• Home • About Us • Contact Us • Become A Member • 
 
Menu
· Home
· Join Michigan Green
· Member Directory
· Our Mission
· Calendar
· About Us
· Our Services
· Board Members
· Contact Us
· News Archive
· Search
· Topics
· Video
Search


Other Pages

· Mercury Information
· Publications
· Energy Saving Tips
· Michigan Green Fund
· Michigan Incentives

RSS News Feeds

Michigan GREEN News in RSS 2.0 format
Michigan GREEN News

Michigan GREEN Top Stories in RSS 2.0 format
Michigan GREEN Top Stories

Old Articles
Friday, August 22, 2008
· Geothermal Energy's Potential
Thursday, August 21, 2008
· Power Rates Spike In Some States
· Russia's Rise
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
· How performance management systems improve energy efficiency
Monday, August 18, 2008
· Colorado at Crossroads of Energy, Politics
· Fixing High Oil Prices
· Transmission Line Crosses Hurdle
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
· Digging Deep for Support
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
· ACEEE Introduces a New State Energy Efficiency Policy Resource
Monday, August 11, 2008
· Net zero electric building is model for federal facilities

Older Articles
A Movement Is Born 
Energy News

May 19, 2008

One does not often feel present at the launch of something civilization changing. Electricity was in the air at the recent Washington International Renewable Energy Conference, which attracted a swarm of more than 8,600 energy entrepreneurs, government officials and academics from around the world. The first such gathering was a German government-sponsored meeting in Bonn four years ago that attracted 1,200. In late 2005, the Chinese government held an event that drew 800 people.

Washington's taxi drivers sensed something big was up. One asked me what I knew about wind turbines, since his brother in Kenya wants to sell them. Another cabby wanted to know if plug-in hybrid vehicles were on display at WIREC -- they were -- because he was tired of being mugged at the gas pump.

Inside the Washington Convention Center, the flow of information was fast and deep. A government official from Iceland said that everyone should get rid of the notion that geothermal was just possible in a few remote geographical areas blessed with volcanic activity. Dig deeper, said Össur Skarphédinsson, Iceland Minister of Industry, and energy-starved regions like Africa can tap new energy sources. A congressman told a breakout session of attendees to get ready for seismic change.

"In the next couple of decades, the United States is positioned to be the arsenal of renewable energy," said Rep. Jay Inslee of Washington state.

Develop wind to the point of producing 20 percent of America's electricity, said Terry Hudgens, who heads PPM Energy (recently renamed IBERDROLA RENEWABLES, Inc.), and the country can avoid the cost of importing $250 million a day of natural gas.

John D. Negroponte, U.S. deputy secretary of state, said renewables are in the big leagues. "Renewable energy was a niche market. That is no longer the case. Just ask the investment bankers."

It will take a family of nations to get the world where it needs to go, said Zhang Xiaoqiang, vice chairman of the national Development and Reform Commission of China. "It is necessary for us to work together."

Tony Hayward, chief executive of BP, said his oil company is investing $1 billion a year in alternative energy but all must commit more resources to energy research and development. "The scale of what's happening today won't have much impact," he said. "We need a step change."

Vinod Khosla, founder of Sun Microsystems and the architect of Khosla Ventures, warned attendees that most energy predictions turn out wrong. But the world's energy picture is about to change profoundly. "It won't take more than 20 years to change the energy picture completely," Khosla said.

Michael Eckhart, president of the American Council on Renewable Energy and one of the principal organizers of WIREC, later told me, "Renewable energy has now engaged all the

Respond to the editor.

governments in the world in a positive way." Collaboration and idea sharing taking place in cavernous meeting halls every few years now multiply and strengthen an emerging global movement.

Out-of-the-box thinking is certain to take the world out of the box it now finds itself in as a result of a dramatic rise in energy use, a shrinking supply of fossil fuel and the threat of global warming. A movement is gaining momentum.

More information is available from Energy Central:

Correction

In Friday's column’s (“Burning Coal” by Ken Silverstein), a reference was made to a plan by Interstate Power and Light -- an Alliant Energy subsidiary -- to “retire its coal units and switch to natural gas by 2013 if utility commissioners approve the overall plan.”

Our characterization of the plan was misleading. IPL’s proposal is to fuel switch one location, and retire one boiler at another. The utility does not intend to fuel switch or retire its entire fleet.

We apologize for the error and regret any misunderstanding it may have caused.

Respond to the editor.
Martin Rosenberg Editor-in-Chief EnergyBiz Magazine
Read Martin's Blog

Posted on Monday, May 19, 2008 @ 11:10:43 EDT by webmaster
Sorry, Comments are not available for this article.
 
Bookmark and News Feed


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

AddThis Feed Button

Related Links
· More about Energy News
· News by webmaster


Most read story about Energy News:
Heating Costs Seen Jumping This Winter

Article Rating
Average Score: 0
Votes: 0

Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad

Options

 Printer Friendly Printer Friendly

 

Michigan GREEN
1215 Ludington Avenue
Escanaba, MI 49829
Ph: 888.473.5444
Fax: 866.430.8361

Michigan Green © 2007