Michele Kearney's Nuclear Wire
Major Energy and Environmental News and Commentary affecting the Nuclear Industry.
Saturday, March 15, 2014
Time for DOE to Complete Its Part 810 Nuclear Export Reform By Margaret Harding
Time for DOE to Complete Its Part 810 Nuclear Export Reform
By Margaret Hardinghttp://www.nucleartownhall.com/blog/time-for-doe-to-complete-its-part-810-nuclear-export-reform/
War on the Roof: Solar Power Has Grown Up By Llewellyn King
War on the Roof: Solar Power Has Grown Up
By Llewellyn Kinghttp://www.nucleartownhall.com/blog/war-on-the-roof-solar-power-has-grown-up/
Column: Termination of MOX will be dangerous step
Column: Termination of MOX will be dangerous step
http://www.aikenstandard.com/article/20140313/AIK02/140319688/1018/AIK02/column-termination-of-mox-will-be-dangerous-step16% of Natural Gas Consumed in Europe Flows Through Ukraine
Posted: 15 Mar 2014 06:00 AM PDT
Europe,
including all EU members plus Turkey, Norway, Switzerland, and the
non-EU Balkan states, consumed 18.7 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) of natural
gas in 2013. Russia supplied 30% (5.7 Tcf) of this volume, with a
significant amount flowing through Ukraine.read morehttp://theenergycollective.com/todayinenergy/354301/16-natural-gas-consumed-europe-flows-through-ukraine?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=The+Energy+Collective+%28all+posts%29
Nuclear: A surprisingly progressive solution to climate change By Rachel Pritzker, Special to CNN
Nuclear: A surprisingly progressive solution to climate change
By Rachel Pritzker, Special to CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2013/11/06/opinion/pritzker-nuclear-pandora/index.html
Activists get nuclear-plant science all wrong
Activists get nuclear-plant science all wrong
http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/03/11/3987739/activists-get-nuclear-plant-science.html
Nuclear plant operator wins $19 million over failure to open Yucca repository
Nuclear plant operator wins $19 million over failure to open Yucca repository
http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2014/mar/14/nuclear-plant-operator-wins-19-million-over-failur/
New Energy Planned To Replace CA Nuclear
New Energy Planned To Replace CA Nuclear
http://www.chem.info/news/2014/03/new-energy-planned-replace-ca-nuclear
Iran’s Oil Exports Peak After Interim Nuclear Deal
Iran’s Oil Exports Peak After Interim Nuclear Deal
If Boost in Exports Continues It Could Threaten to Exceed Agreed Cap
Iran's oil exports peaked at a one-year high in the past two months, the International Energy Agency said, as a thaw in relations with the West boosts the troubled economy of the Islamic Republic.http://stream.wsj.com/story/markets/SS-2-5/SS-2-481261/
Solar power cheaper than natural gas, coal, and nuclear power in Texas!
Solar power cheaper than natural gas, coal, and nuclear power in Texas!
http://www.treehugger.com/renewable-energy/solar-power-cheaper-natural-gas-coal-and-nuclear-power-texas.html
OIG Report Raises Questions On NRC's Pa. Dump Cleanup
OIG Report Raises Questions On NRC's Pa. Dump Cleanup
http://www.law360.com/articles/518615/oig-report-raises-questions-on-nrc-s-pa-dump-cleanup‘Fukushima: The Story of a Nuclear Disaster’ by David Lochbaum, Edwin Lyman, Susan Q. Stranahan, and the Union of Concerned Scientists.
‘Fukushima: The Story of a Nuclear Disaster’ by David Lochbaum, Edwin Lyman, Susan Q. Stranahan, and the Union of Concerned Scientists.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/fukushima-the-story-of-a-nuclear-disaster-by-david-lochbaum-edwin-lyman-susan-q-stranahan-and-the-union-of-concerned-scientists/2014/03/14/474b0890-a87e-11e3-8599-ce7295b6851c_story.htmlTexas County Wants to Store Spent Nuclear Fuel
Texas County Wants to Store Spent Nuclear Fuel
http://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/A-Texas-County-Wants-to-Store-Spent-Nuclear-Fuel-250461931.html
Terrestrial Energy Integral Molten Salt Reactor Developers is Working with an Oil Sands Partner
http://nextbigfuture.com/2014/03/terrestrial-energy-integral-molten-salt.html
Canada could allow the new Terrestrial Energy
Molten salt reactor to be operational by 2020.
