Driving Our Renewable Future 2
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Analysis and Countermeasures of China's Green Electric Power
sustainability Review Analysis and Countermeasures of China’s Green Electric Power Development Keke Wang 1,2, Dongxiao Niu 1,2, Min Yu 1,2, Yi Liang 3,4,* , Xiaolong Yang 1,2, Jing Wu 1 and Xiaomin Xu 1,2 1 School of Economics and Management, North China Electric Power University, Changping District, Beijing 102206, China; [email protected] (K.W.); [email protected] (D.N.); [email protected] (M.Y.); [email protected] (X.Y.); [email protected] (J.W.); [email protected] (X.X.) 2 Beijing Key Laboratory of New Energy Power and Low-Carbon Development, School of Economics and Management, North China Electric Power University, Changping District, Beijing 102206, China 3 School of Management, Hebei GEO University, Shijiazhuang 050031, China 4 Strategy and Management Base of Mineral Resources in Hebei Province, Hebei GEO University, Shijiazhuang 050031, China * Correspondence: [email protected] Abstract: The green development of electric power is a key measure to alleviate the shortage of energy supply, adjust the energy structure, reduce environmental pollution and improve energy efficiency. Firstly, the situation and challenges of China’s power green development is analyzed. On this basis, the power green development models are categorized into two typical research objects, which are multi-energy synergy mode, represented by integrated energy systems, and multi-energy combination mode with clean energy participation. The key points of the green power development model with the consumption of new energy as the core are reviewed, and then China’s exploration of the power green development system and the latest research results are reviewed. -
Vestas to Supply 35 MW of Turbines for Heavy Industry Sites in Belgium
News release from Vestas Northern and Central Europe Hamburg, 30 June 2021 Vestas to supply 35 MW of turbines for heavy industry sites in Belgium Vestas has received a 35 MW order to supply turbines to two projects being developed for corporate heavy industry in Belgium, including providing renewable power for steel production. The two projects are being developed by Storm, a Belgian wind farm developer and owner-operator, and are both located in the industrial harbour of Ghent, Belgium. Storm is developing the 31 MW ArcelorMittal Wind Farm, which will comprise of three V162-6.0 MW EnVentus turbines, two V150-4.2 MW turbines operating at 4.3 MW power mode, and one V150-4.2 MW turbine. The three EnVentus turbines are the first to be installed in Belgium, and will be the largest turbines installed onshore in Belgium. They will be built subsidy-free on the basis of a 20-year corporate PPA with ArcelorMittal. The ArcelorMittal Wind Farm will be powering the ArcelorMittal steel manufacturing plant in Ghent, providing the electricity for steel production. The turbines will also be equipped with Vestas’ Anti-Icing System, enhancing performance by improving power production in cold climate conditions. At a separate project, the 4.2 MW Honda Gent Wind Farm, which is also being developed by Storm, Vestas will deliver one V136-4.2 MW turbine. The power from this project will be used by Honda Motor Europe’s logistics centre in Ghent. Vestas will supply, install, and commission turbines at both sites. At both sites, Vestas will provide service through long-term 20-year Active Output Management 4000 (AOM 4000) service agreements, providing power performance certainty and Vestas’ industry-leading service expertise throughout the lifetime of the projects. -
U.S. Offshore Wind Power Economic Impact Assessment
U.S. Offshore Wind Power Economic Impact Assessment Issue Date | March 2020 Prepared By American Wind Energy Association Table of Contents Executive Summary ............................................................................................................................................................................. 1 Introduction .......................................................................................................................................................................................... 2 Current Status of U.S. Offshore Wind .......................................................................................................................................................... 2 Lessons from Land-based Wind ...................................................................................................................................................................... 3 Announced Investments in Domestic Infrastructure ............................................................................................................................ 5 Methodology ......................................................................................................................................................................................... 7 Input Assumptions ............................................................................................................................................................................................... 7 Modeling Tool ........................................................................................................................................................................................................ -
