Nikola Tesla Secret

Friday, 29 April 2016

Making Impressive Motion: Yingli Green Energy Holding Co. (NYSE:YGE),

EPR Properties (NYSE:EPR) shares fell -0.72% in last trading session and ended the day at $65.17. EPR Gross Margin is 94.40% and its has a return on assets of 4.20%. EPR Properties (NYSE:EPR) quarterly performance is 13.76%.


EPR Properties (NYSE:EPR) is expected to announce first quarter financial results after market close (confirmed) on 04/28/2016.


On 27 April, Yingli Green Energy Holding Co. Ltd. (NYSE:YGE) shares moved up 1.01% and was closed at $5.00. YGE EPS growth in last 5 year was -14.30%. Yingli Green Energy Holding Co. Ltd. (NYSE:YGE) year to date (YTD) performance is 10.38%.


Yingli Green Energy Holding Co. Ltd. (NYSE:YGE) reported it met with creditors to ask for extended repayment terms on $369 million of notes. Yingli reported it “met with holders of its RMB1.4 billion of medium-term notes due on May 12, 2016 and holders of the remaining portion of its RMB1.0 billion of medium-term notes due on October 13, 2015” to seek term modifications.


Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE:VZ) shares moved up 2.48% in last trading session and ended the day at $51.69. VZ Gross Margin is 60.10% and its has a return on assets of 7.40%. Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE:VZ) quarterly performance is 6.54%.


Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE:VZ) approached these negotiations with a goal of preserving good jobs while also making critical changes needed to legacy contracts. Verizon’s 36,000 employees covered under these contracts currently have a wage and benefit package that averages more than $130,000 a year.


Pfizer Inc. (NYSE:PFE) caters to the Healthcare space. It has a net profit margin of 19.10% and weekly performance is -0.69%. On the last day of trading company shares ended up at $33.00. Pfizer Inc. (NYSE:PFE) distance from 50-day simple moving average (SMA50) is 7.23%.


Pfizer Inc. (NYSE:PFE) said that, it is aiming to have a sensor-enabled remote patient monitoring system in place by 2019. The Big Pharma has teamed up with IBM ($IBM) for the project, which will construct a sensor-laden connected house to test the concept ahead of its planned use in a Phase III Parkinson’s disease trial in 2019.


Vapor Corp. (NASDAQ:VPCO) caters to the Consumer Goods space. Its weekly performance is -50.00%. On the last day of trading company shares ended up at $0.00. Vapor Corp. (NASDAQ:VPCO) distance from 50-day simple moving average (SMA50) is 10.63%.


Vapor Corp. (NASDAQ:VPCO) announced that it has appointed Christopher Santi as its President. Mr. Santi, the current Chief Operating Officer of the Company, succeeds Gregory Brauser as the Company’s President. Mr. Santi will also continue to serve as the Company’s Chief Operating Officer.



Making Impressive Motion: Yingli Green Energy Holding Co. (NYSE:YGE),

Thursday, 28 April 2016

Solar project back on track at Waukegan schools


After falling into months of limbo, an effort to install solar panels on the roofs of Waukegan School District 60 buildings has made “substantial progress in the last few weeks” and construction could start this June, a spokesman for the energy company said.


A year after New Jersey-based NRG originally approached the Waukegan school board, company spokesman David Gaier said NRG has chosen seven to nine school buildings where they plan on installing solar panels, which will be donated to the district and used to offset the district’s energy costs.


While current plans have installations planned at nine schools, final engineering assessments could whittle that number down to seven, he said.


The schools being looked at include Andrew Cooke and Lyon magnet schools; Daniel Webster, Jack Benny and Miguel Juarez middle schools; and Greenwood, Hyde Park, Washington and Whittier elementary schools.


In picking the sites, NRG and the district looked at roofs that would be best situated structurally and in terms of the amount of sunlight they receive, district spokesman Nick Alajakis said. They also did take into account any future roof repairs that may be needed.


“We’ve chosen schools with building conditions that help ensure the longest life possible for these systems,” Gaier said in an email.


The entire cost of the project, including system design, equipment purchases and installation, is estimated at $3 million and being covered at no cost to the district by NRG, which also owns the coal-fired power plant on Greenwood Avenue in Waukegan, Gaier said.


The company plans on submitting a construction permit application within the next two weeks with construction to begin in June, Gaier said.


The process involves installing racking systems to hold the solar panels as well as micro-inverters that convert the energy to the AC current from DC, then installing the panels themselves and connecting the system to the school’s electrical system, Gaier said. A local utility will have to inspect the system, and then it will be tested.


Discussions have also included having a website where students can track how much energy is being produced and the accompanying savings, a feature that particularly appealed to the district, Alajakis said.


The goal is for the installation to be complete by the end of August with energy being delivered to the schools by the end of 2016, he said.


NRG did not have an updated estimate on how much the schools would be saving, though the company is looking to offset the energy consumption at the schools where panels will be installed by 20 percent, Gaier said.


During its original presentation to the school board a year ago, the company cited $70,000 in annual energy savings with 800 kilowatts generated through installations at 11 facilities, a higher number than what is now being contemplated.


Another solar project being contemplated by the district is still in the feasibility study phase, Alajakis said.


The district, the city of Waukegan and the Waukegan Park District have been talking about teaming with ComEd to allow construction of a 50-acre solar field capable of generating up to 7 megawatts of power at the Yeoman Creek landfill on Waukegan’s north side.


The site — surrounded by Lewis Avenue to the west, Western Avenue to the east, Glen Flora Avenue to the south and Sunset Avenue and North Road to the north — was used as a municipal dump for residential and industrial waste from 1958 to 1969. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, potentially explosive landfill gas and polluted liquids that included “chemicals, elevated concentrations of metals and ammonia” leaked from the site over the years, requiring a Superfund cleanup that was initiated in the late 1980s.


Plans to reuse the property as parkland have failed to materialize amid ongoing environmental concerns, and an EPA report from November 2013 explored the possibility of establishing a solar field that would be constructed and operated by a private entity under a land-lease arrangement with the owners.


emcoleman@tribpub.com


Twitter @mekcoleman




Solar project back on track at Waukegan schools

Wednesday, 27 April 2016

Assortment of Air Filters


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Tuesday, 26 April 2016

Fewer breezes led to less wind power generation in West last year

SALT LAKE CITY — The wind didn’t howl quite as fiercely in 2015 in Utah and eight other states across the West, leading to the nation’s smallest increase in wind generated power in 16 years.


A recent analysis by the U.S. Energy Information Administration said weather patterns in the western portion of the United States created only a 5.1 percent increase in wind generated power over 2014. By comparison, electricity from wind generation grew by nearly 20 percent in 2013 and by about 8 percent in 2014.


Dampened wind production in the West dominated the first half of 2015, when El Nino weather patterns fueled more pronounced wind generation in the central portion of the United States.


Utah, like California, experienced wind generation declines between 5 and 10 percent. Oregon, Idaho and Wyoming all saw decreases of between 10 and 15 percent.


