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Ending Hawaii’s Oil Addiction - ABC News
#1
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/technology/2...addiction/


Ending Hawaii’s Oil Addiction


Quote:

"When you think of the most innovative places around the world for clean-tech, Denmark, where 50 percent of the energy comes from wind, might come to mind. Or maybe you’d think of Iceland, which is almost nearly 100 percent powered off geothermal, or perhaps Germany, which recently set a new world record in power generated from solar, but Hawaii?

U.S. Pacific Command is working closely with Hawaii, the most oil addicted state in the nation, to ensure that the Hawaii Clean Energy Initiative, a plan launched in 2008 to reduce the state’s consumption of fossil fuels by 70 percent by 2030 is a success.

“Pacific Command accounts for 20 percent of the island’s energy demand, so Hawaii needed Pacific Command to sign on to make the Clean Energy Initiative work,” Joelle Simonpietri senior analyst to U.S. Pacific Command Energy Office joint innovation and experimentation division told ABC News.

The military is using the Hawaiian islands as a test bed for new green tech innovation — everything from algae-based jet fuels and hydrogen fuel cell technology to smart-grids that can resist cyber terror.

Some of these efforts will be showcased on July 18, when the Navy tests a carrier strike force using alternative fuels during the six-week, 22-nation Rim of the Pacific exercises, the largest annual global naval maneuvers.

The ships and aircraft will be powered by alternative fuel, either nuclear or advanced biofuel blends. The biofuel blends are 50-50 mixtures of biofuel (made from used cooking oil and algae) and petroleum-based marine diesel or aviation fuel.

The new “Green Fleet” is not without its critics.

Conservative lawmakers came out this month in opposition to the U.S. military’s use of advanced biofuels, claiming that they are concerned about the cost of these new, nonoil fuels. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the ranking Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said, “I don’t believe we can afford it.”

The Navy purchased 450,000 gallons of biofuels for $12 million in 2011 for the maneuver — $26 per gallon.

Pacific Command contends that the need to invest in biofuels is evident.

“The Department of Defense’s military expenditures on fuel is about $15 billion, 3 billion of that was unbudgeted simply because of the change in the price of fuel,” Simonpietri said. “The reasons for using biofuels, from a military utility point of view, is for national economic security, it’s part of the interest of the nation, and really having different options that can address price volatility.”

Connecting the Islands

Beyond the military’s efforts, the state — which currently imports 90 percent of its energy in the form of oil — is proposing a mega-construction project to build an underwater cable connecting renewable energy projects on the islands.

“Hawaii is taking on renewable energy and using that as a solution to really reduce our vulnerability to imported oil,” Mark Glick, Hawaii’s energy administrator, told ABC News.

“Our (current) power generation comes from low sulfur fuel oil powered plants,” Glick said. “We’re trying to replace power generation which accounts for 30 percent of our energy with renewable energy sources.”

Hawaii Gov. Neil Abercrombie signed the undersea cable bill into law on June 27. The measure puts in place a regulatory framework that would pave the way for the islands to share power through an undersea high voltage network connecting the islands’ renewable energy sources including wind, solar, geothermal and tidal power.

According to a Department of Energy study, the high-voltage undersea cable interconnection project will cost $16 billion to complete, most of which is projected to come from the private sector. To put it into perspective, Hawaii currently spends $5 billion a year importing oil.

Critics of the underwater sea cables between the islands argue it would turn neighbor islands into industrial areas serving Honolulu’s population and that Oahu should look at energy conservation as a first step.

Becoming the Model for Energy Innovation

Since Hawaii’s goals of a 70 percent reduction of fossil fuels was announced, dozens of renewable energy projects have been proposed and employment and jobs in the clean-tech sector have sharply increased.

“Twenty percent of construction jobs in Hawaii are now in the installation of solar photovoltaics,” Glick said.

Several factors have allowed the state to forge ahead. A law that requires all new homes install solar hot water heating, and great tax rebates are helping Hawaii move toward a cleaner energy grid.

Hawaii has the second most solar photovoltaic systems, as well as the most EV’s and charging spots per capita in the country, and it’s also forging ahead on its efforts to increase the percentage of its electrical production with renewable power.

“Looking at all the options her in Hawaii, we have the sun, we have geothermal, wind, possibly wave, all the resources for us available in Hawaii,” Kekoa Kuluhiwa, director of external affairs for First Wind, a wind power company based in Hawaii told ABC News. “I sincerely hope there will be a day when we are completely free from importing fuel for our energy needs.”


end quote



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#2
Hawaii alternative energy needs to be a combination of solar, wind, geothermal, biofuel, waste to energy converters, and ocean power and it does need to be on a well maintained grid, at least for the near future, realistically.

Right now, HECO is still 70% imported bulk oil diesel burning electric plants. In percentages, the BI is doing very well, rapidly approaching 40% from alternative, and most importantly, local energy sources. There are some solar-only fanatics and there is some rationale in their fanaticism because there are astounding breakthroughs being made with solar PV power, not only the solar cell itself but the storage system comprised of the support structure i.e. car frame is the storage system.

There is a problem confusing biodiesel with biofuel. The media likes to make a big deal about going down to the local restaurant and collecting their used frying oil for almost nothing. Can you put that used frying oil directly in your diesel Mercedes Benz? No. It has to be distilled, consuming a lot of energy. If plant material is used, it has to be fermented first, using energy, then distilled, using more energy. So far, the cost of distillation has driven the cost of biodiesel far above the pump price, which the Navy found out it was paying $26 per gallon for clean diesel, 5 times the pump price. The OP doesn't mention it but this first time out for the Navy with a biodiesel fueled fleet is their last time (unfortunately, even this article fails to distinguish between biodiesel and biofuel):

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2012/05/...y-biofuel/
Senate Panel Cuts Off Navy’s Biofuel Buys

Biofuel is different from biodiesel because biofuel is incinerated directly, after gathering and grinding. The incinerators are very high efficiency, heating boilers to produce electricity. HECO tried taking eucalyptus from Hamakua over to an Oahu biofuel plant and found the transport cost made it too costly, doh! The Pepeekeo plant will take about a year and a half to convert and in the meantime, cut down eucalyptus is sitting there and going into some kind of covered storage. Things like this really add cost to the use of the *free* fuel. Local biofuel will feed the grid well over time.

The main priority is not taking local dollars (even if it is all coming out of your pocket and going into HECO's pocket) and sending them to foreign oil producers. Blueplanet did a recent analysis of Hawaii alternative energy efforts so far, mainly on the cost of the solar tax break and how many dollars were being kept local. A solar tax break of $1 is resulting in $44 staying in the local economy. Solar PV is no doubt providing stellar performance in Hawaii but Hawaii alternative energy needs all the local sources, can easily provide them and create jobs and energy independence from foreign suppliers.

Solar tax break analysis
http://blueplanetfoundation.org/renewabl...redit.html

Panasonic has solar panels providing almost 1MW from a large warehouse roof, about 130 m by 100 m:

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/nb20120714a4.html
Obayashi sets up first renewable energy unit

"The company has covered a 13,000-square-meter warehouse rooftop in the town of Kumiyama, Kyoto Prefecture, western Japan, with 4,320 polycrystalline solar panels produced by Panasonic Corp. .
The system, which began operations on Sunday, has an output capacity of 982 kilowatts,"

*Japanese tourist on bus through Pahoa, "Is this still America?*
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