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Summertime is in full swing which means it’s that time of year again to press play on Lorde’s discography. From Pure Heroine to Solar Power, Lorde seems to never disappoint eager fans. It’s been 7 years since Lorde’s greatest project, Melodrama, became ours. Mega Lorde fan or not, you’ve probably heard a majority of the songs on the album and related to many. It’s about growing up, making mistakes, falling out of love with yourself and others, and finding what makes life exciting.
But, what makes Melodrama so iconic? We have to start with the cover art. It’s literally art that if we saw it walking through the MoMA, we wouldn’t think twice. The hues of blues, browns, and pinks on the cover give the songs so much life and really remind us that making timeless music, like that on Melodrama, is a true form of art.
Here are 11 iconic paintings that pair perfectly with each song on the album.
“’Cause honey I’ll come get my things, but I can’t let go/I’m waiting for it, that green light, I want it/Oh, I wish I could get my things and just let go/I’m waiting for it, that green light, I want it”
When thinking about lighting in famous paintings, we first thought of Nighthawks by Edward Hopper. The subtle green lights shining in front of the diner add so much dimension to the painting, just like ‘Green Light’ adds character and depth to Melodrama.
Find Nighthawks at The Art Institute of Chicago.
“We’re king and queen of the weekend/Ain’t a pill that could touch our rush/(But what will we do when we’re sober?)/Uh, when you dream with a fever/Bet you wish you could touch our rush/(But what will we do when we’re sober?)”
Whether you are a wine girlie or a beer girlie (or neither!) you probably recognize Bacchus by Caravaggio. This painting portrays a young Dioynusus (or Bacchus in the Roman language), the God of Wine, inviting viewers to join him for a glass of red wine. The Greeks had it pretty great, huh? If we could eat grapes from the vine under the Grecian sun all day, we would. Lorde‘s music is the closest we come to a perfect summer vacation!
Find Bacchus at the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, Italy.
“Might get your friend to drive, but he can hardly see/We’ll end up painted on the road, red and chrome/All the broken glass sparkling/I guess we’re partying”
When we listen to ‘Homemade Dynamite’ we envision a room up in flames (metaphorically or literally) either because the music is just that good or because of a different reason. For this reason, we paired the third track on the album with The Burning of the Houses of Parliament by J.M.W Turner and William Turner. Turner’s painting mixes beautiful hues of red and orange that almost make the viewer feel calm amid the chaos. This mirrors how we feel when we listen to Melodrama.
Find The Burning of the Houses of Parliament at The Tate in London, United Kingdom.
“Our thing progresses/I call and you come through/Blow all my friendships/To sit in hell with you/But we’re the greatest/They’ll hang us in the Louvre/Down the back, but who cares—still the Louvre”
This is one of our favorite, if not our number one, track on the album. Blasting this song on full volume makes us want to run down the miles and miles of halls in The Louvre with our besties and Lorde herself. Naturally, we went with the most famous painting housed in The Louvre, The Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci.
Find The Mona Lisa at The Louvre in Paris, France.
“They say, “You’re a little much for me/You’re a liability/You’re a little much for me”/So they pull back, make other plans/I understand, I’m a liability”
A famous painting that evokes feelings of horror, sadness, and grief is The Scream by Edward Munch. The beauty of art is that each person who views (or listens) to it, can interpret it differently. That’s how we feel about ‘Liability’ and The Scream. Some may find it beautiful, others may feel uncomfortable. How do you interpret these two pieces of art?
Find The Scream at The National Museum in Oslo, Norway.
“Hard feelings/These are what they call hard feelings of love/When the sweet words and fevers/All leave us right here in the cold-old-old/Alone with the hard feelings of love/God, I wish I believed ya/When you told me this was my home-ome-ome”
When deciding which painting to pair with ‘Hard Feelings/Loveless’ we wanted to pick something that evoked heartbreak and pain. Ophelia by John Everett Millias is stunning, yet quite painful to look at. A young woman bathed in flowers, lying in a pool of water, yet we cannot tell if she is miserable or simply full of bliss. Is this what it feels like to be “alone with the hard feelings of love?”
Find Ophelia at The Tate in London, United Kingdom.
“All the glamour and the trauma/And the f***** melodrama, whoa, whoa/All the gun fights and the lime lights/And the holy sick divine nights, whoa”
You know we couldn’t forget about the man himself, Vincent van Gogh. He’s created dozens of iconic paintings that we know very well and love today. But, have you seen The Drinkers by Vincent van Gogh? It features his same artistic flair that makes his work stand out, but also relates to the themes in ‘Sober II (Melodrama).’
Find The Drinkers at The Art Institute of Chicago.

“I am my mother’s child, I’ll love you ’til my breathing stops/I’ll love you ’til you call the cops on me/But in our darkest hours, I stumbled on a secret power/I’ll find a way to be without you, babe”
The lore behind this song cannot go without a quick mention…but, what does the song really mean to us? Writers, and creators alike, are often misunderstood but quickly become the ones to be celebrated later on in life for their accomplishments that were once taken for granted. One of our favorite paintings depicting a writer is that of Emile Zola by Edouard Manet. The scattered feather pens and messy workspace is so relatable!
Find Emile Zola at the Musée d’Orsay in Paris, France.
“So I fall/Into continents and cars/All the stages and the stars/I turn all of it to just a supercut”
Deciding to chase a memory so far away from your mind is a hard decision to make. Whether that’s in love or in familial relationships, sometimes things happen that we wish to forget about altogether. The Persistence of Memory by Salvador Dalí reminds us of those themes. We can try our hardest to erase our memory, but it always remains persistent. The clocks draped over various objects remind us that time cannot be warped, no matter how hard we wish it to be.
Find The Persistence of Memory at the Museum of Modern Art.

“And maybe all this is the party/Maybe the tears and the highs we breathe, oh no/And maybe all this is the party/Maybe we just do it violently”
Every time we listen to this song we get quite emotional. We can never stop the tears from falling down, so we just let ourselves feel all the feels that Lorde evokes within us. To match with us, we’ve chosen Crying Girl by Roy Lichtenstein. We love the style of art that Lichtenstein took with this painting and hope that Lorde gains inspiration from it for future cover art!
This painting is currently not on view.
“All of the things we’re taking/‘Cause we are young and we’re ashamed/Send us to perfect places/All of our heroes fading/Now I can’t stand to be alone/Let’s go to perfect places”
When we think about perfect places and perfect landscapes, we instantly think of Claude Monet. Our favorite Monet is The Artist’s Garden at Giverny. If we could escape to any place, it would be the garden portrayed here. Perfect places are full of brightly colored flowers and the serenity that nature brings. How would you paint your perfect place? Or, how would you write about it in a song?
Find The Artist’s Garden at Giverny at the Musée d’Orsay in Paris, France.

Which song on Melodrama is your favorite? Be sure to let us know by tweeting us at @thehoneypop or visiting us on Facebook and Instagram.
TO LEARN MORE ABOUT LORDE:
FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TWITTER | YOUTUBE
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The Catholic University of America, along with Rockville-based solar energy company Standard Solar, unveiled the city’s largest, brand new 25-acre solar array located on the university’s West Campus on Monday.
The Catholic University of America, along with Rockville-based solar energy company Standard Solar, unveiled the city’s largest, brand-new, 25-acre solar array located on the university’s West Campus on Monday.