The country continued to add wind generation capacity, which grew by nearly 13 percent last year. Texas accounted for 44 percent of that growth and is the nation’s top generator, producing 24 percent of U.S. wind power, according to the analysis.


Wind energy makes up 4.7 percent of U.S. electric power generation, second to hydroelectric in the renewable energy sector. Energy Information Administration analysts predict that more capacity will bring wind generation above the 5 percent mark by the end of this year. The Bureau of Labor Statistics, too, reports that employment of wind turbine technicians is expected to grow 108 percent through 2024, much faster than average for all professions as new capacity comes online.


Across the country, 11 states get more than 10 percent of their power generation from wind.


Utah is among those states this year that are adding more wind power. The 60-megawatt Latigo Wind Park came online in March in San Juan County and operates under a 20-year power purchase agreement with Rocky Mountain Power.


Beaver County is home to a 306-megawatt wind farm that had been operated by First Wind until it was acquired by renewable energy giant SunEdison in a business deal finalized this year.


SunEdison declared bankruptcy last week after a binge buying spree left it cash strapped.


Scott Albrecht, economic development director for Beaver County, said he met with company officials after the bankruptcy announcement to get a status update on how the development might affect planned solar projects in the county.


SunEdison completed six 3-megawatt solar projects in Beaver County and has three larger, 80-megawatt solar farms in varying stages of development.


“We’re still confident they will be completed and operational,” he said.


A fourth, 100-megawatt solar farm has yet to be constructed, so its fate is less certain, Albrecht said.


Email: amyjoi@deseretnews.com


Twitter: amyjoi16



Fewer breezes led to less wind power generation in West last year

Monday, 25 April 2016

Nuclear Energy's Half Life Crisis in Changed Climate


Thirty years after the meltdown of a flawed Soviet reactor in Ukraine and five years since the disaster at Japan’s tsunami-swamped Fukushima-1 plant, the global nuclear power industry remains in flux.


The heavily-charged debate about whether it is safe, effective and economical to split atoms to generate electricity shows no sign of decay.


“We see a viable market out there emerging, particularly with the carbon constraints that everybody is facing. But it’s also more competitive than it’s ever been,” said J. Scott Peterson, vice president for communications at the Nuclear Energy Institute.


Ten nuclear reactors were connected to grids last year while two – one each in Germany and Britain – were closed.


At present, about 400 reactors in 31 countries are online. More than 60 reactors are “under construction” in 15 countries – although that is a relative state as some completion has been delayed for decades for some due to policy debates, cost overruns or other construction delays.


Fukushima


After the Fukushima disaster – with an ongoing cleanup that could take a century and cost hundreds of billions of dollars – nuclear was totally off the Japanese grid for nearly two years until two reactors restarted in August and October.


Japan, which depends on imports for about 90 percent of its primary energy needs, now has two dozen reactors in the process of restart approvals and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has insisted his country cannot do without nuclear power.


Surveys, however, show that the majority of Japanese now oppose restarting nuclear plants.


“Nuclear in Japan is becoming a shipwreck,” according to Tetsunari Iida, executive director of the Institute for Sustainable Energy Policies. “No one can make decisions about it and no one can take responsibility for it.”


There have been nearly 30 lawsuits and requests for temporary injunctions to suspend operations at 14 nuclear power plants since the Fukushima accident, according to activists.


“The reality is that nuclear will never be a major source of energy for Japan again,” said Kendra Ulrich, a senior energy campaigner for Greenpeace, who is based in Tokyo.



FILE - A worker, wearing a protective suit and a mask, levels ground at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant, operated by Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO), in Okuma, Fukushima Prefecture, northeastern Japan, Feb. 10, 2016.

FILE – A worker, wearing a protective suit and a mask, levels ground at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant, operated by Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO), in Okuma, Fukushima Prefecture, northeastern Japan, Feb. 10, 2016.


Shutting down


Due to the costs of maintaining and retrofitting aging reactors, Ulrich added, “already some utilities are saying ‘we’re not going to re-start.’”


Decommissioning old plants has spawned an industry of its own.


Disposal of waste and other operations related to decommissioning will be worth $200 billion by 2030, according to the French water and waste giant Veolia, which has acquired Kurion, a California-based company involved in the Fukushima cleanup.


Enthusiasm for nuclear power suffered its first big blow at the end of March in 1979 when a virtually new 900 Mwe (megawatt electric output) commercial reactor in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania partially melted down, although there were no demonstrable health implications.


“It created an angst within the public around nuclear energy technology that we eventually recovered from,” Peterson, in Washington, explained. “And it created a new awareness among U.S. operators for training of reactors operators and the fact that we had to have constant vigilance for reactor operators.”


Three Mile Island


Many Americans may be surprised to know that the Three Mile Island plant – site of the worst nuclear accident in the United States — continues to run a single 800 MWe reactor and is one of the country’s best-performing units.


The United States – with 100 nuclear units in operation – produces nearly a third of the world’s total atomic energy and relies on nuclear for about one fifth of the country’s energy production. But its existing plants are being challenged economically and several have been retired. Less than 10 new plants are expected to come online by 2030. That also has contributed to the United States no longer being the dominant player in the global nuclear market.


“We have significant competition from the Russians, from the South Koreans – which have won recent bids with their technology – and even from the Chinese who are starting to get into the export market,” said Peterson at the NEI, a key nuclear industry lobbying group.


What is happening in China “is a mixed blessing,” according to Jane Nakano, a senior fellow in the Energy and National Security Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington.


“China is fast coming up the learning curve and becoming a significant rival or competitor to the Western vendors in the coming years,” Nakano explained to VOA. “On the other hand without the robust expansion of a nuclear power generation program in China – and perhaps by Chinese vendors globally – nuclear as a source of electricity may not have a bright future.”


At home, China’s ambitious domestic plant construction projects are not without controversy.


Environmentalists in Hong Kong are expressing concern that a pair of 1,750 MWe nuclear reactors under construction in Taishan, 130 kilometers away, are based on a French design shown to have structural flaws.



FILE - A monument at the Chernobyl Fire Station to 32 of its crew who died responding to the explosion at the #4 reactor, March 20, 2014. (S. Herman/VOA)

FILE – A monument at the Chernobyl Fire Station to 32 of its crew who died responding to the explosion at the #4 reactor, March 20, 2014. (S. Herman/VOA)


Green energy


Brazil, China, Germany, India, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands and Spain – representing nearly half of the world’s population – now generate more electricity from non-hydro renewables than from nuclear power.


Nations which already do not have any nuclear infrastructure will find “it’s not economically an easy endeavor,” according to CSIS’ Nakano.


Initiating a nuclear energy program goes beyond establishing a reactor and acquiring a fuel source.


Nakano points out that creating the regulatory framework, training skilled personnel and dealing with spent nuclear fuel – the latter a challenge still confronting the United States – takes a lot of time and money.


“If you are serious about this industry and you want to be an exporter of this technology then you not only have to export the technology, but you have to export the regulatory regime and you have to export the safety culture,” said Peterson.