http://nextbigfuture.com/2014/
Japan might restart up to 10 reactors each year and have up to 35 nuclear reactors back online in 2019
Japan might restart up to 10 reactors per year. About 35 reactors
operational in 2019
http://nextbigfuture.com/2014/
China is back to raising nuclear energy build targets after lowering them after Fukushima
China is back to raising its nuclear energy targets for 2020. Perhaps
heading to 70-80GW instead of 58 GW
http://nextbigfuture.com/2014/
The Red Faces of the Solar Skeptics By NANCY FOLBRE
http://economix.blogs.nytimes. com/2014/03/10/the-red-faces-o f-the-solar-skeptics/?emc=edit _tnt_20140315&nlid=61007721& tntemail0=y
The Red Faces of the Solar Skeptics
By NANCY FOLBRE
The Red Faces of the Solar Skeptics
By NANCY FOLBRE
Latest EPA Greenhouse Gas Inventory May Not Reflect Full Scope of Oil and Gas Emissions
Latest EPA Greenhouse Gas Inventory May Not Reflect Full Scope of Oil and Gas Emissions
By Environmental Defense Fund Energy Exchange Blog
The Environmental Protection Agency recently released its draft
inventory of annual U.S. greenhouse gas emissions. Reporting 2012 data,
the inventory estimates methane emissions coming from natural gas and
petroleum systems at around 7.6 million metric tons – that’s enough
natural gas to provide energy to over 7 million homes annually. This new
estimate when compared
LNG Exports, Jobs and Security
LNG Exports, Jobs and Security
By Energy Tomorrow Blog
In
a post last week we discussed the way the Ukrainian crisis is focusing a
number of U.S. leaders on the potential foreign policy impacts of
surging U.S. energy production. With its vast natural gas reserves, the
U.S. could be a leader in the global market for liquefied natural gas
(LNG), if we took the steps to make
Energy Quote of the Day: On Pennsylvania Gas-to-Liquids Plant
Energy Quote of the Day: On Pennsylvania Gas-to-Liquids Plant
By Jared Anderson
Shell
made big news when it announced plans to construct an ethane cracker in
2011 and subsequently chose to site the plant in Pennsylvania.
Recently-announced capital expenditure cutbacks could impact plans to
move forward with the project, but nothing has been officially
announced. With Marcellus shale gas production surging, the plant would
crack ethane produced
Friday, March 14, 2014
MIT energy guru: “A great deal has changed”
MIT energy guru: “A great deal has changed”
http://spectrum.mit.edu/continuum/mit-energy-guru-a-great-deal-has-changed/
Politics The Ukraine Crisis Is Unsettling Decades-Old Nuclear-Weapons Agreements
Politics
The Ukraine Crisis Is Unsettling Decades-Old Nuclear-Weapons Agreements
The acting president of Ukraine has taken to the pages of an American newspaper to warn Russia and other nations.
http://www.nationaljournal.com/politics/the-ukraine-crisis-is-unsettling-decades-old-nuclear-weapons-agreements-20140312Nader’s nuclear blind spot
Nader’s nuclear blind spot
A
Democracy Now segment featuring Ralph Nader and starting with a
discussion on climate change rapidly turned into an antinuclear rant.
Rod does some fact checking to point out several misinformed statements.
For Russia, natural gas weapon works both ways
For Russia, natural gas weapon works both ways
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/plugged-in/2014/03/10/for-russia-natural-gas-weapon-works-both-ways/
SMR Content Pack from Nuclear Energy Insider
SMR Content Pack from Nuclear Energy Insider
Nuclear Energy Insider is making an SMR content pack available.
With the race for SMR deployment heating up, Nuclear Energy Insider has put together a complimentary pack with insight from the likes of TVA, Generation mPower, NuScale and FirstEnergy.
Provide your email address here, and we’ll send it right to your inbox - http://bit.ly/SMR-Intel-Pack
The SMR pack includes:
- Updates on all major SMR projects taking place in the US from utility and technology provider perspectives
- Insight into the SMR supply chain and info on the skills needed to make commercialization a reality
- Q&A with leading US SMR decision makers on SMR licensing, procurement and construction
If you have any questions, do let me know.
