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An Unlikely Solar Power Renaissance Stirs in the Middle East

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Photo: Dubai’s iconic Burj al-Arab.  The oil wealthy Gulf Coast country is planning a $3B solar project in 2013

As debates over solar power tariffs rage among governments in China, the US, and Europe, and many in the United States forecast stagnant or declining growth for the green energy in the upcoming months (or even years) a solar power renaissance is occurring in the least likely of places: the Middle East.

Americans high on prospect of becoming the one of the world’s largest exporters of fossil fuels, due to recent innovations in shale gas extraction might do well to look at what many of world’s biggest oil and gas exporters are doing to foster green energy growth in their own countries.

Reporting from Doha for the Financial Times, Pilita Clark said Saudi Arabia is beginning to consider growing its solar power industry, after

“years of growth in Saudi Arabia and others in the oil-rich Gulf region that mean countries are now burning so much of their own oil and gas resources they could become net fuel importers within 20 years…”

Clark reports that Saudia Arabia has already said it wants to encourage more than $100B in renewable energy investment.  The bulk of this will be in solar.

Qatar is currently the world’s leading exporter of liquefied natural gas—precisely the market that the United States is beginning to enter.

Qatar has also made recent investments in solar power, and is betting that recent improvements in power grid technology will enable the country to easily trade energy with its Gulf Coast neighbors and countries beyond.

“Let me compare it to something: cloud computing,” said Mohammed al-Attiya, chairman of Qatar’s National Food Security Program. “I see the future where power generation could be anywhere and people just get their electricity from places simply because grids are being integrated.”

 

The integrated system al-Attiya is referring to is Desertec, a project undertaken to connect power grids in the Gulf Coast and North African regions, and ultimately to Europe and beyond.

The idea behind Desertec was simple—use vast tracts of empty sun-drenched desert land to build solar power farms and send power out to other regions of the world.

Some have been skeptical of the project, arguing that actually building something so extensive will require tremendous investments and coordinated efforts among governments in a region that is politically unstable.

Qatar announced at the most recent United Nations climate talks the past  that it would be building its first solar power project in 2013, and hopes the investment will produce 2% of the country’s total energy consumption, as part of a larger goal to produce ten times that amount from other renewable energy projects by 2020.

Not to be left out, the Sultanate of Dubai is also building a solar power project intended to produce 1 gigawatt of electricity (about 5 times the amount of Qatar’s planned project).

These countries hope that solar power could be as much a profitable export in the future as oil has been in the past.

Almost 200 countries voted to extend the Kyoto Accord this past week in Doha, Qatar, this past week, and most developed European nations are among them.  Europe will likely need to invest a great deal in renewable energy to meet the legally binding carbon emissions requirements set forth by the agreement.

This may create a new source of demand for solar power, and the desert countries to Europe’s southwest might in an excellent position to supply it.


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200 Countries Agree to Extend Kyoto Protocol–Too Bad it Won’t Make a Difference

Kyoto Protocol – Extended by the UN, but only Covers 15% of Global Emissions

The Kyoto Protocol, adopted in 1997 and effective in 2005 was a bold pledge by nations around the world to curb greenhouse gas emissions.  191 countries signed and ratified the Treaty, the only notable exception being the United States.  This would earn the US the reputation of being a rogue nation.

Writing for Time Magazine in 2001, Tony Karon described the situation thusly:

The Clinton administration was never happy with the terms of Kyoto, but it kept its negotiators at the table to grind away at the original treaty. President [George W.] Bush gambled that withdrawing from the negotiations — that is, removing the indispensable polluter — would force the international community back to the drawing board to seek an agreement more favorable to the U.S.’s gas-guzzling economy. But summary withdrawal from a decade-old process and failure at the same time to advance any alternative was read by the Europeans as a lack of seriousness.

And so the United States remained one country—along with Afghanistan, Andorra and South Sudan.

So it was a broad coalition of like-minded dissenters.

In 2006, even China was calling on the US to join the agreement.

But then in 2011, Canada became the first country to jump ship, certainly drawing criticism, and blaming its exit on the deal’s  inability to deal with the world’s two largest polluters: the United States, and China.

Meanwhile, since joining the treaty managed to become the world’s largest overall polluter.

Under the treaty, only fully industrialized nations were legally bound to reduce carbon emissions, neatly allowing large developing nations such as India and China to sign and ratify the treaty while excusing them from actually having to abide by its restrictions.

