California’s Renewable Energy Goals Feasible
February 18, 2009 by editor
Filed under Eco News, Technology
California’s goal of getting 33 percent of its electricity from the sun, the wind and other renewable sources by 2020 might be more feasible than previously thought, according to a new government report.
If all the renewable power projects proposed in the state last year were built, California would easily surpass that goal, according to a report issued Wednesday by the California Public Utilities Commission. All told, those projects would generate 24,000 megawatts of electricity, enough for 18 million homes.
That’s on top of the renewable power already flowing in California. According to the report, solar plants and wind farms built in California during 2008 can generate 516 megawatts of electricity, roughly as much as a midsize, fossil-fuel power plant. The previous year, the state only added 113 megawatts of renewable power.
President Obama’s Stimulus Package Gives a Boost to Clean Energy
February 18, 2009 by editor
Filed under American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, Solar News
Among the incentives, the plan will allow developers of renewable-energy projects to swap tax credits for cash grants.
The renewable-energy sector got a lift from the economic stimulus package signed Tuesday, with a fix to a crucial tax issue that had stalled projects nationwide.
Solar and wind companies said it could take several months for the legislation to get portions of the industry moving again. But some players are already gearing up for growth.
SolarCity, a Foster City, Calif., company that’s one of the nation’s largest residential solar firms, will end a hiring freeze in place since December and begin seeking more installers immediately, said Chief Executive Lyndon Rive.
“We should be adding 16 or so crews over the next few months,” Rive said. “This is a great step toward resolving our challenges.”
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act will invest nearly $79 billion in renewable energy, energy efficiency and green transportation, according to a final tally of the legislation by the nonprofit Environment California.
Obama Signs Stimulus Packed With Clean Energy Provisions
February 18, 2009 by editor
Filed under American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, Featured, Research, Videos
President Barack Obama signed the $787 billion stimulus package today, and the clean energy industry - among the biggest winners - is celebrating.
The signing ceremony was heavily loaded with solar symbolism: Mr. Obama signed the bill after touring the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, which has solar panels on its roof. He was also introduced by Blake Jones, head of Namaste Solar Electric, a Colorado company that installed solar panels on the governor’s mansion there.

President Barack Obama (right) and Vice President Joe Biden (center) tour the roof of the Denver Museum of Nature and Science with Blake Jones (left), president of Namaste Solar Electric, a Colorado solar company, ahead of signing an economic stimulus package loaded with clean-energy incentives.
“It’s an investment that will double the amount of renewable energy produced over the next three years,” said Mr. Obama, who also promised that the bill would help “transform the way we use energy.”
The text of the bill is posted by the House Appropriations Committee here. This detailed summary is particularly helpful.
The provisions include:
* A large sum for energy efficiency, including $5 billion for low-income weatherization programs; over $6 billion in grants for state and local governments; and several billion to modernize federal buildings, with a particular emphasis on energy efficiency.
* $11 billion for “smart grid” investments.
* $3.4 billion for carbon capture and sequestration demonstration projects (otherwise known as “clean coal”).
* $2 billion for research into batteries for electric cars.
* $500 million to help workers train for “green jobs.”
* A three-year extension of the “production tax credit” for wind energy (as well as a tax credit extension for biomass, geothermal, landfill gas and some hydropower projects).
* The option, available to many developers, of turning their tax credits into direct cash, with the government underwriting 30 percent of a project’s cost.
Kate Galbraith
The New York Times
California Adopts Tough Climate Plan Despite Economic Downturn
Solar panels have been built by the Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD) surrounding the Rancho Seco nuclear power station near Sacramento, California. Local voters in 1989 elected to close the nuclear plant as it was similar to the ill fated Three Mile Island power plant in Pennsylvania.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - California on Thursday adopted the nation’s most sweeping plan to cut greenhouse gas emissions, issuing rules that could transform everything from the way factories operate to the appliances people buy and the fuel they put in their cars.
The Air Resources Board unanimously approved the plan despite warnings it will put costly new burdens on businesses at a time when the economy is in extreme crisis, with California forecasting a staggering budget gap of $41.8 billion through mid-2010.
Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said he believes the regulations will spur the state’s economy and serve as a model for the rest of the country.
The Truth About Green Jobs ~ When They’re Coming, Who Will Get Them, and How to Prevent Their Outsourcing
November 18, 2008 by admin
Filed under Eco News, Green Collar
Message discipline has never been one of the left’s strengths (oy gevalt), so it’s been somewhat astonishing to hear the chorus of support lately for “green jobs.” From city officials in Albuquerque and Minneapolis up to Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama, more and more Democrats are framing climate change as “a moment of opportunity for innovation and job creation,” as Obama has put it, that can revitalize the flagging US economy. But occasionally, enthusiasm outpaces reality. Let’s sift through a few of the more popular claims.








