.4% (20%) | 41% (90%) |
| Fraction of fuel or CO2 | 0.0% | 0.3% | 10.8% | 44% |
- Efficiency capital cost of 25 cents per kWh annual savings (one-time cost)
- Savings from efficiency of 10 cents per kWh (average electricity price)
- Renewable electricity capital costs:
- Onshore wind: $2 per watt (W) falling to $1.5/W in 2030
- Offshore wind: $3/W falling to $2/W in 2030
- Solar PV: $6/W falling to $2/W in 2030
- Solar CSP: $3.5/W falling to $2/W in 2030
- Conventional geothermal: $3.5/W flat through 2030
- Enhanced geothermal systems: $5/W falling to $3.5/W in 2030
- Intermittency cost of $20/MWh (applied to wind and solar)
- Avoided fossil capital costs (for plants planned in baseline but not built in our proposal because of efficiency and renewables):
- Coal: $2/W constant
- Natural gas and oil: $1/W constant
- Carrying charge for financing capital cost: 12%/yr for 20 years
- Saved fossil fuel cost (that is not already counted as efficiency savings):
- Coal: $2/MBtu constant
- Natural gas and oil: $10/MBtu constant
- No write-down cost for retiring coal plants (all plants assumed to be older than 40 years when retired), no decommissioning cost or salvage value for plants
- Transmission infrastructure cost: $0.30/W for wind (including offshore) and solar CSP
- Plug-in vehicle premiums: $5000 per plug-in hybrid vehicle (PHEV), $10,000 per pure-electric vehicle (EV), plus $1000 per vehicle for charging infrastructure
- Higher-efficiency conventional vehicle premium $3000 for 45 mpg (pro-rated for lower mpg, down to zero cost for 22 mpg today)
- Fuel cost: $3/gallon gasoline today, doubling to $6/gallon by 2030
- Plug-in electricity cost: 7 cents per kWh (discounted due to flexible smart-charging price)
- Additional vehicle purchase cost (accelerated vehicle turnover scenario, not part of base case): $20,000 per vehicle (base cost; premiums for higher mpg vehicles covered separately above)
- Carbon credit for CO2 not emitted (relative to baseline): $20/ton CO2, doubling to $40/ton in 2030 (applied to both electricity and vehicles)
Some minor changes were made to the electricity sector model, including subtracting the cost of providing electricity for plug-in vehicles, since this is already counted in the vehicle sector. The other major change to the economic model was reducing the gasoline cost from $4 to $3 per gallon (doubling by 2030), and removing accelerated vehicle turnover from the base case.
| Costs | Undiscounted total | Net present value* |
| Electrical efficiency investment | $346 | $174 |
| Renewable capacity investment | $1,694 | $603 |
| Transmission capacity investment | $131 | $56 |
| Intermittency cost | $328 | $120 |
| Coal plant write-down, decommissioning and salvage | $0 | $0 |
| Plug-in vehicle premium | $980 | $306 |
| Plug-in electricity cost | $120 | $35 |
| Higher efficiency conventional vehicle premium | $261 | $122 |
| Additional vehicle purchase cost | $0 | $0 |
| Subtotal | $3,859 | $1,417 |
| Savings | | |
| Electrical efficiency savings | $1,593 | $618 |
| Avoided fossil fuel generation capacity savings | $269 | $97 |
| Avoided fossil fuel savings | $438 | $162 |
| Plug-in fuel savings | $1,300 | $371 |
| Conventional fuel savings | $1,079 | $379 |
| Subtotal | $4,679 | $1,627 |
| Net savings | $820 | $211 |
| | | |
| Carbon credits | $1,117 | $387 |
| Net savings with carbon credits | $1,937 | $598 |
Figure 7.
Figure 8. Bottom line: undiscounted savings exceed costs by $820 billion over the 22 years of the scenario, or if carbon credits are included, $1,937 billion.
- In our first release of Clean Energy 2030, we assumed gasoline cost $4/gallon and would double to $8/gallon by 2030. We noted at the time that making gasoline less expensive reduces the net savings by a significant amount. Recent economic conditions have now plunged gasoline prices below $3/gallon, so we have changed our baseline assumption to reflect this reality (we now assume prices will double to $6/gallon by 2030). However, because our improved model removes older, inefficient vehicles more quickly, the fleet average efficiency is now significantly higher. Therefore, making gasoline cheaper still results in a net savings of $820 billion. Increasing gasoline prices to $4/gallon again (doubling to $8/gallon in 2030) would increase savings to $1,613 billion.