This, argued many, was the treaty’s fatal flaw.

Considering this, it almost seems amazing that any countries signed it at all.

Now, nearly 200 countries have agreed to extend the agreement, though Russia and New Zealand have opted out—and Canada and the US are not reconsidering their positions.

Now, the treaty will effectively only cover the countries—all 200 of them—that produce about 15% of the world’s carbon emissions.

This is a paltry number, however symbolically powerful the number of participants may be.

Clearly this system is not working, and the exemptions for large developing nations (who are rising economically and producing ever greater amounts of carbon) will continue to keep Russia, Canada and the US out of any agreement that will limit their abilities to remain economically competitive.

Though China is now the world’s largest carbon emitter, the amount of carbon emissions per capita is still significantly smaller than that of the US, though it is equal with the European Union’s and is still growing rapidly.

World governments can sign as many treaties as they like, but without some way to capture that remaining 85% they might find it is not the best use of another precious resource—paper.


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Kachan & Co: Cleantech State of the Union – A Breakdown (Part 2) Fisker Automotive

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(Photo: The Fisker Karma at the Detroit Auto Show)

Fisker Automotive has weathered its fair share of attention, with reports that it is cash-strapped and that it has hired an investment bank–Evercore Partners Inc.–to help identify “strategic partners”.  That means, investors or even buyers.  Evercore, according to an article on WSJ.com, advised GM when that company filed for bankruptcy, though Fisker CEO Tony Posawatz told the Journal Evercore is there to help them find new sources of funding.

Fisker has received $192M in federal funding through a Department of Energy loan, as part of the Obama administration’s now somewhat infamous attempts to promote alternative energy technology.  The original amount of the loan was supposed to be $529M, but the remainder of the sum has been “put on hold”, according to coverage by Mike Ramsey and Sharon Terlep in the aforementioned WSJ.com blog.

Fisker has closed dealerships, laid off workers and renegotiated with suppliers and manufacturers and supposedly considered filing for bankruptcy protection in July.

Mr. Posawatz told the WSJ that Fisker is especially seeking partners in Europe and China, as interest in alternative energy products is greater in those regions.

Given all this, it is encouraging that some new funds are flowing into the company, but the future is by no means secure.

Fisker’s difficulty finding partners in part stems from a lack of interest in the company among major auto manufacturers. As Ramsey and Terlep report, already produce their own battery-powered or hybrid vehicles.

So, in contrast to the days of GM’s EV4, the troubles experienced by small green auto companies may not result from lack of demand, from the fact that large corporate players have moved into the space.

More on the other companies Dallas Kachan discusses in his State of the Union coming soon…


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Cleantech Investment Pioneer Dallas Kachan’s “State of the Union” for Cleantech Industry– A breakdown (Part One)

Venture in 2013 and the Biggest Venture of the Last Quarter

Dallas Kachan is an influential voice and investor in the cleantech world.  He was formerly a Managing Director and Executive Editor of the Cleantech Group, a provider of information on the cleantech sector, and now has his own company, called Kachan & Co..  His group has released both its predictions for the sector in 2013, as well as something Kachan calls a “State of the Union” for the cleantech sector.  Both outline what lies ahead for the sector in light of what it has faced over the last several quarters.

Both are worth reading, but check out the State of the Union for a shorter snapshot of the industry.

Here are some of the group’s thoughts and forecasts:

1.  Venture funding for cleantech was down in 2012, and likely won’t leap back up in 2013.

Though it is likely to hover around the same amount.  Q2 is usually slow for the sector in terms of venture deals, and they expect Q3 venture investment to total about $2Billion.  Kachan calls that “not great, as compared to previous years on record, but it’s okay.”

He lists a number of deals done over the last quarter:

  • $200m to China Auto Rental, efficiency/collaborative consumption, Beijing
  • $136m to Alarm.com, efficiency/smart grid, Virginia
  • $104 to Elevance Renewable Sciences, biochemistry, Illinois
  • $104 to Fiskar Automotive, transportation, Irvine CA
  • $93M to Element Materials Technology, advanced materials, the Netherlands

Three out of the five deals he lists are American, which might bode well for the sector in the United States.  Then again, with the very developed technology ventured community in the US, it isn’t really much of a surprise either.

Each of these deals merits some individual attentions, so I will devote a post to discussing some recent news about each one.