But critics say safety has long been compromised by “regulatory capture” – when an industry has too much sway over its purported overseers.


“It’s the condition that created the Fukushima disaster,” said Ulrich.


Another issue still confronting the industry is concern that countries acquiring fissile materials for civilian power plants will divert them for military purposes.


India, for example, has not established a complete and verifiable separation of its civilian and military nuclear programs, according to a discussion paper authored by Kalman Robert and John Carlson at the Belfer Center’s Project on Managing the Atom.


Nuclear proponents like to point out that the world has enough uranium to keep atomic power going for another couple of centuries and that utilizing it cuts reliance on pollution-causing fossil fuels and foreign energy sources.


Its opponents dismiss nuclear as a viable option for addressing climate change.


“Climate change is an immediate threat and nuclear takes an incredibly long time to build – the average construction time (for a new plant) is just under ten years,” Ulrich told VOA.


The industry has also been beset by its promises of innovation not delivering results.



FILE - A new sarcophagus (shown under construction in 2014), the world

FILE – A new sarcophagus (shown under construction in 2014), the world’s largest movable object, is to be placed over the Chernobyl plant in 2017, March 20, 2014. (S. Herman/VOA)


Innovations


So-called Generation III reactor designs – meant to be safer, simpler and cheaper – touted in the 1990’s – have not lived up to claims.


Promises of further innovation continue to be made.


“Right now, for instance, there’s an outspoken lobby making the case for Small Modular Reactors – an idea which is readily badged as Generation IV but actually goes back to the 1960s,” according to the independent 2015 World Nuclear Industry Status Report.


“We expect the license submissions of small reactor designs to begin this December,” nuclear industry proponent Peterson told VOA. “We have utilities looking at sites to build them.”


The NEI predicts that between 2020 and 2025 these first small reactors will begin to penetrate the commercial market. But others are skeptical.


“The track record of the industry is absolutely abysmal when it comes to creating new designs that are implemented quickly,” according to Ulrich at Greenpeace. “They’re trying to re-sell the public on a myth that they’ve been trying to sell for decades.”


Despite assurances that future generation reactors will be more efficient and safer, the industry – three decades after the world’s worst nuclear accident – still finds itself on the defensive on the safety issue.


“At least in the U.S. mind Chernobyl couldn’t happen here just because of the technology differences and the way our plants are built,” said Peterson, noting the Soviet-era technology even at that time was considered far inferior to the Western technology.


Human toll


Contributing to the apprehension is that experts still cannot agree on the ultimate human toll from the Chernobyl meltdowns.


Dozens of emergency workers died from the radiation effects and the World Heath Organization, decades ago, predicted Chernobyl would cause 4,000 additional cancer deaths. But a Greenpeace-commissioned study put the eventual toll at 93,000.


Nuclear energy’s proponents counter that our conventional energy sources are far more lethal, citing data showing coal killing 4,000 times more people per unit of energy produced than nuclear.



FILE - Japanese rally in Tokyo against restart of nuclear power plants, July 6, 2012. (S. Herman/VOA)

FILE – Japanese rally in Tokyo against restart of nuclear power plants, July 6, 2012. (S. Herman/VOA)


Energy density


Another comparative factor is what is called energy density.


Wind turbines have a power density of one watt per square meter. To be equal to the output of a pair of typical reactors sitting on 100 hectares, one would need 2,000 square kilometers covered with windmills, about the size of the island nation of Mauritius.


Japan could meet its total annual demand of 200 gigawatts if just one percent of its land area was covered with photo-voltaic cells, according to alternative energy evangelist Iida.


And the wind could provide nine times that capacity in the island nation, where traditional natural resources are scarce.


“Both solar and wind must be the substantial mix” to replace fossil fuels and nuclear in Japan, said Iida.


Like the nuclear proponents, those touting green energy contend innovation is just around the corner that will allow their preferred choice for electricity generation to become the most efficient and affordable method.


VOA Correspondent Steve Herman in March 2011 in Fukushima covered Japan’s unfolding nuclear disaster and has also reported from Chernobyl in Ukraine about the ongoing cleanup from the April 26, 1986 accident.



Nuclear Energy"s Half Life Crisis in Changed Climate

Solar Energy War: Utilities Set Their Sights on Rooftop Solar

Sunpower Equinox Solar


Image source: SunPower.


Slowly but surely, utilities are eating away at the revolution taking place in rooftop solar. Nevada eliminated net metering altogether, California and Hawaii reduced net metering credits for customers, and utilities across the country are starting to increase base fees and challenge net metering to reduce the savings solar provides.


The result is effectively a war between residential solar companies and the utilities they’re trying to disrupt. And where your solar investments are positioned in this battle could tell you a lot about their future.


Why the battle over net metering is taking place
The core disagreement between utilities and solar companies is over the price homeowners are credited for solar electricity they export to the grid. The solar energy that’s produced and consumed at a home isn’t in question — it’s only what’s exported that matters.


As the rules stand today, in most states customers are credited with their full retail rate, known as net metering. If the rate you pay for electricity is $0.12 per kWh, you would get a $0.12-per-kWh credit for the electricity exported to the grid. Companies like SolarCity (NASDAQ:SCTY), Sunrun (NASDAQ:RUN), and SunPower (NASDAQ:SPWR) love this structure because they can sell electricity to homeowners for less than their retail rate (in this example, $0.12 per kWh), offering savings to go solar. 


Solarcity Copper Ridge School

Image source: SolarCity.



But utilities argue that they can buy solar electricity from large solar farms at a more cost-effective rate than homeowners can. And that makes sense. NV Energy, which is owned by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK-B), was behind Nevada’s massive cut in net metering and its numbers show the problem for rooftop solar. The utility has signed contracts in the last two years with First Solar (NASDAQ:FSLR) and SunPower to buy solar energy for $0.039 per kWh and $0.046 per kWh, respectively — far below what you would pay for solar on your roof. So, why should it then be happy buying solar energy from customers for $0.114 per kWh, which is the latest retail rate for electricity? And why should regulators force the utility to buy that more expensive solar energy? 


That’s the picture if you’re looking at the system as a whole. And it’s hard to argue that the utility doesn’t have a point that it can procure solar energy more effectively than homeowners. But that doesn’t take into account other system benefits, like locally created supply, reduced need for transmission lines, reduction in demand during peak summer air condition hours or choices in energy, something that’s new to the industry.  


Does choice in energy matter?
One thing residential solar companies would argue is that choice in energy matters. If a customer wants to generate their own electricity they should be able to. And that’s true.


But what can’t go overlooked is that solar systems are still reliant on the grid for reliable operation of a home, and net metering, in one form or another, is the only way to make rooftop solar truly economical until batteries that allow 100% self consumption are an economical option.


Sunpower Equinox

Image source: SunPower.



Customers have the choice to go solar, but in most cases they’re also reliant on compensation from the grid to make their solar choice work. And that tension between choice and compensation is the battle between solar companies and utilities today.