- Accelerated vehicle turnover: including a program (discussed above in the vehicles section) to accelerate the removal of old, inefficient vehicles and replace them with higher-efficiency new conventional and plug-in vehicles would cost an additional $1,302 billion in extra vehicle purchases and save $666 billion in lower fuel costs.
Including the additional carbon benefit (1,280 million metric tons CO2) saves an additional $42 billion. In the short term, such a program may be valuable to a US economy struggling to increase domestic spending.[6]
Figure 9.
Table 4. Job estimates.
| Cumulative new jobs (2009-2030) | Average new jobs per year (2009-2030) | Construction jobs per TWh | Operations jobs per TWh | Job scaling factor in 2030* | Reference | |
| Efficiency | 5,750,000 | 261,000 | 4150 | 0 | 100% | ACEEE |
| Construction jobs per GW | Operations jobs per GW | |||||
| Wind | 6,740,000 (onshore) 1,590,000 (offshore) | 306,000 (onshore) 72,300 (offshore) | 21,200 | 739 | 75% (onshore) 67% (offshore) | US DOE |
| Solar PV | 5,480,000 | 249,000 | 66,140 | 0 | 34% | Navigant Consulting |
| Solar CSP | 2,870,000 | 130,000 | 40,720 | 1742 | 57% | NREL |
| Geothermal | 790,000 | 36,000 | 6400 | 740 | 100% (conventional) 70% (EGS) | Geothermal Energy Association |
| Subtotal | 23,210,000 | 1,055,000 | ||||
| Coal | -9,020,000 | -410,000 | 20,464 | 1681 | 100% | NREL |
| Natural gas | -5,440,000 | -247,000 | 5826 | 2278 | 100% | NREL |
| Net total | 8,750,000 | 398,000 |
Figure 10.
- Transport:
- Reduced vehicle usage (mass transit, carpooling, telecommuting, per-mile vehicle fees, smart growth, etc.)
- Low-carbon biofuels for transportation
- Improved efficiency in freight trucks and airplanes
- Buildings and industry:
- Improved efficiency of heating fuel use
- Use of low-carbon biofuels or hydrogen as a heating fuel
- Substitution of solar energy for fossil fuel combustion in heating water
- Shift away from fuels and toward electricity (including use of combined heat and power systems)
- Management of non-CO2 greenhouse gases including methane and halocarbon gases
- Agriculture and forestry:
- Forest and grassland management
- Methane management from animals and landfills
Google's Role
- American Wind Energy Association, AWEA 2nd Quarter 2008 Market Report, 2008: http://awea.org/publications/reports/2Q08.pdf.
- Clean Edge, Utility Solar Assessment Study: Reaching Ten Percent Solar by 2025, 2008: http://www.cleanedge.com/reports/reports-solarUSA2008.php.
- Energy Information Administration, Table 8.11a Electric Net Summer Capacity: Total (All Sectors), Selected Years, 1949-2007, Annual Energy Review, US Department of Energy, 2007: http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/aer/pdf/pages/sec8_42.pdf.
- Energy Information Administration, Table 9.2, Nuclear Power Plant Operations, 1957-2007, Annual Energy Review, US Department of Energy, 2007: http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/aer/txt/stb0902.xls.
- Energy Information Administration, Existing Electric Generating Units in the United States, 2005, US Department of Energy, 2007. http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/page/capacity/existingunits2005.xls.
- Geothermal Energy Association, All About Geothermal Energy: Employment: http://www.geo-energy.org/aboutGE/employment.asp.
- Interlaboratory Working Group, Scenarios for a Clean Energy Future, Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, ORNL/CON-476 and LBNL-44029, 2000: http://www.ornl.gov/sci/eere/cef/.
- Krupp, F. and M. Horn, Earth: The Sequel. The Race to Reinvent Energy and Stop Global Warming, New York: Norton, 2008: http://earththesequel.edf.org/.
- Laxson, A., M.M. Hand, and N. Blair., High Wind Penetration Impact on U.S. Wind Manufacturing Capacity and Critical Resources, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, NREL/TP-500-40482, 2006: http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy07osti/40482.pdf.