Best wishes
Siobhan O'Meara
Senior Industry Analyst
Nuclear Energy Insider
+44 (0) 207 375 7512
Nuclear Energy Insider is making an SMR content pack available.
With the race for SMR deployment heating up, Nuclear Energy Insider has put together a complimentary pack with insight from the likes of TVA, Generation mPower, NuScale and FirstEnergy.
Provide your email address here, and we’ll send it right to your inbox - http://bit.ly/SMR-Intel-Pack
The SMR pack includes:
- Updates on all major SMR projects taking place in the US from utility and technology provider perspectives
- Insight into the SMR supply chain and info on the skills needed to make commercialization a reality
- Q&A with leading US SMR decision makers on SMR licensing, procurement and construction
If you have any questions, do let me know.
Best wishes
Siobhan O'Meara
Senior Industry Analyst
Nuclear Energy Insider
+44 (0) 207 375 7512
NASA Study: Climate Sensitivity Is High So 'Long-Term Warming Likely To Be Significant'
NASA Study: Climate Sensitivity Is High So 'Long-Term Warming Likely To Be Significant'
http://theenergycollective.com/josephromm/353456/nasa-study-climate-sensitivity-high-so-long-term-warming-likely-be-significant?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=The+Energy+Collective+%28all+posts%29Emergency Communication System Found Inoperable in Pilgrim Nuclear Plant Control Room
Emergency Communication System Found Inoperable in Pilgrim Nuclear Plant Control Room
http://nuclearstreet.com/nuclear_power_industry_news/b/nuclear_power_news/archive/2014/03/14/emergency-communication-system-found-inoperable-in-pilgrim-nuclear-plant-control-room-031401.aspx#.UyOvcxlXBDQNRC Highlights Safety Enhancements 3 Years After Fukushima, With a Focus on Cumulative Impact
NRC Highlights Safety Enhancements 3 Years After Fukushima, With a Focus on Cumulative Impact
http://www.nei.org/News-Media/News/News-Archives/NRC-Highlights-Safety-Enhancements-3-Years-After-FPalo Verde NGS celebrating nuclear accomplishments
Palo Verde NGS celebrating nuclear accomplishments
http://www.fierceenergy.com/story/palo-verde-ngs-celebrating-nuclear-accomplishments/2014-03-14?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal
ANS Nuclear Matinee: World’s First AP1000 In Review
Nuclear Matinee: World’s First AP1000 In ReviewBy ansnuclearcafe on Mar 14, 2014 12:00 amThe world’s first Westinghouse AP1000 pressurized water reactor is scheduled to begin operation later this year at the Sanmen Nuclear Power Station in China. Another AP1000 is scheduled to go online later this year at the Haiyang nuclear power plant … Continue reading → Read in browser » |
FukushimaThird Anniversary Press: The Negative; The Positive
Fukushima Third Anniversary Press: The Negative
Over
the past two weeks, there have been numerous Japanese Press articles
commemorating the Fukushima nuclear accident. Most news reports continue
to emphasize the negative. However, a few have posted a positive
article or two, which was not the case at this time last year. The
positive will be covered in a subsequent posting. The
negative views seem to follow several common themes which are addressed
here.
and...
Fukushima Third Anniversary Press: The Positive
Unlike
last year’s second Fukushima anniversary Japanese press coverage, there
have been a few positive articles on the third anniversary of
Fukushima. OK…so I could find only five, and one is actually a Tepco
press release. But, this is definitely significant when compared to last
year when nothing positive came out of Japan’s Press.