Community solar could solve all of these problems
What could solve this problem is if customers begin getting the choice to buy solar energy from a community solar farm. These are larger solar installations that could leveraging the lower cost that scale provides, but it would still sell energy directly by customers, just like a rooftop solar system. Think of it as owning a small piece of a solar farm for yourself. And the utility would be able to accurately predict energy production and costs, making for more predictability on the grid.


I think community solar will end up being a win-win-win for customers, solar companies, and utilities in the long term, but they’re relatively new to the industry right now. Keep an eye on this as a structure going forward as a way to balance everyone’s interests.


Where do you stand in the solar war?
I don’t write any of this to take sides in rooftop solar vs. utilities, but rather to lay out the position different companies have in this battle. Utilities are often seen as the bad guys, trying to kill off a threatening innovation like rooftop solar. But there’s a logical reason to think that utilities could actually help bring more solar energy to the grid more cost effectively than rooftop solar companies can. And that’s one of their best arguments for utilities against net metering. If your goal is more solar energy production and not more energy choice, you may lean to the utility side of the argument.


But rooftop solar companies also have a good point that they bring choice to a market that’s never had choice before. I just wouldn’t expect them to win the argument that net metering will make sense forever given the low-cost solar alternatives and potential cost shift to non-solar customers in high-penetration markets.


When investing in solar, it’s important to know where your company stands as the industry changes in the long term. And if you’re counting on net metering to fuel your company’s business model — as SolarCity and Sunrun are — you may want to reconsider how sustainable that model is. Utilities across the country are chipping away at net metering, and that may not be good for the disruptive rooftop solar market.



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Travis Hoium owns shares of Berkshire Hathaway, First Solar, and SunPower. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Berkshire Hathaway and SolarCity. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.



Solar Energy War: Utilities Set Their Sights on Rooftop Solar

Sunday, 24 April 2016

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Saturday, 23 April 2016

As wind turbines boom, nature doesn't cooperate


A wind farm in West Texas, outside of Roby. (Photo courtesy Rational Middle Media)A wind farm in West Texas, outside of Roby. (Photo courtesy Rational Middle Media)

Last year might have been a banner year for wind turbine construction, but not for the wind itself.


According to new data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, the amount of electricity generated from wind turbines grew by less than 10 million megawatt hours last year, the smallest increase since 2007.


In a report Thursday government analysts attributed the slow down to decreased wind speeds across the western half of the United States during the first six months of 2015.


“The same weather patterns resulted in stronger winds in the central part of the country, where wind generation growth in 2015 was most pronounced,” the report read.


The fall off came even as wind energy capacity grew by its highest level in three years, as more than 8,000 megawatts worth of new turbines were installed on the grid, according to EIA.


That followed a long period of uncertainty around the future of a federal tax credit for wind energy. In December Congress approved an extension of the credit through the end of 2019, with payments steadily scaling down in the years ahead.




As wind turbines boom, nature doesn"t cooperate

Thursday, 21 April 2016

Wärtsilä enters solar energy business

Wärtsilä Corporation, Stock exchange release, 21 April 2016 at 8:45 am EETWärtsilä enters solar energy businessWärtsilä is entering the solar energy business by offering utility-scale solar photo-voltaic (PV) solutions. The new solutions include solar PV power plants of 10 MW and above, and hybrid power plants comprising solar PV plants and internal combustion engines. Both solutions are offered with full engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) delivery. Wärtsilä’s first solar project will be built in Jordan.   “We are excited to expand our portfolio with new sustainable innovations and help our customers reduce their carbon emissions. Large-scale solar is a big business, with the installed base expected to grow four-fold to 450 GW by 2025. Our competitive edge builds on three things: global EPC capability, a wide sales and service network, and an existing customer base in 176 countries,” says Javier Cavada, President of Wärtsilä Energy Solutions.    Wärtsilä expects rapid growth in solar business, resulting in annual sales of 300 million euros in 2020. Target customers for Wärtsilä’s solar solutions are utilities, independent power producers (IPPs) and industrial customers. The focus areas include Africa, the Middle-East, Latin America and South East Asia. Wärtsilä will acquire the solar PV modules for the EPC projects from leading module suppliers.  Wärtsilä is the first company to offer utility-scale solar hybrid plants. The hybrid solution couples a solar PV park with an ultra-flexible Wärtsilä Smart Power Generation power plant. The two units operate in synchronisation to reduce the engines’ fuel consumption.  Wärtsilä’s first solar project is a retrofit hybrid plant in Jordan. It combines a solar PV farm with IPP4, a 250 MW Smart Power Generation plant comprising sixteen Wärtsilä 50DF engines, delivered to AES Jordan in 2014. Wärtsilä’s EPC scope includes 46 MW of solar modules, covering an area of 81 hectares, as well as inverters, switchgear, control systems and overhead transmission lines. The project will be included in Wärtsilä’s order book in the fourth quarter of 2016.“The solar unit will reduce the carbon footprint of the power plant by saving fuel during the daytime. Experience has shown we can trust Wärtsilä’s EPC capability. We consider Wärtsilä to be a partner with a reputation for quality,” says Meftaur Rahman, President and CEO of AES Jordan. Wärtsilä’s installed power plant base is 60 GW in 176 countries.Read more here:
Wärtsilä Solar Solutions
Download image
Caption: Wärtsilä’s first solar project in Jordan combines an existing 250 Smart Power Generation engine power plant and a 46 MW solar PV plant. The idea of the solar hybrid solution is to save fuel at daylight hours.
More images are available in our image bank at http://imagebank.wartsila.com/Imagebank/ (search word ‘solar’).For further information please contact:Javier Cavada Camino
President, Energy Solutions
Wärtsilä Corporation
Tel. +358 10 709 5297
javier.cavada@wartsila.com
Atte Palomäki
Executive Vice President, Communications & Branding
Wärtsilä Corporation
Tel. +358 10 709 5599
atte.palomaki@wartsila.com
Wärtsilä Energy Solutions in brief
Wärtsilä Energy Solutions is a leading global supplier of ultra-flexible power plants of up to 600 MW operating on various gaseous and liquid fuels. Our portfolio includes unique solutions for baseload, peaking, reserve and load-following power generation, as well as for balancing intermittent renewable energy. Wärtsilä Energy Solutions also provides LNG terminals and distribution systems. As of 2016, Wärtsilä has 60 GW of installed power plant capacity in 176 countries around the world.
www.smartpowergeneration.com

Wärtsilä in brief:
Wärtsilä is a global leader in complete lifecycle power solutions for the marine and energy markets. By emphasising technological innovation and total efficiency, Wärtsilä maximizes the environmental and economic performance of the vessels and power plants of its customers. In 2015, Wärtsilä’s net sales totalled EUR 5.0 billion with approximately 18,900 employees. The company has operations in more than 200 locations in nearly 70 countries around the world. Wärtsilä is listed on the Nasdaq Helsinki.
www.wartsila.com
HUG#2005160



Wärtsilä enters solar energy business

Wednesday, 20 April 2016

Share Performance Check on : Yingli Green Energy Hold. Co. Ltd. (ADR) (NYSE:YGE)


During the most recent session of trading, Yingli Green Energy Hold. Co. Ltd. (ADR) (NYSE:YGE) shares traded in the range of $4.91 – 5.24. Currently, the consensus target price is $5.87 on the stock. Investors might be tracking the stock price in relation to its moving averages. The moving average is a commonly used indicator that helps with price action analysis. Monitoring moving averages may help to spot trend direction, and moving averages may be used to evaluate support and resistance levels. A recent check on the stock shows that company stock has traded $-0.37 off of the 200-day moving average of $5.30. Shares have recently been noted $0.24 off of the 50-day moving average of $4.69.


