industryterm:energy giant

  • Shell Will Test Energy-Generating Kites This Summer - Bloomberg
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-05-26/energy-generating-kites-backed-by-shell-set-for-test-in-scotland


    Kite Power Systems (KPS) Source: KPS

    Power-generating kites backed by Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Schlumberger Ltd. and EON SE will start tests in the U.K. this summer, with the aim of developing a technology that could eventually replace offshore wind turbines.

    Kite Power Systems, known as #KPS, is working on a 17-meter device that flies on air currents high above the ground and generates power by pulling at a cable. It raised 5 million pounds ($6.4 million) from the three energy giants last December.

    The reason we are interested in something like this is that it has potential to reduce the cost of offshore wind in the future,” said Geert van de Wouw, managing director of Shell Technology Ventures BV. “Fundamentally, looking at the science, flying the kite at high altitudes so there’s lots of wind, and the cost of materials is quite a lot lower than a normal offshore wind turbine.

    Alternatives to traditional wind turbines are in the works at multiple start-ups, some backed by corporations in energy and tech such as Alphabet Inc. German utility EON has also invested in a test site in Ireland for drones that are designed to fly at high altitudes and generate energy.

    #cerf-volant

  • Statoil Wins U.S. Offshore Wind Lease Off New York – gCaptain
    https://gcaptain.com/statoil-wins-u-s-offshore-wind-lease-off-new-york

    Norwegian energy giant Statoil has been declared the provisional winner of the U.S. government’s wind lease sale of 79,350 acres offshore New York.

    The win will allow Statoil the opportunity to explore the potential development of an offshore wind farm to provide New York City and Long Island with a significant, long-term source of renewable electricity.

    Statoil submitted a winning bid of $42,469,725 during the online offshore wind auction concluded Friday by the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM).
    […]
    The lease comprises an area that could potentially accommodate more than 1 GW of offshore wind, with a phased development expected to start with 400-600 MW. The New York Wind Energy Area is located 14-30 miles (30-60 km) offshore, spans 79,350 acres (321 km2), and covers water depths between 65 and 131 feet (20-40 meters).

    • de cet article qui mentionne également tous les soucis que peut créer ce champ d’éoliennes

      Offshore wind farms coming soon to NY coast | Brooklyn Daily Eagle
      http://www.brooklyneagle.com/articles/2016/3/17/offshore-wind-farms-coming-soon-ny-coast

      Questions remain about fisheries, shipping lanes, radar systems

      A number of entities expressed caution, however. In its comment to BOEM, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) noted that the area in question is a habitat for roughly 35 important fish species and is the site of significant fisheries. NOAA called for an expanded assessment before proceeding with the leases.

      In a similar vein, David Frulla of the Fisheries Survival Fund, which represents permit holders in the Atlantic scallop fishery, commented to BOEM that the group “strongly objects to the leasing of submerged lands that overlap lucrative scallop beds.”

      The group said BOEM had failed to adequately evaluate the impact the project will have on the region’s fisheries, and asked BOEM to remove more than a dozen lease blocks from consideration for leasing.

      The National Ocean Service also has objections. In its comments to BOEM, the agency highlighted the location of high frequency radars supporting the U.S. as part of the Integrated Ocean Observing System.

      “There are 11 high frequency radars in New Jersey, New York and Rhode Island that will be negatively impacted to some degree or another by wind turbines situated offshore Long Island. This would result in a loss of coastal radar monitoring for 100 miles of the NY, NJ, RI coasts,” NOS commented. 

      Significantly, the shipping industry has also expressed grave concerns. Douglas Schneider of the World Shipping Council (WSC), which represents more than 29 shipping companies that operate upwards of 5,000 ocean-going container vessels, commented that WSC has filed multiple submissions with BOEM noting “the critical need for wind energy projects to be sited a safe distance from areas of high-density commercial vessel traffic.”

      The proposed wind lease area is situated between two principal shipping channels out of New York Harbor: the outbound Ambrose to Nantucket traffic lane and the inbound Hudson Canyon to Ambrose traffic lane.

      The proposed WEA would almost completely occupy the space between these two busy traffic channels, Schneider says. To reduce the risk of collision between vessels and what is termed allision between vessels and fixed wind turbines, two-mile buffer zones must be established, he wrote.

