Monday, August 30, 2021

DOE Releases New Reports Highlighting Record Growth & Declining Costs Of Wind Power

2020 sees record for land-based wind generation, 24% increase in pipeline of offshore wind energy — laying the foundation for rapid growth in years to come.




ByU.S. Department of Energy
Published 2 hours ago

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today released three reports showing record growth in land-based wind energy, significant expansion of the pipeline for offshore wind projects, and continued decline in the cost of wind energy generation — laying the groundwork for significant future gains as the Biden Administration pursues rapid acceleration of renewable energy deployment to reach its goal of 100% clean electricity by 2035.

“These reports contain such terrific news: the U.S. installed a record-breaking amount of land-based wind energy last year. They underscore both the progress made and the capacity for much more affordable wind power to come – all necessary to reach President Biden’s goal of a decarbonized electricity sector by 2035,” said Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm. “At DOE, we will double down on efforts to deploy more wind energy around the country as we also pursue technologies to make turbines even cheaper and more efficient.”

More wind energy was installed in 2020 than any other energy source, accounting for 42% of new U.S. capacity. The U.S. wind industry supports 116,800 jobs.

The 2021 edition of the Land-Based Wind Market Report, prepared by DOE’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, detailed a record 16,836 megawatts (MW) of new utility-scale land-based wind power capacity added in 2020 – representing $24.6 billion of investment in new wind power projects. Other findings from the report include:

Wind energy provided more than 10% of total in-state electricity generation in 16 states. Most notably, wind power provided 57% of Iowa’s in-state electricity generation, while wind provided more than 30% of electricity in Kansas, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and North Dakota.

New utility-scale land-based wind turbines were installed in 25 states in 2020. Texas installed the most capacity with 4,137 MW. Other leading states include Iowa, Oklahoma, Wyoming, Illinois, and Missouri — all of which added more than 1,000 MW of capacity in 2020.

Wind turbines continue to grow in size and power, leading to more energy produced at lower costs. The average nameplate capacity of newly installed wind turbines grew 8% from 2019 to 2.75 MW.

Wind turbine prices have steeply declined from levels seen a decade ago, from $1,800/kW in 2008 to $770–$850 per kilowatt (kW) now.

The health and climate benefits of wind energy installed in 2020 were valued at $76 per MWh, far greater than the cost of wind energy.

The 2021 edition of the Offshore Wind Market Report, prepared by DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory, found that the pipeline for U.S. offshore wind energy projects grew to 35,324 MW, a 24% increase over the previous year. Other details of the report include:

The Bureau of Ocean Management created five new wind energy areas in the New York Bight with a total of 9,800 MW of capacity, representing most of the 2020-2021 growth of the U.S. pipeline.

The Block Island Wind Farm (30 MW) off the coast of Rhode Island and the Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind pilot (12 MW) are the first two projects operating off U.S. coasts. Massachusetts’ Vineyard Wind I became the first approved commercial-scale offshore wind energy project in the United States.

Massachusetts, North Carolina, and Virginia all increased offshore wind procurement targets in 2020 and early 2021. In total, state goals grew by 15,600 MW, from about 24,000 MW by 2035 in 2019 to almost 40,000 MW by 2040.

The 2021 edition of the Distributed Wind Market Report, prepared by DOE’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, noted that eleven states added a total of 14.7 MW of capacity, 1,493 turbines, and $41 million for new investment in distributed wind installations in 2020.

Cumulative U.S. distributed wind capacity stands at 1,055 MW from more than 87,000 wind turbines across all 50 states, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Guam.
Agricultural and residential customers accounted for the largest percentage of distributed wind projects installed in 2020 (36% and 24%, respectively), while utility and industrial customers accounted for the largest share of distributed wind capacity installed (58% and 37%, respectively).

Small wind retrofits — new turbines installed on existing towers and foundations — have become more common, accounting for 80% of small wind capacity installed in 2020.



Land-Based Wind Market Report: 2021 Edition

The three market reports are available at energy.gov/windreport. To learn more about DOE’s wind energy research, visit the Wind Energy Technologies Office homepage.
Offshore Wind Market Report
Distributed Wind Market Report
Land-Based Wind Market Report: 2021 Edition Released

Article courtesy of office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy.



The Future of Green Energy Is Comically Large Wind Turbines

Building a few gigantic wind turbines is more efficient than building many smaller ones, scientists say.


By Audrey Carleton
30.8.21




IMAGE: MINGYANG SMART ENERGY

Chinese renewable energy infrastructure company MingYang Smart Energy just announced it is building an 800-foot-tall offshore wind turbine, the largest in the world.

The colossal MySE 16.0-242 is a behemoth, with 387-foot blades that traverse nearly half a million square feet (around the size of 10 football fields). Most interesting about this big-ass turbine, however, is that, alone, it can create more power than many smaller wind turbines combined. Scientists and companies increasingly believe that a key to creating more efficient wind turbines is to simply make the turbines themselves positively gigantic.

The Department of Energy released a report Monday finding that turbines like MingYang’s are likely the future of wind energy, and that over the next decade turbines are going to get larger.

“Back in 2010, no turbines in the United States employed rotors that were 115 meters (380 feet) in diameter or larger,” the DOE wrote. “In 2020, 91 percent of newly installed turbines featured such rotors. The average rotor diameter in 2020 was about 125 meters (410 feet)—longer than a football field.”




IMAGE: DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

Eric Lantz, group research manager at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), also says large turbines are the future of wind energy.

“The fewer turbines you put up per unit of energy in general results in a lower cost of energy,” Lantz said.

Having co-authored a study on wind turbine size for NREL in 2015, Lantz says taller turbines are more efficient than shorter ones in a few different ways: They reach higher-quality winds and surpass obstructions like mountains, hills, trees, or buildings that would otherwise limit the volume and speed of breezes that a turbine can access.

“As you get higher above ground, you get into better resource quality,” Lantz said. “Surface obstructions that slow the wind down, the higher you get above those, the more you get into free-flowing wind.”