Russia, Iran discuss further reactors
Russia, Iran discuss further reactors
Russia and Iran have reportedly reached a preliminary agreement for the construction of two more units at the Bushehr nuclear power plant. The first unit at Bushehr, completed by Russia, is already in full operation.http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/NN-Russia-Iran-discuss-further-reactors-1403144.html
Russia and Iran have reportedly reached a preliminary agreement for the construction of two more units at the Bushehr nuclear power plant. The first unit at Bushehr, completed by Russia, is already in full operation.http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/NN-Russia-Iran-discuss-further-reactors-1403144.html
Toshiba's first PWR component
Toshiba's first PWR component
The core barrel for the first AP1000 to start construction in the USA has been manufactured at a Toshiba facility in Japan, the first time the company has supplied a component for a pressurized water reactor (PWR).http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/C-Toshibas-first-PWR-component-140314st.html
The core barrel for the first AP1000 to start construction in the USA has been manufactured at a Toshiba facility in Japan, the first time the company has supplied a component for a pressurized water reactor (PWR).http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/C-Toshibas-first-PWR-component-140314st.html
Why the Cancer Cases in Fukushima Aren't Likely Linked to the Nuclear Disaster
Why the Cancer Cases in Fukushima Aren't Likely Linked to the Nuclear Disaster
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/03/140313-fukushima-nuclear-accident-cancer-cluster-thyroid-chernobyl/
Nuclear Power in the US, Market Outlook to 2025, 2013 Update - Capacity, Generation, Deployment Trends, Investments, Power Plants, Regulations, and Company Profiles
Nuclear Power in the US, Market Outlook to 2025, 2013 Update - Capacity, Generation, Deployment Trends, Investments, Power Plants, Regulations, and Company Profiles
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/we-know-beauty-panel-offers-first-rate-cosmetic-surgery-in-los-angeles-2013-03-13?reflink=MW_news_stmp
Why Russia calls a limited nuclear strike "de-escalation"
NIKOLAI N. SOKOV
Why Russia calls a limited nuclear strike "de-escalation"
Since 2000, Russian military doctrine has included the concept of “de-escalation”—the idea that, if Russia were faced with a large-scale conventional attack, it might respond with a limited nuclear strike. Here's why that's relevant to Ukraine.http://thebulletin.org/why-russia-calls-limited-nuclear-strike-de-escalation
Since 2000, Russian military doctrine has included the concept of “de-escalation”—the idea that, if Russia were faced with a large-scale conventional attack, it might respond with a limited nuclear strike. Here's why that's relevant to Ukraine.http://thebulletin.org/why-russia-calls-limited-nuclear-strike-de-escalation
How Beijing can help prevent nuclear terrorism
HUI ZHANG
How Beijing can help prevent nuclear terrorism
China’s nuclear establishment needs a cultural shift.http://thebulletin.org/how-beijing-can-help-prevent-nuclear-terrorism
How Beijing can help prevent nuclear terrorism
China’s nuclear establishment needs a cultural shift.http://thebulletin.org/how-beijing-can-help-prevent-nuclear-terrorism
Five assessments of the Fukushima disaster
CHARLES PERROW
Five assessments of the Fukushima disaster
A survey of books on the catastrophe at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, three years after 3/11.http://thebulletin.org/five-assessments-fukushima-disaster
Five assessments of the Fukushima disaster
A survey of books on the catastrophe at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, three years after 3/11.http://thebulletin.org/five-assessments-fukushima-disaster
Guest Post from Michael Shellenberger Ivanpah’s Land Footprint
Ivanpah’s Land Footprint
World's Largest Thermal Project Requires 92 Times the Acreage of Babcock & Wilcox "Twin Pack"
March 13, 2014 |
Ben Heard
The 392 MW, $2.2 billion Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating
System (SEGS) has just started delivering electricity.
It does not include any component of energy storage. It is expected to
deliver a high (for solar anyway) capacity factor of 31.4 percent.
That's thanks to a "remarkably intense solar resource of 2,717 kWh/m2/yr" combined with the dual-axis tracking.
As the map below shows, the areas of deepest red shading are blessed with this remarkably intense level of solar radiation. That's a huge area of land, and the available energy must be mind-bendingly large.
However, the map below shows us this non-portable resource is mostly distant from large loads. Unless we use electricity close to where we generate it, we are stuck with big losses through big transmission infrastructure. These are typically neither cheap, nor popular. This is a traditional criticism of the model of large centralized electricity generation dominated by fossil fuels and nuclear. It applies equally well to large solar.
It turns out Ivanpah was a canny location for SEGS. With proximity to the large loads of California, connection also did not require a brand new line, just the politically, socially, and environmentally simpler upgrade of existing infrastructure at a cost of $446 million to $484 million. Ivanpah also provided access to natural gas connection just 0.5 miles away for the gas back up it requires. Ivanpah represents a convergence of excellent resources, electricity network connection, gas connection, and load. That’s consistent with an economically rational process where the optimal sites are exploited earliest. Ivanpah was a dead-set winner for location of large solar.
