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POWER

  • Canada Unveils Plans for Carbon Offset System

    Canada last week marked a major milestone in its move toward establishing a national carbon market by laying down the rules for a federal greenhouse gas offset system.

  • Western Governors Identify Renewable Energy Zones

    A report released on Monday by the Western Governors’ Association (WGA) and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) as part of the Western Renewable Energy Zones (WREZ) initiative identifies 36 areas in the Western Interconnection that have the potential both for large-scale development of renewable resources and low environmental impacts.

  • China Blocks Hydro Projects Worth $29.2 Billion for Environmental Concerns

    China’s Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP) last week halted construction of two major hydroelectric projects on the Jinsha River for inadequate environmental reviews. The order has thrown into question a 200 billion yuan (US$29.2 billion) investment in hydro projects along the middle reaches of the river.

  • Superior Court Judge to Decide Constitutionality of Arizona Renewable Standard

    A superior court judge from Maricopa County, Ariz., has accepted jurisdiction to decide whether the Arizona Corporation Commission (ACC), a state regulatory body, has constitutional and statutory authority to adopt and implement renewable energy standards across the state.

  • My Smart Grid Experience

    By Kennedy Maize Here’s further evidence why I believe the current smart grid hoopla is bogus, and North America should be focusing on a strong grid instead. I live on a small farm in rural Maryland, some 60 miles northwest of Washington, D.C. My electric company is Allegheny Power, a distribution subsidiary of Allegheny Energy, […]

  • Interest in Sale of AREVA’s Lucrative T&D Heightens, Frost & Sullivan Says

    European heavyweights Alstom and Siemens could vie to bid for AREVA’s transmission and distribution (T&D) business if the French state-controlled giant puts it up for sale to plug a €12 billion gap and finance its investments, market research group Frost & Sullivan said last week.

  • NRC Renews Operating Licenses for Vogtle Units

    The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) last week renewed the operating licenses for Units 1 and 2 of the 2,301-MW Vogtle nuclear power plant in Waynesboro, Ga., for an additional 20 years, making them the 53rd and 54th reactor licenses renewed by the federal regulatory body.

  • Entergy Builds New Transmission to Replace Hurricane-Ravaged Line

    Entergy subsidiaries on Thursday announced they had completed three major transmission projects in south Louisiana, including a rebuild of a line in Plaquemines Parish that had been destroyed in Hurricane Katrina and two upgrades to transmission lines that run through the Baton Rouge to New Orleans corridor.

  • Judge Throws Out CO2 Emissions Argument at SWEPCO Turk Plant Hearing

    An administrative law judge presiding over hearings on an appeal of an air permit granted by the Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ) to the $1.6 billion ultrasupercritical John W. Turk, Jr. Power Plant proposed for Hempstead County, Ark., on Monday threw out arguments by environmentalists questioning whether carbon dioxide emissions from the plant were properly considered.

  • B&W Unveils Modular Generation III Reactor

    Babcock & Wilcox Co. (B&W) entered the race to commercialize small-nuclear reactors today, unveiling the mPower, a modular 125-MW Generation III nuclear reactor that can be scaled to produce up to 750 MW.