Monday, January 25, 2021

THE NEW GREEN ERA

 

THE NEW GREEN ERA

 Just a few days after the historic inauguration, I am still in ecstasy, because we now have a new direction in addressing our energy, environmental, and economic problems.  We will shift away from fossil fuels, and continue the transition to renewables and sustainability.  This move has already enjoyed incredible success, despite the many political and economic hurdles thrown at it.  The progression to a renewable electric future is going to zoom forward in the following years.  The main reason is $$$$!!!! The driving force of our society!  I predicted many years ago to my students that the tiny CO2 molecule will alter our civilization into a new age---a renewable, cleaner, and more sustainable age.  Just common sense.  We now have the potential political will and the economic means for investments to make it happen, not only here in the US, but around the globe.

 We were told so many times and in so many ways that renewables (and I’ll focus here on solar) were way too expensive, which is no longer true.  Almost all new generation capacity in the past few years has been solar PV, mainly large MW projects, out-competing coal, nuclear, and in many ways edging out natural gas. My two solar systems returned 10% and 20% this last year…tax-free!! My contractor said if the last system I installed was configured today, the return would be closer to 30%! A 3-4 year payback, if that’s how some people understand investments.  Large projects will continue; but we will also see a new focus on existing solar windows…rooftops, parking lots, commercial buildings and facilities…so many potential sites, which do not need to be dedicated just to producing energy, but multiple uses are not mutually exclusive.

 The biggest driving force is all the new technology and development of electricity storage.  Massive battery systems are popping up all over the world, driven by all the research and progress being made by Tesla, VW…pretty much all the major auto manufacturers, as well as many small new startups. The Moss Landing gas-steam 800+MW plant I remember just south of San Francisco was closed a few years ago and replaced by more efficient gas engines, like at Humboldt Bay.  Now, there is a major battery storage system built on site.  I will use the power that’s generated there, as well excess power from the grid during the day, and supplying electricity in that time when renewables aren’t available…using the existing grid infrastructure. (6)  The same thing is happening in retired power plant sites all over the world. 

 But the “big future” is in Hydrogen, which I’ve touted for so many years.   Below are just a few of the hundreds of references I’ve come across in the past few months.  No longer falling on deaf and dumb ears, this future is going to make a lot of money for companies and investors, because it is not just one company or one technology, but all the necessary supportive infrastructure which is spread out over R&D, manufacturing, deployment, employment…huge transformation and potential for jobs and investment to our economy.  All the optimistic studies, reports, etc. over all the years have been correct…they were squashed by the lies and political manipulation of the fossil fuel industry.  Things have changed. Of course, we will continue to use fossil fuels when/where they are appropriate and cost-effective, and it will take time to make necessary changes.  We’ll see how new carbon capture technologies progress, making useful purposes for the CO2 waste product.  Our incredible science and technology are on the verge of incredible findings, now that we are getting back to realizing and trusting their incredible potential. There are so many people anxious to use their minds without being stifled by government and big business.  Money to be made…jobs…!!!

 Then there is the nuclear industry, stuck with a dinosaur technology.  Most of the existing nuclear plants will be retired in the next couple of decades, despite license extensions.  They are too expensive to run cost-effectively, and of course, they continue to generate wastes for which we have no solutions, other than to pay a lot of money to securely store and monitor them.  The industry touts the new cheaper and safer small modular reactors, a few which are about to leave the drawing boards and be constructed to see if/how they will work. (2) Supposedly, these SMR could be manufactured in a factory (sort of like PV modules) and then shipped and assembled on site.  Of course, they will still need heat exchangers, steam generators, turbines, generators, cooling water, a supply of enriched uranium fuel, and the never mentioned means to deal with both the high-level and low-level nuclear wastes.  Hell of a way to boil water! A lot of research has recently produced solar technologies capable of producing the high-temperature needs of the steel, cement, and other industries.  The nuke industry touts it is carbon-free…again, a misstatement…actually a lie.  The entire nuclear fuel cycle is enormously energy-intensive, producing lots of CO2.  There is also a lot of buzz about nukes producing Green Hydrogen! Another false hope for the industry is new advanced reactors which use plutonium as their main fuel, recycling high-level nuclear waste.  This requires reprocessing, which is a technological and economic nightmare, and will not play any kind of a role in our energy needs.  The Hanford Vitrification Plant, 17 years under construction, and over budget to the tune of $17 billion, is supposed to soon come online.  This one plant was built just to take the 56 million gallons of reprocessing wastes left over from bomb building and now in tanks, and solidifying them into glass logs.  It will take 30+ years and cost ??$$ to operate.  It will not reduce any of the radioactivity it is dealing with…it will just put them into a solid form.  Those glass logs will then be added to the spent fuel assemblies that are currently being store in pools or dry casks.  Reprocessing creates many more problems than what the industry purports it solves.  All the nuclear ideas, such as thorium reactors, have not been proven commercially economical or even feasible off the planning board.  And they all produce high-level wastes!!! Of course, that is never addressed, or given lip service.  There is no solution to nuclear waste!

