Category Archives: Asia

The price of oil has leapt to nearly $69 a barrel. Another spike may be on the way

The Economist
RISING oil prices, believes Ali al-Naimi, Saudi Arabia’s oil minister, may soon “take the wheels off an already derailed world economy”. On the face of things, this concern is absurd. The plunge of $115 in the price of oil from its peak last July to its nadir in December was the most precipitous the world has ever seen. Demand for oil is still falling, as the world economy atrophies. Rumours abound of traders hiring tankers to store their excess oil. Rich countries’ stocks cover 62 days’ consumption, the most since 1993 . The average over the past five years has been 52 days’ worth.

Nor are oil firms pumping nearly as much as they could. OPEC has announced three separate rounds of production cuts since September in a bid to steady prices. In all, it has vowed to trim its output by 4.2m barrels a day (b/d). That leaves them with as much as 6m b/d of spare capacity. Despite this growing glut, however, the price of oil has been rising steadily in recent weeks . On Wednesday May 20th it closed above $60 a barrel for the first time in more than six months. That marks an increase of more than 75% since February. The price of futures contracts suggests that energy traders see the price rising higher still in the coming months and years. (During the day on Friday it appeared to be nearing $62 a barrel.)

The explanation is simple. Oilmen are worried because they believe that many of the factors behind the record-breaking ascent last year remain in place. Much of the world’s “easy” oil has already been extracted, or is in the hands of nationalist governments that will not allow foreigners to exploit it. That leaves firms to hunt for new reserves in ever more inhospitable and inaccessible places, such as the deep waters off Africa or the frozen oceans of the Arctic. Such fields take a long time and a lot of expensive technology to develop. Worse, new discoveries tend to be smaller than in the past and to run dry faster.

So oil firms must work doubly hard to replace declining fields and to increase output. Yet the oil industry is short of equipment and manpower, thanks to underinvestment in the 1980s and 1990s, when prices were low. As soon as the world economy starts growing again, the theory runs, demand for oil will once again outstrip the industry’s ability to supply it. In other words, the global recession has only interrupted the “supercycle” of which many analysts used to speak, during which the normal boom-and-bust cycle of oil and other commodities would give way to a protracted period of high prices, as ever-growing demand from emerging markets swallowed everything the extractive industries could produce.

Oil bosses, OPEC ministers and anxious bankers all agree on what is needed to prevent this scenario becoming reality: lavish investment in the development of new fields and in exploration. Yet the reverse is happening. The oil industry is cutting its spending, bringing fewer new fields into production and exploring less. The International Energy Agency reckons that overall investment will drop by 15-20% this year.

In theory, this should not be happening. Big Western oil firms (“majors” in the industry jargon) claim that they continue to invest steadily throughout the cycle, irrespective of gyrations in price. Big fields, they argue, can take a decade or more to develop, and may then produce oil or gas for several decades more. The price of oil at the time the investment is approved is irrelevant; the important thing is to make sure projects will be profitable across a range of possible future prices. If anything, given that most oilmen expect prices to rise in the medium term, you would expect them to be increasing their investment, to capitalise on the good times to come. Nonetheless, the extreme volatility of prices over the past year must have made big firms more cautious about future investments.

Then there are the state-owned firms in oil-soaked countries. These companies control the overwhelming majority of the world’s oil. The better managed and funded of them plan to continue investing despite the downturn. Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest oil producer, recently completed a five-year scheme to expand its production capacity from 10m b/d to 12.5m b/d, at a cost of $70 billion. But in Russia, the world’s second-biggest oil producer, output is falling largely because private capital has been scared off by a series of expropriations, while the state starves the firms it controls of sufficient cash for investment. And most oil-rich states, naturally enough, are happy to see the price rise. Many have become used to bumper revenues in recent years and have struggled to balance their budgets since the price slumped last year.

Falling costs within the industry will offset the impact of falling investment budgets to some extent. BP argues its slight cut in investment does not really represent a reduction, thanks to deflation. Yet many constraints on expansion remain. For one thing, the world still does not have as many experienced petroleum engineers and geologists as it needs, says Iain Manson of Korn/Ferry, a recruiting firm. He expects it to take a decade or more to overcome the shortage. Meanwhile, he says, wages in the oil industry are not falling by nearly as much as other costs.