Even with optimal resource, however, the system is absolutely enormous, with a quoted area of 3,500 acres.
If this is the future of clean energy, it's safe to say environmentalism has comprehensively rejected "small is beautiful.”
We can get the same amount of electricity with greater reliability, from a much smaller area. Consider the land requirements for the equivalent level of electricity generation for small modular reactors (SMR). I tested this by considering a "twin pack" of Babcock and Wilcox Generation mPower 180 MWe SMRs for a total of 360 MWe, close to the rated capacity of SEGS. This front-running SMR design is currently working through the licensing process in the US. An example design is shown below and discussed in more detail here.
The site footprint for this "Twin Pack" is 38 acres. That, combined with the far higher capacity factor, leads to a remarkable cascade of numbers, shown in the table below.
The small nuclear is capable of producing 242 times the electricity per unit land. Small nuclear is as staggering in scale as large solar, just for the opposite reason.
Some might say, well, who cares? We have the land, let's use it.
There is another criterion that matters when selecting sites for large solar: alternative uses of the land, including biodiversity.
In developing SEGS, the project proponent discovered the place was, literally, crawling with endangered reptiles, including the desert tortoise. The project proponent spent more than $56 million relocating the reptiles for their protection with mixed results. Sadly, it seems the lure of raw resource, utility connections, and proximity to load meant endangered species never really stood a chance. The company version of proceedings reads like genuinely good people within a very large company that can only ever put on a positive spin. The truth seems clear: the fauna would have been best served without the disturbance. That we are speaking of solar rather than fossil or uranium energy really does not matter.
As we further developments in both the most dense and most diffuse sources of energy available to us, extraordinary comparisons will arise. They will present us with profoundly different directions for humanity in the 21st century. There is a popular supposition that solar developments rule out the need for nuclear power in a rapidly developing world that remains dominated by fossil fuels. That is insupportable. It is every bit the "hallucinatory delusion" that Shellenberger says it is in Robert Stone's Pandora's Promise.
Asking whether we want large solar is an entirely moot question. We have it, we are going to get more of it and to the extent it helps us live more sustainably, so much the better. But if we environmentalists presume to advocate treading lightly on an earth that will be home to 10 billion deserving souls, then it is dense energy, not dilute energy that really shows us a way forward. Maybe small is beautiful after all.
Ben Heard is the director of Decarbonise SA, dedicated to moving
South Australia to zero greenhouse gas emissions. Like what you see
here? Please subscribe to the blog, Like Decarbonise SA on Facebook and follow @BenThinkClimate on Twitter. Read more about the potential for nuclear power in Australia at Zero Carbon Options.
As the map below shows, the areas of deepest red shading are blessed with this remarkably intense level of solar radiation. That's a huge area of land, and the available energy must be mind-bendingly large.
However, the map below shows us this non-portable resource is mostly distant from large loads. Unless we use electricity close to where we generate it, we are stuck with big losses through big transmission infrastructure. These are typically neither cheap, nor popular. This is a traditional criticism of the model of large centralized electricity generation dominated by fossil fuels and nuclear. It applies equally well to large solar.
It turns out Ivanpah was a canny location for SEGS. With proximity to the large loads of California, connection also did not require a brand new line, just the politically, socially, and environmentally simpler upgrade of existing infrastructure at a cost of $446 million to $484 million. Ivanpah also provided access to natural gas connection just 0.5 miles away for the gas back up it requires. Ivanpah represents a convergence of excellent resources, electricity network connection, gas connection, and load. That’s consistent with an economically rational process where the optimal sites are exploited earliest. Ivanpah was a dead-set winner for location of large solar.
Even with optimal resource, however, the system is absolutely enormous, with a quoted area of 3,500 acres.
If this is the future of clean energy, it's safe to say environmentalism has comprehensively rejected "small is beautiful.”
We can get the same amount of electricity with greater reliability, from a much smaller area. Consider the land requirements for the equivalent level of electricity generation for small modular reactors (SMR). I tested this by considering a "twin pack" of Babcock and Wilcox Generation mPower 180 MWe SMRs for a total of 360 MWe, close to the rated capacity of SEGS. This front-running SMR design is currently working through the licensing process in the US. An example design is shown below and discussed in more detail here.
