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9.10.2010

Governor Nixon's Tax Credit Review Commission Information




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Scotty, Scotts Contracting
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--- On Fri, 9/10/10, Michael Allen <michael.ross.allen@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

From: Michael Allen <michael.ross.allen@sbcglobal.net>


 


----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Coalition for Historic Preservation and Economic
Sent: Fri, September 10, 2010 2:56:09 PM
Subject: Governor Nixon's Tax Credit Review Commission Information


Missouri Coalition for Historic Preservation and Economic Development
September 10, 2010

Dear Michael, 
 

Governor Nixon's Tax Credit Review Commission (TCRC) has begun it review of Missouri's tax credit programs. In addition to the full TCRC meeting which was held September 8, 2010 to debrief the Commission members on all of the tax credit programs, there are several smaller regional meetings to be scheduled throughout the State, at which time public testimony will be taken
 
The State Historic Tax Credit program is under scrutiny by the commission.  It is critically important at each of these public hearings for commission members to understand the great benefit to the state of the historic tax credit and that it is a false choice to say that education is hurt by the credit.  We know, in fact, property tax revenues increase, meaning local funds for education increase, when buildings are brought back to life.
 

The Missouri Coalition for Historic Preservation & Economic Development is urging you to attend the upcoming regional TCRC meetings to voice that making more cuts to the existing Historic Tax Credit Program will only reduce state revenues and kill more jobs, and that surrounding states are increasing their historic tax credit caps to create jobs.

 
 
If you cannot attend, we urge you to send each commission member an e-mail with your views and your own experience.  The list of Commission members is enclosed. 

The Missouri Historic Tax Credit (HTC) program has been proven to provide an economic return to the state by:

 

¯      Creating Jobs - Over 43,000 jobs over the life of the program,

 

¯      Stimulates Private Investment - every $1 spent in Credits results in over $3 in private investment,

 

¯      All of Missouri benefits from HTC's - it has been used in small towns and main street communities as well as larger cities,

 

¯      HTC's generate revenue for the state,

o        Four times the amount of credit must be spent before any credit is issued. Because credits are paid at the end of a project, Missouri receives revenue from sales taxes and payroll taxes before credits are issued.

 

¯    The HTCis the only tax credit program to have been severely cut last year.  There is now in place a 25% reduction from last year's use by the cap imposed last year.

 

 

Please come out and help us show the Commission that the Missouri HTC program is working and is the model other states are using.  Hurting the HTC program would only hurt Missouri's future.

 

Updated information regarding the Tax Credit Review Commission schedule can be found on their web site, http://TCRC.Mo.Gov.


Sincerely,

 

Missouri Coalition for Historic Preservation & Economic Development

The Tax Credit Review Commission meeting dates and cities are as follows:

 

TCRC regional meeting in Kansas City
Monday,  September 13th  
 

Morning meeting 8:30 am - 10:00 am - Kansas City Chamber of Commerce 

911 Main Street, #2600
Kansas City, MO 64105
 

Morning meeting with Kansas City Dept. of Economic Development

(time & place TBD) 

 

TCRC Regional Meeting St. Joseph  
 
Monday,  September 13th  
3:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
& 7:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m.   

Stony Creek Inn

1201 North Woodbine Road
St. Joseph, MO 64506

Phone: 816-901-9600

Agenda
 
TCRC Regional Meeting Joplin
 
Tuesday, September 14th
3:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. & 7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Billingsly Student Center
Connor Ballroom, 3rd Floor
Missouri Southern State University
2950 Newman Rd
Joplin, MO 64801
 
Monday, September 20th
John and Betty Glenn Convocation Center
Southeast Missouri State University, River Campus
One University Plaza
Cape Girardeau, MO 63701
3:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Agenda   
 
TCRC Regional Meeting St. Louis
 
Tuesday, September 21st
Missouri Court of Appeals, Eastern District
En Banc Courtroom
One Post Office Square
815 Olive Street
St. Louis, MO 63101
3:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Agenda
 

A date for a final TCRC Regional Meeting in Columbia will be forthcoming, as well as agendas for each meeting. Please check the TCRC web site for further details - http://TCRC.mo.gov


Click here for: Commission Member Email Contact Infomation


.

__,_._,___

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Guest Post: REMEMBER.......911






Guest Post: Remember 911


"Terrorist attacks can shake the foundations of our biggest buildings, but they cannot touch the foundation of America."

President George W. Bush, September 11, 2001

                         honor those who were killed on. sept 11.