At the solar array’s unveiling ceremony, representatives from Catholic, Standard Solar and the Department of Energy spoke to community members.
“What’s unique about this array is the university gets to benefit from it, but also the community can subscribe,” Standard Solar President and CEO Scott Wiater said.
“We own the solar and we’re going to own and operate the solar for the long term. The university gets some of the electricity, and then some of the community members can subscribe and get the electricity at a discount to what they’d otherwise pay to the utility,” he added.
The previously undeveloped land will now hold 13,800 solar panels.
Wiater said the 42 rows of panels will produce 7.5 megawatts, which is equivalent to taking 1,500 cars off the road. They expect the solar array to be able to support around 1,200 households in the Northeast D.C. area.
Catholic University Executive Vice President Rob Spector said the project has been in the works for about four years. He said the university was looking for a way to make good and productive use of its West Campus area.
“It’s a tremendous amount of power generation. And it will help keep our costs down here at the university for energy, make productive use of this space and also keep this land in our possession for the long term, so that when we’re ready to expand the campus, we’ll have the opportunity to do so at our leisure,” Spector said.
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Grace Newton
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Solar panels practically sold themselves in Europe after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine sent electricity prices skyrocketing. Now, as prices have begun to fall, solar installers have found themselves spending more on marketing to attract customers.
One proven way to win more business has been to offer financing. But small operations usually don’t have the resources to underwrite new installations, which cost tens of thousands of euros each, forcing customers to head to the bank. Problem is, many customers switch installers “because on the way to the bank, they get contacted by five other providers,” Jodok Betschart, co-founder and co-CEO of Cloover, told TechCrunch.
To Betschart and his co-founders, Peder Broms and Valentin Gönczy, the answer wasn’t just better project-bidding software, but the addition of financing to help small installers provide loans themselves. “In one conversation, installers get a real-time underwriting and credit decision,” Betschart said.
Their startup, Europe-based Cloover, has developed software that ingests customer data to assess not only their ability to repay a loan, but also how much money they spend on energy. In many cases, a monthly payment for solar panels will be less than what someone pays for their electric bill.
“But a bank doesn’t really integrate these energy savings into their models,” Betschart said. “Many times, we can enable financing where a normal bank said they cannot do it.”
To underwrite those loans, Cloover recently raised $108.5 million in debt alongside a $5.5 million seed round led by Lowercarbon Capital with participation from 9900 Capital and QED’s Fontes, the company exclusively told TechCrunch. The startup will own the loans in a special-purpose vehicle that’s financed through senior debt providers, and it will cover a small portion of them via equity, Betschart said.
The company charges installers a transaction fee for each loan they originate, and it also claims a percentage of each loan payment. When Cloover rolls out software later this year to allow homeowners to use their batteries to sell electrons to the grid, it’ll also take a cut.
Cloover will use the funding to hire sales and customer success teams to train installers on how to use financing for energy upgrades, Betschart said. Today, the company is working with about 200 installers, though he added that there are thousands more who might be able to use its service.
Giving small installers access to financing should help speed the adoption of climate-friendly technologies, Betschart said.
“Eighty-five percent of all the renewable energy installations of solar energy storage, heat pumps, energy management systems, and so on, they’re done through local and SMB installers,” he said. Big companies already have sophisticated platforms to assess customers’ financial capacities, he added. “The only way to achieve the energy transition is by offering exactly the same optionality to SMB installers.”
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Tim De Chant
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BECKER, Minn. — In a new rule, the EPA says coal plants need to start capturing their smokestack emissions or shut down. It’s a move to curb planet-warming emissions — something Minnesota wants to do by going carbon-free with our electricity by 2040.
Utilities are doing so by shifting to more renewables.
Xcel Energy’s Sherco coal plant in Becker is a mammoth maze of massive machinery.
“What you see on the ground is about 2 million tons of coal which equates to two months of burning if both are operating at 100% power,” said Plant Director Michelle Neal.
That coal is loaded into a 21-story 3,000-degree fireball boiler that’s suspended from the roof.
“It’s rewarding and it’s a fascinating machine,” said foreman Eric Stotko who has been working here for 25 years.
“This is American industry at its absolute best at its height,” said Neal.
The Sherco plant powered 1.5 million homes for nearly five decades before one of the three units shut down a few months ago.
There are other signs that the power is shifting. One of the three units is officially offline for good. The other two are also slated for retirement.
“This really is the epicenter of Minnesota’s energy transition,” said Ryan Long, Xcel Energy President of Minesota and North Dakota. “This will be the last coal unit on our system to retire.”
Coal-powered plants like this one still generate nearly one-fourth of Minnesota’s electricity. That’s down from nearly 50% in 2014 Natural gas makes up another 24%. Nuclear fills in another 21%. Renewables, like wind, solar, hyrdro and biomass, now pull the most weight at 32% — up from 21% just a decade ago.
WCCO
You can see that growth on the horizon from the roof of the Sherco plant.
Just up the road from the Sherco plant is Xcel’s Sherco solar facility. It’s the largest solar project in the state of Minnesota, and by the time it’s done in 2026, it’ll be the fifth-largest solar facility in the country.
“There’s a lot of pride in it I’d like to say this is kind of our first leap into utility-scale solar for Xcel Energy, and we’re doing it right and doing it big,” said Chris Hogg, Xcel Energy Senior Operations Manager
When it’s done there will be 1.8 million solar panels covering 4,500 acres across three sites in the area.
“This was mostly potato fields,” said Hogg.
They’ll start testing this first phase over the summer and flip the switch this fall.
” I think Minnesota is a great place for solar,” said Hogg “It’s very reliable energy at this point.”
Renewables have grown big time in our state. Minnesota is 11th in the nation just behind Colorado. Texas leads the pack.
The MPCA says since 2005, emissions from electricity generation are down more than 50%.
“Solar is only 3% of our mix right now, so it’s exciting to have a lot more online,”
“We’ve seen jobs created, we’ve seen a lot of investment in the state.”
Minnesota is in the top 15 states for solar production and the leader among surrounding states.
When it comes to wind, we’re 10th in the country. In our region, Iowa is out front, but we’re tied with North Dakota for 2nd place.
“nobody loves the idea of shutting down we’ve been doing this a long time careers were built around doing this kind of work and we’d love to just keep right on doing it,” Stotko said when asked about the transition.
“We made a commitment that all of our employees at Sherco that they will have a job with Xcel Energy if they want one when this plant retires in 2030,” said Long. “They have supported us for decades and we have supported them and that’s a partnership we want to continue.”
Despite the significance of water in our state, hydroelectric power plants produce only about 1% of our total electricity. That’s because of our terrain and a number of other factors.
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Erin Hassanzadeh
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Super Bowl 2024 is setting the stage not just for a showdown between top NFL teams, but also for a major environmental milestone. This year, the Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas will host a Super Bowl powered entirely by renewable energy — a first in the history of the event.
The seemingly desolate area of the Nevada desert is the source of the green energy used to power the game.
A vast solar farm with over 621,000 panels shimmers like a mirage but with the capability to power close to 60,000 residential customers — or one very big stadium.
The Las Vegas Raiders, which call Allegiant Stadium home, have entered into a 25-year agreement to buy power from this new solar installation owned by NV Energy.
CEO Doug Cannon said that the solar installation would supply more than 10 megawatts of power for the Super Bowl. This amount of energy is roughly equivalent to the consumption of 46,000 homes.
