Tag Archives: goals
Site Potentials for Biomass Power Plants in Poland (Analyst Version)
DUBLIN, June 13, 2013 /PRNewswire/ — Research and Markets ( http://www.researcha…site_potentials ) has announced the addition of the “Site Potentials for Biomass Power Plants in Poland (Analyst Version)” report to their offering. (Logo: http://photos.prnews…20130307/600769 ) The Polish market for renewable energies has reached a turning point. The new Polish Act on Renewable Energy Sources entails new opportunities for developing biomass power plant projects including locations of the wood or furniture industry. At present, mono-incinerators at such locations produce less than five per cent of the Polish electricity from biomass. Most potentially favourable locations have not yet been developed. Instead, almost 80 per cent of the biomass electricity and more than a third of the renewable energies in Poland are generated through co-incinerating biomass in coal power plants. The new Polish Act on Renewable Energy Sources is scheduled to come into effect in the second half of 2013. According to this law, the support of co-incinerators should decrease significantly in the future. By contrast, smaller biomass power plants, mono-incinerators and electricity generation by using combined hear and power (CHP) technology should receive stronger support. At the same time, the goals in terms of developing and boosting renewable energies are once again increasing. In light of this development, experts have jointly analysed the market for electricity generation from solid biomass in detail. The report focuses on the identification of industrial locations that produce large amounts of biomass. The analyst version of the report Site Potentials for Biomass Power Plants in Poland includes: – A detailed analysis of the current and future legislation for promoting renewable energies and electricity generation from solid biomass in Poland. – An evaluation of the biomass streams that are currently being used as fuel in biomass power plants, including their amounts and sources. Key Topics Covered: Preface for the analyst version Preface Management Summary Part 1: Legislation and market 1 Country data 2 The electricity market in Poland 3 Renewable energy and CHP legislation 4 Current market Part 2: Solid biomass streams 5 Forest wood residues 6 Wood processing industry 7 Agricultural biomass 8 Recycling wood and landscape residues 9 Export / import Glossary Table of figures For more information visit http://www.researcha…site_potentials Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager. press@researchandmarkets.com U.S. Fax: +1-646-607-1907 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716 Sector: Environmental SOURCE Research and Markets Continue reading
Greenhouse Gas Emissions at All-Time High in 2012: IEA
Posted: June 10, 2013 The International Energy Agency (IEA) released a special report on energy use and climate change today, warning that the global goal of limiting the temperature increase to 2º Celsius is likely to fall short of achievement. Global energy-related carbon dioxide emissions rose 1.4% in 2012 to a record high 31.6 billion metric tons. The IEA reports that it a temperature increase of 3.6º to 5.3º Celsius is the probable long-term average temperature increase. The 2º Celsius target “still remains technically feasible, through extremely challenging,” and the agency says that “intensive action” is required before 2020 if the globe is to have a chance of meeting that target. The current IEA estimate calls for greenhouse gas emissions in 2020 of about 4 billion metric tons above the level required to meet the 2º Celsius goal. The largest contributor to the 2012 increase in global carbon dioxide emissions was China, even though the country’s growth in emissions was among the lowest in the past decade. In the United States, emissions fell by 200 million metric tons, about equal to emissions in the mid-1990s. China’s decline in emissions growth is the result of more deployment of renewable energy sources and a higher energy intensity in its economy. “Energy intensity” is a calculation of an economy’s units of energy consumed per unit of GDP. The drop in U.S. emissions is the result of fuel-switching from coal to natural gas in the generation of electricity. To cut emissions enough to meet the 2020 target, the IEA presents its “4-for-2º Scenario,” which includes four goals: Adopt specific energy efficiency measures to save 49% of emissions; Limit construction and use of least-efficient coal-fired power plants to save 21% of emissions; Minimize methane emissions from oil and gas production to save 18% of emissions; and Accelerate phase-out of subsidies to fossil-fuel consumption to save 21% of emissions. The IEA’s report, Redrawing the Energy-Climate Map, says that global subsidies to fossil-fuel production totaled $523 billion in 2011, about six times the amount for renewables subsidies. The agency also notes that 15% of global carbon dioxide emissions receive a subsidy of $110 per metric ton, while just 8% are subject to a carbon price. Various carbon pricing mechanisms have failed to live up to hopes because the global economy has been so weak over the past several years. The IEA notes the result: The weight of scientific analysis tells us that our climate is already changing and that we should expect extreme weather events (such as storms, floods and heat waves) to become more frequent and intense, as well as increasing global temperatures and rising sea levels. In a particularly glaring bit of hopefulness, the IEA estimates that net revenues for nuclear and renewable generation would rise by $1.8 trillion through 2035 while fossil-fuel generation will decline by an equal amount. To reach that goal, the agency expects that about 30% of new fossil fuel plants would be equipped with carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology. The catch is that there is no cheap or easy way to implement CCS, and that goal almost certainly cannot be met. It is easy to quibble with many of the IEA’s conclusions and estimates, and there is sure to be plenty of quibbling in the days ahead. But the value of the IEA’s estimates is that they put a stake in the ground and offer at least a starting discussion point for mitigating carbon emissions. Paul Ausick Read more: Greenhouse Gas Emissions at All-Time High in 2012: IEA – 24/7 Wall St. http://247wallst.com/2013/06/10/greenhouse-gas-emissions-at-all-time-high-in-2012-iea/#ixzz2VtNZJP6P Continue reading
Unit and Apartment for sale in Brisbane by Elliot Dean of RE/MAX Property Centre Toowong
1/29 Brisbane Street St Lucia Marketed by Elliott Dean 0401 762 655 Dream is now over with this luxurious style of living! You can have this apartment for sa… Continue reading