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology, The Future of Geothermal Energy: Impact of Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS) on the United States in the 21st Century, DOE Contract DOE-AC07-05ID14517, 2007:http://geothermal.inel.gov/publications/future_of_geothermal_energy.pdf.
- Nadel, S., Energy Efficiency and Resource Standards: Experience and Recommendations, American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy, Report E063, 2006: http://www.aceee.org/pubs/e063.htm.
- Navigant Consulting, Economic Impacts of Extending Federal Solar Tax Credits, Final Report Prepared for the Solar Energy Research and Education Foundation, 2008: http://www.seia.org/galleries/pdf/Navigant%20Consulting%20Report%209.15.08.pdf.
- National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Job and Economic Development Impact Models, 2008: http://www.nrel.gov/analysis/jedi/.
- Prindle, B., Eldridge, M., Laitner, J. A., Elliott, R. N., and S. Nadel, Assessment of the House Renewable Electricity Standard and Expanded Clean Energy Scenarios, American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy, Report E079, 2007: http://www.aceee.org/pubs/e079.htm.
- Simons, G. and J. McCabe, California Solar Resources in Support of the 2005 Integrated Energy Policy Report, Draft Staff Paper, CEC-500-2005-072-D, 2005: http://www.energy.ca.gov/2005publications/CEC-500-2005-072/CEC-500-2005-072-D.PDF.
- US Department of Energy, 20% Wind Energy by 2030: Increasing Wind Energy's Contribution to U.S. Electricity Supply, DOE/GO-102008-2567, 2008: http://www.20percentwind.org/20percent_wind_energy_report_05-11-08_wk.pdf.
- Blinder, Alan S., A Modest Proposal: Eco-Friendly Stimulus, The New York Times, July 27, 2008: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/27/business/27view.html.
- Godoy, M. CAFE standards: Gas-Sipping Etiquette for Cars, National Public Radio, 2007: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5448289.
- Neff, J., Lutz says new CAFE standards will increase car price by $6k, Auto Blog Green, 2008: http://www.autobloggreen.com/2008/01/13/lutz-says-new-cafe-standards-will-increase-car-price-by-6k/.
- Union of Concerned Scientists, Fuel economy basics: http://www.ucsusa.org/clean_vehicles/solutions/cleaner_cars_pickups_and_suvs/fuel-economy-basics.html.
- Electric Power Research Institute, The Power to Reduce CO2 Emissions, 2007: http://mydocs.epri.com/docs/public/DiscussionPaper2007.pdf
- Energy Information Administration, Annual Energy Outlook, US Department of Energy, 2008: http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/aeo/.
- Gore, Al, The Climate for Change (op-ed), The New York Times, November 9, 2008: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/09/opinion/09gore.html.
- Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Fourth Assessment Report, 2007: http://www.ipcc.ch.
- Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, IPCC Special Report on Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage. Prepared by Working Group III of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [Metz, B., O. Davidson, H. C. de Coninck, M. Loos, and L. A. Meyer (eds.)]. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA, 442 pp., 2005: http://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/srccs.htm.
- Marland, G., T. Boden, and R. J. Andres, Global, Regional, and National Annual CO2 Emissions from Fossil-Fuel Burning, Cement Production, and Gas Flaring: 1751-2005, Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, 2008: http://cdiac.ornl.gov/ftp/ndp030/global.1751_2005.ems.
- McKinsey & Company, Reducing US Greenhouse Gas Emissions: How Much at What Cost?, 2007: http://www.mckinsey.com/clientservice/ccsi/pdf/US_ghg_final_report.pdf.
- Natural Resources Defense Council, A Responsible Energy Plan for America, 2005: http://www.nrdc.org/air/energy/rep/rep.pdf.
- Obama for America website, New Energy for America, 2008: http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/newenergy.
- Pacala, S. and R. Socolow, Stabilization Wedges: Solving the Climate Problem for the Next 50 Years with Current Technologies, Science, 305, 968, 2004: http://www.princeton.edu/wedges/articles/ (other "wedges" articles also available via this link).
- Pickens Plan: http://www.pickensplan.com/.
- WeCanSolveIt.org.
