industryterm:energy needs

  • U.S. marine sanctuary oil drilling report sent to Trump, not public
    https://in.reuters.com/article/us-usa-oceans-drilling/u-s-marine-sanctuary-oil-drilling-report-sent-to-trump-not-public-idINKB

    U.S. Commerce Department Secretary Wilbur Ross sent a report to the White House on Wednesday containing recommendations on whether to change the boundaries of 11 marine sanctuaries to allow more oil and gas drilling, but the report was not made public.

    Commerce reviewed sanctuaries containing 425 million acres of coral reefs, marine mammal habitats and pristine beaches, as part of an administration strategy to open new areas to oil and gas drilling. The goal was to “put the energy needs of American families and businesses first,” according to the order Trump signed in April that triggered it.

    Previous presidents designated the 11 marine sanctuaries for protection. Oil industry executives have said there is little appetite for drilling in the marine sanctuaries, citing costs, public opposition and other factors. Environmental groups have said the Commerce report should be made public.

    The report is currently undergoing inter-agency review,” a Commerce Department spokesman said, adding that decision on when to make the findings public will be up to the White House.

  • Unexamined synergies: dam building and mining go together in the Amazon
    https://news.mongabay.com/2017/06/unexamined-synergies-dam-building-and-mining-go-together-in-the-amazo

    40 large hydroelectric dams are slated for the Amazon basin over the next 20 years, feeding the massive electricity needs of an energy-hungry mining industry — digging, processing and exporting iron, aluminum, manganese and gold.
    But mining’s energy needs are rarely linked to plans for new dams or their environmental impact assessments. Amazon mining and dam building have repeatedly in the past resulted in major harmful environmental and social impacts, including displacement of indigenous and traditional communities.
    Transnational mining companies and consortiums are major beneficiaries of government largesse through subsidies, tax breaks and the energy obtained from newly commissioned Amazon dams.
    Brazilian infrastructure development in the Amazon, including dam building and mining, could — if environmental and social issues are not properly addressed — turn the Amazon into a national sacrifice zone where biological and cultural diversity are drastically diminished.

    #Brésil #développement #extraction_minière #énergie #électricité #barrages #peuples_autochtones #cartographie#environnement #1_gram_of_gold_per_ton

  • Pipelines and Pipedreams : How the EU can support a regional gas hub in the Eastern Mediterranean | European Council on Foreign Relations
    http://www.ecfr.eu/publications/summary/pipelines_and_pipedreams_how_the_eu_can_support_a_regional_gas_hub_in_7276

    Où l’on reparle de la « guerre du gaz » ou « guerre des pipe ».

    Large natural gas discoveries in the eastern Mediterranean have raised hopes that the region could serve EU energy needs, helping it to fulfil its goals of energy diversification, security, and resilience.
    But there are commercial and political hurdles in the way. Cyprusʼs reserves are too small to be commercially viable and Israel needs a critical mass of buyers to begin full-scale production. Regional cooperation – either bilaterally or with Egypt – is the only way the two countries will be able to export.
    Egypt is the only country in the region that could export gas to Europe independently because of the size of its reserves and its existing export infrastructure. But energy sector reforms will be needed to secure investor confidence in this option.
    There are now two options for regional export: to build a pipeline that connects Israel and Cyprus to southern Europe, or to create a network of pipelines into Egypt, from which gas could be liquefied and exported.
    The EU should explore regional prospects by strengthening its energy diplomacy, developing more projects of common interest, working to resolve the Turkey-Cyprus dispute, and incentivising reforms in Egypt.

    #gaz #europe #guerre_du_gaz #russie #europe #tubes #pipelines #pipedreams (nouveau mot-clé)

  • Smart fabric creates renewable energy
    http://us6.campaign-archive2.com/?u=6e13c74c17ec527c4be72d64f&id=da7e8c3f53&e=08052803c8

    Smart fabric creates
    renewable energy

    Scientists have developed a revolutionary fabric that can harvest
    electrical energy from the wearer’s movements and the sun.

    By Tim Radford

    LONDON, 14 November, 2016 – And now, fashion’s latest take on the idea of smart clothes: a fabric that manages its own energy needs.

    Just the thing for that run in the sun, a T-shirt that harvests the energy from solar radiation, while at the same time scavenging the mechanical energy from its own movement so it can store that electric power in its own battery fabric.