Wind speeds also increase substantially with altitude: Lantz’s own research found that moving from 80 to 160 meters sees wind speeds increase from 1 to 1.5 meters per second. Faster winds generate more energy, so taller turbines are generally more efficient than shorter ones.

The MySE 16.0-242 boasts 16 megawatts of power, nearly 10 times the mean capacity of U.S. turbines, and is capable of powering 20,000 homes on its own over its 25-year service life. That’s 45 percent more than MingYang’s now second-largest turbine, the MySE 11.0-203, and enough to eliminate more than 1.6 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions from energy generation, the company claims.

“The launch of our new largest wind turbine, MySE 16.0-242, is an apt illustration of the three essential drivers to technology evolution—demand, combination and iteration,” Qiying Zhang, president and chief technology officer of Ming Yang said in a press release.

Not all turbine locations are created equal, though: tops of hills, open plains and waters and tunnel-like gaps between and within mountain ranges are all ideal spots for turbines, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). In the US, where wind farms are often sited in vast, open prairies with little in the way, larger turbines aren’t worth the cost, Lantz says. “The most wind-rich regions of the country generally show an economic preference for the lowest considered tower height,” his report says, noting that higher turbine heights make more of a difference for energy generation east of the Rocky Mountains.

West of the Rockies, taller turbines aren’t always worth the extra upfront expense: Though wind turbine prices are dropping across the board (now hovering around $750 per kilowatt of energy they generate), taller wind turbines require larger volumes of raw materials, both for their larger size and for the extra material required to provide structural reinforcement to keep them standing. Countries in Northern Europe, for example, where land for wind farms is more expensive, stand to gain more from bigger turbines than the US does, he notes.

Regardless, from a logistical standpoint, it’s generally better to plant fewer turbines than more, Lantz says, because each one requires hurdles in siting, maintenance and management: Looking for one ideal spot for a massive turbine is easier than looking for a large swath of land to plant dozens of them, and repairing a single turbine, with one set of parts, is easier than repairing many.

“The fewer moving parts you have, the fewer possibilities of failure,” Lantz said. “Reducing the number of machines that you have to maintain and service can provide an opportunity for operations maintenance cost savings.”

Since 2012, the average turbine in the US has hovered around 280 feet, the EIA reports, a height that was hard to come by just a few years before. The average size of offshore turbines, like the MySE 16.0-242, has grown by 3.4 times since 2000, and will likely continue to grow.

Turbines will eventually reach a point where they can’t get any bigger, says Lantz, who predicts that at a certain altitude, they risk intercepting air routes and will require permitting from agencies like the Department of Defense or the Federal Aviation Administration. At which point, the administrative hurdle won’t be worth the effort. For now, the MySE holds the title of tallest turbine, but it likely won’t be that way for long as manufacturers across the sector innovate upward, he says. It’s a booming industry, one full of players who are all, literally, racing to the top.

“We still believe that it is gonna top out eventually, people have kind of given up on making predictions on precisely when that might occur,” he says. “Even those of us that do it every day, we don't know what the future will hold.”

Renewable energy blogs quickly lauded the turbine on Wednesday as demonstrating clean energy’s potential for scalability. China, for example, has set its sights on carbon neutrality by 2060. The Biden Administration, for its part, is aiming to achieve a carbon pollution-free power sector by 2035. Reaching these metrics will require scaling up rapidly. Maybe part of the way we do it is with huge, huge wind turbines.\





Explained: Bangladesh garment workers’ safety pact with global retailers

Along with leading brands like H&M and Inditex, which owns Zara and Bershka, the new agreement has also been signed by global unions including IndustriALL and UNI Global Union.

Written by Sanskriti Falor , Edited by Explained Desk | New Delhi |
Updated: August 29, 2021 

The accord made it mandatory for brands to set basic standards of workplace, minimum wages, independent factory inspections, public reports on the factories, constant repairs and renovations. (AP)

Leading global retailers have agreed to extend a health and safety agreement with garment workers and factory owners in Bangladesh. The International Accord for Health and Safety in the Textile and Garment Industry – a legally-binding pact – comes into effect from September 1, and will be valid for two years.

Along with leading brands like H&M and Inditex, which owns Zara and Bershka, the new agreement has also been signed by global unions including IndustriALL and UNI Global Union.

What was the previous accord?

The pre-existing Accord on Fire and Building Safety had come into effect in the aftermath of the collapse of the eight-story Raza Plaza complex in Savar near Dhaka that killed more than 1,100 people.

Put in place by IndustriALL, UNI and 17 textile and garment brands, the accord was the first legally binding agreement that was brought in to ensure and improve the safety of workers. More than 200 companies had signed the agreement.


Brands like Primark and Mango used the factories in the building and were called out to look into the highly unsafe factory conditions that Bangladesh workers had been working in.

The accord made it mandatory for brands to set basic standards of workplace, minimum wages, independent factory inspections, public reports on the factories, constant repairs and renovations.

The 2013 Accord specifically focused on fire, electrical and building safety hazards.

The agreement signatories decided to continue the 2013 Accord for three more years in 2018, until May 31, 2021. It was further extended for three more months until August 31, 2021.

The 2018 accord involved brands to conduct independent safety inspections, remediation programmes, establish safety committees and safety training programmes, disclosure of inspections reports, setting up complaints mechanisms, safely implement the right to refuse unsafe work and take corrective actions plans.

What is the new health and safety accord?


The new agreement is being managed by the Ready-Made Garments Sustainability Council (RSC). According to the International Labour Organisation (ILO), the ready-made garment sector accounts for 80 per cent of Bangladesh’s export earnings and employs about 4.2 million people. ILO’s 2017 report stated, “It is estimated that over 11,000 workers suffer fatal accidents and a further 24,500 die from work related diseases across all sectors each year in Bangladesh. It is also estimated that a further 8 million workers suffer injuries at work – many of which result in permanent disability.”

IndustriALL Global Union general secretary, Valter Sanches, said the new agreement is an important victory towards making the textile and garment industry safe and sustainable. “The agreement maintains the legally binding provision for companies and most importantly the scope has been expanded to other countries and other provisions, encompassing general health and safety,” said Sanches.