Keeping an eye on the stock’s current price compared to its 52 week highs and lows may also be important. Traders may use these numbers to help figure out the current value of a stock, and to try to predict future price movement. When a stock price gets close to either the 52 week high or low, this tends to draw the attention of investors and traders. Recently, shares of the company traded +68.26% away from its 52-week low of $2.93 and -76.41% away from the 52-week high of $20.90.


Investors and analysts frequently use a company’s price to earnings ratio as a way to measure the share price relative to earnings. The company currently has a P/E ratio of N/A. Analysts and investors also examine a company’s PEG Ratio or price to earnings growth ratio when evaluating the stock. The price to earnings growth ratio is a stock’s price to earnings ratio divided by the growth rate of its earnings for a specific time period. Using the PEG ratio alone, a company with a PEG Ratio below one may indicate the stock as being undervalued. On the other hand, if a company has a PEG Ratio that is above one, it may be deemed overvalued. A PEG Ratio that hovers around one may point to the company being fair value. The current PEG Ratio for the company is 0.00.


Yingli Green Energy Hold. Co. Ltd. – Receive News & Ratings Via Email – Enter your email address below to receive a concise daily summary of the latest news and analysts’ ratings with MarketBeat.com’s FREE daily email newsletter.



Share Performance Check on : Yingli Green Energy Hold. Co. Ltd. (ADR) (NYSE:YGE)

Tuesday, 19 April 2016

Mid American Energy to Build Largest Wind Farm in Iowa

Mid American Energy is filing a request with the Iowa Utilities Board to build WIND 11, a project that will add up to 2,000 megawatts of wind generation in Iowa. Mid America’s Ruth Comer says their $ 3.6 billion investment is the largest economic development project in Iowa history.


She says those additional 1,000 wind turbines bring Mid American’s total to 3,000 wind turbines. Comer says Iowa will receive over 40 percent of its energy from wind once their Wind 11 project is completed.


Comer says Mid American Energy has great relations with Iowa’s farmers, landowners and local communities which has allowed them to move forward successfully with these projects.


Mid American Energy began their Iowa wind projects in 2004.



Mid American Energy to Build Largest Wind Farm in Iowa

Monday, 18 April 2016

Toyota Air Filters

Selling 4 new factory Toyota air filters. Make sure these fit your vehicle before emailing asking. I’m not sure which cars these will fit other than 97-2001 4Runners.



Toyota Air Filters

Sunday, 17 April 2016

Town looks to negotiate solar programs and expand water system to school

TOWN OF HOOSICK, N.Y. >> On the April 11 Town of Hoosick board meeting, it was apparent that progress is being made in the areas of solar energy, water contamination and distribution and support for volunteer firefighters.


Solar

Deputy Supervisor Jeff Wysocki revealed that a presentation would not be made from the solar committee due to a wait on a state report about unified zoning. Wysocki said the report was supposed to be unveiled in March. The solar committee was due to present its findings on the benefits of solar energy for April.


“We’re waiting for that [the report] to see where we fit in with all that,” he said. “The committee is still working.”


He added that two preliminary progress reports have been made.


Meeting minutes have not been posted from the past two meetings for the solar committee. The solar committee meets every first Wednesday of the month.


Resident Kevin Allard suggested payment of taxes from the proposed solar PILOT program should be dedicated to a recreation fund for children.


“I’d like to consider doing a PILOT program in which solar farms that have a direct positive impact on the Town of Hoosick,” he said acknowledging Wysocki’s farm that is offsetting the school’s energy costs. The solar farm that’s going up on Route 22, doesn’t have the same impact. Do something like $100 per acre for something like Mr. Wysocki, but for something that doesn’t have a direct impact do like $250 an acre.”




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A motion was made to allow Attorney John Schopf to draft a proposal to enter into negotiations on the town’s behalf to set up a PILOT program for the commercial solar farms in town.


Councilman Eric Sheffer suggested building pilot ideas by utilizing non-vested companies and without using already established applications.


“It’s been brought to my attention both within the town and outside of the town that there’s some pretty big growing pains of these ongoing projects,” Sheffer said. “We should reach out to see where these projects are at before we spend any money trying to negotiate anything.”


On May 3 at 6 p.m., Brighten Energy solar company will visit the Town Hall to discuss community solar and pilot programs.


Water

Supervisor Mark Surdam spoke with Mayor David Borge, the Village Water Department and the Engineering Firm MRB to delve into the idea to expand the Municipal Water & Sewer into the town. This is the result of many conversations about the PFOA contamination.


Hoosick Falls school Superintendent Kenneth Facin suggested having water and sewer coming south to the school, according to Surdam’s report


Further conversation was conducted between Surdam, Mayor Borge and the NYS Environmental Facilities Corporation (EFC), the NYS Bureau of Water Supply Protection and Design Engineer Michael Montysko.


Mayor Borge addressed infrastructure issues in the village that were created and discovered during PFOA flushing process.


“There are options for getting some money. Probably, most likely a combination of grants and either low interest or zero interest loans,” Mark Surdam said. “It comes to a point where we vote to spend money to do a study, I imagine that would be reimbursable money.”


“I think this is something good that can happen for us,” Sutton said. “Would it involve theoretically sidewalks down at the school as well? We’re looking into it.”


A motion was approved by the board in order for Dave Sutton to work with the Village of Hoosick Falls and get more information on growing the distribution of the municipal water system into a reasonable distance, i.e. south on Route 22 to the Hoosick Falls Central School.


Fire

On April 23 the North Hoosick Fire Department will host an open house to allow the public to view the apparatus, equipment and facility. There will be 911 reflective signs for sale, 50 smoke detectors will be given away and there will be fire extinguishers available as a door prize.


On the same day, the Village of Hoosick Falls Fire Department will have an open house on Griffin Ave. from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.


These events are in recognition of the Firemen’s Association of the State of New York (FASNY) “Recruit NY 2016” initiative to bring in more volunteers.


The North Hoosick department, like many volunteer facilities, utilize a service reward program. Points are gained by a volunteer for participating in training, drills, fire calls, etc. These points are exchanged into money or retirement benefits. The 2015 points earned form has been completed and was approved by the board.