  • Germany’s Schroeder Confirmed as Chair of Nord Stream 2 Director Board
    https://sputniknews.com/europe/201610051046021881-schroeder-nord-stream-chair

    Former Chancellor of Germany Gerhard Schroeder has been appointed to the top post in the second pipeline consortium Nord Stream 2 AG, the company’s spokesman Jens Mueller confirmed to Sputnik on Wednesday.

    The appointment was made at the end of July, he added.
    […]
    The start of the construction of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline is planned for 2018. It aims to deliver up to 55 billion cubic meters of natural gas from Russia to Germany annually via the Baltic Sea. Russian energy giant Gazprom has a shareholder agreement to extend the existing Nord Stream with partner European energy firms.

  • Russia issues Hinkley nuclear warning

    http://us6.campaign-archive1.com/?u=6e13c74c17ec527c4be72d64f&id=d8e675e8c0&e=08052803c8

    Assez bizarre, mais bon;

    Russia issues Hinkley
    nuclear warning

    EXCLUSIVE: State-owned Russian nuclear corporation says the industry’s credibility is at risk if building the new UK power plant is delayed or runs over budget.

    By Terry Macalister

    LONDON, 19 September, 2016 – A major nuclear developer has warned the French energy giant EDF that it must deliver the Hinkley Point project in the UK on time and on budget or risk damaging the credibility of the wider industry.

    In an exclusive interview with Climate News Network, Kirill Komarov, first deputy chief executive of Russian state-owned corporation Rosatom, expressed fears that problems at other EDF schemes − such as Flamanville in France and Olkiluoto in Finland − could be repeated.

    #nucléaire

  • How China is sending man back to the Moon to mine safe nuclear power and become the world’s energy giant - Telegraph
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/space/nightsky/12178122/night-sky-march-2016-china-space-mission.html

    A fully-loaded spaceship’s cargo base could power a quarter of the world for a year. This means that helium-3 has a potential economic value in the order of about £1 billion a ton, making it the Moon’s most valuable commodity except perhaps for astronomy and promoting tourism.
    China’s lunar exploration programme is proceeding fast, strongly attracted by the prospect of helium-3 mining. In 2013 China managed to land a lunar robot lander. The final stage of their current programme intends sending a robotic craft to the Moon that will return lunar rocks to the Earth.

    #espace #extractivisme #énergie #chine

  • Forget Ukraine. It’s Business As Usual Between Europe and Russia
    http://www.newsweek.com/forget-ukraine-its-business-usual-between-europe-and-russia-369730

    It was just like the old days before the European Union imposed sanctions on Russia in 2014. At the Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok Gazprom clinched three major deals with some of Europe’s biggest energy companies.

    One of the most important was the revival of a lucrative asset swap between the Russian energy giant and Wintershall, the energy division of BASF, a German chemical company. BASF had abandoned that swap arrangement in December 2014 because of the geopolitical consequences of Russia’s invasion of eastern Ukraine and its annexation of Crimea.

    The asset swap and other deals signed in Vladivostok show how German as well as Austrian energy companies are loath to quit Russia. They also show how Gazprom wants to tie Europe’s lucrative gas market more closely to Russia. In 2013, Russia supplied the EU’s 28 countries with 30 percent of their gas needs.

    But more importantly, the deals confirm how Russia is determined to end Ukraine’s role as the major transit route for Russian gas to Europe. Half of the Russian gas imported by Europe crosses Ukraine.

    Under the terms of the deal between BASF and Gazprom, BASF’s subsidiary Wintershall will obtain a stake of 25 percent plus one share in the Urengoy natural gas fields in Siberia. Both firms will develop the fields.

    In return, Wintershall will transfer to Gazprom its jointly owned gas storage and trading business in Germany as well as a stake in its business in Austria. Through the asset swap, Gazprom will also receive a 50 percent stake in Wintershall’s exploration and production of oil and gas in the North Sea. These activities amounted to sales of over $13.4 billion in 2014, according to BASF.

    The second deal agreed to in Vladivostok involves Gazprom and a European consortium building a second Nord Stream pipeline under the Baltic Sea. This will enable Russia to send more of its gas directly to Germany, bypassing Ukraine.

    The consortium consists of BASF, German energy company E.ON, French electricity company Engie, Austrian oil and gas firm OMV and Royal Dutch Shell. Gazprom will own a 51 percent share of a new company called New European Pipeline AG, which will develop the project. The other partners will have a 10 percent stake, except for Engie, which will own 9 percent.

    The fact that the global energy majors participate in the project bespeaks its significance for securing reliable gas supply to European consumers,” stated Alexey Miller, chairman of the Gazprom Management Committee.