According to the official website of The Accord on Fire and Building Safety, the new agreement maintains the essence of the earlier accord and includes, “respect for freedom of association, independent administration and implementation, a high-level of transparency, provisions to ensure remediation is financially feasible, safety committee training and worker awareness program, and a credible, independent complaints mechanism.”

Instead of specifically focusing on fire and building safety, the agreement broadens its scope of covering general health and safety, according to a report by IndustriALL. It will work towards expanding the scope of the agreement in order to address “human rights due diligence along the brands’ global supply chains”.

The new accord will also set in place an optional arbitration process to implement its terms in a streamlined manner, stated the report.

Christy Hoffman, General Secretary of UNI Global Union, said, “With its accountability, transparency, and legally binding commitments, the International Accord is an example of what modern due diligence should look like in Bangladesh and beyond. It also recognizes that the work in Bangladesh’s garment industry is not done, and this agreement helps strengthen the RSC and deepen brands’ commitments to the people who manufacture their products.”

What is the Ready-Made Garments Sustainability Council (RSC)?


Ready-Made Garments Sustainability Council (RSC) was formed in 2019 by Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA).

RSC was handed over the responsibility of looking after the implementation of the 2018 Accord.

RSC was set in place to ease the functioning of businesses under the Accord and to look after the implementation of the Accord in a more streamlined manner.

President of BGMEA, Rubana Huq had told Reuters, “The RSC is an unprecedented national initiative, uniting industry, brands and trade unions to ensure a sustainable solution to carry forward the significant accomplishments made on workplace safety in Bangladesh.”

RSC was also set up to work towards encompassing “industrial relations, skill development and environmental standards”, Huq added

Int'l Accord separate from RMG Sustainability Council: BGMEA

Star Business Report
Sun Aug 29, 2021 

Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) has said that the recently signed International Accord for Health and Safety in the Textile and Garment Industry is separate from RMG Sustainability Council (RSC).

The trade body of apparel makers said the former Bangladesh Accord Foundation and the recently signed contract for new international platform for health and safety in the textile and garment industry will not have any function directly or indirectly without permission from the government.

They claimed that the International Accord agreement being implemented in Bangladesh by the independent national tripartite RSC is misleading, the BGMEA said in the statement.

The board of the RSC is only accountable to its stakeholders and works through a unique consensual decision making process, whereby no two groups may influence operations.

The International Labour Organisation and the European Union, being key development partners to Bangladesh, have lent their endorsement to the RSC from its very inception.

A European retailer in Bangladesh requesting anonymity said the recently formed International Accord in Bangladesh does not have any function. It has been formed for other countries, he said.

He also said the RSC and the International Accord are two separate entities.

The RSC was formed as an independent non-profit company, licensed by the government to take over the Bangladesh operations of the Accord and as such, the Accord functions in Bangladesh ceased to exist as of 31 May 2020.

The RSC has taken over the monitoring regime as of 1st June 2020 bringing the Bangladesh RMG safety monitoring regimes under one umbrella.


Apparel makers have qualms about Accord extension

BGMEA says Accord cannot work in Bangladesh without government permission


File Photo: Mumit M

The announcement to extend Accord – a legally binding pact set up in 2013 to ensure the safety of Bangladeshi garment factory workers but has been out of the limelight for more than a year – by two years has created discomfort among apparel exporters in the country.

The new agreement called the International Accord for Health and Safety in the Textile and Garment Industry will be officially signed between the brands and international labour organisations on Wednesday (1 September). But, factory owners have already started asking each other as to how the new Accord will work and what kinds of new pressures may come on them.

Labour leaders associated with the Accord, however, have expressed their satisfaction with the new initiative.

The issue came up for discussion at the board meeting of the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) last Saturday. At the meeting, factory owners expressed their confusion and discomfort and urged the BGMEA to send a clear message to its members. Following that, the BGMEA issued a press release on Sunday.

The press release, signed by BGMEA President Faruque Hassan, said the Accord or any other body could not operate in Bangladesh without the approval of the government. In addition, no organisation but the RMG Sustainability Council (RSC) has the legal authority to operate in the country to oversee the safety issues in apparel factories.

A director of the BGMEA, on condition of anonymity, told The Business Standard that brands and labour organisations have the whole work of extending the Accord secretly. "They will work with garment owners, but the BGMEA does not know anything about their activities."

"In the absence of the Accord, the RSC was doing well. Amid this situation, the sudden announcement to extend the Accord has created panic among garment factory owners. They have become perplexed again as the Accord caused a lot of difficulties for them."

"Their [Accord] recommendation for safety gears used to have strings attached, like the purchase must be from a specific firm. The specified company would charge us double than the market rates. And alone our purchases made those firms established," said the apparel makers' leader.

With a coalition of 228 foreign brands and buyers, the Accord on fire and building safety in Bangladesh – also went by Bangladesh Accord – was formed in 2013 followed by the Rana Plaza garment factory collapse. It had supervised the structure of Bangladesh's apparel sector, fire and power safety issues for six and a half years with a five-year monitoring contract.

During the supervision, Accord developed several disagreements with factory owners and the government.

Accord handed over its tasks to RSC as it was formed last year. However, RSC has been running with Accord's policy, logistics and manpower.

International labour organisations, meanwhile, had been expressing concern over labour issues with the absence of Accord. Factory owners, however, seemingly did not expect Accord return after accumulating more power.

Two local labour leaders who are privy with the formation of the new Accord said the new Accord will work with issues such as human rights, health and freedom of labour association. Previous factory monitoring would be limited to worker safety.

Expressing satisfaction over the new Accord, local labour leader Babul Akhter said they are very happy since now there will be scopes for getting justice if an apparel worker is persecuted.

"Already 231 brands and buyers have signed the pact and more are in the pipeline," he noted.

In conditions of anonymity, another labour leader said, "BGMEA is kind of opposing the reality."

Khandoker Golam Moazzem, research director at the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) and an expert with a long time research experience on the country's readymade garment sector, said Accord actually is one of the stakeholders of incumbent RSC.