Worse, there is little sign that governments are willing to grant oil companies easier access to the most promising territory for exploration. Iraq’s plans to sign big new contracts with foreign firms are years behind schedule, as is its new oil law. American sanctions continue to impede investment in Iran. The Nigerian government has been unable to quell the insurgency in the Niger delta, making it difficult for oil firms to operate there. Even in America, despite years of debate, most coastal waters and much of Alaska remain off-limits to drilling.

So when demand begins to revive, a sharp rise in prices is inevitable. That does not mean that a price spike is just around the corner, however. The speed with which it arrives will depend on the strength of the global recovery. For the moment, global consumption of oil continues to fall, despite the slight brightening of the economic outlook. At the recent OPEC powwow Mr al-Naimi, the Saudi oil minister, argued that a low oil price always sowed the seeds of a future price rise, since it led to underinvestment. The only question this time is how quickly the strain will emerge.

Join the The PeakOilWhen Initiative http://www.peakoilwhen.org/

Right now, Yingli can produce solar electricity for RMB1.1 to 1.3/kwh, depending on weather conditions

Yingli spokesman Li Wei

Suntech Chairman Shi Zhengrong said China would achieve solar electricity costs as low as to RMB1/kwh by 2012. Yingli also are aiming to reduce the cost of solar power to RMB1/kwh by 2012.

In June 2008, Yingli Green won a 62-megawatt project in Portugal, the largest solar energy project in the world so far.

About 50 MW of installed solar capacity was added in China in 2008, more than double the 20 MW in 2007, but still a relatively small amount. According to some studies, the demand in China for new solar modules could be as high as 232 MW each year from now on until 2012. The government has announced plans to expand the installed capacity to 1,800 MW by 2020.

By way of comparison, 3,800 MW of solar capacity are estimated to have been installed in Germany in 2007.

Officials at Yingly denies the rumors that Yingli Green Energy and SDIC Huajing Power have submitted a joint bid to build a 10-MW solar power plant in Dunhuang in northwest China at a price as low as RMB0.69/kwh (US$0.1/kwh)….  .

start now a global priority shift

Taking over GM is an ultimate opportunity to start a global priority shift and developing, designing and building clean energy technologies and infrastructure. A GLOBAL PRIORITY SHIFT is a MUST. GM could survive and even prosper and we all gain from getting clean energy in place. Join the www.OilAway.org

.

Concentrated solar power could meet up to 7 percent of the world’s power needs by 2030 and fully one quarter by 2050

Concentrated solar power could meet up to 7 percent of the world’s power needs by 2030 and fully one quarter by 2050.

The 3rd joint report from Greenpeace International, the European Solar Thermal Electricity Association (ESTELA) and IEA SolarPACES since 2003. With every edition we have increased the projected market volume significantly, and it finally turned over a billion dollars in 2008, this amount could double in 2009. While we highlighted in our first joint report the huge market potential, we were able to move to another message in 2005 when we launched the second report in Egypt: “CSP is ready for take off!”.

We now are delighted to say “CSP has taken off”, is about to step out of the shadow of other renewable technologies and can establish itself as the third biggest player in the sustainable power generation industry. CSP does not compete against other renewable energies; it is an additional one that is now economically viable.

Fighting climate change is paramount as such it is essential that the power generation sector becomes virtually CO2 free as soon as possible. Greenpeace and the European Renewable Industry Council developed a joint global vision – the Energy [R]evolution scenario – which provides a practical blueprint for rapidly cutting energy-related CO2 emissions in order to help ensure that greenhouse gas emissions peak and then fall by 2015. This can be achieved while ensuring economies in China, India and other developing nations have access to the energy that they need in order to develop. CSP plays an important role in this concept.

The Global CSP Outlook 2009 goes actually one step further. While the moderate CSP market scenario is in line with the Energy [R]evolution scenario, the advanced scenario shows that this technology has even more to offer. Globally, the CSP industry could employ as many as 2 million people by 2050 who will help save the climate and produce up to one quarter of the world’s electricity. This is a truly inspiring vision. Especially as this technology has developed it’s very own striking beauty – the stunning pictures in this report show that saving the climate look spectacular.