    The latest sportswear fashion parade from designers in China and the US presents a three-way fabric that incorporates interwoven fibres that serve as solar cells, nanogenerators and supercapacitors. The day of the wearable electronic device is at hand.

    #énergie_renouvelable #énergie #climat

  • Energy Cooperation in the History of Turkish-Russian Relations
    http://enerjiuzmani.blogspot.fr/2015/07/july-08-2015-energy-cooperation-in_8.html#more

    The Black Sea separates the territory of the Russian Federation from that of the Republic of Turkey. While Russia has massive oil and gas reserves, Turkey has limited oil and gas sources and is accordingly heavily dependent on foreign supplies to meet its growing energy needs. The countries’ disproportionate levels of resources have led to a strategic relationship in the energy market. This paper examines the history of this relationship in four periods: the Soviet Union period, from 1992-2001, from 2002-2009, and from 2010-2015.

    #Gaz #Russie #Turquie

  • Water Wars in Central Asia | Foreign Affairs
    https://www.foreignaffairs.com/gallerys/2016-08-24/water-wars-central-asia
    https://files.foreignaffairs.com/styles/large-crop-landscape/s3/images/media/2016/08/23/trilling-1043.jpg?itok=v21H9GH0

    Water Wars in Central Asia

    By David Trilling

    The relations of the five former Soviet Republics in Central Asia—Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan—are, more often than not, defined by water. When they were still a part of the Soviet Union, the upstream republics—Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan—which have an abundance of water, would release some from their reservoirs in the spring and summer to generate electricity and nourish crops both on their own land and in the downstream republics, which would return the favor by providing gas and coal each winter.

    But since the dissolution of the Soviet Union over a quarter century ago, that system has collapsed. Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan now face constant blackouts and hope to build giant dams to provide for their energy needs. Kyrgyzstan completed its Kambarata-2 power station in 2010 and is building a second one, Kambarata-1, with the help of Russia. Although he doesn’t have the funds, Tajik President Emomali Rahmon often speaks zealously about his mission to build a 335-meter dam, Rogun, which has the potential to turn his impoverished statelet into a powerbroker. But there is one glaring issue: the region’s glaciers, the source of huge and once predictable water supplies, are melting at record rates. Every year, it loses about as much water as consumed by a country the size of Switzerland. And the dams stand to limit water supply even further for the downstream countries. This has set them on edge.

    #eau #asie_centrale

  • Turkish delegation in Gaza to discuss electricity crisis http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkish-delegation-in-gaza-to-discuss-electricity-crisis.aspx?pag

    delegation from Turkey’s Energy and Natural Resources Ministry is currently visiting the Gaza Strip to discuss means of meeting the coastal enclave’s demand for electricity.

    The visit came two weeks after Ankara and Tel Aviv agreed to normalize relations following a six-year hiatus.
    According to ministry sources, members of the delegation, which arrived in the strip late on July 10, will meet both Israeli officials and representatives of Gaza’s Hamas-run government to discuss means of resolving the problems facing the territory’s energy sector.

    Following its visit to Gaza, the Turkish delegation is expected to provide a report on its findings to Energy and Natural Resources Minister Berat Albayrak.

    The report will include an assessment of the strip’s energy needs, facts about local production, transmission and distribution of energy and recommendations for tackling the chronic problems plaguing Gaza’s electricity infrastructure.

    The report will also be submitted to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and the Turkish cabinet, after which a roadmap will be prepared on the means of implementing the report’s recommendations.

    A number of private Turkish companies have reportedly expressed interest in helping meet Gaza’s energy needs in terms of the production, transmission and distribution of energy.

    @rumor #Turquie #Gaza #Electricité

  • Russia powers up Crimea, cutting dependence on Ukraine — RT Business
    https://www.rt.com/business/324550-crimea-energy-bridge-russia

    Mainland Russia has started supplying electricity to Crimea after the first power bridge to the peninsula was completed across the Kerch Strait. Crimea has had a partial blackout since November 22, after power lines in Ukraine were sabotaged.
    The energy bridge will deliver 200 MW of electricity a day from the Krasnodar region in mainland Russia starting from Thursday. Another 200 MW will be delivered by a second power cable expected to be connected by December 20.