Sustainability was front of mind as the stadium was being constructed, according to Raiders President Sandra Douglass Morgan.
The stadium’s roof is made of a sustainable plastic material that allows in about 10% of daylight but blocks all solar heat, so it takes less energy to cool the building. The grass field is moved outdoors on a rail system to get natural sunlight rather than using energy-intensive growing lights. And everything from grass clippings to food scraps and cigarette butts are composted or converted into other forms of energy.
“When you come to a game you may be thinking about just focusing on the game but when they hear that and know that we’re being conscious of our environmental footprint, hopefully that guest will leave and have that same mindset when they go back home,” said Morgan.
The Super Bowl’s green energy push was highlighted during a visit from U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm, who inspected the stadium’s main electrical entry room.
“People sometimes get nervous about renewable power because they’re not sure if it’s going to be reliable. The fact that renewable power can power a facility like this reliably should speak volumes about what could happen in other communities,” Granholm said.
The solar farm not only powers the current needs but also houses massive batteries to store renewable energy, ensuring a five-hour power supply even when the sun isn’t shining. This technology is seen as a key component in transitioning the U.S. power grid toward 100% clean electricity by 2035, a goal set by President Biden.
Despite the focus on environmental sustainability, the Super Bowl’s entertainment, including a halftime show featuring performer Usher, will not be compromised.
“We have enough power for Usher and all of his lights and all the fanfare that’ll be there,” said Cannon.
Watch the Super Bowl on your local CBS station, on Nickelodeon and streaming on Paramount+ on Sunday, Feb. 11.
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BEIJING — American electric automaker Tesla’s plans to produce energy-storage batteries in China moved forward on Friday with a signing ceremony for the land acquisition for a new factory in Shanghai, China’s state media said.
Construction is scheduled to start early next year with production to come on line by the end of the year, the official Xinhua News Agency said.
The factory won’t build batteries for cars but for electric utilities and other companies to store power. Such storage units have become increasingly important with the growth in solar power and wind energy, which only generate electricity when weather conditions are favorable and need to store it for when residential and commercial users need it.
The new factory will initially produce 10,000 of Tesla’s Megapack units annually for sale worldwide, Xinhua said.
The Tesla project is a rare piece of good news for the Chinese economy, which has seen a sharp drop in foreign investment this year. The Commerce Ministry said this week that foreign investment in the first 11 months of this year was down 10% compared with the same period last year.
Foreign companies are worried about the Chinese government’s increasing control over business on national security and other grounds, as well as growing U.S. restrictions on technology trade with China.
China is a major market and manufacturing center for Tesla, and the company’s CEO, Elon Musk, has built close ties with Chinese officials even as U.S.-China relations soured. In May, he met the commerce minister and the then foreign minister in Beijing.
Tesla built an electric vehicle plant in Shanghai in 2019 that assembles cars for China, Europe and other overseas markets. It is the No. 2 seller in the booming Chinese market for electric vehicles. The market leader is Chinese auto company BYD, which announced plans Friday to build electric vehicles in Hungary in what will be its first car factory in Europe.
Tesla sold 464,654 vehicles in China in the first 10 months of the year, up 37.5% over last year and accounting for 12% of China’s electric vehicle sales, according to the China Passenger Car Association, the research arm of the China Automobile Dealers Association.
China is also by far the world leader in installing wind and solar capacity, making it a major market for energy storage.
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Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.
Around the globe, clean energy investment has never been higher, creating plenty of opportunities for investors who want to take advantage of trends like recovering supply chains, the IRA (Inflation Reduction Act), and more. But where to begin?
Many large companies such as CEG and FLNC are performing well, but energy stocks can shift (especially with inflation-targeting interest rates being high right now), and sometimes quickly! How do you know where to focus your investments? Talking to your financial advisor is always a good start, but I also have several tips on where to begin with healthy renewable energy investment for the coming years.
In the early 2020s, two rapidly expanding areas are solar power and EV (electric vehicle) investment, making these sectors great places to start. Both are seeing high growth due to pent-up demand during the pandemic and more widespread adoption in low-saturation areas.
As with much clean energy spending, investments primarily focus on a few high-growth regions, including China, the EU, the United States and Japan. But opportunities also exist in smaller markets where numbers are starting to rise, notably India, Africa and Brazil. There’s plenty of growth potential in all these regions, especially as EVs grow increasingly familiar with infrastructure build-out to support them. This remains primarily focused on urban growth with excursions into commercial markets for short-length delivery and freight.
Related: 5 Top Green Energy Stocks To Look Out for in 2023
As you research potential investments, remember that some parts of the renewable supply chain still need to be stronger or are particularly important to the long-term success of products. That includes makers of battery storage components, which are necessary to utilize solar and EV-related energy investments fully. It includes makers of the latest high-quality photovoltaics, ocean-rated turbines and micro-inverters. For some examples, look into the operations of First Solar (FSLR), Enphase (ENPH), Vestas (VWS) and SunPower (SPWR).
Related: Oil and Gas Stocks: A Safe Way to Invest in Renewable Energy
For many years, one of the most reliable ways to invest in clean energy was EFTs (exchange-traded funds) specializing in renewable markets. Because renewable energy is seeing lots of global growth across many sectors, fueled partly by concerns about traditional supplies from Russia and Iran, EFTs are strong if low-risk options to get started on energy investments.
Another thing I like about today’s EFTs is that they allow for broad targeting of specific sectors. For example, FAN focuses on wind deployments, and TAN is on solar. Each fund has a portfolio with mixes weighted toward various technologies.
For ground-floor investments with lots of long-term growth opportunities in the next decade, I suggest looking toward the global south. Currently, the global south is seeing a significant shortage of renewable investment compared to many northern regions. Brazil and Australia have growing opportunities, but Africa and many parts of South America still need development. There are lots of options here for investors who don’t mind a slow burn and want to take advantage of projects in the making.
Related: 5 Long-term Strategies To Create Wealth
Wind has come a long way in recent years, and many farms, especially offshore options in ideal global locations, are planned for the 2020s. Like solar, wind has many entry points for investment, from turbine creation and other manufacturing to battery storage capabilities. The EU, USA, and China all have many farms in various stages of development, most focused on using the latest engineering and software to maximize efficiency.
Hydrogen is also in a good spot. Much of the discussion focuses on green hydrogen, which uses low-carbon techniques. Green hydrogen has the potential to meet many business-related carbon footprint goals, so its use could spread across the United States and the EU, as well as other nations, in the coming decade. But anywhere with the potential for hydrogen infrastructure shows promise.
YieldCos are ambitious investment vehicles that purchase power generation assets directly with a focus on profit growth that translates to high dividends. If dividends are your goal, look into YieldCos as a higher-risk option with lots of opportunities for returns…especially once interest rates and inflation finish cooling down.
This is just the start of the potential investments in renewable energy. It’s an industry that covers multiple fields, including rare earth, shipping companies and many types of manufacturing. Clean energy has never been more popular, but watching the (metaphorical) headwinds and political movements is always a good idea as you balance your portfolio.
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Abe Issa
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WASHINGTON — The cancellation of two large offshore wind projects in New Jersey is the latest in a series of setbacks for the nascent U.S. offshore wind industry, jeopardizing the Biden administration’s goals of powering 10 million homes from towering ocean-based turbines by 2030 and establishing a carbon-free electric grid five years later.