 

 

China to start a comprehensive solar energy strategy and implementation plans

Currently the main use of solar energy in China is for heating water. PV is the main technology used in China for electricity generation – both in industrial and commercial applications. Total solar radiation reaching China land areas is estimated at 5×10²²J (equivalent to ~1700 billion tons of coal equivalent (TCE). The areas of Tibet and Qinghai receives that largest amounts of solar radiation, but many other areas receive relatively large amounts of solar radiation, among them: southern part of inner Mongolia, Shanxi, Hebei, Shandong, Liaoning, mid and south Yunnan, South Guangdong, south Fujian, east and west Hainan. PV is considered by the Chinese government as a royal route among the renewable energies, but they realize that it cannot be left to the markets alone. Hence, financial promotion and political regulations were announced. Unlike energy for transportation and heating, electricity generation is still very centralized in China, but the understanding of the need for decentralization is making progress. As a first step, the Chinese government has announced a plan to grant ~2.9USD/Watt-peak (!) for a cap of 20MW, while each project is above 50KW. This PV road map sets its priority on roof projects and PV curtains in large and midsize cities as well as off-grid solar PV. The Chinese believe that PV will eventually become commercially competitive with conventional power network. However, the full potential of PV will be achieved in energy-autonomous buildings rather than as add-on devices in the grid connected systems of current facilities.

The first Multi-National Task Force for 100% Renewable Energy

Quotes from statement of Steven Chu Secretary of Energy before US Senate on March 5, 2009:

“…how we can better nurture and harness science to solve our energy and climate change problems. I have spent most of my career in research labs – as a student, as a researcher, and as a faculty member. I took the challenge of being Secretary of Energy in part for the chance to ensure that the Department of Energy Laboratories and our country’s universities will generate ideas that will help us address our energy challenges. I also strongly believe that the key to our prosperity in the 21st century lies in our ability to nurture our intellectual capital in science and engineering. Our previous investments in science led to the birth of the semiconductor, computer, and bio-technology industries that have added greatly to our economic prosperity. Now, we need similar breakthroughs on energy.

….We also need to refocus our scarce research dollars. …. to step up efforts to educate the next generation of scientists and engineers. The FY 2010 budget supports graduate fellowship programs that will train students in energy-related fields. I will also seek to build on DOE’s existing research strengths by attracting and retaining the most talented scientists. Focusing on Transformational Research. The second area that I want to discuss is the need to support transformational technology research. What do I mean by transformational technology? I mean technology that is game-changing, as opposed to merely incremental. For example, in the 1920’s and 1930’s, when AT&T Bell Laboratories was focused on extending the life of vacuum tubes, another much smaller research program was started to investigate a completely new device based on a revolutionary new advance in the understanding of the microscopic world: quantum physics. The result of this transformational research was the transistor, which transformed communications, allowed the computer industry to blossom, and changed the world forever. DOE must strive to be the modern version of the old Bell Labs in energy research. Because the payoffs from research in transformational technologies are both higher risk and longer term, government investment is critical and appropriate.

…We need to do more transformational research at DOE to bring a range of clean energy technologies to the point where the private sector can pick them up, including: 1. Gasoline and diesel-like biofuels generated from lumber waste, crop wastes, solid waste, and non-food crops; 2. Automobile batteries with two to three times the energy density that can survive 15 years of deep discharges; 3. Photovoltaic solar power that is five times cheaper than today’s technology; 4. Computer design tools for commercial and residential buildings that enable reductions in energy consumption of up to 80 percent with investments that will pay for themselves in less than 10 years; and 5. Large scale energy storage systems so that variable renewable energy sources such as wind or solar power can become base-load power generators. This is not a definitive list, or a hard set of technology goals, but it gives a sense of the types of technologies and benchmarks I think we should be aiming for. We will need transformational research to attain these types of goals. To make it happen, we will need to re-energize our national labs as centers of great science and innovation. At the same time, we need to seek innovation wherever it can be found – the new ARPA-E program will open up research funding to the best minds in the country, wherever they may be. I pledge to you we will have this program up and running as soon as possible. Broader, More Effective Collaboration: DOE also needs to foster better research collaboration, both internally and externally. My goal is nothing less than to build research networks within the Department, across the government, throughout the nation, and around the globe. We’ll better integrate national lab, university, and industry research. And we will seek partnerships with other nations. For example, increased international cooperation on carbon capture and storage technology could reduce both the cost and time of developing the range of pre- and post-combustion technologies needed to meet the climate challenge. … The Nation needs better technologies to fully meet our climate and energy challenges, and DOE can be a major contributor to this effort”.

