Office of Energy Resources proposes $14 million for clean energy investments


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The Rhode Island Office of Energy Resources has announced a plan to invest in clean energy, as well as reduce energy costs, by distributing $14 million in proceeds from the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) auctions.

Commissioner Marion Gold, courtesy of www.energy.ri.gov
Commissioner Marion Gold, courtesy of www.energy.ri.gov

RGGI, which was launched in 2009, allowed participating states to establish a cap on carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fueled electric generating facilities. The power plants in these areas must possess a tradable carbon dioxide allowance for each ton that they emit, and these allowances are distributed through quarterly auctions.

“Rhode Island’s participation in RGGI is a vital component of the state’s energy and environmental policy framework. This plan will not only advance important energy goals, but it will also contribute to local economic growth by investing in carbon-free energy resources, including energy efficiency and renewable generation,” State Energy Commissioner Marion Gold said.

The $14 million will support a number of clean energy programs. Three million will support the capitalization of the Rhode Island Infrastructure Bank, and another $3.6 million will go towards supporting energy efficiency measures for residential, commercial, and industrial consumers. Two million more will support the installation of LED streetlights throughout the state, as well as support clean energy investments in state and municipal buildings. Another $300,000 will go toward funding residential rooftop solar panels.

LED streetlights will also be installed all along Rhode Island’s highways, not just within towns and cities. $2.8 million will be allocated towards that venture. Rhode Island Department of Transportation Director Peter Alviti said that energy efficiency is a top priority.

“The conversion to LED streetlights not only has the potential of reducing statewide energy costs by approximately one million dollars per year, but it also demonstrates the financial benefits of good environmental stewardship,” he said.

The Office of Energy Resources also stated that the plan will support job growth along with enhancing sustainability.

“This is a smart plan that will grow jobs, reduce energy costs, and help protect our environment,” Governor Gina Raimondo said. “By investing in innovative clean energy initiatives like the Rhode Island Infrastructure Bank, Solarize Rhode Island, and energy efficiency programs, Rhode Island can help lead the nation towards a more sustainable energy future while also growing our economy.”

The financial impact is only one part, though. These investments also have the potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, which will improve air quality throughout Rhode Island

“Each kilowatt-hour of energy saved or generated by a renewable energy source means one less kilowatt-hour generated from fossil fuel-fired sources,” said Department of Environmental Management Director Janet Coit. “Programs like these may start small, but the represent important steps forward toward achieving our greenhouse gas reduction goals and transitioning to a clean energy future.”

The Office of Energy Resources is currently taking public comment on the plan, and can be reached by emailing Barbara.Cesaro@energy.ri.gov, or by mailing One Capitol Hill, Providence, Rhode Island, 02908. There will be a public hearing on the proposal on July 29 at 10 am in Conference Room B on the second floor of One Capitol Hill.

 

Elorza launches green initiative for Providence


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Image courtesy of https://www.facebook.com/sustainPVD

Providence Mayor Jorge Elorza has taken a step towards a more environmentally friendly city with his new SustainPVD Environmental Program. The goal of the program is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and address climate change within the city by increasing recycling, expanding composting, and making municipal buildings more energy efficient. Residents can participate as well, by obtaining a home energy assessment at no cost through National Grid’s EnergyWise program, and by finding low to no-cost energy saving opportunities by joining Find Your Four. Residents can register here or here.

Residents are also encouraged to explore solar alternatives. To get a free solar energy assessment, sign up by July 31 by contacting the West Broadway Neighborhood Association at 401-831-9344, or WBNA@WBNA.org.

“Climate change poses significant challenges to Providence in terms of its effect on our waterfront, the impacts of extreme heat, and especially on vulnerable populations,” Mayor Elorza said of the program.

In order to help promote the initiative, Elorza received an energy audit from National Grid in his own home on Tuesday-his first after living there for ten years.

“Through my home energy and solar assessments, I learned how I can make a difference and even save money along the way. I encourage all residents to do the same and help Providence become a greener, healthier, more livable city.”

Providence ranks 32nd in the 51 largest cities in the country for energy efficiency, according to a report by the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy. The report factored in government operations, community-wide efforts, buildings policies, utilities, and transportation.

NBC 10 Wingmen: Fracked gas pipeline politics


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wingmen2A proposed pipeline that would transport fracked gas from Pennsylvania – through Burrlliville, Rhode Island – on its way to Canada is being sold to the American people on the promise of lowering northeast energy prices. But we know fracking contaminates water and we know the new pipeline will keep the public’s energy supply married to fracking industry for the next half century.

Should we believe corporate cheerleaders like Jon Brien, who say ‘build, baby, build’ when it comes to the proposed pipeline? Or is it finally time to take seriously the environmental activists who implore us to create a sustainable supply of green energy?