 

               Eagle1.jpg

 

                america.jpg

 

HELLO FRIENDS JUST SENDING OUT A TRIBUTE TO THOSE INVOLVED IN 911, IT IS THE ANNIVERSARY TOMMORROW.....

SPEND SOME TIME CONTEMPLATING WHAT HAPPENED AND WHO WE ARE TODAY.....

HAVE A GREAT WEEKEND AND REMEMBER THOSE LOST IN 911...

WE WILL NEVER FORGET, NOR WILL WE EVER LET IT HAPPEN AGAIN!!!!

FRIENDS ALWAYS....SUE 

 





Build Green
Scotty, Scotts Contracting
www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com



Stop Global Warming's Evil Twin




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you have 280 butterfly credits
care2 petitionsite actionAlert

Hi Buz,

If the Earth's oceans didn't absorb one quarter of all carbon dioxide emissions, we'd see even higher greenhouse gas levels and a much hotter global climate. But what's the price to the oceans?

Save our oceans from devastating acidification. »

The acidity of ocean water has risen by 30 percent over the last 250 years, and it's getting worse by the day. Higher acidity means less carbonate in the water, and less carbonate in the water means organisms like shellfish and coral can't develop sturdy skeletons. If dramatic measures aren't taken to stabilize ocean pH levels, high enough acidity could actually cause shellfish and coral to dissolve.

Some people call it "The Other Carbon Problem" or "Global Warming's Evil Twin." Others simply call it one of the gravest threats to marine diversity. No matter what you call it, it's exacting a price from our oceans that neither ecology nor humanity can afford to pay.

We can't wait any longer -- ask the EPA to regulate and decrease greenhouse gas emissions today. »

Thanks for taking action!

Samer
ThePetitionSite


The Earth's Oceans
Turning to Acid
Greenhouse gas emmissions are making our oceans acidic.
Take Action!
  
Take action link: http://www.care2.com/go/z/e/AF2Ar/zKhB/blMjq


Become a fan of Care2 on Facebook Follow Care2 Action Alerts on Twitter

Electric Car Charging Station News

Special Report: Power struggles: charging tomorrow's cars

A Tesla Roadster is electrically charged at Tesla Motors Inc in San Carlos, California Reuters – A Tesla Roadster is electrically charged at Tesla Motors Inc in San Carlos, California July 22, 2009. …





LONDON (Reuters) – Imagine driving across America using a fuel so new you have to carry your own supply wherever you go.

At the start of the 20th century, before the era of ubiquitous gas stations, drivers did just that as they tested the limits of cars like the Ford Model T, which ran on gasoline, kerosene or ethanol and could, if driven carefully, travel more than 150 miles on a full tank.

Now a new generation of drivers is set to embark on a similar kind of experiment. Until recently, most electric vehicles, or EVs as they are often known, have had a range of just a few dozen miles, limiting their usefulness and appeal. That's a big reason the long-talked-about era of electric vehicles has been, well, talked and talked about for so long with little real-world progress.

Over the next couple of years, though, tens of thousands of electric cars will hit the laneways of Europe, the streets of the United States and the gleaming highways of Asia. These new battery-powered vehicles have much longer ranges than their predecessors -- up to 250 miles in the case of the Tesla Roadster, but mostly about 100 miles -- and are likely to be the first to sell in large numbers.

By 2020, says J.D.Power Automotive Forecasting, annual sales of EVs will reach 2 million. Banking giant HSBC is even more optimistic and puts the figure at 9 million. That's still some way short of the 61 million petrol- and diesel-driven vehicles sold around the world in 2009 but a huge leap from the 5,000 or so EVs sold last year.

But even as these shiny new vehicles take to the road, serious questions remain about the infrastructure -- or rather, the lack of infrastructure -- to charge them. In an echo of last century's battle over the best fuel source, the way in which the coming fleet of electric vehicles will be recharged has yet to be settled -- and all the proposed models have flaws.

Some experts believe EVs should plug in at a driver's home or workplace. Others back a global network of roadside recharging stations. One prominent company is pushing the idea of petrol station-like outlets where you can zip in and quickly switch your almost-dead battery for a fully charged one. Another group advocates avoiding "pure" EVs and the problem of charging infrastructure altogether, focusing on cars which use both electricity and gasoline.

The stakes are huge: the pace of the shift to electric vehicles, progress in the fight against climate change, and a market which HSBC bullishly forecast this week would grow 20-fold by 2020 to $473 billion -- a fifth of the entire low-carbon economy.