Additionally, Resolution No. 54, 2016 Protection District was approved to adopt the updated plan document prepared by Penflex Inc. This sets trust in which assets accumulated by the town are held for payment of the Service Reward Program Benefits.


Events

In an effort to recover from the water crisis, the Community Celebration Committee has planned an Earth Day event at Brown’s Brewing Company at the Walloomsac facility (50 Factory Hill Road, Hoosick Falls, N.Y.). The band “Flood Road” will play on April 22 from 7 to 9 p.m.


Admission cost $10 and includes a brewery tour, a pint of beer and samples of new menu items. Proceeds will benefit local watershed protection through the Rensselaer Land Trust. The event is sponsored by “I Heart Hoosick” to kick-off their season of events and recognize and thank all involved in making Hoosick Falls’ water safe again. Free sunflower seeds will be available.


Brown’s is committed to sustainable infrastructure and practices by using solar energy, LED light bulbs, reduced cooling needs due to geography, hydroelectric energy, aerobic water digestion system, by using local and ingredients and also by giving spend grains and yeast to local farmers to be repurposed.


Love Your Village clean up day will happen on May 7 from 9 a.m. to noon in partnership with St. Gobain. More information on this can be found at hayc3.org.


The Town Board meets every second Monday night of the month at 7 p.m. For more information visit townofhoosick.org.


—Makayla-Courtney McGeeney can be reached at (802)-447-7567, ext. 118.



Town looks to negotiate solar programs and expand water system to school

Friday, 15 April 2016

Nikon Metrology Introduces MV331, MV351 Laser Radars

Nikon_logoBRIGHTON, MI, Apr 14, 2016 – Nikon Metrology has introduced the new MV331 and MV351 for large scale, automated, non-contact metrology. The new Laser Radar slashes inspection time compared to traditional measurement systems and can be used in aerospace, automotive, renewable energy.


Premium productivity for large volume inspection


The Laser Radar offers non-contact inspection, true single-person operation and supports off-line programming for completely automated and unattended operation, reducing operating costs. The Laser Radar’s patented technology enables direct surface and feature measurements at high data rates which eliminates the need for photogrammetry targets, spherically mounted retro reflectors (SMRs) and handheld probes. The MV331/351 also slashes inspection times with high speed ‘vision scans’ that capture up to 2,000 points per second. For manual measurements, the multi-zoom overview camera allows the operator to locate the target part within a larger workspace.


Designed for accurate feature inspection


The Laser Radar can automatically perform feature, edge and trim measurements; improving product quality. With the Laser Radar, feature inspections are much faster than traditional methods and can be completely automated. The Laser Radar’s edge detection tools also allow users to measure both sharp and hemmed edges.


Existing inspection stations can be converted to measure with the Laser Radar as it can directly measure traditional tooling like tooling balls, photogrammetry dots, trihedrals or even reflective tape.


Redesign of internal components, improved environmental control create longer periods between calibrations and less measurement susceptibility due to environmental factors. This allows the Laser Radar to run a full day between field checks, even in a manufacturing environment.


Flexibility in measuring surfaces and finishes


Recapturing one billionth of the reflected laser beam is enough for the Laser Radar to accurately perform a measurement. Laser Radar can scan dark diffuse as well as highly reflective materials or surface finishes of any color at sharp incident angles. The system’s high signal/noise ratio yields repeatable range measurements on composites, metals and even highly reflective painted surfaces. The non-contact measurement technology also makes the Laser Radar ideal for measuring hot, soft or delicate surfaces.


Ready for shop floor use


For fully automated inline or line-side inspections, Laser Radars can be installed on a standard 6-axis robot arm with the built-in robot mounting interface. The MV331’s interface provides a stable mount for a large rage of industrial robots. The robots are used to automatically position the Laser Radar so it can then inspect areas otherwise hidden from the line of sight.


The Laser Radar has replaceable external air filters. In addition to the new filters, positive air pressurization can be used to keep dust and other airborne particles out when working in harsh manufacturing environments.


Seamless integration with common large scale metrology software


Customers can choose from a host of large scale metrology software solutions or use the software SDK to directly control the Laser Radar. Spatial analyzer, polyworks and metrolog software are all commonly used in conjunction with Laser Radar. The Laser Radar comes with a small footprint cabinet including a high-performance PC and peripherals.


For more information, visit Nikon Metrology website.




Nikon Metrology Introduces MV331, MV351 Laser Radars

Thursday, 14 April 2016

Maine Senate approves solar energy bill

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Maine Senate approves solar energy bill

Wind Power Transmission Line Plans Move Foward

If all goes according to plan, 400,000 megawatts of low-cost wind power from the Oklahoma Panhandle will be pumped into the Mid-South by 2020, allowing residents to power their homes and businesses with eco-friendly renewable energy.


The Plains & Eastern Clean Line, a 700-mile overhead, direct-current transmission line that begins on a wind farm in Oklahoma and culminates at a converter station near Millington, won a major approval from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) late last month. That approval clears the way for construction of the line, which is set to begin in late 2017.


“West Tennessee and Memphis will be the hub, not just for transportation and logistics, but also for renewable energy,” said Clean Line Energy co-founder and executive vice-president of development Mario Hurtado, referencing the Millington area substation the company will build for the project. The wind energy will be sold to the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), which provides power to Memphis Light, Gas, and Water customers and other utilities across the South. — Bianca Phillips


click to enlarge flyby_mariohurtado.jpg

Flyer: How would you explain the Clean Line Energy project?


Mario Hurtado: This project is basically a super-highway or pipeline, but in the form of electric transmission to take the cheapest energy in the country and get it, in the most efficient way, to Arkansas, Tennessee, and the rest of the Mid-South.


An hour of wind energy from the Panhandle costs about two cents [to produce] and two cents to get it to TVA and the rest of the Southeast. Four cents for wind energy on a long-term basis with zero emissions, we think is a very good deal.


Wind energy is extremely inexpensive right now, and part of that has to do with federal policy. For people in the Tennessee Valley, that means the opportunity to save billions of dollars on their electric bills.


Was the DOE approval the last hurdle?


This is the last regulatory approval, but we still have some permits to get on the environmental front. We have some commercial engineering milestones. This approval from the federal government allows us to do a lot of the work we need to do in Arkansas and Oklahoma.


Some Arkansas property owners protested the project because they didn’t want a transmission line going over their property. Are you still working to get permission to build the line through Arkansas?


There are more than 2,000 parcels on the transmission line, and we have to talk to every one of those landowners. We’re working very hard to start that conversation. We need to continue to do that, which is why we have time now to purchase more right-of-way and make sure people understand our compensation package for easements and how we want to treat them fairly and compensate them properly to build a transmission line on their land.


When the transmission line gets built, the landowners still own the property. They just give a limited permission for that transmission line to be there. And it takes up very little land on the ground because most of it is in the air.


Once the line is built, people can still farm on [the land], ranch on it, or use the property however they want. We are paying them the full market value for square footage for that right-of-away. We pay based on the market value of the property, and in addition to that, every year the project receives revenue, they will receive a piece of that revenue for having granted the easement for the transmission line.