 The industry has been recently touting the progress of fusion for potentially giving us unlimited energy.  Another hoax! Even if the astronomical problems are solved, it will be many years before commercial development; and even fusion produces a variety of nuclear wastes.  It is not as clean as spouted. I support a lot of different scientific research which, in reality, has no real value to me or the 99% of our global population…fusion, rockets to Mars, underwater cities…they allow for the accumulation of scientific knowledge which in the big picture has true value.  Fusion power may someday become a reality; but it suffers the same problems fission power faces…enormous infrastructure, technical complexity, unknown high cost, and it DOES produce radioactivity and radioactive wastes.  We already have a fusion reactor that works very well, is clean, sustainable, technologically useful, job-producing, and FREE…it’s called the SUN!

 As our civilization transitions from a hunter-gatherer society (I found it…that’s my oil…keep your hands off it!) to a harvester society (capturing the appropriate renewable resource, storing it for times of need, and sharing it with whatever needs and demands.) 

This is a major transition that will occur over TIME.  The complexity of this change lies in that there is no one thing, no silver bullet, no single technology; but an incredible variety of resources, supply, demand, and efficient use.  What is evident today is the enormous amount of money going into renewables, encouraging the incredible human ingenuity in our scientific and technologic spheres to bring on spectacular innovations and changes that will make for a more sustainable and just planet.

 Enough for now, since I could go on and on!  I will soon continue my blog with examples of all the new exciting ideas and projects that are now seeing the light of day.

 Here are a few references for the above:

1.     https://watershedsentinel.ca/articles/mini-nukes-dirty-and-dangerous/?fbclid=IwAR14eIaY3jwgq2nrU5bIVuT9nkJCr1RJuRjRVer90uF0wbw_dm34xh9wwdM

2.     https://www.powermag.com/doe-rolls-out-nuclear-innovation-blueprint-ahead-of-biden-administration-takeover/?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiT0dWaFlUUm1PR1JtTUdSayIsInQiOiJnZ3FrNHl6azZkTjBPa0U3K3pQSURaQkZEWmk4NURUSStsS3BCNTlTZjhWVVhVbVBvMjU2VEl1RjVxcUJkUXhSSUY0bnFkdk51RXpMcVYrQk5veDVGMUhqU2doTlF5MG1JeWl6clpRVENEMnEzUUIwZGFOdWlIdnNjYVlRdUdBNSJ9

3.     https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-08-20/solar-wind-and-battery-cleantech-are-now-mainstream-investments

4.     https://reneweconomy.com.au/fortescue-leads-stampede-into-green-energy-with-stunning-plans-for-235-gigawatts-of-wind-and-solar-27936/?fbclid=IwAR1pJGelMsxXrIFoHc95iNKyTsT6XN84Owr59Pfqysp3n1EmS1GRh0Hel8M

5.     https://www.reuters.com/article/us-canada-hydrogen/canada-unveils-hydrogen-strategy-to-kick-start-clean-fuel-industry-idUSKBN28Q2XC

6.     http://digital.olivesoftware.com/olive/ODN/SanFranciscoChronicle/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=HSFC%2F2021%2F01%2F17&entity=Ar04104&sk=CC46A142&mode=text

 

 

 

 

 

Monday, November 16, 2020

POST-ELECTION THOUGHTS

 

POST-ELECTION THOUGHTS

 In these trying and difficult days, I am uplifted by the move forward that our new administration will put forth with regards to some sort of Green Energy Plan to deal with climate change.  I am bolstered by the incredible development and deployment of so many renewable technologies that have been occurring worldwide.  With the release of the great ingenuity of the scientific, technical, and economic base here in the US, freed from the political chains of the past, the potential is enormous and positive.  It will take time, and it does not mean we will stop using fossil fuels.  They will continue to be a part of our transition and will hold appropriate use in the future. 