"Accord set to expire in August. Without an extension, it could not even be with the RSC," he added.

Despite Accord's extension, Golam Moazzem believes RSC should look after the apparel issues in Bangladesh. "If RSC wanted to add new issues to the jurisdiction, it could have talked to the ministries," he noted.

Established in 2013, Accord had 1,500 factories under its supervision as the US buyer-formed Alliance for Bangladesh Workers Safety oversaw another 600 apparel units. Later, Nirapon replaced the US supervisor.

Apart from the foreign initiatives, the labour ministry's National Initiative looks after around 750 factories.

GFF to invest $10m in RMG factories

FE REPORT | Published: August 29, 2021 

Garment workers returning home during the lunch break in Mirpur's Darussalam area of the city on Saturday, but nobody cares about Covid-19 health safety norms — FE photo

Global Fashion Fund (GFF) will initially invest US$10 million to finance local readymade garment (RMG) factories, especially small and medium enterprises (SMEs), to ensure sustainable production.

To this effect, Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) and GFF on August 25 signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) aiming to support and strengthen the development and uptake of innovative sustainability solutions and particularly to improve environmental and social sustainability of the local factories, according to a statement.

BGMEA president Faruque Hassan and GFF Fund Director Bob Assenberg signed the MoU at a virtual ceremony on behalf of their respective organisations.

GFF will provide a long-term loan in addition to technical, environmental and social assistances to the manufacturers to ensure sustainable production, it added.


Launched by Laudes Foundation and Fashion for Good in 2019, Good Fashion Fund (www.goodfashionfund.com) is managed by Fund Manger FOUNT.

Through the joint efforts, GFF aims to invest US$ 10 million in readymade garment manufacturing companies in Bangladesh in the next two years out of its total targeted fund worth US$25 million.

The collaboration aims at giving the manufacturers an access to finance and help them in building a restorative and regenerative apparel supply chain that include the use of recyclable and safe materials, clean and less energy, closed-loop manufacturing and the creation of fair jobs and growth.

Talking at the event, BGMEA President Faruque Hassan said energy efficiency, renewable energy, carbon and water footprint reduction and circular economy have been the core areas of concern for BGMEA as long as sustainability and resilience are concerned.

So SMEs will have to invest in eco-friendly technologies, he added.

Expressing gratitude, he said the collaboration of the two organisations can be prolific to enhance the sustainability standard of the SMEs.

Mr Bob Assenberg said, "We are very excited about partnering with BGMEA and our joint support to apparel manufacturers in Bangladesh will become more sustainable."

They are committed to driving a positive change and good fashion practice in the apparel sector in Bangladesh and look forward to working with forward-looking SMEs in the country, he noted.

Explaining GFF vision, he said it aimed to invest in innovations that deliver both economic growth and good fashion practice for manufactures.

munni_fe@yahoo.com

 

China’s Refinery Crackdown Leaves Oil Tankers With Nowhere To Go

China is cracking down on its private-sector oil refiners in a bid to close tax loopholes and mitigate pollution. Approximately a quarter of the nation’s mammoth refining capacity comes from these independent refineries, known as “teapots.” Beijing allowed these private refiners with their most limited crude import quota since 2015, when teapots were first able to directly buy their own oil. This blow to a significant portion of the nation’s refining capacity is currently causing major disruption to the supply chain of crude oil in the region. This is not only a problem for China’s oil supply and voracious demand, but for all of the many countries that supply petroleum to the world’s largest crude oil importer. Because of the crackdown, oil tankers are currently piling up off the shores of key Asian ports. “Vessels off Singapore, Malaysia and China had about 62 million barrels last week after hitting a near three-month high earlier this month,” Bloomberg reported earlier this week. Some of these stranded ships are carrying oil from Iran and Venezuela, countries which are currently under sanction from the United States, and which will therefore have a very hard time finding another buyer for their oil if the Chinese market dries up. 

“These barrels sitting off Southeast Asia are distressed,” Braemar ACM Shipbroking’s tanker researcher Anoop Singh told Bloomberg. “They’re going to have a tough time finding homes other than China, unless the situation surrounding the U.S. sanctions changes dramatically, or China’s clampdown on its independents is eased.” The sticky situation for the sanctioned oil is compounded by a Chinese consumption tax that Beijing rolled out in June as part of its extended crackdown. With the stated purpose of addressing pollution, the tax impacts bitumen blends used for road-making, which have historically served as a cover for the comings and goings of Iranian and Venezuelan crude. The tax has hit imports hard, with bitumen imports shrinking by a massive 80 percent since their peak in May. 

In the last five years, China’s teapots have gained significant power in China’s energy sector. The current crackdown serves a dual purpose. According to Chinese officials, the goal is to shore up oversight, ensure legal compliance, and cut back on widespread bad behaviors such as tax evasion, fuel smuggling, and violations of environmental and emissions standards. Unofficially, however, the crackdown serves to re-establish state control over private-sector entities who have gotten a little big for their britches in the eyes of Beijing. 

While the politics of the oil pileup are complex and especially fraught for Venezuela and Iran, whose suffering economies will be hit hard by their trickle of oil trade drying up, the move is a popular one among environmentalists and climate activists. Earlier this month the United Nations and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change sounded a “code red for humanity” in a damning report announcing that the world has reached a point of no return for global warming. Any amount of oil that remains unused can be seen as a win for the climate, even if that oil is doomed to float off Asian shores for the foreseeable future. 

Arguably, no nation is as instrumental in the fight against climate change as China, the world’s largest carbon dioxide emitter and its second-largest economy. President Xi Jinping has committed to lofty climate pledges, promising that China will reach peak oil demand by just 2030 and go completely carbon neutral by 2060, but it’s also clear that China’s primary goal is energy security at any cost. For example, Beijing has ramped up coal production overseas at the same time it promises to limit its domestic capacity.

Whether or not China’s private refinery crackdown is aimed at compliance with environmental regulations or with re-establishing the state’s chokehold on the sector, however, refining and burning less oil in China stands to have some very good consequences for all of us.