 


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Anti-Fracking Poster in Manhattan – Part of Ongoing Campaign by Yoko and Sean Lennon

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On my way back from class today I stumbled on an anti-fracking poster in Manhattan (Broadway, just north of 4th Street).

Meant to be a play on John Lennon’s song “Imagine” (Yoko and Sean?), the poster bears  Twitter handle (@nygovcuomo)and a hashtag #dontfrackny.

Yoko Ono and Sean Lennon erected a billboard on the Major Deegan expressway back in November and apparently, with some help, are continuing the campaign around New York City.

Here is a link to a story in Rolling Stone on the original billboard.


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Scientific American: “Conservative Bias” has led to underestimations of climate change effect

Since I just posted on this topic,  I want to provide some follow up to some of the issues I discussed in a previous post.

Scientific American has just published an article authored by Glenn Scherer, making a case that scientific research has actually underestimated the effects of climate change.

Fingers are pointed directly at the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which has failed to get the numbers right on several different points.

Here is a breakdown:

1. Decline of summer sea ice in the Arctic:

“In the 2007 report, the IPCC concluded the Arctic would not lose its summer ice before 2070 at the earliest. But the ice pack has shrunk far faster than any scenario scientists felt policymakers should consider; now researchers say the region could see ice-free summers within 20 years.”

2. Sea-Level Rise:

“In its 2001 report, the IPCC predicted an annual sea-level rise of less than 2 millimeters per year. But from 1993 through 2006, the oceans actually rose 3.3 millimeters per year, more than 50 percent above that projection.

 

Some other important points brought up in the article:

 

1.  The IPCC does not conduct original research.

The organization’s job is to synthesize findings from studies conducted around the world and provide meta-analysis

2.  The IPCC was awarded the Nobel Prize (along with Al Gore) in 2007, for its findings on climate change.  This is not thought to be an organization of climate change skeptics.

3. There are scientists producing material that produces far more dire predictions for the planet than the IPCC is offering.

I’m not going to go into too much detail here, but you can check it out for yourself on the SciAm website.

Typical of climate change coverage, there is a conspicuous absence of possible SOLUTIONS to the climate change problem, though I must concede that perhaps we cannot begin solving a problem that a significant proportion of us do not believe even exists.

Like just about any article published by a significant news organization on the Internet, the SciAm story is worth checking out for the comments section alone.

Here is one posted by user “Sisko”:

“Let’s review some of the claims in this propaganda piece by Scherer

He wrote- “The IPCC’s overly conservative reading of the science, they say, means governments and the public could be blindsided by the rapid onset of the flooding, extreme storms, drought, and other impacts associated with catastrophic global warming.”

My response- Idiots try to claim that any recent bad weather has been caused by CAGW but when you look at the actual long term data trends you find that there is not any significant change from the long term data.”

 

What is CAGW?  That’s Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming.

 

Here is an excerpt from a rebuttal by dubay.denis (addressing to “Mr. Sisko (if that is your real name)”:

 

“If at some point you want to check on the propaganda you have filled your mind with, you might check out the following report prepared by the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences, (see http://www.scribd.com/doc/98458016/Climate-Change-Lines-of-Evidence).

We all need to debate what to do about climate change, but as the above report will indicate if you choose to read it, the existence of climate change is not a matter to debate, it’s a matter of evidence, which is very clear.

To suggest otherwise is to mislead, misrepresent, and misinform, with the simple goal of creating doubt, so you and your cohorts can win the policy debate before it even begins. That is dishonest, and dangerous to our democracy. Stop it!”

 

It goes on from there.  Check it out…

 

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=climate-science-predictions-prove-too-conservative

 


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Don’t Forget Your Water Wings

Along with kelp, raw sewage and gasoline, Hurricane Sandy has also managed to wash onto our shores a hearty dose of post-disaster apocalyptica.

Sandy has been rough for New York (for some New Yorkers more than others, of course) but, the total bill for Sandy is estimated at $50 Billion.  My completely uneducated guess is that it will be much more, because it seems that these estimates always fall short of the total in the end.

But the conversation about rising sea levels and global warming (sorry, ahem, “climate change”) has found new fuel in the aftermath of the hurricane.  Perhaps rightly so, or not.  For those advocating the climate-change agenda, you could say this began a pivotal battle in an ongoing war.

And you could say the man who inadvertently ignited it was Andrew Cuomo, Governor of New York.