How is this more eco-friendly?


We’re connecting to a power source, which is wind energy, that doesn’t have any emissions and has a very low impact. This country has been shifting from coal-fired power generation, from boilers that burnt coal, to [power] generation that is much cleaner.



Wind Power Transmission Line Plans Move Foward

Tuesday, 12 April 2016

Faster Tesla Model S P100D Flagship To Join Updated Range

If the 3.0 second 0-100 km/h time of the 2016 Tesla Model S P90D isn’t quite impressive enough for you, hold onto your hat – an even faster P100D flagship is on the way.


As reported by TMR in March, the P100D is expected to raise the bar for Tesla’s flagship sedan, dropping sprint times below 3.0 seconds for Ludicrous Mode-equipped models, lifting the current car’s 397kW power output and 505km range.


The new variant, as decrypted by a US software hacker exploring a Tesla firmware update (illegally, we’d guess), will likely take the place of the current P90D, and continue to offer dual-motor, all-wheel-drive grip.


The shape of things to come: The Tesla Model 3

The shape of things to come: The Tesla Model 3



At the same time, the Model S range will be treated to a mid-life update that will bring exterior styling into line with the more recently introduced Model X SUV and smaller Model 3 sedan.


Changes are set to see the blacked-out front applique of the Model S reduced in size, while new front and rear lights, new exterior paint colours, and new alloy wheel designs will complete the makeover.


Inside, Tesla will turn its attention to adding more storage to the previously minimalist interior, with new door pockets, and a higher lidded centre-console taking the place of the open tray that currently fills the space between the front seats.


The Model X is set to donate its interior tech

The Model X is set to donate its interior tech



The seats themselves are also likely to see an upgrade, borrowing from the Model X, which features the availability of heated and cooled seats in place of the heated-only seats of the Model S.


Another Model X spec highlight, ‘Bioweapon Defense Mode’ cabin air-filtration, will also make its way onto the Model S, capable of filtering out bacteria, viruses, allergens, and smog at levels hundreds of times higher than regular cabin air-filters.


A price rise is also tipped to arrive with the updated Model S when it debuts late in 2016. pricing for the current range starts at $122,208 for the Model S 70, up to $197,738 for the current Model S P90D before on-roads.


MORE: Tesla News and Reviews



Faster Tesla Model S P100D Flagship To Join Updated Range

'Green' energy: Red ink nightmare


‘Green’ energy: Red ink nightmare


Updated 2 hours ago


Another green energy company generously infused with taxpayer subsidies is circling the drain after reports that it overstated its cash flow.


According to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing by a subsidiary, solar energy giant SunEdison faces a “substantial risk” of bankruptcy, USA Today reports. SunEdison also is under investigation over whether it exaggerated its cash position, according to The Wall Street Journal. Company shares have fallen 95 percent in the past 12 months and for the first time traded for less than $1, The Daily Call reports.


And once again, it’s not just shareholders who are on the hook.


SunEdison and its subsidiaries received nearly $650 million in government subsidies and tax credits since 2000. In comparison, Solyndra — the poster child for the government’s failed green dreams — picked up $535 million in loan guarantees before it declared bankruptcy in 2011.


Recently, the Spanish green-energy company Abengoa filed for Chapter 15 bankruptcy protection after receiving $2.7 billion in federal loan guarantees.


Rather than shore up selected “winners,” government’s helping hand oftentimes prolongs the inevitable for too many green initiatives — which would have been better off on their own.


It is government’s incessant meddling that’s turned more than one green dream into a red-ink nightmare.




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"Green" energy: Red ink nightmare

Monday, 11 April 2016

Chinese team invents solar panels for rainy weather

KOLKATA: Power generation from solar panels stops during rains, an issue that has plagued the sector for several decades. Not anymore. A group of Chinese researchers have developed a system which can generate power from solar panels even when it’s cloudy and raining.


In a science journal, Angewandte Chemie, the researches claimed to have developed a technology that would make solar cells all weather. The solar panels would be covered with a layer of liquid graphene — a form of carbon.


During sunny days, the panels will use existing technology for generating power while during rain it will use the graphene-based energy transformation system thus keeping the power flow un-interrupted.


This could raise the capacity utilisation of solar panels to a great extent which, at present, cannot generate during rains.


According to the research paper, the scientists that have developed it hopes to advance the system from a lab-experiment to commercial development soon.



Chinese team invents solar panels for rainy weather

Sunday, 10 April 2016

Diversify Oklahoma economy to include more solar energy

Oklahoma and Michigan go together like pan and oven mitt. Both have experienced economic busts within the past 10 years. Michigan has recovered soundly, yet Oklahoma is still struggling. The state should learn from Michigan’s recovery by diversifying its energy sector. Efforts to diversify Michigan’s economy have resulted in long-term stability. Motor vehicle and parts manufacturing filled just 7.6 percent of the state’s GDP in 2012 compared with 12.8 percent in 2000, according to a 2015 report by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. The center also noted that chemical and textile manufacturing both added more jobs than auto and auto parts manufacturing from 2009 to 2012. By diversifying its manufacturing sector, Michigan has achieved long-term job growth and economic stability.


Oklahoma can emulate Michigan’s recovery by expanding within the renewable energy sector. The state already ranks fourth in installed wind capacity according to the American Wind Energy Association. Turbine projects continue to move forward throughout the state. However, solar power holds Oklahoma’s biggest opportunity. The state ranked 42nd in installed solar capacity in 2014, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association. Diversifying the economy to include solar cell manufacturing and installation would not only make Oklahoma a national energy leader, but also give it much-needed economic stability.


Joseph Van Harn, Norman


 



Diversify Oklahoma economy to include more solar energy

Saturday, 9 April 2016

Honeywell HPA300 Air Filter

shopgoodwill.com – #28829333 – Honeywell HPA300 Air Filter – 4/10/2016 5:00:00 PM

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Available for sale today is a: Honeywell HPA300 Air Filter


 


Brand: Honeywell


Type: Air Filter


Model: HPA300


Specifications: 120V ; 60Hz ; 1.10A


Color: Black


Condition:


Cord and plug are undamaged.  True [ x] False [ ]


Power button works and appliance turns on and off:  True [x ] False [ ]


All buttons and/or variable knobs for settings function.  True [x ] False [ ]


Notes: timer functions were adjustable however on/off function of the timer has not been verified; the included filters may need to be cleaned/replaced for best function; indicator lights functional; dimmer settings functional


Dimensions:  18 �” x 22 �” x 9 �”


*All measurements are approximate.


 


*To Save Money on Pick-Up Orders Please Scroll Down and Read the Red Text!


 



Shipping to P. O. Boxes or A.P.O.s



Questions?  Click our name under Seller above to send us an email.  We are not here on weekends and holidays, so please ask your questions early.  We’ll answer your weekend questions when we return.