The Danish wind energy developer Ørsted said this week it’s scrapping its Ocean Wind I and II projects off southern New Jersey due to problems with supply chains, higher interest rates and a failure to obtain the amount of tax credits the company wanted. Together, the projects were supposed to deliver over 2.2 gigawatts of power.
The news comes after developers in New England canceled power contacts for three projects that would have provided another 3.2 gigawatts of wind power to Massachusetts and Connecticut. They said their projects were no longer financially feasible.
In total, the cancellations equate to nearly one-fifth of President Joe Biden’s goal of 30 gigawatts of offshore wind power by 2030.
Despite the setbacks, offshore wind continues to move forward, the White House said, citing recent investments by New York state and approval by the Interior Department of the nation’s largest planned offshore wind farm in Virginia. Interior’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management also announced new offshore wind lease areas in the Gulf of Mexico.
“While macroeconomic headwinds are creating challenges for some projects, momentum remains on the side of an expanding U.S. offshore wind industry — creating good-paying union jobs in manufacturing, shipbuilding and construction,″ while strengthening the power grid and providing new clean energy resources for American families and businesses, the White House said in a statement Thursday.
Industry experts now say that while the U.S. likely won’t hit 30 gigawatts by 2030, a significant amount of offshore wind power is still attainable by then, roughly 20 to 22 gigawatts or more. That’s far more than the nation has today, with just two small demonstration projects that provide a small fraction of a single gigawatt of power.
Large, ocean-based wind farms are the linchpin of government plans to shift to renewable energy, particularly in populous East Coast states with limited land for wind turbines or solar arrays. Eight East Coast states have offshore wind mandates set by legislation or executive actions that commit them to adding a combined capacity of more than 45 gigawatts, according to ClearView Energy Partners, a Washington-based research firm.
“I think very few people would argue that the U.S. will have the gigawatts the Biden administration wants″ by 2030, said Timothy Fox, a ClearView vice president. “But I do think eventually we will have it and will likely exceed it.”
Offshore wind developers have publicly lamented the global economic gales they’re facing. Molly Morris, president of U.S. offshore wind for the Norwegian company Equinor, said the industry is facing a “perfect storm.”
High inflation, supply chain disruptions and the rising cost of capital and building materials are making projects more expensive while developers are trying to get the first large U.S. offshore wind farms opened. Ørsted is writing off $4 billion, due largely to cancellation of the two New Jersey projects.
David Hardy, group executive vice president and CEO Americas at Ørsted, said it’s crucial to lower the levelized cost of offshore wind in the United States so Americans aren’t debating between affordability and clean energy. Hardy spoke at the American Clean Power industry group’s offshore wind conference in Boston last month on a panel with Morris.
“We’re probably a little bit too ambitious,” he said. “We came in hot, we came in fast, we thought we could build projects that were inexpensive, large projects right out of the gate. And it turns out that we probably still need to go through the same learning curve that Europe did, with higher prices in the beginning and a little slower pace.”
In May, there were 27 U.S. offshore wind projects that had negotiated agreements with states to provide power before the brunt of the cost increases hit, according to Walt Musial, offshore wind chief engineer at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, an arm of the Energy Department. The delay between signing purchase agreements and getting final approval to build allowed unexpected cost increases to render many projects economically unfeasible, he said.
Musial called Ørsted’s announcement a setback for the industry but “not a fatal blow by any means.”
On Tuesday, the Biden administration announced approval of the nation’s largest offshore wind project. The Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project will be a 2.6 gigawatt wind farm off of Virginia Beach to power 900,000 homes. And even as Ørsted announced the New Jersey cancellations, it said it was investing with utility Eversource to move forward with construction of Revolution Wind, Rhode Island and Connecticut’s first utility-scale offshore wind farm, a 704-megawatt project.
The current outlook from S&P Global Commodity Insights is 22 gigawatts by 2030, though that will be revised due to the recent industry announcements.
New York state, meanwhile, recently announced the award of 4 gigawatts of offshore wind capacity as it seeks to obtain 70% of its electricity from renewable sources by 2030 and 9 gigawatts of offshore wind by 2035. That announcement came shortly after New York regulators rejected a request for bigger payments for four offshore wind projects worth a combined 4.2 gigawatts of power. Those developers said they were assessing the viability of their projects.
Any delay in offshore wind means continued reliance on fossil fuel-burning power plants, according to environmental advocates.
“The quicker they come online, the quicker our air quality improves,” said Conor Bambrick, director of policy for Environmental Advocates NY.
New Jersey, under Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy, has established increasingly stringent clean energy goals, moving from 100% clean energy by 2050 to 100% by 2035. Murphy cast Ørsted’s decision as “outrageous” and an abandonment of its commitments, but the two-term Democrat said New Jersey plans to move forward with offshore wind. Additional offshore projects are pending before the state’s utility regulators.
“We definitely remain optimistic,” said Catherine Klinger, Murphy’s climate action and green economy executive director. “Offshore wind is a lot bigger than Ørsted.”
The first U.S. commercial-scale offshore wind farms are currently under construction: Vineyard Wind off Massachusetts and South Fork Wind off Rhode Island and New York.
Catherine Bowes, a senior director at Turn Forward, a nonprofit that advocates for offshore wind, believes the industry still has strong momentum because of the quality of the wind resources off the coastlines and the growing demand for clean electricity to meet decarbonization goals. The nonprofit is advocating for 100 gigawatts of U.S. offshore wind power.
“The bumpiness we’re seeing right now in no way indicates an inability of offshore wind to play a major role in the U.S. electric grid,″ Bowes said Thursday.
Terminated contracts can be rebid, presumably with higher prices to cover development costs. Offshore wind developers are asking the federal government to ensure the industry can take advantage of tax credits under the Inflation Reduction Act to help these first projects become operational.
Michael Brown, CEO of Ocean Winds North America, which is developing several offshore projects, including one in New Jersey, said at the clean power conference that the industry will thrive in the U.S. but “it might be a little bit slower than we all want it.”
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McDermott reported from Providence, Rhode Island; Hill from Albany, New York and Catalini from Trenton, New Jersey.
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Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives support from several private foundations. See more about AP’s climate initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
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UPPER TOWNSHIP, N.J. — For decades, tourists heading to the New Jersey beach resorts of Ocean City and Cape May saw the towering smokestack of the B.L. England Generating Station as they zipped past it on the Garden State Parkway.
The 463-foot-tall (141.1-meter) stack was a local landmark and even a weather forecaster for some residents who glanced outside to see which way emissions from its top were blowing, and how fast, as they decided what to wear for the day.
But the power plant, which burned coal and oil over the decades, closed in May 2019, a casualty of the global move away from burning fossil fuels.
And the smokestack, the last major remaining piece of the plant, was imploded Thursday morning, brought down by 350 pounds of explosives strategically placed by a demolition company known in the area for razing the former Trump Plaza casino in nearby Atlantic City in 2021.
At 10 a.m., as a crowd of over 100 onlookers watched from a nearby pier and additional spectators on at least 50 boats moored a safe distance away in the bay took in the spectacle, a loud boom rang out, followed by two smaller ones, and the stack quickly tilted away from the water and collapsed in a cloud of dust.