Suzlon Group: Fact Sheet
Suzlon Group: Fact Sheet Suzlon Group Suzlon Group, consisting of Suzlon Energy Limited (SEL) and its global subsidiaries, is India’s largest renewable energy solutions provider with presence in 18 countries across six continents. Suzlon has a strong presence across the entire wind value chain with a comprehensive range of services to build and maintain the projects, which include design, supply, installation, commissioning of the project and dedicated life cycle asset management services. Suzlon Group is a market leader in India with over 11.9 GW of installed capacity and global installation of ~ 17.9 GW spread across 17 countries in Asia, Australia, Europe, Africa and Americas. Suzlon’s Global wind installations help in reducing ~38 million tonnes of CO2 emissions every year. The company has an installed manufacturing capacity of 4,200 MW wind turbine generators spread across three Nacelle units in India and one unit in China (Joint venture). Suzlon boasts of a wide range within its 2.1 MW suite of products with varying rotor blade and tower heights suitable for all wind regimes. o The S111-120m (120 meter hub height), lattice-tubular tower prototype turbine commissioned in Gujarat in March 2016 achieved ~42% plant load factor (PLF). It received Type Certification in June, 2016. o The S111-140m (140 meter hub height), is the tallest lattice-tubular tower in the country. The prototype set up in August 2017 at Kutch, Gujarat, has received its Type Certification. It is expected to deliver 44% plant load factor (PLF) than earlier products on the same site location and wind conditions. -
Wind Energy & Wildlife
WIND ENERGY & WILDLIFE: Benefits for companies purchasing wind energy, wind Site it Right energy developers and financiers, consumers, and wildlife. central great plains grasslandscollaborating to conserve America’s most impacted habitat THE CHALLENGE The Nature Conservancy supports the development of A REAL LIFE EXAMPLE: renewable energy, such as wind, as an emission-free source of electricity. Economically viable wind resources Company XYZ was looking to purchase wind-generated and ecologically important areas, however, show some electricity, both to meet forecasted energy needs, and to overlap in the Central Great Plains. This overlap raises satisfy the company’s own initiative for sustainability, concerns that wildlife populations may be seriously which promotes the use of renewable energy, along impacted by commercial wind energy development. As a with other sustainable practices. XYZ issued a request for proposals for 100 megawatts (MW) of wind energy, result, power purchasers should be aware of this overlap, beginning in 2017. Several proposals were received and and more importantly, know how to avoid wildlife XYZ reviewed them, selecting company “ABC” as the impacts and the risks of procuring wind power from lowest-cost provider. A power purchase agreement was projects sited in sensitive habitat areas. signed, and XYZ’s CEO was pleased. rasslands are an important part of Gthe country’s cultural, economic and natural history, and are the most altered and least conserved landscapes on earth. The results of this decline are staggering. Almost three-quarters of the breeding bird species in the United States survive in the prairies of the Great Plains. Historically, some of these birds were widely distributed and found in vast numbers. -
Wind Power: Energy of the Future It’S Worth Thinking About
Wind power: energy of the future It’s worth thinking about. »Energy appears to me to be the first and unique virtue of man.« Wilhelm von Humboldt 2 3 »With methods from the past, there will be no future.« Dr. Bodo Wilkens Wind power on the increase »Environmental protection is an opportunity and not a burden we have to carry.« Helmut Sihler When will the oil run out? Even if experts cannot agree on an exact date, one thing is certain: the era of fossil fuels is coming to an end. In the long term we depend on renewable sources of energy. This is an irrefutable fact, which has culminated in a growing ecological awareness in industry as well as in politics: whereas renewable sources of energy accounted for 4.2 percent of the total consumption of electricity in 1996, the year 2006 registered a proportion of 12 per- cent. And by 2020 this is to be pushed up to 30 percent. The growth of recent years has largely been due to the use of wind power. The speed of technical development over the past 15 years has brought a 20-fold rise in efficiency and right now wind power is the most economical regenerat- ive form there is to produce electricity. In this respect, Germany leads the world: since 1991 more than 19.460 wind power plants have been installed with a wind power capacity of 22.247 MW*. And there is more still planned for the future: away from the coastline, the offshore plants out at sea will secure future electricity supplies. -
Vestas Wins 97 MW Order for Wind Project in Australia