Despite the hype, it's almost impossible to predict the format or formats most likely to win the great electric vehicle infrastructure battle. Model T owners adopted petrol as their fuel of choice for reasons both obvious -- the falling price of petrol -- and unpredictable: prohibition in 1919 forced ethanol off the market.

The variables today -- technology, political interference, the psychology of car-lovers -- are similarly hard to pin down. "The introduction of electric vehicles is more than a financial matter," says U.S. analyst Sam Jaffe, research manager at IDC Energy Insights. "It's a big anthropological experiment. There's no question that there are drawbacks, but there are also advantages. It requires a re-setting of mindsets and how that unfolds will decide who wins the race."

ON YOUR MARKS, PLUG IN

The starting grid for the coming EV race is filling up quickly. Mitsubishi Motors Corp's jelly bean-shaped i-MiEV has been on sale in Japan since April and will launch in the United States and Europe over the coming few months. The Japanese automaker is also making two versions of the car for French automaker PSA Peugeot Citroen.

Nissan is set to roll out its edgy-looking Leaf in December, while corporate partner Renault will start selling its mid-sized Fluence ZE (for zero emissions) in the first half of next year.

Europe's biggest automaker Volkswagen, a late entrant in the competition, plans to launch all-electric vehicles in 2013, though it says zero-emission vehicles will account for 3 percent of sales by 2018.

These "pure" electric vehicles face competition from dual gasoline-electric cars. Sometimes called extended range cars, these vehicles can charge at a plug-in socket or switch over to gasoline, and include General Motors' Chevrolet Volt, which goes on sale in the United States from this year for $41,000, and in Britain a year later.

Will the charging infrastructure be able to keep up with all those new cars? The question is critical. "If it's too difficult to charge an electric vehicle, too inconvenient, the customers will not buy them," says Christian Feisst, managing director of business development for smart grid at U.S. networking giant Cisco Systems. "Today a lot of the work is around battery technology and the behavior of customers. There is not a lot of work done around the charging technology, or the charging process itself, nor how to manage charging."

A BATTERY PROPHET

One company that is sinking millions into technology is Better Place, a three-year-old California-based firm that has raised about $700 million from investors and imagines a vast global network of "switch stations": gas station-like outlets where drivers can swap a spent battery with a fully charged one in a few minutes.

Led by soft-spoken Israeli-born founder Shai Agassi, a former executive at SAP, the company boasts of having built "the largest cleantech investment in history". Last January, HSBC bought a 10 percent stake which valued Better Place at $1.25 billion.

Since earlier this year, the eco firm has been running a trial in Tokyo using three taxi cabs and will soon start testing a small network of stations in Israel, where it says it has deals with 92 corporate fleet owners. It expects a commercial launch in Israel and in Denmark in late 2011, and has plans in five other countries, including Australia, China and the United States.

The swap station model's main selling point is speed. Charging an EV battery can take up to eight hours. By switching batteries instead, that wait is reduced to three to four minutes. The company says its business model -- a subscription plan which covers the use of switch stations, the lease of a battery and the electricity used -- cuts a large cost item, the battery, out of the upfront price tag for the car.

"The underlying assumption that we're working by is that this is too big a market to do half solutions," says Jason Wolf, head of Better Place North America. "You're not going to get to mass adoption by people paying a premium because they want to be green or any other reason."

Early adopters, he says, will always buy cars like the Nissan Leaf and the Tesla Roadster, which retail at about $33,000 and $109,000 respectively. Better Place will reach beyond that niche to the drivers -- commuters, salespeople, small business owners -- who put tens and even hundreds of thousands of miles a year on the clock. "There's not a problem getting early adopters. That's great, we need them and we support those types of vehicles, but really where the heart of the market lies is the third of drivers who are burning two thirds of the gasoline."

CAN SWITCHING GET HIP?

But questions remain. In Israel, industry heavyweights including two of the country's biggest car fleets have adopted a wait-and-see approach to Better Place's trial. Eldan, a major leasing company whose cars are ubiquitous on Israeli roads, says it is in close contact with Better Place, but will not sign on until the electric-powered vehicles arrive and the technology is in place. "At that time we can determine its quality and will positively consider a relationship with the company," Eldan said in a statement.

There's also little sign that major automakers are ready to start producing cars with "switchable" batteries. The Israel and Denmark schemes both benefit from generous local tax breaks for non-polluting cars, and will use Renault's Fluence ZE model. So far, Renault is the only carmaker to announce a switchable car. Renault's decision was helped by Better Place guaranteeing a production run of 100,000.