    This will cover 80-90 percent of Crimea’s energy needs, according to Russian Energy Minister Aleksandr Novak. He says another 400 MW energy bridge will be constructed by May 2016.

    According to Novak, Crimean authorities will have to decide how to allocate the 200 MW between consumers. Eastern Crimea will be the first to receive electricity from Russia, mainly the cities of Kerch and Feodosia as well as 180 other settlements.

    Une première ligne à haute tension à travers le détroit de Kertch, en attendant une seconde. La déconnexion (électrique) de la Crimée et de l’Ukraine va devenir permanente.

  • Gazprom, European partners sign Nord Stream-2 deal | Agricultural Commodities | Reuters
    http://af.reuters.com/article/commoditiesNews/idAFL5N11A0G420150904

    FRANKFURT/VLADIVOSTOK, Russia, Sept 4 (Reuters) - Russia’s Gazprom and its European partners signed a shareholders’ agreement on the Nord Stream-2 gas pipeline project that will run beneath the Baltic Sea to Europe, bringing Europe closer into Moscow’s energy orbit.

    Russia provides for around a third of EU energy needs, but around half of the gas the EU imports from Gazprom is shipped via Ukraine, with which Russia is in conflict. It wants to find new ways to deliver gas to Europe bypassing its neighbour.

    Gazprom, E.ON, BASF/Wintershall , OMV, ENGIE and Royal Dutch Shell formed the new consortium for the project, a spokesman for the consortium said on Friday.

  • #Gaza's only #power_plant « finished » in Israeli shelling
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/gazas-only-power-plant-finished-israeli-shelling

    Israeli tank fire hit the fuel depot of the Gaza Strip’s only power plant on Tuesday, witnesses said, cutting #electricity to Gaza City and many other parts of the Palestinian enclave of 1.8 million people. A thick column of black smoke rose from the facility, which supplies the territory with two-thirds of its energy needs, and the fuel containers were in flames. “The power plant is finished,” its director, Mohammed al-Sharif, told Reuters. He said the local fire brigade was not equipped to extinguish the blaze. read more

    #Israel

  • India’s dam building bonanza

    By Kieran Cooke

    India is in the midst of a massive hydro electric dam building programme, necessary, it says, to fuel the energy needs of its fast growing economy. Kieran Cooke, one of the editors of the Climate News Network, has been in India and reports on the country’s energy plans.

    Assam, northeastern India, March 16 – This region, east of Bangladesh and bordering China to the north, is an area described by politicians as India’s ‘future powerhouse’ and is a key focus point of the country’s dam building programme.

    The ambition of planners in New Delhi is not in doubt. So far plans for more than 160 dams – both big and small – have been announced in the northeast, the majority of them to be built in the remote, mountainous state of Arunachal Pradesh and harnessing the waters of the mighty Brahmaputra river and its tributaries.

    It’s planned that in total more than 60,000 MW of electricity will be generated from the planned dams. More projects are likely to follow.

    Not to be outdone, China, which borders Arunachal Pradesh, is involved in a major dam building programme on its side of the border, also using the waters of the Brahmaputra – which it calls the Yarlung Tsangpo.

    Controversy
    The dam building programme is highly controversial: critics say it not only ignores geological and ecological factors – it also fails to take into account the impact of climate change in the region.

    The Brahmaputra, 10 kilometres wide in places, is one of the world’s major rivers, winding for nearly 3,000 kilometres from the Tibetan Plateau through China, India and Bangladesh before joining with the Ganges and flowing out into the Bay of Bengal.

    It is an extremely volatile, tempestuous river system: the Brahmaputra’s waters rise dramatically during monsoon season, causing widespread flooding, erosion and misery for many thousands of mostly subsistence farmers.

    Ashwini Saikia is a farmer on the banks of the Brahmaputra river, in the small settlement of Rohomoria in northern Assam. Even now, in pre monsoon season when the river is low, there is the “plop, plop” sound of land falling into the waters.

    Erosion fears
    “Each year the river has eaten away more and more of my land. Then in 2010 the waters rose so much I lost my house for the fifth time in the last 15 years” says Ashwini.

    Ashwini has given up farming and is now being forced to move with his family and livestock - to where he’s not entirely sure.

    Dr Partha Das is an Assamese academic who has been studying the Brahmaputra for several years. He also runs Aaranyak, a locally based environmental NGO.