By Haley Zaremba for Oilprice.com

Wyoming is the No. 1 US coal producer, but its largest utility is ditching the fossil fuel

Michelle Lewis
- Aug. 30th 2021 


Wyoming has been the US’s top coal producer since 1986. But while the state stubbornly clings to the fossil fuel, its largest utility is dumping coal in favor of renewables.

PacifiCorp is ditching coal in Wyoming

Rocky Mountain Power is Wyoming’s largest electric utility, and its parent company, PacifiCorp, announced on Friday, according to KPVI, that its biennial Integrated Resource Plan is expected to “include substantial investment in renewables — and no new investment in coal or natural gas. The 2021 plan will be finalized next week.”

KPVI continues:

PacifiCorp intends to retire 14 of its 22 active coal units by 2030 and another five by 2040, with the remaining three shuttered shortly afterward. It would retain two coal units at Wyoming’s Jim Bridger power plant, converting them to natural gas peaking units in 2024.

All of PacifiCorp’s Wyoming coal plants would be offline by 2039, according to this year’s plan…

…Compared with a 2005 baseline, system CO2 emissions would be down 53% in 2025, 74% in 2030, and 92% in 2040, according to the company’s calculations.

Further, PacifiCorps plans to add more than 3,600 megawatts of wind, more than 5,600 megawatts of solar, and around 6,700 megawatts of battery storage.

The driver of PacifiCorps’ coal retirement? It’s bad business, and the company has known that since 2018:

[A] 2018 company report found that 13 of its 22 coal units were uneconomical. In the 2021 announcement, it cited “ongoing cost pressures on existing coal-fired facilities and dropping costs for new resource alternatives.”
Wyoming legislators cling to coal

In response, Wyoming legislators tried to stop utilities from shutting coal plants by passing a bill that went into effect last month. Oil City News explained in March 2020:


Wyoming Governor Mark Gordon [R-WY] signed Senate File 21 into law on Tuesday, March 10. That bill will require electric public utilities to “first make a good faith effort” to sell coal-fired electric generation facilities before retiring such facilities.

The rules will go into effect July 1, 2021, and will allow non-utilities to purchase otherwise retiring coal fired power plants and sell energy to industrial customers.


Rob Godby, associate professor of economics at the University of Wyoming, told KPVI:

Wyoming policy has actively tried to resist the transition away from coal and to prolong plant lives and mine lives.

And so far, just looking at the outcomes, that’s been largely unsuccessful.
Wyoming’s energy profile

Wyoming produces 14 times more energy than it consumes. It’s the biggest net energy supplier among the states, according to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA).

While it was responsible for around 39% of all coal mined in the US in 2019, and the state holds more than one-third of US coal reserves at producing mines, it’s also a growing wind producer. The EIA writes:


Wind power in Wyoming has more than doubled since 2009 and accounted for 12% of the state’s electricity net generation in 2020. The state installed the third-largest amount of wind power generating capacity in 2020, after Texas and Iowa.

Read more: Why Wyoming’s coal habit is turning it into an energy dinosaur

Photo: “Eastern Wyoming Coal Mine near Gillette, WY” by ccvedros is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
Prospectors rescue moose stuck neck-deep in mud

'The ditch must have been seven, eight feet deep because there was no body at all — just a head and that’s it'
A moose stuck in a mud ditch out Highway 655 was saved by a group of prospectors.
Supplied photo

Listen to this article
00:03:14


A Timmins moose is back on the loose thanks to a group of seasoned prospectors.

Last week, Moe Vallier was one of three people to save a moose from a deep, muddy ditch.

It happened about three to four miles down Highway 655 and about two miles into the bush, he said.

“An old prospector friend of ours was taking soil samples down that road and he came across the moose and he spent an hour or so trying to get him out by throwing dead trees and branches and everything, but the moose couldn’t lift his leg high enough to get out,” he said.

Vallier was one of the friends to receive the call to go help. They loaded up, cut a trail through the bush to get to the area, which he said was swampy and had a corduroy (log) road to get to it. On either side of the road are ditches to help keep the road from washing away, explained Vallier.

“The ditch must have been seven, eight feet deep because there was no body at all — just a head and that’s it. He was going under a few times so we tried to hurry up as much as we could before he drowned,” he said.

To haul the moose out, they used a couple of nylon slings that are soft and wouldn't hurt the animal, and their Argo.

"I wanted to put one underneath his belly but there’s no way I could get in that hole, I would have sunk. So we ended up putting over his horns. The first time I did it he was fighting back a bit there, but the second time he knew we were helping him, he just let us do it,” he said.

The moose was burned out after slowly being pulled from the ditch, but was otherwise OK.

“He looked at us for about five minutes and then he decided to walk away,” he said.

Hermann Daxl was the one who stumbled on the stuck moose. It was the rare panting that alerted him to the situation.

"When I pursued that I thought I did not know that moose liked mud baths and almost went on to my work of sampling decayed vegetation by which one can find a mine in this remote bush. But then I realized that the banks of the four-metre wide puddle were all churned up as if he had tried to get out. So I tried to scare him out, and gestured him how to get out. He somehow simulated that but merely splashed me with mud," said Daxl.

"Then I threw in logs and branches whereby I punched my left hand and broke a right rear lower rib, which still hurts a lot. Meanwhile I had also called a friend, had hardly a signal on the cellphone, gave GPS and explained he could well get here with an Argo and a chainsaw, because I had to give up.

"I continued to look for a gold mine, but had to give that up too because of my rib. On my way back, the moose was gone and I saw the tracks of my rescuer friends. Lucky also because had I not had good results from my first sampling, I would not have gone, and also had I succeeded taking enough samples a week earlier I would not have gone. Surely nobody else would have gone there. And when my rib heals I have to go again. Will see what is there then."

The group suspects the moose got stuck earlier in the morning.

With about four decades of prospecting under his belt, this is the first time Vallier said he's pulled a live moose out of a hole.

When he gave the go-ahead for a friend to share the photos on Facebook he thought it would make someone smile. Now that the story has been out there for a couple of days, he's amazed at the attention the story is receiving.

