SheerWindâs INVELOX is taking shape at Army National Guard location. 200KW system to be operational by end of March! A Better Way to Harvest Wind Energy. find more at SheerWind.com
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SheerWindâs INVELOX is taking shape at Army National Guard location. 200KW system to be operational by end of March! A Better Way to Harvest Wind Energy. find more at SheerWind.com
Saintsbury's setting an example on sustainability
Doing the opposite of Cameron and forcing energy changes!
With 3,000 letters of support, this campaign is still could use your help!
Half of respondents to national survey would welcome a new wind farm within five miles of their home. Hannah Fearn reports
Solar FREAKIN' Roadways!: I've been trying to think of a good way to talk about this new technology, this video does the trick!
Beautiful view
Canadian Wind Energy Association
Anyone seen this? Science is crazy!
Read more here
Modelling commissioned by Clean Energy Council says average household would pay $50 less a year in 2020 under RET
11 of the EU countries published plans are incoherent, have questionable claimed savings, or both. Meaning despite what the government stated previously in the week, the UK is not on track to meet targets!
The National Trust has launched a trading operation to generate renewable energy and revenue from a hydro scheme in Snowdonia to help fund its conservation work.
Apple now want companies to copy them!
Renewable energy powering data centres and manufacturing facilities.
Using less packaging
Recycled materials making up parts of their products
Hats off to you Apple! (although Google have been using renewable energy for a while, just saying)
Eight major renewable energy projects, expected to support 8,500 jobs, have been given government approval.
The contracts, which include offshore wind farms and conversions of coal-powered plants to run on biomass, are the first awarded under the government's energy market reforms.
Yet again Tories slate onshore wind farms and say that we do not need any more wind farms as we are looking to meet 2020 EU targets. But apparently this is all we need to do, and should not be beating these targets!
Japan to start building worldâs biggest offshore wind farm this summer
Japan is to start building its ambitious wind farm project off the Fukushima coast in July. The farm is expected to become the worldâs largest and produce 1GW of power once completed in 2020.
The power-generating facility will be built 16 kilometers off the coast of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, which was critically damaged by an earthquake and tsunami in March 2011.Â
The 143 wind turbines, which are to be 200 meters in height, will be built on buoyant steel frames stabilized with ballast and anchored to the continental shelf.Â
Once completed in 2020, the project will generate 1 gigawatt of renewable electrical power. Â
The project is part of Japanâs national plan to increase renewable energy resources following the nuclear disaster at Fukushima. After the quake, Japan shut down its 54 nuclear reactors, but due to energy shortages it has had to restart two reactors.Â
âThis project is important. I think it is impossible to use nuclear power in Fukushima again,â project manager Takeshi Ishihara of the University of Tokyo told New Scientist weekly magazine.Â
Ishihara believes the areaâs seismic activity wonât be a problem for the turbines. His team has carried out lots of computer simulations and water tank tests in order to verify the safety of the turbines in all possible extreme events, such as earthquakes, tsunamis and typhoons.Â
âAll extreme conditions have been taken into consideration in the design,â he added.
There were some objections to the project by local people, who expressed concerns, in particular, over possible impact on the fishing industry, which was also hit by the nuclear disaster. But Ishihara is sure itâs possible to turn the farm into a âmarine pastureâ that would attract fish.
The project is also part of the prefectureâs plan to become completely energy self-sufficient by 2040, using only renewable sources.  Â
The Fukushima wind farm will produce double the amount of energy of the Greater Gabbard array, currently the worldâs biggest, off the coast of Suffolk in the United Kingdom, which generates 504 megawatts from its 140 turbines. Although the title of biggest will soon pass to the London Array in the Thames Estuary, where 175 turbines will produce 630 megawatts of power when it becomes operational later this year.
Scientists and researchers believe Japanâs wind capacity could reach 7.6 gigawatts over the next three years.
Sunrise and Wind Turbines - explore by Marvin Bredel on Flickr.