“Everything went as we had planned: it fell exactly the way we expected it to,” said Chad Parks, a spokesman for the property owner Beesley’s Point Development Group, a New York company that says it specializes in redeveloping “distressed” heavy industrial sites.
Two smaller structures, a gypsum silo and part of the former power plant, will be torn down using ground-based heavy equipment.
The demolition clears the way for the waterfront site on Great Egg Harbor Bay to enter its next role in providing energy to New Jerseyans: As the connection point for several of the state’s planned offshore wind farms. It also will house a mixed use development likely to include a hotel, a marina, restaurants, shops and residential housing units.
Because the power plant already had connections to the electrical grid, much of the infrastructure to plug offshore wind into the power system already exists in a nearby substation, making it a logical site to bring the offshore wind power onshore.
A cable from the first such wind farm, to be built by energy company Orsted, will come ashore on a beach in Ocean City, run underground along a roadway right-of-way before re-entering the waters of the bay and finally connecting to the grid at the former B.L. England site.
That route, and the very existence of the project itself, has generated significant opposition from residents in Ocean City and other Jersey Shore communities, who are fighting them in court and in the court of public opinion.
The power plant opened in 1961. A cooling tower there was demolished in September 2022, and boilers at the site were demolished in April.
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Follow Wayne Parry on X, formerly known as Twitter, at www.twitter.com/WayneParryAC
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Wind turbines and a lignite-fired power plant photographed in in Germany.
Jan Woitas | Picture Alliance | Getty Images
Demand for oil, coal and natural gas is set to peak before the end of this decade, with fossil fuels’ share in the world’s energy supply dropping to 73% by the year 2030 after being “stuck for decades at around 80%,” the International Energy Agency said Tuesday.
A transformative shift in how the planet is powered is also underway, with the “phenomenal rise of clean energy technologies” like wind, solar, heat pumps and electric cars playing a crucial role, according to a statement accompanying the IEA’s World Energy Outlook 2023 report.
Energy related carbon dioxide emissions are also on course to peak by the year 2025.
Despite these seismic shifts, the IEA says more effort is required to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, a key goal of the Paris Agreement on climate change.
The IEA’s analysis of governments’ “current policy settings” shows the world’s energy system is on course to look very different in the next few years.
In its statement, the Paris-based organization said it sees “almost 10 times as many electric cars on the road worldwide” in 2030, with “renewables’ share of the global electricity mix nearing 50%,” higher than the roughly 30% today.
Among other things, heat pumps — as well as other electric heating systems — are on course to outsell boilers that use fossil fuels.
“If countries deliver on their national energy and climate pledges on time and in full, clean energy progress would move even faster,” the IEA’s statement said.
“However, even stronger measures would still be needed to keep alive the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 °C,” it added.
“As things stand, demand for fossil fuels is set to remain far too high to keep within reach the Paris Agreement goal of limiting the rise in average global temperatures to 1.5 °C,” the statement went on to say.
In a sign of how high the stakes are, the IEA’s report said its Stated Policies Scenario was now “associated with a temperature rise of 2.4 °C in 2100 (with a 50% probability).”
Tuesday’s report reaffirms the content of an op-ed published in September 2023 that was authored by the IEA’s executive director, Fatih Birol, and published in the Financial Times.
In remarks published Tuesday, Birol sought to emphasize the huge potential for change while also highlighting the massive amount of work that still needs to be done.
“The transition to clean energy is happening worldwide and it’s unstoppable,” he said. “It’s not a question of ‘if’, it’s just a matter of ‘how soon’ — and the sooner the better for all of us,” he added.
“Governments, companies and investors need to get behind clean energy transitions rather than hindering them,” Birol said.
“There are immense benefits on offer, including new industrial opportunities and jobs, greater energy security, cleaner air, universal energy access and a safer climate for everyone.”
“Taking into account the ongoing strains and volatility in traditional energy markets today, claims that oil and gas represent safe or secure choices for the world’s energy and climate future look weaker than ever,” Birol said.
The IEA’s report comes just weeks ahead of the U.N.’s COP28 climate change summit in the United Arab Emirates.
The shadow of the Paris Agreement, reached at COP21 in late 2015, looms large over the IEA’s report.
The landmark accord aims to “limit global warming to well below 2, preferably to 1.5 degrees Celsius, compared to pre-industrial levels.”
The challenge is huge, and the United Nations has previously noted that 1.5 degrees Celsius is viewed as being “the upper limit” when it comes to avoiding the worst consequences of climate change.
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FRANKFURT, Germany — Stalled spending on electrical grids worldwide is slowing the rollout of renewable energy and could put efforts to limit climate change at risk if millions of miles of power lines are not added or refurbished in the next few years, the International Energy Agency said.
The Paris-based organization said in the report Tuesday that the capacity to connect to and transmit electricity is not keeping pace with the rapid growth of clean energy technologies such as solar and wind power, electric cars and heat pumps being deployed to move away from fossil fuels.
IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol told The Associated Press in an interview that there is a long line of renewable projects waiting for the green light to connect to the grid. The stalled projects could generate 1,500 gigawatts of power, or five times the amount of solar and wind capacity that was added worldwide last year, he said.
“It’s like you are manufacturing a very efficient, very speedy, very handsome car — but you forget to build the roads for it,” Birol said.
If spending on grids stayed at current levels, the chance of holding the global increase in average temperature to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels — the goal set by the 2015 Paris climate accords — “is going to be diminished substantially,” he said.
The IEA assessment of electricity grids around the globe found that achieving the climate goals set by the world’s governments would require adding or refurbishing 80 million kilometers (50 million miles) of power lines by 2040 — an amount equal to the existing global grid in less than two decades.
Annual investment has been stagnant but needs to double to more than $600 billion a year by 2030, the agency said.
It’s not uncommon for a single high-voltage overhead power line to take five to 13 years to get approved through bureaucracy in advanced economies, while lead times are significantly shorter in China and India, according to the IEA.
The report cited the South Link transmission project to carry wind power from northern to southern Germany. First planned in 2014, it was delayed after political opposition to an overhead line meant it was buried instead. Completion is expected in 2028 instead of 2022.
Other important projects that have been held up: the 400-kilometer (250-mile) Bay of Biscay connector between Spain and France, now expected for 2028 instead of 2025, and the SunZia high-voltage line to bring wind power from New Mexico to Arizona and California. Construction started only last month after years of delays.
On the East Coast, the Avangrid line to bring hydropower from Canada to New England was interrupted in 2021 following a referendum in Maine. A court overturned the statewide vote rejecting the project in April.
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Oslo — Electricity was free in Norway’s two biggest cities on Monday, market data showed, the silver lining of a wet summer. With power almost exclusively produced from hydro in Norway, the more it rains or snows, the more the reservoirs fill up and the lower the electricity price.
A particularly violent summer storm dubbed “Hans” that swept across Scandinavia in August, in addition to frequent rainfall this summer, have filled reservoirs in parts of Norway.
CORNELIUS POPPE/NTB/AFP/Getty
As a result, the spot price of electricity before taxes and grid fees was expected to hover between 0 and -0.3 kroner (-0.03 U.S. cents) on Monday in the capital Oslo and the second biggest city, Bergen, according to specialized news site Europower.
On Nord Pool, Europe’s leading power market, wholesale electricity prices in the two cities on Monday averaged -1.42 euros per megawatt hour. A negative price means electricity companies pay consumers to use their production.