A moose stuck in a mud ditch out Highway 655 was saved by a group of prospectors.
Supplied photo
Scapegoat or scoundrel?

Why scientists want to clear the air about the role of seals and focus on ecosystems

JENN THORNHILL VERMA

SPECIAL TO THE GLOBE AND MAIL
PUBLISHED AUGUST 29, 2021

VERY LONG READ 



How a 'trash-to-treasure' mentality can change plastic waste


The majority of plastic waste is buried in landfills across the world
Image: REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir Hossain
25 Aug 2021
Emma Samson

Forum in focus
The one essential element needed to accelerate action on climate change
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Plastics and the Environment

Explore the latest strategic trends, research and analysis

Just 9% of plastic waste created is recycled;

Recycling rates could be 100% with improved waste management, an optimized recycling system and clever product design;

To build a trash-to-treasure or waste-to-product mindset, the financial and sustainability benefits must be better understood by plastic producers.


Since the 1950s, the increase in mass production of plastics has led to 8.3 billion tonnes of plastic waste. Unfortunately, 12% of this waste has been incinerated and only 9% successfully recycled with the rest buried in landfills all over the world. As plastic takes hundreds of years to degrade, most of it still exists in some form.

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What if we could recapture those legacy resources and use them to create new products, saving us from extracting raw fossil fuels in the future? While large scale urban mining may be a way off, we can capture the plastic waste we produce now and turn it back into treasure.

Losing our virginity

Some scientists have called for a global treaty to end production of “virgin” plastic by 2040. Such an agreement would turbocharge the development of full circularity in the plastic chain, where everything is reused and nothing wasted and plastic material stays in a perpetual loop. Improved waste management, an optimized recycling system and clever product design can make recycling rates of 100% possible if all the moving parts work in unison.

To adopt a fully integrated waste-to-product mindset, we need to communicate the value proposition to plastic manufacturers. There are clear financial benefits to this strategy as well as sustainability advantages. Using recycled content is not only about preventing waste; it also reduces CO2 emissions and energy use, allowing companies to meet ambitious corporate social responsibility (CSR) objectives and pre-empt government legislation on extended producer responsibility (EPR) and recycled content mandates. In addition, it lessens dependence on importing raw materials, shortening supply chains and reducing costs. Losing our virginity is a goal we must race towards.

In a circular utopia, all plastics would be recycled back into the same products in a never-ending loop. Nothing would leak into the environment, nothing would downgrade and nothing would be made from fossil fuels ever again. However, even state-of-the-art facilities have systemic and technological limitations preventing them from attaining higher recycling rates. Technically, all plastics could be converted back into fuel through advanced chemical recycling methods, such as pyrolysis, but these are incredibly investment and energy-intensive and not feasible for small communities.

Mechanical recycling may have its constraints when dealing with post-consumer waste, but what we can't convert back into the same product, we can still make into something else. Waste-to-product may be a line rather than a circle, but thankfully, it's a much longer line in terms of the life span and use of the material.
Bottles to bricks?

Lego made headlines in June 2021 with its bricks made from recycled PET bottles. Exciting news, although it caused quite a storm on social media, where people criticized their use of rPET (recycled polyethylene terephthalate), an already high-demand recycled material owing to its broad application in critical industries such as FMCG (fast-moving consumer goods) and textiles. On the one hand, the bricks turn discarded, single-use packaging into multi-use products that will last for generations; on the other hand, valuable plastic bottles that could be part of the circular economy have just been lost to the toybox.

PET is the most commonly recycled plastic globally and it is the only commercially available recycled material approved for food contact – exactly why Lego chose it over other types of polymers because children have a tendency to put things in their mouths. Regulations for food-grade plastic are prohibitively strict, but for non-food-grade items in critical sectors such as construction and automotive, there are few reasons not to use waste-to-product design.

How much single-use plastic waste do countries generate?
Image: Statista



Waste-to-product solutions


Much of the 381 million tonnes of plastic waste generated each year come from developing countries, where waste management and recycling is rudimentary at best. However, basic mechanical recycling can transform mixed, low-quality waste into long-lasting functional products such as furniture, dustbins and latrines – keeping waste out of the ocean and boosting the local economy. For example, a lounge chair made from recycled HDPE (high-density polyethylene) has been shortlisted in the Plastics Recycling Awards Europe 2021 for its waste-to-product design.

"The chair shows not only that it's possible to incorporate recycled material without sacrificing aesthetics, but also that it's possible using low-key technology in remote settings," says Jaap Patijn of Searious Business.

Another remarkable opportunity for waste-to-product lies in the fishing industry, which contributes 10% of ocean plastics in the form of discarded gear and nets. For example, the Greek initiative Enaleia has collected more than 20,000kg of used nets and upcycled them into 260,000 pairs of socks, preventing ocean pollution and providing extra income to 1,000 fishers in the region.

No such thing as disposable

The pandemic forced us to temporarily prioritize health concerns over the future of our planet. Millions of people turned to disposable PPE (personal protective equipment) to protect themselves and others from COVID-19 infection. Masks are used for a short time and then discarded, often littering our high streets and parks. UK retailers, Wilko and recycling specialists ReWorked came up with a possible response to the problem. Masks can be washed and shredded down into raw materials and then refashioned into products ranging from other safety materials for businesses to building materials and furniture.


A fully circular plastic economy may be a dream, but it is not a total fantasy and innovative waste-to-product designs like these demonstrate the possibilities. While recycling technology is developing faster and faster, pushing us closer to a cradle-to-cradle model, we must let go of our take-make-waste mentality. There is no such thing as waste, only opportunities.
MISSED SHARK WEEK

Sharks Have Evolved To Walk: New Walking Shark Species Found Off Australian Coast


Monit Khanna
Updated on Jul 05, 2021,

Highlights
Before you start freaking out, these species aren’t the great white sharks, in fact, they're actually smaller shark species that feed on coral reefs underwater.

The walking sharks have appeared in waters in the Northern Australian regions as well as some areas of New Guinea.

Moreover, they’re isolated in specific areas and don’t really travel for longer distances.

