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Week in Renewables: Climategate Continued, Cheaper Solar, Biochar Fraud

By Chris Morrison | Nov 30, 2009

This year’s Thanksgiving week proved great for climate change skeptics, lousy for climatologists. The so-called Climategate emails from the United Kingdom’s Climate Research Unit received an increasing amount of attention as the week went on, provoking a variety of negative reactions.

So far, the only tangible consequences are an inquiry led by Sen. James Inhofe and a suit filed against NASA, and many of the arguments that the emails explode the science of climate change have been insubstantial. But the scandal isn’t ready to disappear yet. Searchers are just beginning to delve into some of the data that came with the emails, which may reveal some of the inner workings of climate science.

Until these investigations are complete, it will be hard to tell how much of an effect Climategate will have on the politics of climate change and the renewables industry. The biggest effect — and the one that skeptics are hoping for — would be reduced commitment from the United States in the Copenhagen climate treaty process.

Copenhagen is already dragging on, a processs that BNET blogger Kirsten Korosec has written more about in our weekly oil and gas roundup. China and India, the largest developing nations, appear firm in their resistance to any CO2 reduction. The United States, for its part, is resistant to deep cuts.

The biggest moves to date have come from smaller countries — a trend that California, which sometimes seems to regard itself as a separate entity from the U.S., followed by releasing a new cap-and-trade plan that would reduce emissions to 1990 levels by 2020. If adopted the plan will take effect in 2012.

Solar power achieved what are perhaps its largest cost reduction in history this year, helped along by the recession. A study by New Energy Finance shows a 50 percent drop in cost per kilowatt hour for solar panels through 2009. Supply has soared in the face of steady demand, which snagged on the lack of available financing.

Bright spots still appear on a regular basis, though. Abengoa, a large renewable energy company, just announced a partnership with utility E.ON to build two large solar thermal power plants in Spain.

Spurred in part by a growing solar industry, the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission announced that it is looking for ways to cope with the costs and challenges of a new electricity distribution network. The FERC was disallowed this year from “socializing” the costs for new transmission, a barrier to a new national network.

Hydrogen technology got a couple of boosts. Sun Catalytix, a company started by MIT professor Daniel Nocera to produce and store hydrogen, was funded with $3 million. Scientists from the Carnegie Institution also announced a new high-pressure storage method for hydrogen, using the unreactive gas xenon.

Finally, the nascent biochar industry took a hit, as Mantria Industries was taken to court by the SEC for an alleged “Ponzi scheme” involving fraudulent claims meant to get investments from the elderly.

Chris Morrison, a reporter on energy, renewables and climate change, is the former lead cleantech writer for VentureBeat. Follow him on Twitter.

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  • Mann is Off the Hook, So Let’s Look at the Real Crime [Video of Mann]

    Green Options - 4 days 11 minutes ago

    “An academic inquiry into the so-called ‘climategate’ email scandal has concluded that a well-known U.S. scientist [Mann] did not directly or indirectly falsify data in his research,” according to Mike De Souza of the National Post. The investigation made it very clear (as other peer-reviewed analyses have done) that Mann’s...

  • Kim Cobb’s view

    RealClimate - 53 days 4 hours 56 minutes ago

    Guest Commentary: An Open Essay on “ClimateGate” Kim Cobb, Georgia Tech Since the widespread distribution of stolen e-mails originating from the University of East Anglia, I have become increasingly distressed by the way that the internet and media machinery has digested their content. As a climate scientist, I have always been sensitive to...

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    TreeHugger - 44 days 7 hours 7 minutes ago

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  • Useful Reset: What Peer Review Is and Is Not

    Coyote Blog - 72 days 8 hours 39 minutes ago

    This is from a post of mine last January, long before the Climategate scandal  (though most of us who spent a lot of time with climate issues knew of the Climategate abuses long before the smoking gun emails were found).  The one thing this article does not mention is what we know today — that

  • The Climate Post: Throngs enter Copenhagen’s climate gates

    Grist - 61 days 1 hour 21 minutes ago

    by Eric Roston First Things First: President Obama last week shifted the date he will visit the Copenhagen climate talks from Dec. 9 to Dec. 18, the last and most consequential day. Three days into the 15th U.N.-sponsored Conference of Parties, this otherwise mundane fact carries the most symbolism. Whatever happens, whatever has already...

 
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  •  
    1

    erich_z

    11/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Week in Renewables: Climategate Continued, Cheaper Solar, Biochar Fraud

    Please don't throw the Biochar baby out with Mantria's Snake Oil bath water.
    http://www.sec.gov/news/press/2009/2009-247.htm
    The thermal conversion technology that they got hold of nefariously, is a solid, important innovation for the capture of energy from waste and low cost sequestration of carbon in soils. http://terrapreta.bioenergylists.org/taxonomy/term/93

    All political persuasions agree, building soil carbon is GOOD.
    To Hard bitten Farmers, wary of carbon regulations that only increase their costs, Building soil carbon is a savory bone, to do well while doing good.