 The fear that this transition will be “too expensive” again hides the truth that we spend over $1.3trillion each year in the US, and this does not count the health, environmental, and social costs it incurs.  Investments in new renewable technology will begin to replace what we currently spend on infrastructure and subsidies.  It will create new industries…instead of building factories to make modular nuclear power plants, we need to build factories manufacturing solar PV cells, wind turbines, and all the associated infrastructure…here in the US creating so many jobs lost overseas.  The deployment of renewable technologies will bolster local economies with jobs and revenue.  It will create a huge new “industry” making money for everyone! There are so many very talented people, and people with money to invest, who are waiting for the incentives to put their great ideas and innovations to use.  This is happening all over the world, with the surprising largest projects occurring in Australia.  It is going to happen here!

https://reneweconomy.com.au/fortescue-leads-stampede-into-green-energy-with-stunning-plans-for-235-gigawatts-of-wind-and-solar-27936/?fbclid=IwAR1pJGelMsxXrIFoHc95iNKyTsT6XN84Owr59Pfqysp3n1EmS1GRh0Hel8M

 https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-08-09/china-s-aiko-solar-will-spend-2-87b-to-build-plants-in-zhejiang

 https://greekcitytimes.com/2020/11/05/volkswagen-electrify-astypalaia/

 The nuclear industry continues to suck money for costly new technologies that will never make any huge impact on our energy needs.  They will continue to be too expensive, unsafe, environmentally damaging through the entire fuel cycle, and will be unnecessary by the time they reach commercialization.  As with fossil fuels, their use will play a role when/where it is most appropriate.

 https://www.forbes.com/sites/llewellynking/2020/10/13/new-design-molten-salt-reactor-is-cheaper-to-run-consumes-nuclear-waste/?sh=204b3e9d33c6

 https://www.kcbx.org/post/planned-and-unplanned-shutdown-diablo-canyon-halts-all-electricity-generation#stream/0

 My biggest thrill is in the “sudden” awareness in Hydrogen…especially GREEN HYDROGEN.  It is just common sense that this is the future, and now its economic potential is beginning to be realized by industry and policymakers.  In the future, I will focus on this, since its potential to STORE renewable energy is key to our sustainable future.

 https://e360.yale.edu/features/green-hydrogen-could-it-be-key-to-a-carbon-free-economy

 https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-10-19/tesla-powerwall-rival-seeks-to-bring-hydrogen-into-your-home

 https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-11-01/-hydrogen-wars-pit-europe-v-china-for-700-billion-business?srnd=premium

 

Let the sunshine!!!

 

 

 

 

Friday, October 9, 2020

PRE-ELECTION THOUGHTS

 With all the craziness going on in so many aspects of our lives, here are just a few updates on what is going on with energy.  Next year looms to be a breakout year for renewables, regardless of who wins, but especially if the Green New Deal comes through.  Solar and wind installations are growing, in spite of Covid and the political denial.  The nuclear industry continues to tout the promise of cheap, safe new tiny modular reactors, which will not have any major inroad in our electricity generation compared to the renewables potential.

 The biggest excitement I have is that HYDROGEN is making incredible headway in almost every aspect of future energy predictions.  No longer a pipe dream for the future, major corporations and the tiny ones who have been working on this for years (ie PLUG) are starting to commercialize and press for incorporation in our energy mix.  Even the nuclear industry is trying to stay alive saying nuclear electricity can be used to make hydrogen.  Again, the big focus now is in transportation, but it is just common sense that it will become a major factor in green electricity storage.

 My greatest thrill is in following Enphase (ENPH), the company that made the inverters for my two solar systems.  Priced at $4.50/share three years ago, it jumped to $58+/- as reported in my June blog.  Today it broke $110!!!!   The next Apple? Microsoft? Tesla?  The company is doing very well in developing microgrids all over the world, especially Europe.  Wait until the renewable markets are set free in this country!  Innovation, small local business production and jobs…what we need. 


Enough for now.  We just voted by mail yesterday, and anxiously await the next few months to see if the America we’ve lived and believed in will survive.  Stay safe..in so many ways!!!!

