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German electric grid need pegged at $25B
by Staff Writers
Bonn, Germany (UPI) Jun 1, 2012

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Germany will need to spend $25 billion over 10 years to upgrade its transmission network to accommodate a switch to renewable power, grid operators say.

The country's four main grid operators -- 50Hertz, Amprion, TenneT and TransnetBW -- laid out the estimate this week in Bonn at the request of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who vowed to make the grid changes necessary to complete the phase-out of the country's nuclear power plants.

She said the proposed upgrades, dubbed the National Grid Development Plan, are feasible and would help the country succeed in a "demanding and exciting" effort to reorient its electric grid to tap new supplies of wind energy generated in northern Germany, Deutsche Welle reported.

"The transition is feasible in the way we decided it a year ago. And of course we will stick to our pledge to phase out nuclear energy by 2022," Merkel said at the Federal Network Agency in Bonn.

"The better the network and the technology, the more likely it is that we will be able to use the full potential of renewables, guarantee a power supply and keep the costs at an acceptable level," added Environment Minister Peter Altmaier.

The draft plan laid out by the grid operators calls for 2,400 miles of new power lines, including 1,300 miles of long-distance direct current lines similar to those used for undersea connections between Britain and continental Europe, and well as 1,100 miles of standard alternating current lines.

That would be in addition to a current round of 870 miles of alternating current lines already either under construction or planned under a existing 10-year-old, $8.6 billion grid upgrade scheme, the Financial Times reported.

"The expansion of the transmission network accounts for only a fraction of the cost of the energy transition (to renewables) but will account for much of the success of its implementation," grid operators said in the plan.

"These are long-term investments in lines that are available for several decades and will contribute to the security of supply from renewable sources and the development of the electricity market," they declared, urging a "quick approval process" to meet Merkel's goal of a 2022 nuclear phase-out.

That could be a problem judging from the slow progress of efforts to build new north-to-south power lines from Germany's burgeoning offshore and onshore wind power developments in its northern provinces. Building such lines is a long process, taking 10 years in many cases, and they lines are often bitterly opposed by local residents and environmentalists.

But Merkel said the process must be speeded up accommodate the smaller, local nature of renewable power generation.

German Association for Renewable Energy President Dietmar Schutz hailed the plan as evidence of the feasibility of adapting the country's power grid and said it can be accomplished "if everyone pulls together."

The $25 billion cost is acceptable if viewed as the long-term infrastructure investment it is, he said, asserting the costs would work out to no more than 0.5 cents per kilowatt hour.

"We now have a common basis for a broad discussion," he said. "The priority projects for network expansion can now be identified and then be quickly brought to the widest possible consensus on their routes."

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Energy efficiency for California buildings
Sacramento (UPI) Jun 1, 2012 - The California Energy Commission has passed new energy efficiency standards aimed at reducing energy costs for new homes and commercial buildings.

The CEC says that energy savings over the next 30 years under the new rules, approved by a 4-0 vote Thursday, would be equal to the output of six modern natural-gas-fired power plants, saving enough electricity to run 1.7 million homes.

As part of the new standards, home builders must fit new houses with solar-ready roofs, more efficient windows, insulated hot water pipes and whole house fans that use evening air to cool homes and attics, reducing the need for central air conditioning.

The new regulations, which take effect Jan. 1, 2014, also apply to major building additions and retrofits.

Nonresidential buildings must be equipped with solar-ready roofs as well as high-performance windows, sensors and controls that allow for "daylighting."

"Improving the energy efficiency of buildings in which we will live and work will save Californians energy for decades," Energy Commissioner Karen Douglas said in a statement.

"These standards will help save consumers money on their utility bills, keep them comfortable in their homes and reduce greenhouse gas emissions through better, more efficient buildings."

While the new standards will raise the construction cost of a new home an average of $2,290, it will result in more than $6,200 in energy savings over 30 years, CEC says.

Steve Malnight, vice president of Customer Energy Solutions for Pacific Gas and Electric Company, which provides natural gas and electric service to approximately 15 million people in northern and central California, said the commission's work on building standards "is integral to California's long-standing leadership in energy efficiency."

"The building standards adopted today, which represent a balancing of many interests, are a cost-effective way to help customers save money on their energy bills and reduce greenhouse gas emissions," Malnight said in a statement.

The CEC projects that the new regulations will add up to 3,500 new building industry jobs. Independent inspectors, for example, will need to verify that air conditioners were installed correctly.

CEC said it worked closely with the building industry and other stakeholders to develop the standards.

While the California Building Industry -- representing 90 percent of the state's home builders -- supported the new measures, the group said that in light of the weak economy it would have preferred that the commission hadn't made changes to existing standards at this time.

Noting that the commission has ambitious goals to meet, "we recognize that doing nothing was not in the cards," Robert Raymer, senior engineer for the builders group told the Los Angeles Times.



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