Nuclear Power
Smart Grid spending on the rise – but not enough – Portfolio.com
Posted in Americans, China, Economy, Electricity, Energy, Europe, Global Warming, Nuclear Power, Obama, Politics on December 29th, 2009 by admin – Be the first to commentA few key sentences from this article -
- Governments and utilities worldwide are likely to spend $200 billion on so-called smart grid initiatives by 2015, a development that promises greater energy efficiency on a global scale, but that is only a small step towards what could be done to use energy more efficiently.
- Right now, only a fifth of the energy we actually burn or otherwise generate for electricity is actually used.
- A smarter grid is the basic building block for such initiatives as electric and hybrid cars, and utility executives like Jim Rogers, CEO of Duke Energy, consider increasing efficiency a source of energy in and of itself.
- Bringing a full smart grid online in the United States alone is a $1 to $2 trillion proposition over the next couple of decades, according to research by Jackson Associates, and it will save $48 billion for the 200 largest U.S. utilities.
- Take, for instance, the Bush tax cuts of the early 2000s. That legislation cost $2.48 trillion from 2001-2010—enough to have already modernized our electric grid by now, if we’d chosen to invest it that way.
- Closer to our own time, the government will spend more money bailing out banks, AIG, General Motors and Chrysler than the entire world will spend on smart grid technology that could lay the groundwork for future growth and help mitigate the effects of global warming.
Read the full article here – http://www.portfolio.com/views/blogs/daily-brief/2009/12/29/smart-grid-spending-on-the-rise-but-not-enough/
S.Korean-led group wins $20.4 billion UAE nuclear deal
Posted in Electricity, Energy, Learn, Nuclear Power, Politics on December 28th, 2009 by admin – Be the first to commentThis handout photo provided by the South Korean Blue House shows an illustration of nuclear power plants to be built by a South Korea-led consortium in Sila, 330 kilometres (204 miles) west of the United Arab Emirates capital. The consortium won a 20-billion-USD contract to build four nuclear power plants in the Middle East country.
(AFP/Pool/Blue House)

