Month: February 2020

“Is Biomass Dead?” (niche generator struggles)

“While the biomass bonanza from plants like Covanta’s in California may be dead, byproducts such as biomethane, and other applications such as the utilization of biomass vegetation to create biochar … do show promise in more selective operations.”

Over the years, posts at MasterResource have documented the environmental problems of wood/plant/garbage-generated electricity, as well as opposition from environmental groups. Biomass is “the air pollution renewable.”

Last summer, Kennedy Maize documented the lost luster of government-enabled waste-to-energy power plants, such as the Wheelabrator plant near Baltimore and the Detroit Renewable Energy plant.

“Waste-to-energy had a 15-year heyday, driven in part by the 1978 Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA),” Maize explained. “The law essentially created the non-utility generating industry.” He continued:

Many local governments had long incinerated garbage to reduce volumes flowing to landfills, but that provoked public opposition due to air pollution. With PURPA, developers began seeing a way to incinerate garbage in a technologically and environmentally sound fashion, generate electricity, and use the new law to force electric utilities to, reluctantly, buy the output.

That was the waste-to-energy story, another failure in the long quest of government policy to make the uneconomic economic.

In Power magazine this month, Jim Romeo updated the decline of this uneconomic (vs. natural-gas combined cycle) and air emissions renewable alternative. “Is Biomass Dead?” begins with the story of the 50 MW Covanta Biomass Plant in California, “once a crown jewel for the prospect of sustainable energy in California.” Closed since 2015, this plant will be joined by like facilities that are retired or soon will be.

Citing the Energy Information Administration, Romeo notes that power from biomass and waste totaled 2 percent of total U.S. electricity generation, down from its peak in 2014. Subsidized wind and solar too are pushing out biomass.

Then comes the open question of carbon dioxide reductions. “From an environmental perspective, biomass energy faces greater challenges than other renewable resources due to the ongoing controversy surrounding the question of whether CO2 emitted from combusting biomass is … ‘carbon neutral,’” noted one environmental attorney quoted by Romeo.

Biomass remains “workable,” Romeo concludes. But the energy landscape is littered with technological viable generation that failed the economic test. Remove government subsidies, and biomass, industrial wind turbines, and on-grid solar will all but become become relics as well.

The post “Is Biomass Dead?” (niche generator struggles) appeared first on Master Resource.

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February 19, 2020 at 01:11AM

Time to Get Serious: Fretting About CO2? Then Nuclear Power’s The Only Solution

If you’ve tuned in to someone banging on about ‘carbon pollution’ (aka carbon dioxide gas) and they aren’t banging on about nuclear power, it’s time to tune out. STT promotes nuclear power because it works. Reliable, safe and affordable it’s the only stand-alone power generation system that does not generate carbon dioxide gas during the […]

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February 19, 2020 at 12:31AM

Professor: Respected Military Generals Could Convince Climate Skeptics

Row of military ships against marine sunset

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

According to Professor Emeritus Michael Klare, trusted military leaders could “bridge the gap” by convincing climate skeptics.

A military perspective on climate change could bridge the gap between believers and doubters

Michael Klare
Professor Emeritus and Director, Five College Program in Peace and World Security Studies, Hampshire College

February 19, 2020 12.54am AEDT

As experts warn that the world is running out of time to head off severe climate change, discussions of what the U.S. should do about it are split into opposing camps. The scientific-environmental perspective says global warming will cause the planet severe harm without action to slow fossil fuel burning. Those who reject mainstream climate science insist either that warming is not occurring or that it’s not clear human actions are driving it. 

With these two extremes polarizing the American political arena, climate policy has come to a near standstill. But as I argue in my new book,“All Hell Breaking Loose: The Pentagon’s Perspective on Climate Change,” the U.S. armed forces offer a third perspective that could help bridge the gap.

“Changing weather patterns, rising temperatures, and dramatic shifts in rainfall contribute to drought, famine, migration, and resource competition” in Africa, General Thomas D. Waldhauser, then commander of the U.S. Africa Command, told the Senate Armed Services Committee in February 2019. “As each group seeks land for its own purposes, violent conflict can ensue.”

The military’s approach to climate change could bridge the divide between believers and doubters. People who assert that protecting endangered habitats and species is trivial next to health and economic problems, and that society has time to tackle whatever threats may develop, might be persuaded to take action when they hear from respected generals and admirals that the nation’s security is at stake.

This is already happening in some communities, such as Norfolk, Virginia, where base commanders and local officials have found common ground in addressing the area’s extreme vulnerability to sea level rise and hurricane-induced flooding.

Read more: https://theconversation.com/a-military-perspective-on-climate-change-could-bridge-the-gap-between-believers-and-doubters-128609

President Obama tried using the military to convince climate skeptics. How did that work out?

After all these years climate activists still don’t get us. Perhaps they judge us by their own followers, they’

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February 19, 2020 at 12:03AM

100 plus miles of I-80 stayed closed Sunday night

Winter weather prolonged an already lengthy closure of Interstate 80 in southern Wyoming on Monday, according to the state transportation department.

A day earlier, Wyoming Dept of Transportation (WYDOT) crews worked to clear snow drifts that were several feet high in the Elk Mountain area.

In addition to the Laramie-Rawlins closure, the eastbound lanes were closed between Rock Springs and Rawlins, and the westbound lanes shut down between Cheyenne and Laramie.

Read More:
https://kgab.com/wydot-100-miles-of-i-80-to-stay-closed-through-monday-morning/

Thanks to Jack Bailey for this link

The post 100 plus miles of I-80 stayed closed Sunday night appeared first on Ice Age Now.

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February 18, 2020 at 09:55PM