Carbon Trust launches offshore wind turbine maintenance competition

A competition has been launched to find new solutions to the maintenance challenges presented by wind turbines built hundreds of kilometres offshore.

Backed by the Carbon Trust, the project is looking for new ways of safely transporting engineers to turbines located up to 300km off the coast in extremely difficult conditions.

The trust claims that this could boost revenues by up to £3 billion by increasing the amount of time turbines can generate energy for by four percent.

Typically, offshore conditions mean that turbines can generate power 90 percent of the time.

However, the tough environment present further out at sea, where conditions are in theory better for wind energy generation, could mean that turbines are only able to transfer power for 160 days of the year.

Charles Hendry, minister of state for energy, said: “As developers seek to get wind turbines into deeper waters, where the wind blows more wildly and the waves are stronger, it is vital that access and safety are maximised and costs minimised.”

Successful applicants to the competition will be granted funding of up to £100,000 per concept.

The world’s largest offshore windfarm – Thanet – was recently opened off the south coast of the UK by Vattenfall.

>>> Please read the full article here

Green Deal ‘will support 250,000 jobs’

Some 250,000 jobs could be supported by the government’s Green Deal, the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) has claimed.

The scheme is designed to allow homeowners and businesses to make energy-efficient improvements without the upfront cost and without having to own the property. Some 26 million UK homes are expected to benefit from the initiative over the next 20 years and the DECC claims that the scheme, which was outlined in the coalition’s programme for government, will support a quarter of a million jobs.

Chris Huhne, secretary of state for energy and climate change, said that the Green Deal was part of the “third industrial revolution”.

“Insulation installers and the supply chain all stand to benefit from this long overdue energy makeover… We need to tap in to this huge market to save people money on fuel bills, save carbon and help the economic recovery,” he added. The Green Deal is expected to be available by late 2012.

>>> Please read the full article here

Feelgoodz Flip-Flops An Unwitting Casualty of Gulf Oil Spill

While not exactly on the same scale as fishing and tourism taking a huge hit from the Gulf oil spill, Change.org highlights an unwitting and unexpected casualty of it all: Feelgoodz flip-flops. The ethically-sourced, all natural rubber, footwear start-up is sitting on thousands of unsold shoes and may be unable to repay a $50,000 loan that got them started.

Apparently, just as the company had a container of 10,000 flip-flops ready to be distributed to 75 Whole Foods stores throughout the US–to enter through the Port of New Orleans–the BP oil spill happened. The ship with the shoes aboard was stuck in Freeport, Bahamas.

The shoes eventually reached New Orleans, over two months later than expected, and the window to stock the seasonal shoes at Whole Foods closed.

The result of all that is that the company may be unable to repay that $50,000 loan to Village Capital Funding by this week’s deadline.

>>> Please read the full article here

Bees fare better in town than country

Researchers at the University of Worcester analysed the pollen collected by bees from 45 hives on National Trust property around the country.
They found that bees in towns and cities have a much more “varied diet”, taking pollen from different flowers.

For example at Kensington Palace in London, where the Duke of Gloucester is keeping bee hives, the samples contained large amounts of pollen from rockrose, eucalyptus and elderberry.
In contrast bees in the countryside tended to rely on fields of crops. At Nostell Priory in Yorkshire and Barrington Court in Somerset, the samples were heavily dominated by oilseed rape with little other pollen types detectable.

In the last 20 years there has been a dramatic 50 per cent decline in bee numbers in Britain. Climate change, pesticides and even a mystery disease known as ‘colony collapse disorder have been blamed’.

Experts also believe that intensive farming may have contributed to the decline of bees because it means there is less wild flowers in the countryside to provide the insects with a ’varied diet’. Matthew Oates, Nature Conservation Adviser at the National Trust, said there are “precious few” pollen sources for bees in the countryside because farmland is either taken over for “monoculture” like wheat or barley or grazed for livestock.

He urged farmers to allow more wild flowers on field margins and to plant seed mixes in unused areas. Mr Oates also said the study showed how important urban beekeepers are to boosting numbers and called on more people to install a bee hive in the town.

“These are interesting early findings, seemingly backing what we’ve suspected for a while – namely that bees today often fare better in urban environments than in contemporary farmland,” he said.

Already the middle class fad for keeping bees has seen a doubling in hives over the past two years, according to the British Beekeepers Association, with many new beekeepers coming from towns and cities.

>>> Please read the full article here

Sun’s ‘quiet period’ explained

Solar physicists may have discovered why the Sun recently experienced a prolonged period of weak activity.

The most recent so-called “solar minimum” occurred in December 2008.

Its drawn-out nature extended the total length of the last solar cycle – the repeating cycle of the Sun’s activity – to 12.6 years, making it the longest in almost 200 years.

During a solar minimum the Sun is less active, producing fewer sunspots and flares.

The new research suggests that the longer-than-expected period of weak activity may have been linked to changes in the way a hot soup of charged particles called plasma circulated in the Sun.

The study, conducted by Dr Mausumi Dikpati of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Colorado and her US colleagues, is published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

The Sun’s activity strengthens and weakens on a cycle that typically lasts 10.7 years. Since accurate records began in 1755, there have been 24 such solar cycles.

