Sunday, March 28, 2010

B.C. ready to support ocean power, minister says, Vancouver Sun

B.C. ready to support ocean power, minister says
British Columbia is preparing to make a push to become a leading proponent of ocean energy resource development, B.C. Energy Minister Blair Lekstrom said on Friday at the Globe 2010 conference in Vancouver.

Lekstrom, appearing as a panelist at a session that looked at opportunities and obstacles to commercialize electricity generation using tidal and wave energy, said his ministry has "just completed work on an ocean policy."

Click link above for full Vancouver Sun story.

The power line which will deliver a means to remain in traditional territories



This video pretty well covers the benefits which will be derived from the different areas of the North Coast Mountain Region. Renewable energy jobs are maintenance intensive and profitable. Work from this field will be ideal for BC and Yukon First Nation Citizens and to Alaska Natives as well as for other Alaskans and British Columbian residing in their respective areas.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

B.C. group touts green economic solution

B.C. group touts green economic solution

B.C. could pull in about $4.3 billion annually and eliminate its debt over several years by tapping into and selling its vast green-energy potential, said a report released yesterday.

Bio-energy, run-of-river, wind, geothermal, tidal, wave and solar energy could all be developed to help the environment and to work towards wiping out B.C.'s debt in 15 years or less, said the B.C. Citizens for Green Energy's 76-page report.

"B.C. is widely recognized as having a natural abundance of renewable green energy resources. However, this natural abundance is currently going virtually untapped as are the economic and environmental benefits that developing them could bring to our province," said the report, titled A Triple Legacy for Future Generations: B.C.'s Potential as a Renewable Green Energy Powerhouse.

Read more by clicking above link.

Tides come in (environmentalresearchweb blog) - environmentalresearchweb

Tides come in (environmentalresearchweb blog) - environmentalresearchweb
The use of tidal energy for generating electricity is moving ahead rapidly around the world, and the potential for expansion is significant, with the emphasis being on tidal current turbines, although some tidal barrages are also being developed or planned – for example, various barrage and lagoon scheme are still under consideration for the Severn estuary. A decision on which to go for should emerge later this year.

The global potential is quite large. Trade network Tidal Today’s second annual ‘Tidal Summit’, held in London last November, heard from a speaker from the Fraunhofer Institute for Wind Energy and Energy System Technology (IWES) who relayed some estimates of tidal energy potentials: China: 50 TWh p.a; Ireland: 10 TWh; UK: 31 TWh; France: 10 TWh; Norway: 3 TWh; US: 115 TWh. The big ones, in terms of capacity, included Canada: >40 GW and South Korea: 1000 GW.

Click on the link above to read the full story.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

CBC News - North - Feds failing wind energy industry, Whitehorse engineer says

CBC News - North - Feds failing wind energy industry, Whitehorse engineer says

A Whitehorse engineer who organized a wind energy conference in Ottawa this week says governments should spend more money on alternative energy industries, not on infrastructure and bailing out car manufacturers.

J.P. Pinard, who hosted the 2009 Wind-Diesel Workshop on Monday and Tuesday, said the federal government cut incentive programs this year for wind energy, including a wind subsidy program and a plan to assist northern communities wanting to supplement diesel-generated power with wind energy.

Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/north/story/2009/06/03/wind-energy.html#ixzz0hQNeOf0z or click above link

CBC News - North - Yukon Energy urged to release alternative power studies

CBC News - North - Yukon Energy urged to release alternative power studies
The Yukon's public power utility should release feasibility studies it had done on wind and geothermal energy, says NDP MLA Steve Cardiff.

Cardiff is calling on Yukon Energy Corp. to release the studies, which he said the utility has been withholding to date.

"These studies were paid for with public funds. The energy corporation belongs to Yukon citizens," Cardiff told CBC News on Friday.

Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/north/story/2010/03/05/yukon-alt-power.html#ixzz0hQMDeREq or click above link.
 

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