News, Weather and Classifieds for Southern New England

Basic Oil Economics or No More Jed Clampetts

T"...when up from the ground come a-bubblin' crude."oday’s Morning Joe program on MSNBC featured a typically brain-dead discussion of oil prices. I’ll summarize…

Joe Scarborough: We’re producing more oil, but the price is still high. That’s un-possible!

Time Mag’s Richard Stengel: I know. Can you believe it?

What’s missing from this discussion – and all the blather we’ve heard and will hear from the GOP during the 2012 election – is a fundamental understanding of what it means to produce petrochemical liquid fuels.

Oil Pumping Basics

Since before the Macondo explosion and leak, I’ve been a fan of The Oil Drum, a peak-everything blog that focuses on the oil patch. You really can learn quite a bit from the authors and the commenters, who tend to be oil field vets. Here’s what’s most important to this discussion:

It costs money to get oil.

The photo above is from the opening credits of the classic TV show The Beverly Hillbillies in which Jed Clampett is “shootin’ at some food, when up from the ground comes a-bubblin’ crude.” Half a century ago, that was a plausible scenario – oil deposits almost on the surface could be breached with virtually zero effort. Dig a hole anywhere in Texas, and you’re rich!

Those days are long, long gone. Hence peak oil. Peak oil does not necessarily mean that there’s no more oil in the ground; it means that we’ve reached (and surpassed) the point of diminishing returns in terms of the cost of getting oil.

Think about this: the Macondo well – referred to by workers as ‘the well from hell’ – required sending robotic submersibles a mile down in the ocean and then drilling a hole an additional two miles into the earth. So you’re reaching down a total of three miles just to get to the “discovered” deposit before you find out what’s actually down there. (Satan, as it turned out…)

That kind of engineering doesn’t come cheap.

If there were an easier and cheaper place to get oil, don’t you think BP would have opted for that? Of course they would have, but the fact is that there isn’t an easier place to get oil. Hence Macondo.

“Economic” Oil Extraction

It’s silly to criticize Obama or any part of the US government for restricting off shore oil production because the oil companies are already sitting on a giant number of leases. The reason that these leases aren’t being used is that it’s not “economic” to go get the oil – the price doesn’t justify the cost of extraction.

There’s a clear correlation between the price of oil and the amount of production, and this confirms the basic peak oil argument. The cheap and easy oil is all gone, so prices have to reach certain thresholds before it’s worth the effort to go get the oil we know is in the ground.

This is why 2008 was a banner year for deep water oil. Prices sky-rocketed, and suddenly it was worth the effort to drill down three miles to get to a deposit. Drilling platforms were double- and triple-booked. Even though prices fell by half from their peak as a result of the financial meltdown, they quickly rebounded to the $70 – $80 region.

After a brief hiatus, it was back to work for the rigs. A prime driver of BP’s foolish haste capping Macondo was that the drilling rig was already late for its next assignment. They also wanted to skip a step and turn the exploratory well into a production well to get the oil to market quickly.

With the current price of oil (NYMEX) over $100, seriously whacky oil sources become profitable – shale oil and even drilling in the Arctic Ocean. That is insane!

So, we know that we can get more oil if the price is high enough. Therefore, producing more oil won’t make prices go down to what they have been in the past; it will only make prices pull back from their highs.

So, sorry Newt. $2.50 per gallon gas is exactly as plausible as you becoming President of the United States.

The Two Main Drivers of Oil Extraction Costs

Obviously, the simple costs of getting labor and machinery out to the oil deposit’s location and then drilling, lining and capping the well represent the primary factor in the equation that determines if an oil well is economic to drill. Equally obvious is the fact that the market price – and no other factor – influences the decision to produce or not to produce. There are likely a few exceptions of deposits close to population centers or very close to coastlines, but there are so many leases on known deposits that fights over the exceptions are political shenanigans and little more.

Here’s what’s not obvious and what’s really behind the peak oil equation – the amount of energy it takes to produce energy. Deep sea submersible, massive mud-pumping ships and floating cities called “drilling platforms” don’t run on unicorn tears. They mostly run on oil.

As oil gets harder and harder to reach, it takes more and more energy to pump that next barrel. And even within a single deposit, the first barrels come out on their own but as pressure drops it takes more and more energy to get each successive barrel. Pumping the bottom of a well that’s three miles below the earth’s surface requires a lot of suction!

Compare the easy Texas drilling of the Jed Clampett days to the process of separating oil from Canadian tar sands or shale. It takes a lot of money and energy just to get the crude. Then you need to include the costs and energy inputs of distillation. That doesn’t come for free either.

The bottom line is that high gasoline prices are here to stay, and there’s nothing that any politician can do about it. Anybody who says otherwise is either a liar or a fool.