“There have been a series of extreme weather events. That is not a political statement; that is a factual statement,” Cuomo said in a press conference after Sandy hit. “Anyone who says there is not a change in weather patterns is denying reality.”

Cuomo was not explicitly connecting hurricanes to climate change, but his insistence that his words were “not a political statement” suggested an acute awareness of a sensitive issue.

Others are not being so subtle.

There may be no connection between Sandy and climate change–we have to be willing to acknowledge that possibility.

Some people at Fox News certainly have and they have quoted some scientists who argue against the contention that climate change caused or magnified Sandy.  REAL scientists.  By that I mean, NOT Ann Coulter.

Then again, a smart writer named Mark Fischetti at Scientific American has a well-reported piece arguing exactly how Sandy WAS in fact magnified by climate change, and that extreme weather events.  Fischetti according to  a recent op-ed in the Washington Post by James Hansen at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York,

“Our analysis shows that it is no longer enough to say that global warming will increase the likelihood of extreme weather and to repeat the caveat that no individual weather event can be directly linked to climate change. To the contrary, our analysis shows that, for the extreme hot weather of the recent past, there is virtually no explanation other than climate change.”

Well there you have it.  We are absolutely sure that climate change is affecting weather patterns.  And, yet, some of us (some actual scientists) are absolutely sure that we cannot be sure climate change is affecting weather pattern.

Consider one scientist quoted in the aforementioned Fox News piece.

“Neither the frequency of tropical or extratropical cyclones over the North Atlantic are projected to appreciably change due to climate change, nor have there been indications of a change in their statistical behavior over this region in recent decades,” said Martin Hoerling, a meteorologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

This is a contentious debate, and, oddly, it seems to carry an echo of debates between believers and atheists—it doesn’t feel futile, it just leaves me wondering if it is the best use of our time.

On November 24, the New York Times ran this piece and this piece and this piece, all opinion pieces about climate change, inevitably rising seas, and what to do about them, or how we can do nothing to stop them.  They were fine articles and were written by people who have researched the topic, and, to be fair, one was written by professors at Wharton and was about how we should begin to think about paying for the damage incurred by extreme weather events, should they continue or proliferate.

I would like to discuss each of these pieces in greater depth, but it is not so much their content that concerns me now.  It is the fact that they all have struck at the same time.  And, beyond asking ourselves how we should assess the risks and damages associated with future storms (and who should foot the bill), I sometimes think we are not really going anywhere with this discussion.  It seems clear that economic concerns continue to trump the specters of climate change and atmospheric pollution, and it sometimes seems as though it will have to get worse–much worse–before the entire world, or enough of the world, gathers the will to do anything about it.

Mayor Bloomberg endorsed Barack Obama for a second presidential term, citing climate change.  

Does Bloomberg think Obama can stop climate change?  Or hurricanes?  Scientists cited in one of the articles hyperlinked above (“Rising Seas, Vanishing Coastlines” by Benjamin Strauss and Robert Kopp) said,

“This past summer, a disconcerting new scientific study by the climate scientist Michiel Schaeffer and colleagues — published in the journal Nature Climate Change — suggested that no matter how quickly we cut this pollution, we are unlikely to keep the seas from climbing less than five feet.”

(Hyperlinks not mine)

Some have the idea of building floodgates, or levees around New York City–and those may be necessary.  Maybe they will even work.

But I cannot see how these sorts of conversations will push us closer to adopting cleaner technologies in the short term.

Simple economics might, though.  Cleantech will win every time it can add even a few cents to someone’s bottom line.

In the meantime, don’t forget your water wings.


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Reported in the WSJ: LNG for Export–a New Report shows a net benefit to shale gas for US Economy

US companies are inching closer to liquified gas exportation.  A recent piece in the Wall Street Journal observes that the Department of Energy recently released a report showing that liquefying natural gas for export would result in a net benefit for the economy.

Writing for the WSJ, Keith Johnson and Tennille Tracy said,

The looming prospect of the U.S.’s becoming a major exporter of natural gas underscores how the energy revolution is transforming the nation’s economic prospects. Just a few years ago, many energy companies were planning to build facilities to import liquefied natural gas into the U.S.

This of course is not without its barbs.  Environmental activists are not keen on what Johnson and Tracy call a “glut of cheap gas”, and some are calling for more attention to the alleged toxicity of shale gas removal methods.