“(Electricity) producers have explained in the past that it is better to produce when prices are a little bit negative rather than take measures to stop production,” Europower said.
Even though the spot price was slightly in the red in some parts of the country — which is divided into various price zones — companies are still able to make money from green electricity certificates.
According to climate experts, global warming is leading to more frequent and more intense rainfall and snowfall in northern Europe.
Last week, the Norwegian Meteorological Institute said temperatures in August in Norway were an average of 0.9 degrees Celsius (or a little less than 2 degrees Fahrenheit) higher than usual, and that after an already rainy July, precipitation in August was 45% higher than usual.
“All this rain, including ‘Hans’, contains an element of climate change,” researcher Anita Verpe Dyrrdal said.
One weather station in southern Norway registered 392.7 millimeters (about 15.5 inches) of rain in August, 257% more than usual.
According to Europower, this is the second time electricity prices have gone negative in parts of Norway. The first time was on August 8 in the wake of storm “Hans.”
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Rosamond, California — Next to the rows of alfalfa, another type of farm is taking root in Southern California’s Kern County, one that’s harvesting clean, renewable energy.
Solar Star, one of the largest solar farms in the U.S., has a peak output of 586 megawatts.
“These panels track the sun all day,” said Alicia Knapp, president and CEO of BHE Renewables, which owns Solar Star. (I’ll double-check all quotes)
Solar Star produces enough electricity to power about 255,000 California homes a year, according to Knapp.
There are more than 5,000 solar farms across the U.S., according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. In 2022, they produced 3.4% of the nation’s electricity, the agency said.
Dozens of new facilities are being added every month. The increase in available solar energy is a much-needed boost for power grids currently strained by this summer’s record-breaking heat.
On Thursday, PJM Interconnection, the largest electrical grid operator in the nation, issued a level one emergency alert, warning of potential blackouts from Chicago to Washington, D.C.
Meanwhile, like a mirage in the desert, the 1.72 million panels that make up Solar Star cover five square-miles of unused farmland.
Knapp said that constructing transmission lines to transport the electricity is significantly more challenging than acquiring the land for the panels.
“And what could make things even more difficult is if your transmission corridor goes between states,” Knapp explained.
Lorelei Oviatt, director of planning and natural resources for Kern County, told CBS News that “red tape” and delays in constructing power lines are holding back solar growth.
“When Sacramento tells me that they need 600,000 acres of solar, my question to them is, ‘Where is the transmission?’ And the reason is because people don’t like them,” Oviatt said.
Another issue is that too much solar power is wasted. Solar Star sometimes generates more than is demanded of it, “mainly in the peak of the day,” Knapp said.
The most common method to store excess power is through a process known as pumped storage hydropower, which uses the extra electricity to pump water to an uphill reservoir. When the power is needed, the water is released back downhill through a generator.
Knapp says that recent advances in technology will soon connect more farms to giant rechargeable batteries that will enable the use of solar power long after the sun goes down.
“You want to be able to maximize the output and store the energy, and then use it when you need it,” Knapp said.
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Solar and wind power hit a new record this year, generating more U.S. power than coal for the first five months of the year, according to preliminary data from the Energy Information Administration.
It’s the first time on record that wind and solar have out-produced coal for five months, according to industry publication, E&E News, which first calculated the figures.
Official EIA data, which is released with a lag, shows wind and solar energy out-producing coal for January, February and March, while real-time figures “indicate that same trend continued in April and May,” EIA spokesperson Chris Higginbotham said in an email.
When hydroelectric power is counted among the renewable mix, that record stretches to over six months, with renewables beating out coal starting last October, according to the EIA.
“From a production-cost perspective, renewables are the cheapest thing to use — wind and solar. So, we’re going to see more and more of these records,” said Ram Rajagopal, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Stanford University.
The figure marks a new high for clean power and a steep decline in coal-fired power generation, which as recently as 10 years ago made up 40% of the nation’s electricity. And while the monthly figures are preliminary and could be revised in the coming months, according to the EIA, more renewables in the pipeline mean that coal power is set to keep falling.
“We expect that the United States will generate less electricity from coal this year than in any year this century,” EIA Administrator Joe DeCarolis said in May. “As electricity providers generate more electricity from renewable sources, we see electricity generated from coal decline over the next year and a half.”
For years, coal power has been declining, pushed out by increasingly cheap natural gas — also a fossil fuel — driven by a hydraulic fracturing boom. But coal saw a brief resurgence last year when natural gas prices shot up in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, leading some utilities in the U.S. and Europe to sign on coal-powered generators.
Globally, coal use reached a new high in 2022, however, its bounceback has been short-lived in the U.S., as coal plants in the country retire at a steady pace. Six coal-fueled generating units have been closed so far this year.
The retirement of coal is good news for the climate. As the most-polluting energy source, coal is responsible for more than half of carbon emissions from electricity-production, despite it making up less than 20% of the grid. However, recent research on natural gas casts doubt on its comparative “clean” status.
The Inflation Reduction Act, which dedicated billions of dollars to the expansion of clean energy, promises to boost the renewable buildout even further. But constructing more clean energy plants is only half the battle, Rajagopal said. The other half is connecting those new renewable sources to the nation’s electrical grid, a process that is taking longer and longer.
On average, a project — such as a wind, solar or hybrid plant — that went online in 2022, waited five years from the time it requested a connection to the grid until it began commercial operations, according to a recent report from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. That’s up from less than two years for projects built between 2000 and 2007, the April report found.
More than 10,000 projects representing 1,350 gigawatts of generating capacity are awaiting hookup to the grid, the vast majority of those zero-carbon, the LBNL said.
“There are many hundreds of gigawatts of projects in interconnection queues of the United States,” Rajagopal said.
“Even if we wanted to accelerate [renewables] more, there is this pipe, and we have to make sure everything fits into the pipe, and making sure it all gets approved takes time.”
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BERLIN — The world is set to add a record amount of renewable electricity capacity this year as governments and consumers seek to offset high energy prices and take advantage of a boom in solar power, according to a new report Thursday.
The International Energy Agency said high fossil fuel prices — resulting from Russia’s attack on Ukraine — and concerns about energy security had boosted the rollout of solar and wind power installations, which are expected to reach 440 gigawatts in 2023.
That’s about a third more than the world added the previous year, taking the global installed capacity to 4,500 GW, roughly the combined total power output of the United States and China, the Paris-based agency said.
“The global energy crisis has shown renewables are critical for making energy supplies not just cleaner but also more secure and affordable,” said Fatih Birol, the IEA’s executive director.
“Governments are responding with efforts to deploy them faster,” he said. Recent incentives to install renewables introduced by the Biden administration are already driving a significant uptake in the United States.
About two-thirds of this year’s increase in renewable power capacity will come from photovoltaic, with both large-scale solar farms and consumer rooftop installations seeing significant growth.
IEA said manufacturing capacity for PV components was also surging, especially in China.
Construction of new wind farms is predicted to rebound after a period of low growth. However, in contrast to solar manufacturing, the supply chains for wind turbines aren’t growing fast enough to meet demand, the agency said.
Birol also cautioned that power grids must be upgraded and expanded to cope with the intermittent nature of solar and wind power, which require a fundamentally different approach by network operators compared with existing coal, gas or nuclear plants.
The report forecast that several European countries, including Spain, Germany and Ireland, will see wind and solar’s combined share of their overall annual electricity generation top 40% by 2024.