 There are so many articles coming out every day.  Here are just a few:

 https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2020/aug/27/enormous-opportunity-how-australia-could-becomehe-saudi-arabia-of-renewable-energy

 https://sponsored.bloomberg.com/news/sponsors/features/hyundai/explore-the-global-hydrogen-economy-today/?adv=16713&prx_t=aXwFAdt1EAZKMQA&ntv_idp=1

 https://www.spglobal.com/platts/en/market-insights/latest-news/petrochemicals/100520-hydrogen-roadmap-lays-out-steps-to-make-the-gas-14-of-us-energy-demand-by-2050?mkt_tok=eyjpijoiwkrrd056zghnell3ww1kasisinqioiiyy2drdzh1ekjxatzkq3pgb2zirkgzrvdad3nidu9ua0raredzu1awyjrwswxmttvzcwhos0sxyzbzeucyddi3qxk5d2zodgw1blblowvidglwnuq4qlwvannsa3jjewwxtnbdtzjpag9hnhbkn2fxohbyqkh0nxpibvdxdffgunyifq%3d%3d

 

Friday, July 24, 2020

WE REALLY NEED NUCLEAR POWER!!!!

Nuclear power, climate change, renewables…It’s all been dictated by a small handful of powerful, greedy, and corrupt people in this country and the world.  It has nothing to do with common sense, affordability, or sustainability.  It’s been obvious to many of us all along.

 So much for the nuclear renaissance…

 https://www.toledoblade.com/local/politics/2020/07/21/FBI-launches-raids-related-to-nuclear-bailout-law-source-says/stories/20200721079/

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/top-ex-scana-official-stephen-byrne-pleads-guilty-in-sc-nuclear-fiasco-fraud-case/ar-BB176Gzo?ocid=sf

 https://www.wbur.org/earthwhile/2020/06/25/plymouth-nuclear-plant-decommissioning-company-criminal-investigation

 The list goes on and on…these are just the stupid ones who got caught!!!

 

 


Saturday, July 18, 2020

SOME REALLY GREAT NEWS

Some really great news in these troubled times.

As the US struggles through its chaos, the rest of the world is not standing still, and continues to move towards a more sustainable future.  Recent events have peaked my optimism that there are a lot of smart people in this world.  Here is some of my joy!

I’ve always admired the son of a close friend of mine, who went to work for Nextracker, a small company in the Bay Area, that specializes in solar tracking.  He writes software for them, and about a year and a half ago, they moved him and his family to Australia, to work on what he said was a fabulous solar project.  The 120MW Bomen Solar Farm has been completed and is up and running.

https://www.westpac.com.au/news/making-news/2020/06/renewable-life-solar-farm-sets-sail-post-ppas/

Just the other day, he told his dad that the contract was signed for 6 square miles! of solar surface, for which he will program the solar tracking!  This is part of a $20 billion project in Northern Australia which will produce 10,000MW of solar electricity on about 60 square miles of land, and coupled with battery storage, will send electricity to Singapore via a 2400-mile undersea cable.  Many years in the planning, this project is constantly morphing and growing, as more private investors see the emission-free future, and are expanding the renewables potential for this part of the world.  Vestas is looking at building 5MW of wind, and other investments in various technologies are looking at Green Hydrogen production.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/jul/14/just-a-matter-of-when-the-20bn-plan-to-power-singapore-with-australian-solar

My prediction of hydrogen as the future carrier of energy is now making a very big inroad in many parts of the world.  Years ago, the argument was over a plutonium or a hydrogen economy.  Sanity and common cents will eventually prevail!

https://www.dw.com/en/germany-and-hydrogen-9-billion-to-spend-as-strategy-is-revealed/a-53719746

 

 

 


Wednesday, June 3, 2020

RENEWABLES IN A TURBULENT TIME



At the risk of overstating the obvious, these are historic times on all the fronts of pandemic, climate change, economic instability, and social justice.  I can write and speak volumes, but the focus here is on what has been happening in the area of energy production and use, and the rather positive news regarding solar and wind.  We will always need electricity production, and the upward trend in renewables capacity is happening in this country, as well as worldwide. Almost all new generation now and planned is in wind and solar.  Basic economics, which is good for jobs, the environment, and sustainability.