“It is baffling that this report omits the serious threats increased fracking and gas production pose to our water, our air, and the health of our families,” said Michael Brune, the executive director of the Sierra Club, in the article.

Meanwhile, some think that US manufacturers are increasingly using natural gas and that NERA Economic Consulting, the group who conducted the survey, is underestimating domestic demand.

Dow Chemical Vice President George Blitz was quoted as saying that the report was “just not an honest assessment”.

The authors note that availability has “has helped underpin a revival in manufacturing and helped lower electricity costs for consumers.”

Key to this, I think, is the fact that much of this liquefied natural gas is not meant for domestic consumption, but rather for export.  Apparently, it is more profitable for companies to ship the fuel overseas than it is for them to sell it to domestic customers.

This may help to win over skeptics of the controversial hydrofracturing technology, particularly those in the Obama administration.

The US economy still needs sources of new growth, and selling LNG as an export takes pressure off of political leadership to bolster the economy while still allowing allowing Obama to pursue domestic green energy goals.  In theory.

Also, the piece observes how LNG exports can be a powerful geopolitical tool for the Obama Administration.  Some have observed that Obama’s second term will be dominated by foreign policy concerns.

Johnson and Tennille write,

“Pipelines from Russia now supply a big chunk of the natural gas to Western Europe, but alternative sources could undercut Moscow’s sway. In Asia, the U.S. can bolster allies such as Japan and South Korea by helping lessen their dependence on gas imports from unstable regions.”

In other words, it could be a nice card in Obama’s deck.


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Post for Forbes.com on NYU Entrpreneurs Challenge

Here is a link to a story I did awhile back on the NYU Entrepreneurs Challenge for Forbes.com.

I interviewed one of the founders of the startup, Bianca Padilla, about a startup she is trying to get off the ground with two friends.  I traded emails with her recently and she told me that they dropped out of the NYU Entrepreneur Challenge this time around, but are going to work on their concept and enter again next year.

 

Anyhow here is the link.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/nyuentrepreneurschallenge/2012/09/29/networthkids-raising-a-generation-of-smart-savers/


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A Strange Energy Hedge….or a public good?

The U.S. Department of Energy, though its subsidiary, ARPA-E, (that is, the Advanced Research Projects Agency–Energy), announced last week that it will be funneling $130 million into 66 different “transformational energy technology projects through its OPEN 2012 Program.  According to the agency’s press release,

 ARPA-E seeks out transformational, breakthrough technologies that show fundamental technical promise but are too early for private-sector investment. These projects have the potential to produce game-changing breakthroughs in energy technology, form the foundation for entirely new industries, and have large commercial impacts.”

A fine objective, based on a sound conclusion: a great many green technologies are brilliant money losers.

As I wrote in my recent post, “Fading Greenery”, the US is poised to become the world’s top producer of oil by 2020, due to the development of new shale oil and gas extraction technologies.  Government subsidies to the oil industry in the United States are generous, and well-liked.  President Obama’s efforts to end them have been rebuffed.

Whether oil companies should be subsidized is another matter entirely, but it certainly appears that oil will remain a dominant energy solution due to already widespread use, still abundant resources and favor among politicians.  Green energy solutions may chip away at oil here and there–solar panels will improve and lower in price, wind turbine technology will improve, and so on.  But for any kind of real green tech revolution to occur there may have to be some kind of government support.  Unfortunately, we have already learned that this can be quite dangerous for a politicians career (Obama/Solyndra).  Even the election-immune Chinese government has run into some financial trouble in its attempts to bolster the growth of it’s own alternative energy sector, though it will likely pull out of them if it can continue to grow demand at home and parry probes from European and American companies seeking tariffs on Chinese imports.

Among the technologies the OPEN 2012 Program says it will evaluate are “advanced fuels, advanced vehicle design and materials, building efficiency, carbon capture, grid modernization, renewable power, and energy storage.”

Approximately 47% of the projects were led by universities, 29% by small businesses, 15% by large businesses 7.5% by national labs and a meager 1.5% by non-profits.

The good news for capitalists is that businesses, large or small comprised 34% of applicants, which is not too shabby.  That universities comprise almost have of all project awarded funds should not surprise, though it might say something of the importance of higher education to anyone who wants to work in cutting edge technology research and development.

The real question here is whether we should consider investment in green energy technologies a “public good”–a good that government must provide in the absence of interest from the private sector.