Shifting the global economy away from fossil fuels is one of the most important steps for reducing greenhouse gas emissions that cause global warming.
Experts say that to meet the Paris climate accord’s goal of limiting temperature rise since pre-industrial times to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 Fahrenheit), emissions need to be halved by 2030 and cut to “net zero” by mid-century.
The International Renewable Energy Agency, a separate body, has called for a major increase in wind and solar investments. Nations are expected to discuss setting an international target for the rollout of renewable energy at this year’s U.N. climate summit in Dubai.
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TORONTO, May 31, 2023 (Newswire.com)
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The AC200P power station, made by BLUETTI, a leading provider of portable power solutions, continues to be a top choice for outdoor enthusiasts and homeowners alike, three years after its initial release. With a 2,000W inverter, a 2,000Wh LiFePO4 battery, seven charging methods, and 17 outlets, the AC200P meets the power needs of users in nearly all scenarios, whether indoors or outdoors.
Great mobile power
What makes the AC200P stand out among competitors is its great capabilities. The AC200P with 2,000W output (4,800W surge) can power various outdoor activities such as camping, RVing, and boating. During power outages, the AC200P is a lifesaver, keeping critical appliances running, such as medical equipment, working devices, refrigerators, and lights, giving users peace of mind at all times.
Durable and expandable battery
The AC200P also features a durable LiFePO4 battery that is a safer, longer-lasting, and more eco-friendly battery type than the Lithium-ion variation. At over 3,500 charge cycles, the AC200P outlasts its competitors’ Lithium models with around 500 cycles. Moreover, the AC200P offers expandable capacity, with the ability to connect additional batteries, such as the B230 or B300 expansion battery pack, to increase its capacity to 4,048Wh and 5,072Wh, respectively. This feature is particularly useful for longer trips, glamping, overlanding, prolonged power outages, or whenever extra power is needed.
Multiple charging methods
The AC200P offers various charging options, either separately or in combination to enable dual recharging. The AC200P supports up to 1,100W dual AC+Solar input, or 800W dual AC input with optional T400 or T500 adapters at a low cost. With a max 700W solar input when connected with BLUETTI PV200, PV350, or other brand solar panels, the AC200P can offer endless solar energy on the move. It can maximize the Sun’s rays at 1,200W if there is a D050S charging enhancer plugged into solar panels for an additional 500W.
Cost-effective solar solution
Supporting a more durable battery and many useful features, the AC200P is also more budget-friendly than other well-known brands that provide around 2kWh capacity. BLUETTI’s recent offerings of special solar generator kits, AC200P with either PV200 or PV120 solar panels, even provide a more favorable chance to go solar.
About BLUETTI
BLUETTI has been committed to promoting sustainability and green energy solutions since its inception. By offering eco-friendly energy storage solutions for both indoor and outdoor use, BLUETTI aims to provide exceptional experiences for our homes while also contributing to a sustainable future for our planet. This commitment to sustainable energy has helped BLUETTI expand its reach to over 100 countries and gain the trust of millions of customers worldwide.
For more information, please visit BLUETTI online at https://www.bluettipower.ca/
Or follow us on social media:
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Source: BLUETTI POWER INC
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Solarcycle CTO Pablo Dias and COO Rob Vinje show a solar panel laminate after it’s been cleanly separated from the glass to investors and partners. The laminate is where most of the value is contained in a panel, like silver, silicon, and copper.
Solarcycle
The growing importance of wind and solar energy to the U.S. power grid, and the rise of electric vehicles, are all key to the nation’s growing need to reduce dependence on fossil fuels, lower carbon emissions and mitigate climate change.
But at the same time, these burgeoning renewable energy industries will soon generate tons of waste as millions of photovoltaic (PV) solar panels, wind turbines and lithium-ion EV batteries reach the end of their respective lifecycles.
As the saying goes, though, one man’s trash is another man’s treasure. Anticipating the pileup of exhausted clean-energy components — and wanting to proactively avoid past sins committed by not responsibly cleaning up after decommissioned coal mines, oil wells and power plants — a number of innovative startups are striving to create a sustainable, and lucrative, circular economy to recover, recycle and reuse the core components of climate tech innovation.
Wind and solar energy combined to generate 13.6% of utility-scale electricity last year, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), and those numbers will undoubtedly rise as renewable energy continues to scale up. Some leading utilities across the nation are far ahead of that pace already.
Meanwhile, sales of all-electric vehicles rose to 5.8% of the total 13.8 million vehicles Americans purchased in 2022, up from 3.2% in 2021. And with the Environmental Protection Agency’s newly proposed tailpipe emissions limits and power plant rules, EV sales could capture a 67% market share by 2032 and more utilities be forced to accelerate their power generation transition.
Solarcycle is a prime example of the companies looking to solve this climate tech waste problem of the future. Launched last year in Oakland, California, it has since constructed a recycling facility in Odessa, Texas, where it extracts 95% of the materials from end-of-life solar panels and reintroduces them into the supply chain. It sells recovered silver and copper on commodity markets and glass, silicon and aluminum to panel manufacturers and solar farm operators.
“Solar is becoming the dominant form of power generation,” Solarcycle CEO Suvi Sharma said, citing an EIA report stating that 54% of new utility-scale electric-generating capacity in the U.S. this year will come from solar. “But with that comes a new set of challenges and opportunities. We have done a phenomenal job making solar efficient and cost-effective, but really have not done anything yet on making it circular and dealing with the end-of-life [panels].”
The average lifespan of a solar panel is about 25 to 30 years, and there are more than 500 million already installed across the country, Sharma said, ranging from a dozen on a residential home’s rooftop to thousands in a commercial solar farm. With solar capacity now rising an average of 21% annually, tens of millions more panels will be going up — and coming down. Between 2030 and 2060, roughly 9.8 million metric tons of solar panel waste are expected to accumulate, according to a 2019 study published in Renewable Energy.
Currently, about 90% of end-of-life or defective solar panels end up in landfills, largely because it costs far less to dump them than to recycle them. “We see that gap closing over the next five to 10 years significantly,” Sharma said, “through a combination of recycling becoming more cost-effective and landfilling costs only increasing.”
Indeed, the market for recycled solar panel materials is expected to grow exponentially over the next several years. A report by research firm Rystad Energy stated they’ll be worth more than $2.7 billion in 2030, up from only $170 million last year, and accelerate to around $80 billion by 2050. The Department of Energy’s National Renewable Laboratory (NREL) found that with modest government support, recycled materials can meet 30%-50% of solar manufacturing needs in the U.S. by 2040.
Both the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) provide tax credits and funding for domestic manufacturing of solar panels and components, as well as research into new solar technologies. Those provisions are intended to cut into China’s dominant position in the global solar panel supply chain, which exceeds 80% today, according to a recent report from the International Energy Agency.
One recipient of this federal funding is First Solar, the largest solar panel manufacturer in the U.S. Founded in 1999 in Tempe, Arizona, the company has production facilities in Ohio and another under construction in Alabama. It has been awarded $7.3 million in research funds to develop a new residential rooftop panel that is more efficient than current silicon or thin-film modules.
First Solar has maintained an in-house recycling program since 2005, according to an email from chief product officer Pat Buehler. “We recognized that integrating circularity into our operations was necessary to scale the business in a sustainable way,” he wrote. But rather than extracting metals and glass from retired panels and manufacturing scrap, “our recycling process provides closed-loop semiconductor recovery for use in new modules,” he added.