    “The dam building programme has many question marks hanging over it including the fact that the northeast is a highly seismic region, with an earthquake in 1950 completely altering the geological structure of the Brahmaputra river basin.

    Climate change impacts
    “Then there is the whole question of climate change, which has scarcely been mentioned by the planners. Already we’re seeing an increase in intense rainfall events that are accelerating the high rate of soil erosion and landslides in mountainous regions. And as temperatures rise and glaciers melt on the Tibetan Plateau and in the Himalayas, river flow levels - at least in the short term - are likely to increase.”

    The Indian government defends its dam building programme, saying the power generated will mean that the country will be able to wean itself off its dependence on coal for energy, most of it low quality and extremely polluting.

    But many in the northeast, who have long felt cut off from the rest of India and neglected by central government, are unconvinced by New Delhi’s arguments.

    There are accusations that the mostly privately backed dam building projects are money making exercises for the wealthy: most of the power produced will be exported to other parts of India and not used to build up local industries.

    Tribal concerns
    The northeast is a tribal area: indigenous peoples say the influx of labourers from elsewhere in India is threatening local culture. They say the dams will also lead to more deforestation – and threaten some of India’s most important wildlife habitats.

    Opponents of the dam building say no proper overall plan has been put in place: though India and China recently reached agreement on sharing various river resources, there is no specific deal on managing the Brahmaputra’s waters.

    Protests about the dams has been growing, with work on what is India’s biggest dam construction project to date – the 2,000MW Lower Subansiri dam on one of the Brahmaputra’s tributaries - repeatedly held up. – Climate News Network

    #inde #eau #barrage #climat

  • Nucléaire en Jordanie : toujours des controverses
    ’Nuclear commission preparing for two agreements with Russian reactor vendor’ | The Jordan Times
    http://jordantimes.com/nuclear-commission-preparing-for-two-agreements-with-russian-reactor-ve
    La préparation du contrat avec l’exploitant russe progresse mais le projet suscite toujours de multiples oppositions

    During the talk show, which also hosted Jamal Gammoh, head of the Lower House’s Energy Committee, Toukan stressed the importance of the nuclear project for the Kingdom, which imports about 96 per cent of its energy needs.

    But Gammoh said there was no need for the country to resort to nuclear energy for power generation.

    “Jordan has plans for mega-projects in the fields of oil shale and renewable energy to generate power. The nuclear reactor will come with risks and we do not need such risks as the planned renewable energy projects will cover the country’s needs,” the deputy said.

    De surcroit, la question de l’exploitation de l’uranium jordanien se pose toujours. Curieusement, les polémiques n’évoque pas le fait que les Jordaniens ne disposent d’une infrastructure de préparation du minerai pour la combustion nucléaire...

    Referring to Jordan’s uranium reserves, Toukan said the results of a feasibility study conducted by world-renowned geostatistics centres and experts will be announced within two months.

    “Initial results indicate that uranium is available in commercial quantities in Jordan,” he noted.

    “I am hopeful that the studies will show that there are more than 40,000 metric tonnes of uranium in the rocks in Jordan,” Toukan said.

    In 2012, the government terminated a contract with Areva that conducted feasibility studies on the quantities of uranium in the country.

    Areva said there were about 28,000 metric tonnes of uranium in Jordan, Toukan said, adding that the government terminated the contract because Areva’s figures were not accurate.

    #nucléaire #électricité #minérai #uranium #Jordanie #Russie

  • De manière significative, en Jordanie le discours sur l’énergie se restructure. D’une approche opposant énergies fossiles et renouvelables, on passe désormais à une approche opposant énergie importée et énergie produite localement
    Next three years critical for energy sector — Hamed | The Jordan Times
    http://jordantimes.com/next-three-years-critical-for-energy-sector----hamed

    Hamed said that despite the challenges which the energy sector will face during the next few years, under-construction renewable energy, oil shale and nuclear projects are expected to supply Jordan with much of its energy needs.

    “By 2020, local energy sources’ contribution in the energy grid is expected to rise from the current 3 per cent to 40 per cent,” he added.

    The minister underscored that renewable energy and improving energy efficiency are among the main solutions to reduce the intensity of Jordan’s energy crisis in the medium and long term.

    Energy experts and environmental activists say the government must explore alternative energy resources, such as wind and solar power, as Jordan has one of the highest annual daily averages of solar irradiance in the world, with 330 days of sunshine per year.