With 57,000 soft orders for the car by July -- most of them from fleet companies -- interest in the Fluence ZE has been greater than expected, insists Better Place. Still, prospective customers have paid no deposit nor made any financial commitment to buy.

"Better Place was a catalyst for Renault to go mass market with the electric version of Fluence," says a Renault spokeswoman, adding that it was "hard to say" whether the model would have seen daylight without that guarantee.

Wolf concedes that Better Place will have problems if it can't convince other automakers to join the French carmaker in embracing "switchable" batteries. But "given where we are in discussions (with automakers) and the logic behind it that all of them see, I don't see it as a major concern," he says.

Perhaps. But even if Better Place can convince other automakers of the logic of its model, there's still the question of what sort of batteries they would use. The electric vehicles on the road or in the works all use batteries of different types -- nickel sodium chloride, lithium-ion, lithium-metal-polymer -- and sizes.

Better Place says it expects to cater for about three different battery types -- more would impose greater warehousing demands at its switch stations -- and predicts other carmakers will eventually settle on one of those types.

"You may hold an inventory of two, three types at first and over time what's going to happen is that pressures for OEMs (carmakers) to differentiate on batteries goes away, because you're manufacturer number three, four, five and you haven't already developed your own battery. At that point you're just going to take the least-cost, or best product for the overall vehicle," argues Wolf.

POWER-SHARING

Automakers, though, say standardized batteries are far from inevitable. The world's biggest carmaker Toyota says it will continue to prioritize building cars for safety and performance, not to make it easy to get a battery in and out. There's also the fact that auto owners and manufacturers will be unable to track a battery -- where it's been, the conditions it faced -- which might make it difficult to diagnose problems in a car.

"It is hard to imagine," says Toyota's Managing Director in Europe Graham Smith, of standardized batteries. "What if a manufacturer feels like they can move faster?"

For now, Toyota and General Motors have both chosen a dual, plug-in electric-gasoline approach which by-passes the need for charging away from home.

Even carmakers focused on pure EVs are hesitant to sign up. "Every manufacturer has a different battery type, battery size, method for removing the battery," says Andy Wertheim, general manager of environmental affairs at Mitsubishi in Britain. "Certainly at the moment we see that battery swapping is not relevant for us and for the foreseeable future."

Nissan, which shares a CEO in its alliance with Renault, also has doubts, citing its own research that shows that people prefer to own rather than lease a battery. "There are different battery layouts, batteries are shaped differently. That means even between Nissan and Renault already there are two types of battery. So I just think: how do you store those?" asks Jerry Hardcastle, vice president of vehicle design and development at Nissan Motor Co's technical center Europe. Nevertheless, he concedes the Better Place model might eventually work. "We're watching very closely what's going on in Israel."

THE COMING NETWORK?

Better Place's main competition will come from extended range cars or the myriad companies building and promoting charge spots or stations: parking meter-like posts on a street, in a car park or elsewhere into which you plug your car to top up its battery.

One such is California-based ECOtality, which has won $130 million funding from the U.S. Department of Energy to install and trial charge spots across the United States. The company expects to install 20,000 stations by May next year.

Other big players in the fast-growing market are U.S.-based Coulomb Technologies, which has about 850 vehicle charge spots installed, Britain's Elektromotive, which has about 1,000, and AeroVironment, which has some 14,000 industrial chargers for the likes of fork lift trucks. Better Place also plans to install charge spots alongside its switch station hubs.

"We view this as like cellphone coverage: the person with the largest network is ultimately going to win," says Jonathan Read, chief executive and president of ECOtality. "Better Place is going to take a long time and a lot of money to roll it out. We're able to hit the ground and have a greater network distribution before they even start putting their first chargers in the ground."

The Better Place battery swap model, he says, "is egregiously flawed - the concept of vehicle manufacturers agreeing to any sort of common battery is like herding cats."

Office buildings, utilities, local governments and car park operators are all likely customers for EV charging stations. ECOtality will soon announce a deal to install charge points in gas stations, whose owners are keen to entice EV drivers into their convenience stores.

Other retailers see the logic in the schemes. "Demand is not very high at the moment," says Jack Cunningham, environmental affairs manager at British retailer Sainsbury, which offers free charging to customers. "We take a fairly long-term view that will increase."