The site footprint for this "Twin Pack" is 38 acres. That, combined with the far higher capacity factor, leads to a remarkable cascade of numbers, shown in the table below.
The small nuclear is capable of producing 242 times the electricity per unit land. Small nuclear is as staggering in scale as large solar, just for the opposite reason.
Some might say, well, who cares? We have the land, let's use it.
There is another criterion that matters when selecting sites for large solar: alternative uses of the land, including biodiversity.
In developing SEGS, the project proponent discovered the place was, literally, crawling with endangered reptiles, including the desert tortoise. The project proponent spent more than $56 million relocating the reptiles for their protection with mixed results. Sadly, it seems the lure of raw resource, utility connections, and proximity to load meant endangered species never really stood a chance. The company version of proceedings reads like genuinely good people within a very large company that can only ever put on a positive spin. The truth seems clear: the fauna would have been best served without the disturbance. That we are speaking of solar rather than fossil or uranium energy really does not matter.
As we further developments in both the most dense and most diffuse sources of energy available to us, extraordinary comparisons will arise. They will present us with profoundly different directions for humanity in the 21st century. There is a popular supposition that solar developments rule out the need for nuclear power in a rapidly developing world that remains dominated by fossil fuels. That is insupportable. It is every bit the "hallucinatory delusion" that Shellenberger says it is in Robert Stone's Pandora's Promise.
Asking whether we want large solar is an entirely moot question. We have it, we are going to get more of it and to the extent it helps us live more sustainably, so much the better. But if we environmentalists presume to advocate treading lightly on an earth that will be home to 10 billion deserving souls, then it is dense energy, not dilute energy that really shows us a way forward. Maybe small is beautiful after all.
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July 24, 2013Environmentalism’s Merchants of Doubt
May 07, 2013Clean Energy Stagnation
July 09, 2013
Michael Shellenberger, President, Breakthrough Institute
436 14th St, Suite 820, Oakland, CA 94612
cell (best): 415-309-4200 :: office: 510.550.8800 x355 :: Skype: Shellenberger
Penn Enerjgy's Top Oil & Gas News 3/14
Top Oil & Gas News | |||
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South Korea to spend $1.8 billion to build
world's fourth largest oil hub South Korea plans to construct the world's fourth largest oil hub as it aims to become a major oil trading post with a total capacity of 56.6 million barrels, South Korea's largest news outlet Yonhap News Agency reported. South Korea began expanding its number of oil storage facilities by opening a location in Yeosu in 2013 with the capacity to hold up to 8.2 million barrels of oil. Full Article Share: |
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PennEnergy Video News
Update From Malta's offshore exploration incentives, to oil sands challenges in Utah and Alberta, to Petrobras' billion-dollar investment plan, all of the week's biggest headlines are in the PennEnergy Video News Update. Full Article Share: |
This Week's Most Popular Oil & Gas News
• BP using mini crude oil refinery to evade export ban
• Malta offers incentives to European offshore exploration companies
• Oil sands development facing legal challenges in Utah and Alberta
• Petrobras raises $8.5 billion for offshore exploration
• The Irony of Fate, Or How I Learned My Brother Doesn’t Love Me
• Shale exploration: Magnum Hunter Resources – A refocus in US shale strategy for sustainable growth
• Seadrill agrees to sell ultra-deepwater drillship
• KrisEnergy expands offshore oil and gas footprint in Bangladesh
• GEA delivers heat exchangers for LNG production to Yamal
• Hess to appoint Terrence J. Checki to Board of Directors
• Gazprom announces gas pipeline milestone in Turkey
• Chevron highlights upstream performance at annual security analyst meeting
• Statoil awards contracts for Barents seismic
• FTTN: Oklahoma oil and gas well on track to meet projections
• RIL announces maintenance at Jamnagar crude oil refinery complex
• APPEA: Greens ignore facts in call to end shale gas development
• Energy Transfer announces open season for Bakken/Three Forks oil pipeline service
• CNPC signs agreement to establish gas pipeline company in Tajikistan
• BP using mini crude oil refinery to evade export ban
• Malta offers incentives to European offshore exploration companies
• Oil sands development facing legal challenges in Utah and Alberta
• Petrobras raises $8.5 billion for offshore exploration
