❌

Normal view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.
Before yesterdayMain stream

Regional property owners turning unusable land into money through solar

30 May 2024 at 15:04
Regional property owners turning unusable land into money through solar energy leases. With upheavals in the agriculture industry making some farms unviable, a landowner in South Australia is encouraging others to consider repurposing their properties for renewable energy projects.

Climate and health benefits of wind and solar dwarf all subsidies

29 May 2024 at 16:18
Wind turbines in front of a sunrise, with their blades blurred due to their motion.

Enlarge (credit: Ashley Cooper)

When used to generate power or move vehicles, fossil fuels kill people. Particulates and ozone resulting from fossil fuel burning cause direct health impacts, while climate change will act indirectly. Regardless of the immediacy, premature deaths and illness prior to death are felt through lost productivity and the cost of treatments.

Typically, you see the financial impacts quantified when the EPA issues new regulations, as the health benefits of limiting pollution typically dwarf the costs of meeting new standards. But some researchers from Lawrence Berkeley National Lab have now done similar calculationsβ€”but focusing on the impact of renewable energy. Wind and solar, by displacing fossil fuel use, are acting as a form of pollution control and so should produce similar economic benefits.

Do they ever. The researchers find that, in the US, wind and solar have health and climate benefits of over $100 for every Megawatt-hour produced, for a total of a quarter-trillion dollars in just the last four years. This dwarfs the cost of the electricity they generate and the total of the subsidies they received.

Read 14 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Australia: Solar for First Nations communities? Where?

By: gusset
26 May 2024 at 00:03
10,000 Aboriginal households in the Northern Territory go without power. Prepaid meters leaving households disconnected For around 10,000 Aboriginal households in the Northern Territory, mostly in remote areas, getting power and keeping it on can be a difficult task.

Because power is run through a prepaid smart meter, power cards need to be purchased from the local store or online and swiped on to the meter. If you don't have money on your meter, it simply cuts out. This means consumers don't have the same regulated protections against energy disconnection as those living in urban areas or on post-paid billing systems. 10,000 First Nations households. "The government's Remote Power System Strategy is aiming to achieve an average of 70% of the energy in the 72 Indigenous Essential Services (IES) communities coming from renewables by 2030." That's 6 years. Meanwhile, Gina Rinehart & friends doubled their fortunes in 3 years during the pandemic.
❌
❌