Do the Right Thing – Shale Gas Edition
August 15, 2011 3 min. read

(Thanks to ProPublica for this graphic.) Thankfully, we are, slowly but certainly, entering a new ballgame on hydraulic fracturing.  Yes, we need the gas trapped in shale – in the medium term.  Long term:  renewables.  But, for now, as we transition to renewables, we’ve got to reduce the carbon footprint of the electric power, transportation […]

Read more
Environmentalist to Commerce
June 4, 2011 3 min. read

It appears to me that President Obama has made another excellent choice for his administration for advancing the cause of clean tech and living up to the responsibility of fighting the climate crisis.  He has named John Bryson, a founder of the seminal environmental organization, the Natural Resources Defense Council, as the new Secretary of […]

Read more
Nippon Nukes New Nukes
May 16, 2011 2 min. read

That’s how I imagine Variety would have headlined last week’s very big news that Japan’s prime minister, Naoto Kan, is abandoning any push for new nuclear power and will make a concerted effort to promote renewables.  I lauded Germany’s Chancellor, Angela Merkel, when she made essentially the same decision in March.  A panel of experts […]

Read more
The Nuclear Crisis in Japan
March 16, 2011 2 min. read

In a previous post, I flagged an analysis by Robert Alvarez on the situation with the spent fuel pools.  Here is a look from this morning at the situation from another expert, David Wright, at the Union of Concerned Scientists:  Spent Fuel Pools at Fukushima.  Wright concludes that the indications are that the water level […]

Read more
White Roofs
July 23, 2010 1 min. read

I’ve said all along that US Energy Secretary Steven Chu is a smart guy.  He’s got a Nobel Prize in Physics to prove it.   (That’s why I say he’s too smart to be taken in by the ongoing boondoggle that is nuclear power.) Here he is talking about a new study from DOE on white […]

Read more
Amory Lovins on Myths
March 2, 2010 2 min. read

I would be remiss in not pointing you to a blockbuster paper by Amory Lovins from September that I’ve only just now read.   I scanned his article in Grist at the time in which he thoroughly debunks Stewart Brand’s support for nuclear power.  Here are the four myths he shatters: variable renewable sources of electricity […]

Read more
More Solar Notes
February 24, 2010 2 min. read

The Department of Energy has announced substantive backing in the form of loan guarantees for an exciting concentrated solar power (CSP) project in California.  The plant will generate 400 MW of electricity using the same “power tower” approach I saw when we were on vacation in Spain this past August.  For backing this project, I […]

Read more
Nuclear Boondoggle
February 18, 2010 1 min. read
Tags:

Just a quick note:  A former student of mine jumped in the other day with some comment about the recent nuclear power announcement from the White House.  Here is her take and my response. For a stunningly strong and incisive analysis, go to Kate Sheppard’s article yesterday at “Mother Jones.”  One of the several eye-opening […]

Read more
Countdown in Copenhagen
December 15, 2009 5 min. read

I read a really good book by Steve Schlesinger a few years back called Act of Creation.  It’s about the San Francisco conference at which the United Nations was born.  There was a lot of intrigue and high drama, with plenty at stake.  There are stories of heroes, too, like Edward Stettinius, the unsung Secretary […]

Read more
Copenhagen Buzz
December 14, 2009 2 min. read

There’s plenty of sturm und drang coming from COP 15.  The “FT” reports this morning that the African states first walked out then returned, having claimed “…that they had won some concessions.” The “Financial Times” front page this morning declared China signals climate funds shift.  Apparently, the PRC “… abandoned its demand for funding from […]

Read more
There Oughta Be a Law
August 11, 2009 3 min. read

You will notice in this diagram from the Energy Information Administration (EIA) depicting the total electricity flow in the US for 2008 that “conversion losses” account for 63% of the energy generated.  Got that?!  Nearly two thirds of the energy used to make electricity, 51% of that from coal, 21% from nuclear, and 17% from […]

Read more
China – Getting Closer
July 31, 2009 2 min. read

United States and China to Cooperate on Climate Change and Energy is the word from the excellent weekly, “EERE Network News,” put out by DOE’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE).  As I noted recently here, DOE Secretary Steven Chu was in China recently and the pressure is building on the Chinese to […]

Read more

Popular from Press