• The Irony of Fate, Or How I Learned My Brother Doesn’t Love Me
• Shale exploration: Magnum Hunter Resources – A refocus in US shale strategy for sustainable growth
• Seadrill agrees to sell ultra-deepwater drillship
• KrisEnergy expands offshore oil and gas footprint in Bangladesh
• GEA delivers heat exchangers for LNG production to Yamal
• Hess to appoint Terrence J. Checki to Board of Directors
• Gazprom announces gas pipeline milestone in Turkey
• Chevron highlights upstream performance at annual security analyst meeting
• Statoil awards contracts for Barents seismic
• FTTN: Oklahoma oil and gas well on track to meet projections
• RIL announces maintenance at Jamnagar crude oil refinery complex
• APPEA: Greens ignore facts in call to end shale gas development
• Energy Transfer announces open season for Bakken/Three Forks oil pipeline service
• CNPC signs agreement to establish gas pipeline company in Tajikistan
Energy Insights | |
Black Swan: Imagine no possessions - I
wonder if you can? John Lennon's iconic song "Imagine" has been rated #3 on Rolling Stone's list of the "500 Greatest Songs of All Time". It envisages a world where elimination of some of the major things that divide humanity - religion, nationalism, and materialism - are discarded in order to achieve global peace and harmony. Full Article Share: |
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Climbing the Mid-Career
Mountain Many experienced executives unhappy with their jobs are as afraid of tackling a mid-life career change as they would be planning an ascent of Mt. Everest – both seem distant, difficult, scary and potentially disastrous. Yet in terms of planning and execution, those looking to start a new career have much to learn from mountain climbers. Full Article |
Pennenergy's Top Power Headlines 3/14
Top Power Headlines | |||
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Prologue to Catastrophe: An Eyewitness
Account from Inside Fukushima To commemorate the third anniversary of the Fukushima disaster, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists shares an eyewitness account from inside the nuclear complex immediately following the massive earthquake and Tsunami. Full Article Share: |
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House votes to block proposed EPA rules
for coal-fired power plants The U.S. House of Representatives have approved a bill to block proposed EPA regulations setting stricter emissions limits for new coal-fired power plants. Full Article Share: |
Most Popular Power News This Week
• Gas leak suspected in deadly explosion that levels 2 NYC buildings
• Russian occupation in Ukraine raises questions on energy
• NRC issues annual assessments for U.S. nuclear power plants
• Employee Innovations Address Environmental Concerns of CO2 Storage,Carbon Ash
• AES Energy Storage unveils Advancion, a complete battery-based grid resource
• Report urges better cybersecurity for North American electricity grid
• Solvay launches production of torrefied biomass in U.S.
• Xcel fund grants $42MM to 29 renewable energy projects
• Alstom secures first wind turbine contract in Korea
• Westinghouse signs nuclear agreement with Technical University of Sofia
• Gas leak suspected in deadly explosion that levels 2 NYC buildings
• Russian occupation in Ukraine raises questions on energy
• NRC issues annual assessments for U.S. nuclear power plants
• Employee Innovations Address Environmental Concerns of CO2 Storage,Carbon Ash
• AES Energy Storage unveils Advancion, a complete battery-based grid resource
• Report urges better cybersecurity for North American electricity grid
• Solvay launches production of torrefied biomass in U.S.
• Xcel fund grants $42MM to 29 renewable energy projects
• Alstom secures first wind turbine contract in Korea
• Westinghouse signs nuclear agreement with Technical University of Sofia
PennEnergy Blogs | |
All Energy: Cha-cha-
cha-Changes One of the biggest shifts to occur over the years was my sudden realization that stuff comes from places and these once elusive places need access to resources to make and deliver said stuff. Seems elementary, but one of the pitfalls of city convenience can often be ignorance. Full Article Share: |
Editor's Note 3/14
Dear Readers
I have business meetings today. I will resume posting this evening. Have a good day.
Michele Kearney
I have business meetings today. I will resume posting this evening. Have a good day.
Michele Kearney
Thursday, March 13, 2014
U.S. For International Convention To Resolve Nuclear Liability Issue
U.S. For International Convention To Resolve Nuclear Liability Issue
http://www.indolink.com/displayArticleS.php?id=031214074839
http://www.indolink.com/displayArticleS.php?id=031214074839
ANS Update 3/13 New ANS Awards in Fuel Cycle and Waste Management
Updates from ANS Nuclear Cafe Blog
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