But building the huge networks of charge posts that many envisage as the future will not be cheap -- and some experts question the economics of such schemes. In the UK, a single street-side charge post can cost up to 5,000 pounds ($7,700) to install. But with electricity providers making less than 2 pounds per charge, few see the business case for deploying them. "We calculated that the payback was more than 50 years at the current electricity cost in Spain," says Jorge Sanchez Cifuentes, EV project manager at Endesa, a Spanish utility. British power providers voice similar concerns.

"Getting the capex back is a bit of a stumbling block," concedes Calvey Taylor-Haw, founder of UK-based charge spot firm Elektromotive. "You've got to have lots of money from central government."

Cisco's Feisst says state subsidies are the only way to get the infrastructure in place. "If you want to make long-distance drives then you need a public charging infrastructure," he says. "Utilities don't make a lot of money with public charging infrastructure so there must be government support to develop that, especially in the initial years when penetration of EVs is not high."

As governments cut spending in this age of austerity, though, such subsidies are likely to dry up, making a distant dream of plans for a network of systems that offer drivers universal charging with the cost billed back to a single provider.

CHARGE ME, QUICK

Then there's the time factor. Recharging an EV can take up to eight hours, though that is coming down fast.

AeroVironment says it has devised a 50 kilowatt electric charger based on DC electricity which can power a Nissan Leaf in just 26 minutes, though each unit would cost $30-40,000. ECOtality says it can charge a Nissan Leaf to 80 percent full in 15 minutes using its 60 amp fast charger, which will cost $20-25,000 apiece. Better Place switch station hubs will cost about $500,000 to build.

"In my opinion we're talking five to 10 years to have the right battery technology available that can make longer distances and allow faster charging," says Cisco's Feisst. "It's critical to have a fast charging process at public charging stations, and then we don't need to replace the batteries."

Fast chargers have their own problems, according to IDC Energy Insights' Sam Jaffe, potentially damaging batteries and creating intolerable power surges on the grid. "We are extremely skeptical about very-quick charge stations. It's technically feasible but on a large scale it would be very damaging for the grid."

ECOtotality calls that argument "fallacious". But Better Place spokeswoman Julie Mullins agrees and says that's why the swappable battery model will win out: "Our mission is to break dependence on oil and we can't wait 10 years for a better battery."

LESS MAY BE MORE

With all the uncertainty about battery-swap stations and recharging posts, it's not surprising that a growing number of EV backers see a minimalist approach -- charging at home or at the office -- as the best way ahead.

Because of safety concerns around the long, continuous load required to power an EV, carmakers are expected to mandate a home-charging device with every vehicle they sell. Little wonder that companies like Elektromotive, one of Britain's biggest manufacturers of public charging devices, have moved into home-charging stations.

Bethan Carver, Manager of Product Development at EDF Energy, the UK arm of French utility EDF, says the modest initial uptake of electric cars almost ensures most charging will be done at home. "It's more important to develop charging solutions at home or at work. Our view is that only a small fraction of charging demand will take place on the street, a couple of percent ongoing."

HELPING THE ANXIOUS

Of course home-charging won't work for people who live in apartments and have no designated parking space. And there may be another, more curious reason why at least some roadside charge spots will be needed: to alleviate the "range anxiety" that many drivers of electric cars seem to suffer.

"People were really apprehensive to drive because there was nowhere to charge," says Mitsubish's Andy Wertheim, of a pilot project in Kanagawa, Japan. But with the addition of a GPS system and even a single quick charging post "it was amazing what happened with how much further people drove."

Nissan has found similar results. People who charged their cars at home at first "go to the areas of Tokyo where there are quick charging points. But because we can track where they're going, as a research activity, bizarrely when they get there they don't charge their cars up. They go back home and recharge at home," says Nissan's Hardcastle.

A SPLIT SOLUTION

In the end, it may be that the electric car market splits in two: urban drivers and fleet operators happy with limited range at low cost in one group, and motorists who want to go further and buy an extended range car in the other. "For the next 20 years I think that will see us through," says Paul Nieuwenhuis from Cardiff's Center for Automotive Industry Research. "I don't know if battery swap is the answer."

"The fundamental problem of Better Place is it's going to cost so much. Can they raise that amount of capital?" asks Jaffe, adding that he still sees "a lot of intelligence" in the model.

"For me it's a question of timing," says EDF Energy's Bethan Carver. "A lot of the debate so far is on future possibilities."

(With additional reporting by Ari Rabinovitch in Tel Aviv and Chang-Ran Kim in Tokyo; editing by Simon Robinson and Sara Ledwith)



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http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

9.09.2010

Xcel wind-to-battery test and Hawaii Wind Project




Dear States Advancing Wind Members,

 

A couple wind deployment-storage items that may be of interest to you from DOE's State News Monthly Report.