Scientists reveal that the rapid evolution of walking ability in individuals or small groups is because of small groups of sharks moving to a new area.


Off the coast of Australia and New Guinea, researchers have discovered species of sharks that actually walk on the bottom of the sea instead of swimming like we’ve seen sharks do for years.

Getty Images
Also Read: Giant Bird Flying With Shark-Like Fish Is Making People Hunt For Answers

Before you start freaking out, these species aren’t the great white sharks, in fact, they're actually smaller shark species that feed on coral reefs underwater. In fact, scientists have already been aware of such species for some time now.

However, what was earlier presumed as just five species has now increased to nine, based on a 12-year long study from an international team of scientists from the University of Queensland (UQ), Conservation International, CSIRO, the Florida Museum of Natural History, and the Indonesian Institute of Sciences and Indonesian Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries (published in Marine and Freshwater Research).

The walking sharks have appeared in waters in the Northern Australian regions as well as some areas of New Guinea. They’re not as gigantic as the great white sharks, instead, they are really small in size. Moreover, they’re isolated in specific areas and don’t really travel for longer distances.

Mark Erdmann

Also Read: World's Largest Glowing Shark Found, Which Lures Prey With Its Bioluminescence


Mark Erdmann, a co-author of the study, said in a statement to Conservation.org, "Instead of swimming around, these little bottom-dwelling sharks actually ‘walk’ using their pectoral and pelvic fins, which makes it easier for them to poke their heads under coral and rocks as they look for small fish, snails and crustaceans to eat. We’ve found that most walking sharks spend their entire lives on the same reef where they hatched — never really moving more than a mile out of this radius. The only way they can get across deep water or move a significant distance would be if they are on a reef that is moving due to tectonic plates shifting."

Scientists reveal that the rapid evolution of walking ability in individuals or small groups is because of small groups of sharks moving to a new area. After they’ve adopted the walking technique, future generations learn to walk from birth.


Mark Erdmann

Also Read: Drone Saves Surfer's Life From A Deadly Shark, Captures Scary Experience

Erdmann added, "Speciation typically happens when individuals of a given species get separated from their main population — sometimes by walking or swimming or being carried away on a current to an isolated place. If they are lucky enough to survive and breed, eventually evolution will take this new population in a different direction and often leads to a new species."
Humans Are Evolving: Science Finds Evidence Of An Extra Artery Growing In Our Arm

Monit KhannaUpdated on Aug 28, 2021,

Highlights

According to Teghan Lucas from Flinders University, the prevalence was around 10 percent in individuals born in the mid-1880s which turned to 30 percent for people born in the 20th century.From an evolutionary standpoint that’s a considerable spike in such a short span of time. 

To understand how prevalent this blood channel has been, researchers examined 80 limbs from cadavers donated by Australians of European descent. The donors aged from 51 to 101, indicating most were born in the first half of the 20th century. Looking at the frequency of finding the median artery that was also capable of a good blood supply, the research team compared the figures with previous records and found that the artery was three times more common in adults today than it was over a century

An artery that temporarily goes to the centre of the forearms while a child is still in the womb isn’t disappearing as often as it did earlier, giving most adults an extra channel of vascular tissue.



This is according to a study published in the Journal of Anatomy last year by researchers from the University of Adelaide as well as Flinders University in Australia. They claim that since the 18th century, anatomists have been looking at the presence of this artery in adults and their recent study has highlighted that it has been increasing considerably.

According to Teghan Lucas from Flinders University, the prevalence was around 10 percent in individuals born in the mid-1880s which turned to 30 percent for people born in the 20th century. From an evolutionary standpoint that’s a considerable spike in such a short span of time.

The artery in question -- the median artery -- is known to form early in the human development cycle and helps move blood down the centre of our arms to enrich the growing hand. However, at around 8 weeks, this regresses leaving the job to other vessels - the radial and the ulnar arteries.

According to anatomists, it is not guaranteed that the median artery will phase away. Instead in many cases, it stays there for a month or even more.

To understand how prevalent this blood channel has been, researchers examined 80 limbs from cadavers donated by Australians of European descent. The donors aged from 51 to 101, indicating most were born in the first half of the 20th century.

Looking at the frequency of finding the median artery that was also capable of a good blood supply, the research team compared the figures with previous records and found that the artery was three times more common in adults today than it was over a century ago. These findings hint that natural selection is favouring those who have retained this extra bit of blood supply.


Unsplash

Also Read: Viruses Play Key Role In Our Ability To Reproduce And Survive, Study Finds

Lucas explained in a conversation with ScienceAlert, "This increase could have resulted from mutations of genes involved in median artery development or health problems in mothers during pregnancy, or both actually."

While the existence of this additional artery means we could give fingers or forearms more blood flow to make them stronger and more impactful, they also put us at a greater risk of carpal tunnel syndrome, forcing us to use our hands less.

Lucas added, "If this trend continues, a majority of people will have a median artery of the forearm by 2100."

Trudeau says he won't back down after protesters hurl death threats, racist and sexist slurs

Protesters heard shouting racist insults at police officer of colour on protective detail

Protesters wait for Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau to arrive at a campaign event in Bolton, Ont., on Friday. The angry crowds outnumbered police and the event had to be cancelled. Another protest in Cambridge, Ont., today was delayed for an hour after crowds protesting against Trudeau hurled death threats, anti-lockdown and vaccine comments and racial and sexist slurs. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

For the second time in a week, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau has had a campaign event disrupted by protesters shouting obscenities, uttering death threats against the prime minister and hurling racist and misogynist insults at people of colour and women in his protective detail.   

While making a stump speech to promote his party's climate change policies in Cambridge, Ont., Sunday morning, the Liberals were forced to delay Trudeau's appearance for an hour because of the disruptions. 

Signs brandished by angry protesters displayed slogans such as "Who benefits from the lock down?" and the "Liberals ruined the country," with one protester shouting through a megaphone decked out with the name; "InfoWars," a U.S.-based far-right conspiracy theory website. 