    Biochar provides the tool powerful enough to cover Farming's carbon foot print while lowering cost simultaneously.

    Another significant aspect of bichar is removal of BC aerosols by low cost ($3) Biomass cook stoves that produce char but no respiratory disease emissions. At Scale, replacing "Three Stone" stoves the health benefits would equal eradication of Malaria.
    http://terrapretapot.org/ and village level systems http://biocharfund.org/
    The Congo Basin Forest Fund (CBFF).recently funded The Biochar Fund $300K for these systems citing these priorities;
    (1) Hunger amongst the world's poorest people, the subsistence farmers of Sub-Saharan Africa,
    (2) Deforestation resulting from a reliance on slash-and-burn farming,
    (3) Energy poverty and a lack of access to clean, renewable energy, and
    (4) Climate change.

    The Biochar Fund :
    Exceptional results from biochar experiment in Cameroon
    http://scitizen.com/screens/blogPage/viewBlog/sw_viewBlog.php?idTheme=14&idContribution=3011
    The broad smiles of 1500 subsistence farmers say it all ( that , and the size of the Biochar corn root balls )
    http://biocharfund.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=55&Itemid=75

    Mark my words; Given the potential for Laurens Rademaker's programs to grow exponentialy, only a short time lies between This man's nomination for a Noble Prize.

    This authoritative PNAS article should cause the recent Royal Society Report to rethink their criticism of Biochar systems of Soil carbon sequestration;

    Reducing abrupt climate change risk using
    the Montreal Protocol and other regulatory
    actions to complement cuts in CO2 emissions
    http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2009/10/09/0902568106.full.pdf+html

    There are dozens soil researchers on the subject now at USDA-ARS.
    and many studies at The up coming ASA-CSSA-SSSA joint meeting;
    http://a-c-s.confex.com/crops/2009am/webprogram/Session5675.html

    The Clean Energy Partnerships Act of 2009
    The bill is designed to ensure that any US domestic cap-and-trade bill provides maximum incentives and opportunities for the US agricultural and forestry sectors to provide high-quality offsets and GHG emissions reductions for credit or financial incentives. Carbon offsets play a critical role in keeping the costs of a cap-and-trade program low for society as well as for capped sectors and entities, while providing valuable emissions reductions and income generation opportunities for the agricultural sector. The bill specifically identifies biochar production and use as eligible for offset credits, and identifies biochar as a high priority for USDA R&D, with funding authorized by the bill.
    To read the full text of the bill, go to: http://www.biochar-international.org/sites/default/files/END09F94.pdf.

    Senator Baucus is co-sponsoring a bill along with Senator Tester (D-MT) called WE CHAR. Water Efficiency via Carbon Harvesting and Restoration Act! It focuses on promoting biochar technology to address invasive species and forest biomass. It includes grants and loans for biochar market research and development, biochar characterization and environmental analyses. It directs USDI and USDA to provide loan guarantees for biochar technologies and on-the-ground production with an emphasis on biomass from public lands. And the USGS is to do biomas availability assessments.
    WashingtonWatch.com - S. 1713, The Water Efficiency via Carbon Harvesting and Restoration (WECHAR) Act of 2009

    Individual and groups can show support for WECHAR by signing online at:
    http://www.biocharmatters.org/

    Congressional Research Service report (by analyst Kelsi Bracmort) is the best short summary I have seen so far - both technical and policy oriented.
    http://assets.opencrs.com/rpts/R40186_20090203.pdf .

    United Nations Environment Programme, Climate Change Science Compendium 2009
    http://www.unep.org/compendium2009/

    Al Gore got the CO2 absorption thing wrong, ( at NABC Vilsack did same), but his focus on Soil Carbon is right on;
    http://www.newsweek.com/id/220552/page/3

    Research:
    The future of biochar - Project Rainbow Bee Eater
    http://www.sciencealert.com.au/features/20090211-20142.html

    Japan Biochar Association ;
    http://www.geocities.jp/yasizato/pioneer.htm


    Carbon to the Soil, the only ubiquitous and economic place to put it.
    Cheers,
    Erich

  •  
    2

    biocharguy

    12/04/09 | Report as spam

    Biochar Information

    Visit http://www.outbackbiochar.com for biochar information, biochar research and the latest biochar news. This wonderfully informative site has gardening tips with biochar, recent studies published all over the world and informative biochar articles. In addition you can purchase biochar for your home garden from Outback Biochar. Thank you in advance for your support and remember, if we all work together we can make real progress on climate change!

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