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News
South Africa Abandons Pebble Bed Modular Reactor Project
South Africa’s government on Thursday announced it would no longer invest in the Pebble Bed Modular Reactor (PBMR) project, despite providing nearly 80% of the R9.2 billion ($1.3 billion) that has been poured into development of the Generation-IV helium-cooled high temperature reactor design. The decision was reached with the “fiscal constraints in these hard economic times” in mind, the government said.
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News
Legislative Briefs: Bingaman, Udall Introduce 15%-by-2021 RES Bill
The week brought important news from Washington on energy- and climate change–related legislation. Sens. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) and Tom Udall (D-N.M.) introduced a bill to create a federal renewable electricity standard, the White House said it had received permitting guidance on greenhouse gases from the Environmental Protection Agency, and Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.) reportedly canceled a key vote on a bill that sought to curb power plant emissions.
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News
MIT Fuel Cycle Study: Uranium Supplies Will Not Constrain Industry Growth
A new study from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Energy Initiative (MITEI) concludes that uranium supplies will not limit growth of the nuclear industry, contrary to a view that has prevailed for decades.
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News
Duke Energy, Indiana OUCC Cap Edwardsport IGCC Costs at $2.98 B
Costs passed onto consumers associated with the construction of Duke Energy Indiana’s Edwardsport coal gasification plant near Vincennes, Ind., will be capped at $2.975 billion, according to a settlement agreement reached last week between the utility, the Indiana Office of the Utility Consumer Counselor (OUCC), and Nucor Steel Indiana.
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News
California Commission Approves Third Major CSP Project in Three Weeks
The California Energy Commission (CEC) last week unanimously approved construction and operation of Solar Millennium’s 1,000-MW Blythe Solar Power Project. If built, the project, consisting of four parabolic trough units, could be the world’s largest concentrating solar power (CSP) facility and among the first commercial solar thermal plants permitted on federal land.
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News
Explosion Shuts Down Xcel Coal-Fired Plant in Minn.
Xcel Energy shut down its 538-MW Black Dog Power Plant in Burnsville, Minn., on Tuesday after an explosion rocked the coal- and gas–fired plant, causing visible damage to the exterior of the building. No personnel were harmed, but three firefighters responding to a smoldering fire in a coal hopper received minor injuries, police said.
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General
MIT Report Buries Breeders, Reprocessing
By Kennedy Maize Let us hope that the false hope of fast breeder reactors fueled with plutonium reprocessed from spent light water reactor fuel is finally properly interred. A new report from the same MIT crew that examined the future of nuclear power in 2003 buries the pipe dream of breeder reactors, or, at least, […]
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News
Steelworkers Accuse China of Unfair Cleantech Trade Policies, Japan Takes Issue with Ontario’s FIT Program
Disputes concerning dominance of the world’s renewable energy sector heated up in the past week: The U.S.-based United Steelworkers (USW) filed a trade case alleging that “illegal” Chinese policies and practices threatened America’s industries, while Japan complained to the World Trade Organization (WTO) that Ontario’s feed-in-tariff (FIT) program violated rules and is protectionist.
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News
Old Dominion to Delay Permitting for Proposed Va. Coal-Fired Plant
Old Dominion Electric Cooperative (ODEC) last week said it would delay plans to obtain air permits necessary to begin construction of its proposed coal-fired Cypress Creek Power Station in southeastern Virginia, citing a slump in demand growth caused by the slackened economy.
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News
Governors Urge Passage of Federal Renewable Energy Standard
As lawmakers returned to Capitol Hill this week, a bipartisan group of 26 governors on Monday urged Congress to pass a federal renewable energy standard (RES), saying that it could spur rapid growth of the nation’s renewable electricity sources.