Page 1 of 2 News release from Vestas Asia Pacific Singapore, 14 December 2020 Vestas wins 97 MW order for wind project in Australia In partnership with Global Power Generation, a subsidiary of the multinational power company Naturgy Group, Vestas has secured a 97 MW deal for the Hawkesdale Wind Farm in Victoria, Australia. The project will feature 23 V136-4.2 MW wind turbines which Vestas will supply and install. Upon completion, Vestas will also deliver a 15-year Active Output Management 5000 (AOM 5000) service agreement. With an energy-based availability guarantee, the service agreement will maximise the energy production of the fleet and provide Global Power Generation (Naturgy Group) with long-term business case certainty. The deal follows Vestas’ recent announcement of the second stage of the Berrybank wind project and the Ryan Corner wind project, two new Victorian wind parks to be developed with Global Power Generation. Together, the three projects will export a total of 425 MW of clean energy to the Australian grid. “We are proud that customers from all around the world turn to Vestas for our leading technology, market experience, broad service solutions and ultimately, the best return on investment for their wind project”, said Clive Turton, President of Vestas Asia Pacific. “Global Power Generation is a valued customer to Vestas globally and we look forward to building on our existing partnership through the delivery of Hawkesdale Wind Farm”. “Global Power Generation is very pleased to continue its partnership with Vestas as OEM and long-term maintenance service provider for Hawkesdale Wind Farm”, said Pedro Serrano, Chief Business Development Officer, Global Power Generation. -
Commercialization of Energy Storage Technologies
Commercialization of Energy Storage Technologies PECC International Project Energy Transition and New Economic Models 2013-2014 Energy transition: Making the most out of available resources Victoria, BC, Canada November 08 2013 CONFIDENTIAL Presentation Agenda • Introduction to SDTC’s clean technology commercialization model • Demand Drivers for Energy Storage (ES) and Renewable Energy (RE) Integration • Technology Configurations and SDTC ES Portfolio Company Summary • ES Market Size and Potential • Regulatory Policy and Market Rules Support for ES CONFIDENTIAL 2 External Sources Acknowledgement • Sandia National Labs • DOE/ EPRI 2013 Electricity Storage Handbook in Collaboration with NRECA July 2013 • Energy Storage for the Electicity Grid: Benefits and Market Potential Assessments Guide, A Study for the DOE Energy Storage System Program Feb 2010 • EPRI (Electric Power Research Institute) • Electricity Energy Storage Technology Options 23-Dec-2010 • Lux • Grid Storage Under the Microscope: Using Local Knowledge to Forecast Global Demand March 2012 • Roland Berger Strategy Consultants CONFIDENTIAL 3 SDTC Mission and Mandate • SDTC is a policy delivery instrument of the Government of Canada to deliver environmental and economic benefits to Canadians. • As a delivery agent, we foster the development and demonstration of technological solutions that address: • Clean Air • Clean Water • Climate Change • Clean Land • Forge innovative partnerships and build a sustainable development technology infrastructure. • Ensure timely diffusion - increase -
The Economics of Wind Power in China and Policy Implications
Energies 2015, 8, 1529-1546; doi:10.3390/en8021529 OPEN ACCESS energies ISSN 1996-1073 www.mdpi.com/journal/energies Article The Economics of Wind Power in China and Policy Implications Zifa Liu 1, Wenhua Zhang 2,†, Changhong Zhao 2,† and Jiahai Yuan 2,* 1 School of Electrical & Electronic Engineering, North China Electric Power University, Chang Ping District, Beijing 102206, China; E-Mail: [email protected] 2 School of Economics and Management, North China Electric Power University, Chang Ping District, Beijing 102206, China; E-Mails: [email protected] (W.Z.); [email protected] (C.Z.) † These authors contributed equally to this work. * Author to whom correspondence should be addressed; E-Mail: [email protected]; Tel./Fax: +86-10-6177-3091. Academic Editor: Erik Gawel Received: 6 December 2014 / Accepted: 4 February 2015 / Published: 17 February 2015 Abstract: In 2009, the implementation of feed-in tariff (FIT) and attractive public subsidies for onshore wind farms aroused great investment enthusiasm and spurred remarkable development of wind power in China. Meanwhile, rapid learning-by-doing has significantly cut down the cost of wind turbines and the capital cost of wind farms as well. Therefore, it is the right time to examine the appropriateness of the existing FIT policy for wind power in China. In this paper, we employ the analytical framework for levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) to model the generation cost of wind power. Results show that the existing FIT policy is attractive to investors, but serious curtailment and turbine quality issues could make wind power unprofitable. Meanwhile, rapid substantial decreases in the cost of wind power have made it competitive to coal power in 2013, implying that it is possible and necessary to reform the FIT policy for new wind farms. -
Renewable Energy and Related Services: Recent Developments