 

Best,

Anne

 

Xcel Energy's Wind-to-Battery Test Shows Promise

August 11, 2010

In its quest to store wind energy and move it to the grid, Xcel Energy has reached a milestone in its preliminary tests of a one-megawatt (MW) battery-storage technology system, the company announced on August 3. The Wind-to-Battery Project showed it was possible to reduce the need to compensate for the variability of wind generation, Xcel Energy said. It is the first U.S. use of the sodium sulfur battery-storage technology as direct energy storage, according to Xcel Energy. The small demonstration project was part of the company's research into how to integrate unpredictable renewable energy into the grid. Begun in October 2008, the research is being conducted with a battery installation in Luverne, Minnesota, that is connected to a nearby 11-MW wind farm. Twenty 50-kilowatt battery modules in the demonstration weigh approximately 80 tons and are able to store about 7.2 megawatt-hours of electricity, with a charge/discharge capacity of one megawatt. Fully charged, the battery could power 500 homes for more than seven hours.

The preliminary test results indicate this technology can shift wind energy from off-peak to on-peak availability, and can support the regional electricity market by responding to real-time imbalances between generation and load. The system could provide voltage to the transmission grid, which would contribute to system reliability, according to Xcel Energy. Testing will continue to see how the battery system handles larger amounts of wind energy transfers to the grid. The next phase of the project will determine the potential cost effectiveness of the technology. A final report for the project, which received a $1 million grant from Xcel Energy's Renewable Development Fund, is expected in summer 2011. See the Xcel press release and the Wind-to-Battery report (PDF 2.94 MB). Download Adobe Reader.

 

DOE Closes $117 Million Loan Guarantee for Hawaii Wind Project

August 04, 2010

DOE announced on July 27 that it finalized a $117 million loan guarantee for Kahuku Wind Power, LLC, and its 30-megawatt (MW) Kahuku Wind Power project in Hawaii. The project includes the development of an innovative wind power plant that will supply electricity to approximately 7,700 households per year. According to company estimates, the project, located on Oahu's North Shore, will create more than 200 jobs on the island. The project will be the first to meet reliability requirements for wind and solar energy set by Hawaiian Electric Company, the only electric utility operating on Oahu.

The Kahuku project, which began construction in July, uses 12 2.5-MW Liberty wind turbine generators manufactured by Clipper Windpower and a 10-MW battery energy storage system that will modulate and smooth fluctuations in power output caused by changes in wind levels. First Wind Holdings, LLC, the project sponsor and an independent U.S.-based wind energy developer, successfully built and currently operates Hawaii's largest wind energy facility, the 30-MW Kaheawa Wind project on Maui, which generates 9% of the island's annual electricity needs. See press releases from DOE and First Wind, and the DOE Loan Guarantee Program Web site.

 

 

The U.S. Department of Energy Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) publishes this summary of news stories posted the past month on the EERE State Activities & Partnerships Web site. EERE collects news stories dealing with state involvement in renewable energy and energy efficiency projects from EERE technology program Web sites, the State Energy Program, and EERE Network News.


_______________________________________________
WindPower mailing list
WindPower@cleanenergystates.org
http://eight.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/windpower
If you will to be removed from this list, please contact anne@cleanegroup.org. Thank you.



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Rick Scotts Florida Nuclear Plans

Rick Scott owes Floridians answers on Nuclear

Scott calls for nuclear, but at what cost?

By Mike Antheil

West Palm Beach, FL

Yesterday the Rick Scott campaign attacked a group of businessmen and farmers who believe that renewable energy is the path to creating new jobs and growing Florida's economy. His response - more nuclear.

"widespread renewable energy, at a fraction of the cost of nuclear, will create the tens of thousands of jobs and attract billions of dollars in private investments that the state desperately needs."

We have three simple questions of the Rick Scott campaign:

  1. How much extra nuclear will Florida need?
  2. How much extra is Rick Scott willing to tax ratepayers to pay for it?
  3. Isn't the Scott campaign really just advocating taxing ratepayers to create profit for the one or two companies that are actually capable of building additional nuclear reactors?  

Rick Scott owes Floridians answers, and he owes the small businesses in Florida a chance to explain how widespread renewable energy, at a fraction of the cost of nuclear, will create the tens of thousands of jobs and attract billions of dollars in private investments that the state desperately needs.



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