The first Multi-national Task force for 100% renewable energy is definitely the right step in the right direction, but we need to do more.

China’s biggest PV project seeks operator

DUNHUANG, Feb 23, 2009 (SinoCast Daily Business Beat via COMTEX) — China’s largest photovoltaic power generation project is seeking for builder and operator now and the tender is near close, said the National Energy Administration, the bidding holder. China plans to build up a large PV power generation farm in Dunhuang, Gansu Province in Northwest China, covering a plot of land of 1 million square meters and involving total investment about USD 75 million. It is designed to have installed capacity of 10 megawatts and could generate electricity of 16.37 million KWH annually. The project is a landmark of China’s PV power generation industry. The top five independent power generation giants and leading PV application companies in China, as well as several foreign companies, have given their offers to it. The winner that will be announced on March 20, 2009 should complete the construction in 18 months and gain a license to operate it for 25 years. Given that silicon price is plunging now, the PV products that will be widely used in this project will cost less. The bidding holder expects the winning offer to be below 30 US cent per KWH of electricity the project generates and sells.

Energy independence is first of all a matter of national security

The most exciting international renewable energy Conference is starting tomorrow in Eilat and will last until the end of the week. The conference scientific advisor, Amnon Samid, chairman of the AGS group, told us that besides presenting the state of the art in each sector of the renewable energy and the issues involved with integrating renewable energy into the Grid, the conference will deal with actual questions – like how will the economics of solar power change in the short and mid-term? how much has the financial crisis affected the solar sector – which companies are delaying expansion planes and laying off staff ? will the market for solar power be growing and how fast? Which countries lead manufacturing and installation of solar power? Should or could Israel be a major player in the solar power industry or in other power generation technologies? What new solar thermal and PV plants are in the pipeline and what impact might they have?

In addition to the participation of politicians and businessmen from around the world, the conference will also feature several of the country’s leading solar start-up firms, including GreenSun Energy, Verilite, Solaris Synergy, HelioFocus and Tigo Energy. GreenSun has developed a revolutionary CPV technology to produce high efficiency solar panels that reduce the price per watt of solar energy in half and expects that its technology will reduce the price well below $1 in the next year, while Verilite’s patent pending technology of flat mirror collectors and a passively cooled central linear cell array will deliver an unmatched combination of durability, simplicity and low cost. Solaris Synergy’s new proprietary technology, which integrates a number of innovative mechanical, optical and thermal solutions, is based on medium-concentration solar units with photovoltaic elements cooled by evaporation, dramatically decreasing the temperature of photovoltaic elements. More mature companies will also present, like HelioFocus, that is developing a unique solar thermal technology that is high efficiency and modular, which allows market penetration without extensive project finance, and Tigo Energy, that through the re-partitioning of traditional PV system electronics, has developed a Distributed Inverter System Solution which will immediately provide returns of 7-20% above today’s traditionally architected PV systems.

However, Samid emphasizes that as much as Israel enjoys much creativity and a lot of successful start ups, also in the field of renewable energy, by itself it could not lead to energy security and independence. Now that a new government will be established in Israel, it should take all necessary steps for diversification of energy sources which is essential to energy security and to low carbon energy path to release Israel from depending on fossil fuels. Samid is calling upon the government to establish a special Task Force with strict time table and a required national budget – for developing the required family of technologies for supplying all its electricity needs with no use of oil. This is a matter of national security, and should be dealt as such, emphasizes Samid. ‘Technology will enable us to say we can grow our economy and protect our environment and secure our existence at the same time’.

Golden Opportunity for converting research into sustainable businesses

While financial markets are falling apart and businesses that are not based on technology and innovations are knocking the bottom under themselves, the coast is clear for  technology people to buckle down and bear fruit of their ongoing achievements, that were unfortunately not recognized enough so far, while more and more executives with no technology background and understanding were running our economies.   