    Tell that to Poland and the Baltic states—and Ukraine. They had criticized the first Nord Stream pipeline, which was agreed to under the then German chancellor Gerhard Schröder in 2005. At the time, Warsaw argued that the deal increased Europe’s dependence on Russian energy.

    Since then, however, Europe has been diversifying its energy supplies, spurred by the 2009 Ukraine gas crisis, which disrupted supplies to Europe because of a dispute between Russia and Ukraine over energy prices.

    Also, through its Third Energy Package, the European Commission is introducing more competition in the energy sector by breaking the hold any one company can have over the production, distribution and trading of gas. That is one of the main reasons why in December 2014 Russia pulled out of the South Stream project, which was to transport gas across the Black Sea to Southeastern Europe. Under the terms of the commission package, Russia would have had to open up the gas pipeline to competition.

    The third deal reached in Vladivostok involves OMV’s participation in the Urengoy oil and gas fields. When the deal is concluded, OMV will acquire a 24.8 percent stake in the project in exchange for Gazprom obtaining some of the assets of OMV.

    • Sans trop de surprise, le projet de #North_Stream_2 ne plait pas à l’Ukraine…

      Ukraine PM calls second Russia-Germany pipeline ’anti-European’ - Yahoo News
      http://news.yahoo.com/ukraine-pm-calls-second-russia-germany-pipeline-anti-173441635.html

      Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk on Thursday criticised as “anti-Ukrainian and anti-European” a deal between Russia’s energy giant Gazprom and several Western firms to build a second gas pipeline under the Baltic Sea.

      In June, Gazprom agreed with Anglo-Dutch Shell, Germany’s E.ON and Austria’s OMV to build the new gas pipeline — dubbed Nord Stream-2 — to Germany, bypassing conflict-torn Ukraine and also EU neighbour Poland.

      When the first Nord Stream was built, it brought the European Union no additional energy independence,” Yatsenyuk said after talks with Slovak counterpart Robert Fico in Bratislava.

      The construction of Nord Stream-2 is affecting the security of the continuous gas supply of the EU’s southeastern countries. It is a monopolisation of gas supply routes to the EU,” he told reporters.

      This project is anti-Ukrainian and anti-European.

  • EU ’to announce anti-trust charges against Gazprom’ - Business Insider
    http://www.businessinsider.com/afp-eu-to-announce-anti-trust-charges-against-gazprom-2015-4

    EU regulators will announce on Wednesday anti-trust charges against Russia energy giant Gazprom, sources close to the matter told AFP.

    The European Commission formally opened its probe in September 2012 and has significantly delayed moving forward due to tensions with Moscow over the crisis in Ukraine.

    The EU will officially complain that Gazprom was hindering competition in Central and Eastern European gas markets, where the company benefits from a dominant position.

  • Energy giant’s bleak outlook is 25% rise in CO2 - Climate News Network

    http://www.climatenewsnetwork.net/energy-giants-bleak-outlook-25-rise-co2

    By Alex Kirby

    The British-based oil and gas “supermajor” BP says it expects global emissions of carbon dioxide to rise by a quarter in the next 20 years.

    LONDON, 24 February, 2015 − It may come as a shock, as governments ponder how to tackle climate change, to learn that the world is moving rapidly in the wrong direction.

    But BP, one of the world’s six biggest oil and gas companies, says it thinks that, on present trends, emissions of CO2 will be 25% greater within two decades than they are today.

    The prediction is published in BP’s Energy Outlook 2035, which it says is its best effort “to describe a ‘most likely’ trajectory of the global energy system”.

  • Russian Money Suspected Behind Fracking Protests - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/01/world/russian-money-suspected-behind-fracking-protests.html

    Vlasa Mircia, the mayor of this destitute village in eastern Romania, thought he had struck it rich when the American energy giant Chevron showed up here last year and leased a plot of land he owned for exploratory shale gas drilling.

    But the encounter between big business and rural Romania quickly turned into a nightmare. The village became a magnet for activists from across the country opposed to hydraulic fracturing, or fracking. Violent clashes broke out between the police and protesters. The mayor, one of the few locals who sided openly with Chevron, was run out of town, reviled as a corrupt sellout in what activists presented as a David versus Goliath struggle between impoverished farmers and corporate America.
    (…)
    Everything that has gone wrong is from Gazprom,” Mr. Mircia said.
    (…)
    Before stepping down in September as NATO’s secretary general, Anders Fogh Rasmussen gave voice to this alarm with remarks in London that pointed a finger at Russia and infuriated environmentalists.