 



SMB



Combined shipping information



Can’t seem to combine at checkout?  We use USPS and UPS for shipping.  When items are slated for different couriers in separate auctions, you may not be able to combine them at checkout.  Contact us about possibly switching couriers to enable combining.


 



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Note this before bidding–ALL SALES ARE FINAL.  By bidding on this item the buyer understands and accepts that items are represented, through description and pictures, to the best of our ability. Bids are placed with the knowledge that an item may contain unseen faults for which the buyer takes responsibility. The buyer understands that items have not been professionally authenticated or professionally tested unless stated and are sold as-is.  So, please bid accordingly.  Toys are not intended for children ages 0 to 12 and are sold as collectibles.  Helmets are not intended for active use and are sold as collectibles.  We hope to provide a pleasant auction experience for our customers.  Please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions prior to bidding.


This auction is brought to you by Goodwill of South Central Wisconsin




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PICK-UPS: You must contact this seller by calling 608-246-3140, ext. 169, BEFORE MAKING PAYMENT for items being picked up, so handling adjustments can be made. A reduced $1.00 handling fee will be assessed for each item picked up. Shipping paid by mistake on a pick-up order will not be refunded. PICK-UPS are between the hours of 9:00-3:30, Monday – Friday. You must schedule an appointment with the seller 24 hours in advance (608 246-3140 ex. 169). Once confirmation has been made, any additional items will require separate confirmation. Items will need to be picked up within 7 days of payment. If items are not picked up, they will become a donation and recycled. NO refund will be given. SHIPPING: If payment is made with the incorrect shipping method BEFORE CONTACTING THE SELLER, adjustments will not be made. Please contact us if you wish to change your shipping courier. We offer service from USPS and UPS. Please contact seller if you have items to be combined that are both USPS and UPS. If you wish to have USPS package insurance removed, you must contact the seller before selecting payment. All refunds for electrical must be made within 3 days of receipt or refunds will not be granted.





Seller Contact Information:


Goodwill Industries of South Central Wisconsin, Inc.
1302 Mendota Street
Madison, WI, 53714
608 246 3140



Return Policy: Items may be returned with prior authorization from the seller within seven (7) days of receipt if the merchandise was damaged during shipping or if there was a major distortion in the description. Returns will not be accepted without prior authorization. The seller will make arrangements for pickup, file a claim with the delivery company, and process a refund for you if the claim is accepted. There is no refund on shipping and handling charges.



Copyright © 2016 Goodwill of Orange County. All rights reserved. Use of this website constitutes acceptance of the shopgoodwill.com Bidders and Sellers Agreements.


 


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Honeywell HPA300 Air Filter

Friday, 8 April 2016

Osage Utilities announces land purchase for solar array


OSAGE | Osage Municipal Utilities (OMU) has entered into a purchase agreement for a 3.5-acre plot east of Fox River Mills Inc.




The land will provide a site for the solar project OMU has been planning for nearly a year.




“We’ve finally secured what we feel will be a good site,” said Laura Kuennen of OMU. “We’ve been working on plans for the project and are very excited to move forward.”




While it’s anticipated to be a community solar project, Kuennen said it’s still in its infancy phase. OMU is encouraging customers who are seeking green energy options to consider the project for some of their energy needs. 




OMU customers will have the opportunity to subscribe to the output from the solar project in exchange for a bill credit based on the solar energy the array produces.




The project would also offer customers the benefit of renewable energy generated by the solar panels without having to use their own equipment. 




Kuennen said municipal utilities are getting into solar projects. “This is kind of the way things are going now,” she said. “We want to encourage green living and renewable energy.”




OMU has a long history of supporting energy efficiency programs and renewable energy projects for the Osage community and this project fits right into their future goals, she said.




The plan has entered the design phase, with OMU having hired KJWW Engineering Consultants of Des Moines to complete the electrical and structural engineering design specifications for the approximately 500-kilowatt system.




Once the design phase of the project is complete, OMU will bid the project. 




Timing is depended on the bidding process, Kuennen said. 




Chrystal Berche is a correspondent for the Mitchell County Press-News, another Lee Enterprises newspaper. 




Osage Utilities announces land purchase for solar array

Thursday, 7 April 2016

JEA board, staff discuss revamping solar plan

JEA staff shared options for its board to consider later this month as leaders at the publicly owned utility look to revamp how it handles solar power, a proposal unpopular with advocates of rooftop solar panels.


Staff members briefed the board of directors on Thursday to share their rationale for a reduction in the rate it compensates rooftop solar customers for energy they send back to the grid while simultaneously tripling the solar power in JEA’s portfolio.


The proposal has been criticized by environmental activists and those who install rooftop solar panels.


The JEA chief executive officer and chief financial officer recommended two implementation options to the board for changing how the utility compensates current rooftop solar customers who return unused power to the grid in exchange for credits from JEA:


n Grandfathering in existing net metering customers, giving them the current rate (about 11 cents per kilowatt hour) while changing the rate for new net metering customers to 7.5 cents


n Phasing in a new rate for all net metering customers beginning Dec. 31 with the current rate being gradually reduced to 7.5 cents.


“We’ll charge our customers what it actually costs us to buy that solar energy,” said CFO Melissa Dykes.


Board chairman Tom Petway said he believes either proposal is fair to current customers.


“Nobody was guaranteed a solar rate forever because they have solar on their rooftop,” he said.


JEA’s stated goal with solar rates is to treat all solar providers the same, to pay 7.5 cents per kilowatt hour, regardless of whether it is from a large solar farm or an individual customer.


Opponents of the proposal argue it is regressive and discourages people from installing rooftop solar by significantly reducing the economic return. Pete Wilking, owner of Jacksonville-based A1A Solar, said the premise of the JEA proposal is flawed. He questioned how the staff arrived at 7.5 cents to credit solar customers. He contends there are a number of factors that JEA did not consider, including the reduced need for capacity on the energy grid and green energy, which is needed as utilities are being required to move toward cleaner energy.


“The future of the grid is going to look so much different than it does today,” he said.


JEA is paying current net metering customers more than it will pay for solar through its new contracts. Rooftop solar advocates disagree those customers are being subsidized and point to the many benefits, stating the power is sent nearby to neighbors, not through the power grid, and that those customers – not JEA – funded the power source on their homes.


Petway said they must think about all 450,000 JEA customers when considering this proposed change that would affect about 500.


The current average electric bill for a JEA customer is $124 a month with average net metering customers paying $17. Under the proposal, that would increase to $33.


Also, as part of its proposed solar changes, JEA is entering into contracts that would add 38 megawatts of solar in the next 18 months at a cost of $5 million, adding enough power for 5,000 houses a year. JEA currently has 12 megawatts of solar available. Even with the expansion, solar would only be 1.4 percent of JEA’s energy portfolio. The board did not vote and did not allow public comment on Thursday, but Petway said the workshop was about education and board dialogue on the issue. Petway expects the board to vote on the proposal at its April 19 meeting, when there will be a public hearing.


Sebastian Kitchen: (904) 359-4161



JEA board, staff discuss revamping solar plan