THE TIME IS RIPE NOW FOR TECHNOLOGY PEOPLE WITH BUSINESS UNDERSTANDING AND EXPERIENCE TO TAKE CHARGE!

We are calling upon Academic institutions as well as strategic investors, regional and governmental authorities,  to share our common objectives of providing abundant, clean, secure and affordable energy. The main goals are accelerating the development of energy technologies towards cost-effectiveness for a more sustainable energy economy and ensure that those technologies can compete on the global market. We are initiating establishing a prime Renewable Energy Technological Center, that will be formulated as a holding company operating and owning the following synergistic activities:

-          A framework that will invest in Renewable Energy startups and provide them with full management services

- Providing relevant information to renewable energy companies, including souring for crucial components, suppliers and designers, as well as estimating the competitiveness by calculating several parameters such as levelized cost of electricity produced, cost items, market penetration possibilities etc.

-          Testing and pilots’ facilities for technologies coming out of the Center

-          A framework for industry-academy joint ventures, including providing training services to convert engineers and scientists into renewable energy in general and solar in particular.  

The first phaze in our program is establishing a Test Center for Solar Electricity Generation Technologies for helping accelerate the pace of solar energy as the main endless source of Clean Renewable energy, optimizing the chances of innovative technologies to succeed and provide a unique opportunity for investors in the sector.

Developers of innovative solar electricity technologies will be provided with the full range of technical, financial and other resources necessary to support them along the road towards the marketplace.  Dedicated to solar, the center will be the first of its kind and in a strong position to attract high quality projects.

FOR MORE INFORMATION:

Contact us at: solar@ags-tech.com

www.TestSol.com

 

New designs can make photovoltaics much more competitive, but it didnot measure up to the expectations yet…….. - If lack of financing is one of the obstacles – do approach us………………………..……PV@ags-tech.com

Solar cells are the most efficient mean of converting solar energy into electrical energy directly. During last years, technological advances – mainly have made it possible for Photovoltaics to be competitive in a variety of applications. It is expected that in the next 5 to 10 years the photovoltaic industry will expand due to supporting infrastructure, required new materials, processes and automated manufacturing lines of cells and arrays. It seems that the current general trend to support solar thermal CSP will gradually be changed towards Photovoltaics following technological advances. Even now, with proper cells, sun concentration techniques, optimal optical configuration and cooling methods, commercial Photovoltaics can be competitive and even superior – in many market niches – with CSP and even with conventional power generation systems.

Photovoltaic technology was first created about 55 years ago, while in the early 1980s the first thin-film cells achieved more than 10 percent efficiency, and the peak watt cost was around 10USD.  In the 1990s polycrystalline thin films achieved 16 percent efficiency, and price went below 5USD per peak watt. 

Nano-photovoltaic can reduce dramatically the production costs, and operating cells under concentrated sun with selected spectrum bands can achieve satisfactory conversion efficiencies, because the efficiency of a solar call is higher in some bands of spectral than the other. By splitting the solar spectrum one can enhance the efficiency and by the way, solve the issue of cooling the cells. Moreover, by installing second concentrator optical element just above the concentrator cell, the concentrator ratio could be increased and focus isotropic illumination on the concentrator. (Here is to mention, that while it might be difficult to operate silicon cells above 300 suns, Gallium Arsenide, for example, could achieve reasonable efficiencies with up to 1000 suns). Another design involves light-confining cavities formed by several cells, while the incoming radiation is introduced through a small aperture, which prevent the light from escaping. It seems also, that refractive concentrators equipped with Fresnel lenses could perform better than reflective concentrators. It seems that Fresnel lenses will be preferred for photovoltaics, while mirrors are still preferred in solar thermal applications.

However, the current challenge is to build an automated production line capable of producing thousands of MWatts annually of wafers, cells, modules and inverters, and providing erection and after sales rapid response 24/7 service for many years.

 If you have achieved several referenceable customers or won a significant project and looking for a true partner plus a financial backer – Do take advantage of our network of potential investors, strategic partners and industry contacts.  

email to: PV@ags-tech.com