A Bevy of Benefits
Bantam Communications
Bantam delivers strategic consulting and public affairs protocols that support the growth of the clean energy economy.
Good morning and happy Friday,
This week, Amazon and Google pushed the “nuke on high” button, announcing dueling investments to power data centers with small modular reactors. Bill Gates is also big on nuclear these days, although a group of scholars recently convened in Casper, WY to try to check his pro-nuclear narrative.?
Meanwhile, on the campaign trail, in response to a question about whether global warming is a “hoax,” Republican candidate Donald Trump said “we can’t destroy our country” for the sake of saving the climate, noting that the U.S. is “competing against countries that don’t spend anything on climate change, like China.”
Mmmn, not quite, says HeatMap: According to the IEA, in 2023 China accounted for one-third of the world’s clean energy investments.
In other IEA news, the organization released its annual World Energy Outlook this week, announcing that “We’re now moving at speed into the Age of Electricity.” While predicting that clean energy will become the largest source of power by the mid-2030s, it cautions that stronger policies are needed to meet net-zero targets.
Read on for more.
A Bevy of Benefits
BDD readers are likely familiar with the bevy of direct benefits associated with the IRA. This week saw the release of a new economic analysis that attempts to show the full extent of these economic benefits, accompanied by a “first-of-its-kind” survey of nearly 930 businesses. Here are just a few highlights:
??The Takeaway
Arrested development. In contrast, the survey asked clean energy business leaders about what might happen if the IRA were repealed, and in summary, the response was “considerable losses, layoffs, and closures.” A companion study commissioned by E&E News found that 44% of IRA-driven clean energy manufacturing projects are planned for the seven swing states that could decide the upcoming election, although voters in those battleground areas may not fully appreciate the IRA’s impact on their local economies.
Un-Chariton-able
This week saw a couple of interesting developments on the transmission front, as Invenergy’s Grain Belt Express cleared a legal hurdle in Missouri, and the Bonneville Power Administration proposed 13 new projects “necessary to reinforce the Pacific Northwest’s electric grid.” Here’s the juice:
领英推荐
??The Takeaway
BPA beefs up. Meanwhile out west, BPA says its latest plans to beef up transmission will enable the addition of “thousands of megawatts of new wind and solar generation and battery storage to the federal grid.” All-in, the projects are expected to cost $3 billion and include 500-kV lines and supporting facilities in Oregon and Washington. BPA will host a public meeting on Oct. 17 to discuss the proposal.
Yowza.
It’s been a crazy couple of weeks in the “supersizing of wind turbines,” with all kinds of action in China, where the China Wind Power conference just wrapped up.
Last week Sany Renewable Energy installed a 15 MW onshore turbine; currently, the largest turbine in the world is a 20 MW offshore behemoth designed by Mingyang, but Dongfang Electric is hot on their heels, having just manufactured a “typhoon-proof” monster 26 MW offshore model. Not to be outdone, CCRC just rolled a 20 MW floating turbine, the world’s largest, off the production line.
If that doesn’t make your head spin, how about this: Sany just announced that they’ve commissioned a test bench for 35 MW turbines.
As non-engineers, we had to look that up: test benches are used to put wind turbine designs through their paces, testing the performance of the design and key components under a variety of extreme conditions.
While Sany doesn’t expect there will be 35 MW turbines “in the near future,” the company says the test bench will utilize “high-intensity accelerated fatigue tests” to “simulate 20 years of wind farm operation in just one year,” and can also “accurately simulate complex weather conditions and extreme working environments, withstanding typhoon-level winds.”
That’s a lot to wrap our minds around – supersized, indeed!