Retired wind turbines present another recycling challenge, as well as business opportunities. The U.S. wind energy industry started erecting turbines in the early 1980s and has been steadily growing since. The American Clean Power Association estimates that today there are nearly 72,000 utility-scale turbines installed nationwide — all but seven of them land-based — generating 10.2% of the country’s electricity.
Although the industry stalled over the past two years, due to supply chain snags, inflation and rising costs, turbine manufacturers and wind farm developers are optimistic that the tide has turned, especially given the subsidies and tax credits for green energy projects in the IRA and the Biden administration’s pledge to jumpstart the nascent offshore wind sector.
The lifespan of a wind turbine is around 20 years, and most decommissioned ones have joined retired solar panels in landfills. However, practically everything comprising a turbine is recyclable, from the steel tower to the composite blades, typically 170 feet long, though the latest models exceed 350 feet.
Between 3,000 and 9,000 blades will be retired each year for the next five years in the U.S., and then the number will increase to between 10,000 and 20,000 until 2040, according to a 2021 study by NREL. By 2050, 235,000 blades will be decommissioned, translating to a cumulative mass of 2.2 million metric tons — or more than 60,627 fully loaded tractor trailers.
Players in the circular economy are determined not to let all that waste go to waste.
Knoxville-based Carbon Rivers, founded in 2019, has developed technology to shred not only turbine blades but also discarded composite materials from the automotive, construction and marine industries and convert them through a pyrolysis process into reclaimed glass fiber. “It can be used for next-generation manufacturing of turbine blades, marine vessels, composite concrete and auto parts,” said chief strategy officer David Morgan, adding that the process also harvests renewable oil and synthetic gas for reuse.
While processing the shredded materials is fairly straightforward, transporting massive turbine blades and other composites over long distances by rail and truck is more complicated. “Logistics is far and away the most expensive part of this entire process,” Morgan said.
In addition to existing facilities in Tennessee and Texas, Carbon Rivers plans to build sites in Florida, Pennsylvania and Idaho over the next three years, strategically located near wind farms and other feedstock sources. “We want to build another five facilities in the U.K. and Europe, then get to the South American and Asian markets next,” he said.
In the spirit of corporate sustainability — specifically not wanting their blades piling up in landfills — wind turbine manufacturers themselves are contracting with recycling partners. In December 2020, General Electric’s Renewable Energy unit signed a multi-year agreement with Boston-based Veolia North America to recycle decommissioned blades from land-based GE turbines in the U.S.
Veolia North America opened up a recycling plant in Missouri in 2020, where it has processed about 2,600 blades to date, according to Julie Angulo, senior vice president, technical and performance. “We are seeing the first wave of blades that are 10 to 12 years old, but we know that number is going to go up year-on-year,” she said.
Using a process known as kiln co-processing, Veolia reconstitutes shredded blades and other composite materials into a fuel it then sells to cement manufacturers as a replacement for coal, sand and clay. The process reduces carbon dioxide emissions by 27% and consumption of water by 13% in cement production.
“Cement manufacturers want to walk away from coal for carbon emissions reasons,” Angulo said. “This is a good substitute, so they’re good partners for us.”
GE’s wind turbine competitors are devising ways to make the next generation of blades inherently more recyclable. Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy has begun producing fully recyclable blades for both its land-based and offshore wind turbines and has said it plans to make all of its turbines fully recyclable by 2040. Vestas Wind Systems has committed to producing zero-waste wind turbines by 2040, though it has not yet introduced such a version. In February, Vestas introduced a new solution that renders epoxy-based turbine blades to be broken down and recycled.
Lithium-ion batteries have been in use since the early 1990s, at first powering laptops, cell phones and other consumer electronics, and for the past couple of decades EVs and energy storage systems. Recycling of their valuable innards — lithium, cobalt, nickel, copper — is focused on EVs, especially as automakers ramp up production, including building battery gigafactories. But today’s EV batteries have a lifespan of 10-20 years, or 100,000-200,000 miles, so for the time being, recyclers are primarily processing battery manufacturers’ scrap.
Toronto-based Li-Cycle, launched in 2016, has developed a two-step technology that breaks down batteries and scrap to inert materials and then shreds them, using a hydrometallurgy process, to produce minerals that are sold back into the general manufacturing supply chain. To avoid high transportation costs for shipping feedstock from various sites, Li-Cycle has geographically interspersed four facilities — in Alabama, Arizona, New York and Ontario — where it’s deconstructed. It is building a massive facility in Rochester, New York, where the materials will be processed.
“We’re on track to start commissioning the Rochester [facility] at the end of this year,” said Li-Cycle’s co-founder and CEO Ajay Kochhlar. Construction has been funded by a $375 loan from the Department of Energy (DOE), he said, adding that since the company went public, it’s also raised about $1 billion in private deals.
A different approach to battery recycling is underway at Redwood Materials, founded outside of Reno, Nevada, in 2017 by JB Straubel, the former chief technology officer and co-founder of Tesla. Redwood also uses hydrometallurgy to break down batteries and scrap, but produces anode copper foil and cathode-active materials for making new EV batteries. Because the feedstock is not yet plentiful enough, the nickel and lithium in its cathode products will only be about 30% from recycled sources, with the remainder coming from newly mined metals.

“We’re aiming to produce 100 GWh/year of cathode-active materials and anode foil for one million EVs by 2025,” Redwood said in an email statement. “By 2030, our goal is to scale to 500 GWh/year of materials, which would enable enough batteries to power five million EVs.”
Besides its Nevada facility, Redwood has broken ground on a second one in Charleston, South Carolina. The privately held company said it has raised more than $1 billion, and in February it received a conditional commitment from the DOE for a $2-billion loan from the DOE as part of the IRA. Last year Redwood struck a multi-billion dollar deal with Tesla’s battery supplier Panasonic, and it’s also inked partnerships with Volkswagen Group of America, Toyota, Ford and Volvo.
Ascend Elements, headquartered in Westborough, Massachusetts, utilizes hydrometallurgy technology to extract cathode-active material mostly from battery manufacturing scrap, but also spent lithium-ion batteries. Its processing facility is strategically located in Covington, Georgia, a state that has attracted EV battery makers, including SK Group in nearby Commerce, as well as EV maker Rivian, near Rutledge, and Hyundai, which is building an EV factory outside of Savannah.
Last October, Ascend began construction on a second recycling facility, in Hopkinsville, Kentucky, using federal dollars earmarked for green energy projects. “We have received two grant awards from the [DOE] under the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law that totaled around $480 million,” said CEO Mike O’Kronley. Such federal investments, he said, “incentivizes infrastructure that needs to be built in the U.S., because around 96% of all cathode materials are made in East Asia, in particular China.”
As the nation continues to build out a multi-billion-dollar renewable energy supply chain around solar, wind and EVs, simultaneously establishing a circular economy to recover, recycle and reuse end-of-life components from those industries is essential in the overarching goal of battling climate change.
“It’s important to make sure we keep in mind the context of these emerging technologies and understand their full lifecycle,” said Garvin Heath, a senior energy sustainability analyst at NREL. “The circular economy provides a lot of opportunities to these industries to be as sustainable and environmentally friendly as possible at a relatively early phase of their growth.”
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