    The Kingdom also has significant amounts of untapped wind energy, with wind speeds as high as 7.5 metres per second and up to 11.5 metres per second in hilly areas, according to experts.

    Despite these advantages, renewable energy currently contributes less than 1 per cent of Jordan’s energy mix.

    En complément, voir mon article sur cette question : http://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00857506

  • Sweet hydrogen: how sugar could help satisfy the world’s energy needs | Lou Del Bello | Science | guardian.co.uk
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/blog/2013/jul/19/sweet-hydrogen-sugar-energy-needs

    There are problems with hydrogen in transport, however: the gas needs to be stored and transferred at high pressure, and it’s highly flammable. This has prevented the technology from being implemented in small vehicles.

    But Zhang’s proposed solution to this problem is simple. “Why should we transport hydrogen? We can transport sugar instead, and perform the reaction in the car or in the service station.”

    Using solid sugar as raw material, he wants to create cheap bioreactors that will produce hydrogen, as required, using the enzyme cocktail developed at Virginia Tech.

    The ultimate test for the method’s viability will be the creation of a prototype, but at the moment researchers are still working to obtain maximum efficiency from the reaction.

    #énergie #recherche #sucre #hydrogène

  • The New Power Map | Foreign Affairs

    http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/138597/aviezer-tucker/the-new-power-map
    Aviezer Tucker
    December 19, 2012

    The New Power Map : World Politics After the Boom in Unconventional Energy

    The energy map of the world is being redrawn — and the global geopolitical order is adrift in consequence. We are moving away from a world dominated by a few energy mega-suppliers, such as Russia, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela, and toward one in which most countries have some domestic resources to meet their energy needs and can import the balance from suppliers in their own neighborhood. This new world will feature considerably lower energy prices, and in turn, geopolitics will hinge less on oil and gas. Within the next five to ten years, regimes that are dependent on energy exports will see their power diminished. No longer able to raise massive sums from energy sales to distribute patronage and project power abroad, they will have to tax their citizens.

    #energie #geopolitique

  • Le roi de Jordanie accuse Israël de faire pression pour retarder les projets nucléaires de son pays
    Jordan king says Israel disrupted nuclear plans - Zawya
    http://www.zawya.com/story/Jordan_king_says_Israel_disrupted_nuclear_plans-ANA20120912T113909ZPIN71/?lok=113916120912&weeklynewsletter&zawyaemailmarketing

    The king, whose country needs atomic energy to meet its energy needs and power water desalination plants, said “strong opposition to Jordan’s nuclear energy programme is coming from Israel.”

    [...]

    “When we started going down the road of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes, we approached some highly responsible countries to work with us. And pretty soon we realised that Israel was putting pressure on those countries to disrupt any cooperation with us,” the king added.

    “A Jordanian delegation would approach a potential partner, and one week later an Israeli delegation would be there, asking our interlocutors not to support Jordan’s nuclear energy bid,” King Abdullah said.

    Il critique les opposants au projet nucléaire en en faisant des suppôts d’Israël (ONG type Greepeace Jordan mais aussi les Frères Musulmans...)

    “Against this backdrop, I feel that those who oppose our peaceful nuclear programme for all the wrong reasons are furthering Israeli interests more efficiently than Israel could ever do,” the king said.

    La réponse israélienne ne manque pas de piment, de la part d’un pays qui n’a jamais signé le traité de non-prolifération...

    An Israeli official in Jerusalem dismissed the charge.

    “The king’s accusations sound (like) a hollow excuse,” the official told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

    “We were consulted and we always said that of course if this was done according to NPT (Non-Proliferation Treaty) regulations and supervision and everything, then fine, we have no objection.”

    #Israël
    #Jordanie
    #Traité_de_non_prolifération_nucléaire
    #nucléaire
    #centrale_nucléaire
    #électricité
    #désalinisation

  • Desertec and Democracy: Arab Spring Boosts Dream of Desert Power
    http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,764877,00.html

    Desertec is a multi-billion-dollar energy initiative that hopes to meet Europe’s energy needs with solar power from the Sahara. The recent upheavals in North Africa have put the project in question. But many experts argue that the Arab Spring will actually help Desertec’s grand vision become reality.

    #énergie #industrie #maghreb pour @reka