When the event did start, it was disrupted by honking horns and foul and threatening language hurled from a crowd of people -- almost all of whom were unmasked and were not maintaining physical distance from one another. 

Asked if he felt he could continue to hold campaign events safely, Trudeau said his message on climate change and vaccination was not one he would walk away from. 

"No, I'm not going to back down on a message that Canadians know is the right path forward, and that's why Canadians need to choose to move Canada forward in this pivotal time," Trudeau said. 

CBC News was present when a protester shouted a racist remark at a police officer of colour on Trudeau's protective detail, while another protester was heard making misogynist remarks to a female police officer on the detail. 

"First of all, I want to thank the police officers, local and national, who do an amazing job in both keeping people safe and allowing Canadians to express themselves," Trudeau said. "That is what an election is all about. We may disagree with them, and of course, we will always condemn violence and hatred."

"This needs to make us ever more convinced of the importance of the choice in this election. Do we fall into division and hatred and racism and violence, or do we say no."

On Sunday, the Conservative Party tweeted: "The threatening images and behaviour are disgusting. This needs to stop immediately. Canada is better than this."

Watch: Protesters disrupt Trudeau campaign event shouting threats, obscenities: 




An angry crowd of protesters delayed a campaign stop for Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau in Ontario, days after a rally was cancelled over security concerns. Disagreements on the campaign trail aren’t uncommon, but political watchers say these events have reached a new level of nastiness. 

Trudeau has been dogged by protesters at many of his campaign events. He was forced to cancel a campaign event in Bolton, Ont., Friday night when hundreds of angry protesters showed up at the Liberals' outdoor rally.

Among the protesters of Friday were anti-vaccination activists who shouted vulgarities at Liberal volunteers and carried anti-Trudeau signs and flags scrawled with obscenities. The crowd was frustrated with Trudeau's push to make vaccines mandatory in some settings and his support for provincial vaccine passports to restrict entry into some non-essential businesses.

Video footage from the event shows a handful of people with blue Conservative-branded T-shirts among the unmasked crowd assembled for the protest, which also included a strong contingent of people angry over the federal government's ban on flavours in smoking cessation devices, such as e-cigarettes.

Conservatives ban protesters from volunteering

In response to the behaviour, Conservative candidate Kyle Seeback said that the volunteers from his campaign who attended the protest are no longer welcome on his campaign team. 

"My campaign has zero-tolerance for obscenities or threatening behaviour against any candidate," Seeback said.

Speaking at an event in Fredericton on Saturday, Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole said he is trying to run a positive campaign, and he "strongly condemns any form of harassment" on the campaign trail.

"We should be having a healthy and respectful debate. We have no time for people who bring negativity to campaigning. I urge everyone to put the country and our democracy first — let's have a positive debate of ideas on the future. That's my approach, and that's my expectation for every single member of our team," he said. 

"I expect professionalism, I expect respect. I respect my opponents."

  • Have an election question for CBC News? Email ask@cbc.ca. Your input helps inform our coverage.

  • Find out who's ahead in the latest polls with our Poll Tracker.

On Sunday evening, O'Toole issued a news release stating that anyone who does not support his party's plan to tackle climate change would not be welcome in the caucus.

"If there are candidates who don't support it — or any other part of Canada's Recovery Plan — they won't be sitting in the caucus of a future Conservative government," he said.

The statement came just hours after Trudeau called out O'Toole during an event in Cambridge, Ont. for, in his words, not doing enough to condemn "conspiracy theories" from an incumbent Tory candidate.

At a campaign event in Saint-Hyacinthe, Que., earlier in the day, O'Toole was repeatedly pressed about an undated flyer that longtime MP Cheryl Gallant sent before the election to constituents in the eastern Ontario riding of Renfrew–Nipissing–Pembroke.

In the materials, she suggested federal Liberals would pursue a "climate lockdown" and said her constituents should make the upcoming election "a referendum on more lockdowns."

Tories need to crack down on conspiracy theories: Trudeau

Gallant also released a video in June in which she asked: "How long do you think it will take for the Trudeau Liberals to start calling for a climate lockdown?" 

Liberals shared a screenshot of Gallant's flyer online Sunday, prompting the Conservative Party to allege that the Liberals have candidates who support "9/11 truther conspiracies."

In a tweet, the party highlighted a 2011 tweet from Toronto Centre Liberal incumbent Marci Ien, in which she said "Loose Change 9-11: An American Coup," a 9/11 conspiracy theory documentary, "really makes you think about what really happened on September 11, 2001."

The tweet came to light in the Toronto Centre byelection last October. Ien, a former journalist, tweeted at the time: "I've spoken often with the families of 9/11 victims and shared their stories as a broadcaster — and I'll also do everything I can as an MP…  to help keep Canadians safe from all such tragedies."

O'Toole wouldn't tell reporters if he found Gallant's comments acceptable and instead pivoted to promoting his platform, which includes a plan to fight climate change.

"We're running on a plan to get our country back on its feet, not on things that happened months or years ago," he said.

Shortly after O'Toole's statement was released threatening to turf people from caucus if they didn't support the Conservative climate plan, Gallant tweeted that she is proud to run on the Conservatives' recovery plan platform "in its entirety."

 

Conservative campaign spokesperson Cory Hann said party officials spoke with Gallant Sunday about the views she expressed in the video and that she removed them as a result of that conversation. Gallant posted the tweet after the party asked her to publicly confirm her support for the party platform, he said.

Asked about Gallant earlier Sunday, Trudeau said it was "extremely disappointing" to see elected politicians "peddle in conspiracy theories."

"It's not enough for leaders like Erin O'Toole to simply distance themselves from those comments. He has to flat-out condemn them and then correct the record," he said.

Drawing a link to the aggressive protests outside of his event, Trudeau said the Conservative leader can help people "shouting out here today" understand they are misinformed on matters such as climate change and vaccines. 

"We know they don't listen to me. Perhaps they will listen to Erin O'Toole," he said. "That's the choice that Erin O'Toole needs to make right now around Cheryl Gallant and all of these conspiracy theories being peddled."

With files from from the CBC's Janyce McGregor and Travis Dhanraj