The 23rd cycle, which ended in December 2008, was both longer than average and had the smallest number of sunspots for a century. Sunspots are areas of intense magnetic activity that are visible as dark spots on the star’s surface.

Currents of fire
The new research suggests that one reason for the prolonged period of weak activity could be changes in the Sun’s “conveyor belt”.

Similar to the Earth’s ocean currents, the Sun’s conveyor transports plasma across its surface to the pole. Here, the plasma sinks into the heart of the Sun before rising again at the equator.

During the 23rd cycle, these currents of fire extended all the way to the poles, while in earlier cycles they only extended about two thirds of the way.

Dr Roger Ulrich of the University of California, Los Angeles, a co-author of the study, said the findings highlighted the importance of our monitoring of the Sun.

The research team used sophisticated computer simulations to show how changes in the conveyor might have affected cycle duration. They found that the increased length of the conveyor and its slower rate of return flow explained the prolonged 23rd cycle.

However, Dr David Hathaway, a solar physicist from Nasa’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama, who was not involved in the latest study, argued that it was the speed and not the extent of the conveyor that was of real importance.

The conveyor has been running at record high-speeds for over five years. Dr Hathaway said: “I believe this could explain the unusually deep solar minimum.”

>>> Please read the full article here

Woolly mammoth extinction ‘not linked to humans’

Woolly mammoths died out because of dwindling grasslands – rather than being hunted to extinction by humans, according to a Durham University study.

After the coldest phase of the last ice age 21,000 years ago, the research revealed, there was a dramatic decline in pasture on which the mammoths fed.

The woolly mammoth was once commonplace across many parts of Europe.

It retreated to northern Siberia about 14,000 years ago, where it finally died out approximately 4,000 years ago.

The reasons for its extinction are unclear and have been a matter of heated scientific debate.

Some scientists have argued that it was principally the result of climate change while others say that it was driven by pressures of a growing human population, or even a cataclysmic meteor strike.

Now, according to Professor Brian Huntley of Durham University, that debate has been settled.

“What our results have suggested is that the changing climate, through the effect it had on vegetation, was the key thing that caused the reduction in the population and ultimate extinction of mammoths and many other large herbivores,” he said.

Professor Huntley and his colleagues created a computer simulation of vegetation in Europe, Asia and North America over the last 42,000 years.

They did this by combining estimates of what the climate was like during this period with models of how various plants grow under different conditions.

They found that the cold and dry conditions during the ice age, with reduced concentrations of carbon dioxide, didn’t favour the growth of trees.

So instead of forests there were vast areas of pasture, which was ideal for large herbivores, such as woolly mammoths. But as a result of a warmer, wetter climate and rising concentrations of carbon dioxide at the end of the ice age, trees emerged at the expense of the grasslands.

“During the height of the ice age, mammoths and other large herbivores would have had more food to eat,” said Professor Huntley.

“But as we shifted into the post-glacial stage, trees gradually displaced those herbaceous ecosystems and that much reduced their grazing area.”

>>> Please read the full article here

Eon installs first turbine on MoD land

The first wind turbine to be used on Ministry of Defence (MoD) land has been installed by Eon at the Duke of York’s Royal Military School in Kent.

Over the 20-year lifespan of the turbine, it will save 114 tonnes of carbon emissions and will help contribute to the MoD’s target of generating ten percent of power from renewable sources.

The Duke of York’s Royal Military School is used to educate the children of serving army personnel and the turbine is also intended to teach pupils about renewable energy.

Colin Grenville, Eon’s microgeneration sales manager, told BusinessGreen: “Up to now, wind energy was seen as a bit of a no-go for MoD sites as there had been a number of issues with radar interference. This project shows what can be done even where there has been historic opposition.”

Mr Grenville added that the energy company was in talks with the MoD about installing more turbines.

The UK generated 6.7 percent of its electricity from renewable sources in 2009, statistics released recently by the Department of Energy and Climate Change show.

>>> Please read the full article here

Branches of low carbon restaurant chain to open in the UK

The low carbon restaurant chain Otarian is to open its first UK branches in London this week.

Based on the principle of vegetarianism, the chain will be the first to include information on carbon footprints to internationally recognised standards on all of its menus .

Restaurants in Wardour Street, Soho, Shaftesbury Avenue, and Covent Garden are due to open on August 20th.

Otarian operates a no air freight policy, meaning all products are delivered by road and if a reliable supply cannot be obtained the dish is altered.

Some 98 per cent of waste from the restaurant is either composted or recycled and sustainable building products, such as floor tiles made from recycled glass, are used throughout the building design.

Radhika Oswal, said that vegetarianism is the most sustainable way of living as it has “a lighter ecological footprint, reduced resource impacts, and lower carbon emissions than non-vegetarian equivalents”.

A report released earlier this year by the Centre for Alternative Technology entitled Zero Carbon Britain suggested that an 80 per cent reduction in livestock in the UK would contribute to the country producing zero emissions by 2030.

>>> Please read the full article here

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