India: Opportunities In Clean Power Generation

lweb.es/f2224 12.05.2016

iconIndia’s energy system faces the challenges of meeting growing demand, cutting pollution and offering more than 300 million people not connected to the power grid access to modern energy. The target is to build 175GW of renewable energy by 2022, primarily solar and wind. This would present an investment opportunity of more than $150 billion in clean power generation. This report examines the recent growth across India’s off-grid, small energy grids, rooftop solar and utility-scale renewable energy segments and looks at challenges in their future growth.

Renewables Beat Coal As Largest Source Of Power Capacity

lweb.es/f1836 11.11.2016

iconAccording to the International Energy Agency, in 2015 coal power plants produced close to 39% of the world’s power, whilst renewables – including hydroelectric dams – accounted for 23%. However the IEA expects that number to climb to 28% by 2021, when renewables will supply the equivalent of all the power produced currently in the US and the EU combined. The IEA sees renewables growing 13% more between 2015 and 2021 than it did in its previous year’s forecast, due mostly to “stronger policy backing in the United States, China, India and Mexico.”

FuelCell Energy and ExxonMobil Plan Fuel Cell Carbon Capture

lweb.es/f1819 11.11.2016

iconThe James M. Barry Electric Generating Station, a 2.7 gigawatt mixed-use coal and gas-fired power plant operated by Alabama Power will host pilot plant tests of a fuel cell carbon capture technology, which uses carbonate fuel cells to concentrate and capture carbon dioxide streams from power plants. “The fuel cell carbon capture solution we are advancing with ExxonMobil could be a game-changer in affordably reducing carbon dioxide emissions from coal and gas-fired power plants globally,” said Chip Bottone, president and CEO of FuelCell Energy, Inc.