    Russia, as part of their sophisticated information and disinformation operations, engaged actively with so-called nongovernmental organizations — environmental organizations working against shale gas — to maintain dependence on imported Russian gas,” Mr. Rasmussen said. He presented no proof and said the judgment was based on what NATO allies had reported.

    Typical #hearsay !

  • French energy giant inks deal extending presence in Turkey
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/french-energy-giant-inks-deal-extending-presence-in-turkey.aspx?p

    The agreement covers Turkey’s second nuclear plant slated to be built in the Black Sea province of Sinop and a 2-billion-euro thermal power plant project in the southern province of Adana.

    The deal was signed by the Chairman and CEO of GDF SUEZ, Gérard Mestrallet, and Turkish Energy Minister Taner Yıldız on Jan. 27, marking an expansion of energy cooperation relations between the parties.

    As part of the deal the Turkish government and the French energy giant have reached a preliminary agreement for establishment a 1,320-megawatt (MW) thermal power plant in Adana.

    #Energie
    #Turquie

  • Government terminates agreement with AREVA
    http://www.zawya.com/story/Jordan_Government_terminates_agreement_with_AREVA-ZAWYA20131107054250/?lok=054200131106&&zawyaemailmarketing
    (pay wall)
    Suite logique de l’annonce du choix de la firme russe Rosatom au dépens d’AREVA pour construire une centrale nucléaire en Jordanie
    cf. http://seenthis.net/messages/189825

    Government terminates agreement with AREVA

    Amman - Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour said a decision to terminate a uranium mining agreement with the French energy giant AREVA was due to the firm not honoring its obligations, as stipulated in the agreement.
    In remarks during a Lower House of Parliament session chaired by its speaker, Atef Tarawneh, Ensour said the agreement was cancelled by the previous government on September 24, 2012.
    He noted that Jordan did not incur losses due to this decision, saying the government confiscated the firm’s equipment.
    Following a debate between deputies about the agreement, MP Jamal Qammo said it was AREVA that terminated the agreement, as exploration for uranium in Jordan is not economically feasible.

    © Jordan News Agency - Petra 2013

    En passant, il est quand même surprenant qu’il n’y est pas encore eu d’article à ce sujet dans la presse française (en tout cas, je n’en ai point vu...)
    Plus largement, sur le même sujet : une sélection de liens : http://seenthis.net/spip.php?page=recherche&recherche=%2Bjordanie+%2Bnucl%C3%A9aire&x=0&y=0
    #nucléaire
    #Jordanie
    #électricité
    #uranium
    #mine
    #énergie

  • Gazprom abandons arctic gas project for now

    http://www.france24.com/en/20130626-gazprom-abandons-arctic-gas-project-now

    Gazprom abandons arctic gas project for now
    The Barents Sea is seen in 2004. Russia’s energy giant Gazprom said it was giving up development of the Shtokman natural gas field under the arctic Barents Sea until new technology made the project viable.
    The Barents Sea is seen in 2004. Russia’s energy giant Gazprom said it was giving up development of the Shtokman natural gas field under the arctic Barents Sea until new technology made the project viable.

    AFP - Russia’s energy giant Gazprom said on Thursday it was giving up development of the Shtokman natural gas field under the arctic Barents Sea until new technology made the project viable.

    #russie #gazprom #énergie #arctique #barents

  • Government officials accused of ’schmooze-athon’ with Shell | Environment | The Guardian
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012/aug/17/government-officials-schmooze-athon-shell

    Senior Whitehall officials from 10 government departments and agencies attended exclusive “training courses” laid on by Shell over two days at its London headquarters, according to documents released by the Department of Energy and Climate Change (Decc) following a freedom of information request.

    The documents show that in June this year and last, “30-40 mid- to senior-level civil servants” attended the two-day “Shell energy course for Whitehall”, laid on at the energy giant’s expense at its UK head office on London’s South Bank.

    parce que déjà...

    Big energy users get seven times more Treasury meetings than green sector
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/jul/23/green-companies-treasury-meetings-energy

    In total, Treasury ministers have held 17 meetings with either green campaign groups or clean energy lobbyists since May 2010. In comparison, they have met with representatives from fossil fuel and energy companies; airports and airlines; and the motoring lobby and car manufacturers on 119 occasions over the same period.

    et en France ?

    #énergie #lobby #pétrole #énergie_renouvelable