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Solar Energy Conversion Process: Light and Heat

The scientific struggle to increase the efficiency in which renewable energy is used and then reused has proven to be a daunting task. Large wind farms and fields of solar panels are commonly used to generate energy through solar radiation. Congruently, investors are having a troublesome time competing with traditional oil and electric suppliers.

latest news
Supply fears hit UN carbon credits

FT, 6 Sep 2010

Uncertainty about the supply of UN-issued carbon credits has led to their price hitting a four-month high. Certified Emission Reductions (CERs) have surged on international carbon markets in recent weeks after a UN board acted over concerns that chemical plants in China and elsewhere in the developing world were deliberately overproducing HFC 23, a potent greenhouse gas, in order to claim the saleable credits for subsequently destroying it.

A carbon border tax can curb climate change

FT, 6 Sep 2010

As global growth picks up after the economic crisis, carbon emissions are going back up too. With China and India back on track to double their gross domestic product every decade, and with coal providing nearly 30 per cent of global energy, the chances of stabilising and reducing emissions are low. Indeed, little progress has been made in the last two decades. Only recessions lower emissions – and then only for a short time.
Low-carbon market to treble by 2020 - HSBC

Reuters, 6 Sep 2010

The world's low-carbon energy market is likely to treble by 2020, HSBC analysts forecast on Monday, saying that rising concerns about resource scarcity would support broad consensus on the threat of climate change.
Novacem: Cement That Eats Carbon

Bloomberg, 3 Sep 2010

The construction materials industry emits gobs of carbon dioxide, but a British startup has devised a new cement that absorbs and stores CO2 when it's produced

UK 'must accelerate' on low-carbon road

20/07/2010 by BBC NEWS

By Richard Black

The Committee on Climate Change (CCC) report comes days after the coalition announced £34m cuts to investments in offshore wind, geothermal and biofuels.

The committee warns that other countries are spending much more.

Meanwhile, Conservative MP Tim Yeo has issued a pamphlet urging more radical moves such as privatising motorways.

The chairman of the Climate and Energy Select Committee says that working towards a low-carbon economy is essential to Britain's future prosperity.

Six of the best

The Committee on Climate Change is charged with advising government on how it should meet its medium- and long-term targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions, in particular the goal of cutting emissions by 80% by 2050.

Maintaining and increasing investment in low-carbon technologies now, it says, is essential if the 2050 target is to be hit.

Last week, the Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC) announced cuts in its grant programmes as part of the overall cost-cutting drive across Whitehall.

"That is unwelcome, it is a move in the wrong direction," said CCC chief executive David Kennedy.

"However, it's very specific in the sense that it relates to this year, it relates to the £6bn economy-wide cuts.

"More important for us is the next 10 years, and that's what our report focuses on."

Offshore wind, wave and tidal power, carbon capture and storage, "smart" electricity grids, electric vehicles and cleaner aviation are six areas in which the committee says government support is essential.

"We've got a government that wants to be the greenest ever," observed Mr Kennedy.

"We have funding commitments from the previous government, and they should be regarded as a minimum.

"By international standards our spend is very low; the US for example spends three times as much as we do relative to GDP on low-carbon inovation, and China is very active in renewable energy, energy-efficient buildings, electric cars and clean coal."

Unless UK spending increased, he said, the country risked being left behind.

Pricing is right

This theme was picked up by Mr Yeo in his pamphlet Green Gold: The Case For Raising Our Game On Climate Change, published by the Tory Reform Group.

"We must beware of China who, behind a smokescreen of recalcitrance in international talks, is moving faster than most Western countries to decarbonise its economy," he writes.

"We risk waking up in 10 years' time to find that suddenly China is hawkish about the need for tougher limits on global emissions and for faster action to cut them."

As well as fast de-carbonisation of the energy sector, he urges introduction of road pricing schemes and the privatisation of motorways.

He argues this would induce people to make low-carbon transport choices more effectively than any other single measure.

The country should also begin an experiment with tradeable personal carbon allowances.

The recession, he says, must not push climate concerns into the long grass.

"Britain faces serious economic challenges but we cannot afford for climate change to fall down the agenda," he writes.

"If we lead the way in switching to a low carbon economy, we will reap the rewards as going green will be rewarded with gold."

Copyright 2010 BBC News

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