References
- See also a study by McKinsey & Company:
http://www.mckinsey.com/clientservice/cc si/pdf/US_ghg_final_ report.pdf - Electricity generation technologies do not all generate the same amount of electricity over a year. The ratio of average output to maximum output is known as the "capacity factor," and is around 20% for solar photovoltaics, 30% for concentrating solar, 35-40% for wind, 50% for hydroelectric, and 90% for geothermal, biomass, nuclear and coal. Natural gas, which is mostly used for "ramping" purposes (increasing or decreasing output quickly according to changing demand) can run up to 90% but is typically operated around 20%. Thus, 100 GW of geothermal (with 90% capacity factor) produces the same amount of electricity in a year as 300 GW of solar (with 30% capacity factor).
- Attentive readers will note this capacity was 250 GW in the previous version of the proposal. We chose this higher amount to ensure that all plants would be at least 40 years old when retired; the same amount of generation is actually implied in the model, by reducing the number of hours per year these plants run from 20% to 17%.
- Solar PV and CSP installations based on a California solar study by
Simons and McCabe. - The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) fuel efficiency estimates tend to be inflated by about 20%. This is because such estimates are done under ideal, rather than real-world, conditions. Therefore, although the current CAFE standard mandates that fleet average new vehicles must achieve 35 mpg in 2020 and beyond, the actual fuel efficiency is projected by EIA is lower.
- See article by Blinder:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/27/busine ss/27view.html








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Prashant Bele
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Untitled
2] We always discuss about 'encouraging' people to buy PHEV or Electric vehicles. How about primary measures or indications to de-motivate the users to buy an Internal Combustion engine burning fossil fuels? There is always the firs time, right?
3] Creating bigger systems and then distribute the energy to wider population always required higher grade of infrastructure and investments. How about creating smaller technologies which will help a house-hold to generate its own energy needs and sustain? - Solar panel is an example. It could be sustainable cellular community development.
4] Electric vehicles are no doubt could be the future. Are we making general public aware about the source of raw material to manufacture the lithium ion battery? Hope it will not create another “dependence” situation; for sure not middle-east this time.
Dr Peter Lionel Griffiths BA ACA DD
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New Constant, Clean, Fuel-less Source Of Electrical Power Discovered
The matter of making this solution available to the world is a matter of organizational genius including the financial wherewithal to make it happen. This means that at a certain stage of this process an alliance of some sort needs to take place between the creative genius and the organizational genius.
Source: http://ClimateCleanu
Legislation by itself will not bring change in the absence of the enabling technology and know-how. Money will not bring change without the enabling technology and know-how.
With the enabling technology all things are possible.
Thank you,
Peter L. Griffiths BA ACA DD
Founder and Member
Climate Cleanup Group
http://knol.google.c
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Rajamanickam Antonimuthu
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Nice Artcile
http://knol.google.c
Thanks,
Rajamanickam.
http://www.qualitypo
Artur Landerzon Barrera Garcia
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Invitation of Al Gore, 24 October 2009
http://www.350.org/
Artur Landerzon Barrera Garcia
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Hello Jeffery
Sur
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The scientific breakthrough in technology of usage of solar
I think, You’ll very interested to know absolutely new methods of usage of solar. All of these methods were developed by Russian inventor Viсtor Petrik:
http://www.goldformu
I’m sure, that leading organization like Google.org, should to know about the really scientific breakthrough in technology of usage of solar.
Vyacheslav M.
If i could read Russian, I would, indeed read that site. When I click on the English version, there's a message at the bottom of the page about data being transferred. After 4 minutes, I gave up. You've got my attention. Please help me acquire this information.
jmiranda@twcny.rr.co
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James
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Great work
Great job overall on trying to sort out the details of converting to a national renewable energy portfolio. My critique can be found here:
Part 1:
http://blog.sciencei
Part 2:
http://blog.sciencei
Part 3:
http://blog.sciencei
If you have the time, please take a look and comment/rebut/discus
James
ockaili
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comments
pretty comprehensive study.You could adjust the following:
1-use $1.5/Watt for offshore wind and 1.2/Watt for onshore to fall down to $1/watt for offshore/onshore
2-wind/solar transmission for the time being you might want to stick to $0.5/Watt
Let me know if you need someone to assist when you start with Europe :)
Regards,
ockaili
Adam Hutchison
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Eco Plan
http://www.eco-trees
รุ่งโรจน์
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Pete