ENERGY: New technologies needed to store excess renewable energy

Via theCLog. More from the guardian.co.uk:

For decades, “grid parity” has been the Holy Grail for alternative energy. The rap from critics was that technologies like wind and solar could not compete, dollar-for-dollar, with conventional electricity sources, such as coal and nuclear, without large government tax breaks or direct subsidies. But suddenly, with rapid technological advances and growing economies of manufacturing scale, wind power is now nearly at grid parity — meaning it costs roughly the same to generate electricity from wind as it does from coal. And the days when solar power attains grid parity may be only a half-decade away.

So with grid parity now looming, finding ways to store millions of watts of excess electricity for times when the wind doesn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine is the new Holy Grail. And there are signs that this goal — the day when large-scale energy storage becomes practical and cost-effective — might be within reach, as well. Some technologies that can store sizeable amounts of intermittent power are already deployed. Others, including at least a few with great promise, lie somewhere over the technological horizon.

New storage approaches include improvements to existing lithium ionbatteries and schemes to store energy as huge volumes of compressed air in vast geologic vaults. Another idea is to create a network of small, energy-dense batteries in tens of millions of homes. Under such a “distributed storage” scheme, utility computers could coordinate electricity flows over a “smart grid” that continually communicates with — and adjusts the flow of power to and from — local batteries. This would even include batteries in future plug-in hybrid or all-electric vehicles.

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ENERGY: Onion waste converted into energy

Onion EnergyI couldn’t take all the tears. From the Los Angeles Times:

The system at Gills Onions, which will be unveiled to the public today, converts methane from fermented onion juice into energy burned in two on-site fuel cells.

The company has farms throughout California that send onions year-round to the Oxnard plant, where they are skinned, diced, sliced or packaged whole in a numbingly frigid facility by 400 employees. The vegetables are then shipped all over the country to wholesalers and retailers such as Ralphs.

Machines slice off about 40% of each onion. That leaves 150 tons of waste a day. For years, the Gills spread these leavings as fertilizer over their fields or sold them as cattle feed. But the refuse was expensive to handle, and it posed a hazard to the atmosphere and groundwater.

So the brothers decided to turn it into energy instead.

Machines extract about 30,000 gallons of onion juice that is then sent to a 145,000-gallon holding tank kept at a toasty 95 degrees. Inside, bacteria purchased from an Anheuser-Busch beer brewery produce methane gas by feasting on the carbohydrates in the fermenting juice.

“It’s like a big stomach,” said project manager Bill Deaton.

The gas is purified, dehumidified and compressed, then burned in the fuel cells at temperatures that exceed 1,000 degrees. The 600-kilowatt system produces enough power to operate the plant’s refrigeration units and lighting.

The Gills are also looking into installing a battery at the plant that can store excess electricity from the fuel cells. Reserve energy could be used during peak hours in the summer, when electricity is more expensive.

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LEED CERTIFICATION federal prison welcomes convicted Ponzi schemer Bernie Madoff

The only LEED-certified federal prison is Bernie Madoff’s new home.

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OBAMA birth certificate controversy continues

A soldier doesn’t want to deploy to Afghanistan, because he believes President Obama wasn’t born in the United States. Apparently, such folks are called “birthers.” Ridiculous. More from Media Matters for America and The Huffington Post.

UPDATE: 21 July 2009
Here is an update regarding more shenanigans from the birther movement. In addition to being unreasonably or obsessively anxious, these folks are completely blind, idiotic, and hypocritical. See Birthers Displeased With Reasonable Republican via Gawker and the video below. As one commenter on Gawker notes, “Birthers fall under the same category as moon landing hoax people (if we’re going to use a timely event). No matter how much information you provide them – including the announcements of two newspapers from the day after Obama’s birth – they refuse to admit anything.”

Chris Matthews on the issue:

UPDATE: 23 July 2009
Jon Stewart on the Birther movement:

On the Net:

Birth Certificate
FactCheck.org
PolitiFact
Snopes.com
Wikipedia

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RECOMMENDED IMAGE(S): Swordfish vs. deep-ocean submersible

Alvin_SwordfishAccording to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), “In 1967, during dive 202, Alvin was attacked by a swordfish on the bottom at about 2,000 feet. The fish became trapped in Alvin’s skin and was brought back to the surface.” As indicated by WHOI, the fish became dinner.

Apparently, swordfish can be aggressive, so the Alvin incident isn’t necessarily unique, since swordfish have been blamed for attacking humans, boats, and various kinds of aquatic gear.  Perhaps, many of these records are swordfish merely having unfortunate interactions with our underwater gear (see the videos below), or obviously the result of humans intruding into their environment. In 2004, a 30-year-old man was killed while “swimming in the sea with friends when [a] 7kg swordfish leapt out of the water and struck him in the chest.”

Video: A swordfish (Xiphias gladius) interacts with some underwater gear.

Video: This marlin became “stuck in the blow out prevention stack of a subsea oil rig,” but a remotely operated underwater vehicle managed to free it. After being released, it was clearly weak and confused so no doubt easy prey for sharks.

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