United States International Trade Commission Renewable Energy and Related Services: Recent Developments Investigation No. 332-534 USITC Publication 4421 August 2013 U.S. International Trade Commission COMMISSIONERS Irving A. Williamson, Chairman Daniel R. Pearson Shara L. Aranoff Dean A. Pinkert David S. Johanson Meredith M. Broadbent Robert B. Koopman Director, Office of Operations Karen Laney Director, Office of Industries Address all communications to Secretary to the Commission United States International Trade Commission Washington, DC 20436 U.S. International Trade Commission Washington, DC 20436 www.usitc.gov Renewable Energy and Related Services: Recent Developments Investigation No. 332-534 USITC Publication 4421 August 2013 This report was prepared principally by Project Leader Lisa Ferens Alejandro [email protected] Deputy Project Leader Samantha Pham [email protected] Office of Industries Laura Bloodgood, Andrew David, Erick Oh, Samira Salem, Alan Treat, and Isaac Wohl Office of Economics Aimee Larsen and Alan Fox Content Reviewers Aimee Larsen and Brian Allen Administrative Support Phyllis Boone, Trina Chambers, and Cindy Payne Office of Analysis and Research Services Peg Hausman and Jeremy Wise Help Desk and Customer Service Division Under the direction of Robert Carr, Chief, Natural Resources and Energy Division Abstract Renewable Energy and Related Services: Recent Developments offers estimates of the U.S. and global markets for trade and investment in services essential to energy production in the solar, wind, small hydropower, and geothermal sectors, as well as discusses trade barriers affecting these services. The services span a range of industries, including consulting, engineering, construction, and equipment maintenance and repair. Global demand for such services has grown rapidly in the past five years as more and more countries strive to meet rising energy needs, reduce carbon output, and strengthen energy security by developing renewable energy. -
Suzlon China Appoints New CEO
Press Release For Immediate Release 19th November 2010 Suzlon China appoints new CEO Pune/ Beijing: Suzlon Energy today announced the appointment of He Yaozu as CEO and Country Manager of its China operations, Suzlon Energy Tianjin Limited. Tulsi Tanti, the founder, Chairman and Managing Director of Suzlon Group, said: “Suzlon has been fully operational in China now for five years. As a Group, we have a 3.4 per cent market share and have been executing contracts of up to 1 GW. We now want to take our business to the next level. “Yaozu’s extensive experience in both China and the wider region makes him an excellent fit for us at Suzlon. China is now the largest market for wind in the world and we wanted someone of Yaozu’s stature to be our Suzlon China CEO. We are confident that, with Yaozu at the helm, and the encouraging public policy regime, our business can now really take off.” Yaozu’s appointment comes at a time when Suzlon is giving a strong push to expand its China operations through initiatives including establishing an R&D centre in Tianjin, co-investing in wind farm projects, and increasing its manufacturing investment. In addition, with the appointment of Yaozu, Suzlon will be the first major international wind turbine manufacturer in China with a Chinese CEO. Yaozu has been a senior adviser to China Machinery New Energy Co, and serves as a non-executive director of China Green Power Limited. He also served on the board of Hoi Sing Industrial Holding Company. He was previously managing director of Global Infrastructure Company (Asia) Limited and, prior to that, managing director of Ogden Energy in China. -
Decarbonizing China's Power System with Wind Power
January 2015 Decarbonizing China’s power system with wind power: the past and the future OIES PAPER: EL 11 Xin Li The contents of this paper are the author’s sole responsibility. They do not necessarily represent the views of the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies or any of its members. Copyright © 2015 Oxford Institute for Energy Studies (Registered Charity, No. 286084) This publication may be reproduced in part for educational or non-profit purposes without special permission from the copyright holder, provided acknowledgment of the source is made. No use of this publication may be made for resale or for any other commercial purpose whatsoever without prior permission in writing from the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies. ISBN 978-1-78467-019-1 i Abstract Wind power in China has experienced significant growth since the beginning of this century. Total installed capacity has increased almost 300 fold – from 346 MW in 2000 to 91,413 MW in 2013. This rapid development has had two major drivers: • First, the excellent wind power resource in China, especially in the north of the country, and the increasing competitiveness of wind generation worldwide. • Second, favourable government policies such as: mandatory targets for major power generators in relation to renewable energy; the decentralization of plant approval rights; and feed-in tariffs for wind generation. Along with the development of domestic wind turbine manufacturing capacity, these factors have stimulated the growth of wind power over the past 10 years or so. However, this rapid development has itself created new challenges. In particular, wind power has not been fully integrated into the electricity system as a whole, as the growth of wind generation capacity has not been matched by a corresponding growth in transmission capacity.