Coal is continuing its rapid decline in use, primarily because of its industry cost, not even taking into account all of its true costs.  Latest figures from whatever powers that be shows coal at 6-8 cents/kwh, solar PV at 4-5 cents, offshore wind 5-6 cents, and nuclear at 14+ cents.  Surprisingly, large scale battery storage is coming in at 15 cents, with those costs in a fairly rapid decline.  Renewables beat coal in electricity production in the US for the first time in 130 years, and the same is happening all over the world.  The 2250MW Navajo coal plant recently shut down is being re-powered with PV.  The first phase is 200MW, with 550MW more in the works for now.  Not only does this mean electricity generation worth money, but local jobs and a much cleaner environment. (1)

In Nevada, Warren Buffet, who owns the utility, has committed to 600MW near Las Vegas, with battery storage. (2)  Here in Humboldt County, a new contract has been signed to purchase 100MW of power from a to-be-built facility near Bakersfield.  This is part of our Community Choice Aggregation which supplies electricity to whoever wants it in the County.  It is currently comparable with PG&E costs, and will ultimately be cheaper and more reliable, as PG&E continues to struggle to survive in its bankruptcy, and ratepayers are on the hook for bailing them out. (3)  Coupled with supplying electricity, utilities are now making serious efforts in the demand-side for electricity via energy efficiency, which most often is a lot cheaper that production. (4)

The biggest news comes in the infant technology of storage.  Battery technology is making amazing strides, and virtually all new large-scale renewable projects include battery back-up.   California alone is committing to over 1000MW of new storage. (5)  Hawaii, Arizona, and even Florida are taking part in developing this new technology in earnest.  Costs are high right now (true costs compared to what?) but as with the other renewable components, the more that is produced and implemented, the lower the final costs.  I still believe Hydrogen will be the ultimate storage medium, and a lot of research is now heading in that direction.  Though the use of hydrogen-fuel cell vehicles is important, I still feel that large-scale hydrogen production on site at PV and wind farms will eventually be key to smoothing out the intermittency of renewable production. (6)


Another shift in conducting energy business is the adoption of microgrids in place of the old model of a large centralized power plant sending electricity in all directions to users.  Whether it is Humboldt County, the City of Napa, a school district in the valley…so many entities are seeing the economic value of “small is beautiful” in providing lower costs, more reliability, more local control, more jobs, and less stranglehold from large corporate energy conglomerates. 

The complex world of energy and electricity production is probably the largest financial entity in the world.  Aside from oil, where individual companies control the entire chain from exploration, extraction, transportation, refining, and distribution, renewables offer a different picture, mainly because the fuel is FREE.  This cuts into control and profits, and is the main reason renewables have been held back for so long by the powers that be.  There is still a lot of money to be made in the future, and it is those that understand how to develop and implement the technologies that will do well.  Here is an idea I purported many years ago, and it may be time.  JinkoSolar in China is spending $1.6 billion building a facility that by 2022, will produce 16,000MW of solar panels per year!. (7) What does that mean?  It means that by 2022, panels capable of generating 16,000MW will be available to be sold and installed wherever.  That’s the equivalent of 16 large nuclear of coal plants, which would cost 10x as much just to build, take 8+ years, and when on line will only produce +/-1000MW of electricity.  Each year that one manufacturing facility will an additional 16,000MW of panels.  A lot of panels…it would take many years to produce the 6TW of worldwide generating capacity, but this is just one technology to be used when appropriate.  We should be building PV manufacturing facilities here in the US and around the world…JOBS, sustainable energy technology to be developed and put into operation…over time, this as well as other generating technologies, storage, efficiency, etc.  can get us to the sustainable future so may bigwigs say is impossible.

One last bit of bright news is my following a company called Enphase, which originated in the little town of Petaluma (once the egg capital of the US).  They made the inverters used in both my solar PV systems I installed about three years ago.  They work great. At that time, the publicly traded stock (ENPH) was selling for around $4.50.  This company has grown, and is actively involved worldwide in microgrids, new inverter technology partnership with Panasonic, and a bunch of other things.  The stock has fluctuated a lot in the past couple of months…from a high of $64…this morning down to $58.32.   There is money to be made in renewables…from the products themselves to the usage.

The revolution (in all its fronts) is starting, and my optimism is that people are not really self-destructive, and we eventually will come out of all this mess in a better place because we do have the knowledge and technology to do so.  What we need is the moral courage to fight the greed and politics in place now.  Let the sun shine!!!!

 Some supportive materials.  There is so much available on line…real and fake!


Sunday, May 17, 2020

NUCLEAR UPDATE during the pandemic


NUCLEAR UPDATE during the pandemic

As most of the world is in turmoil and a great variety of businesses and industries look to evolve and adapt to the uncertain future, life goes on in those many essential services.  The recent dramatic changes in energy use demonstrates that major shifts in supply and demand can happen very quickly, either by choice or through unforeseen factors.  The recent over-drilling for oil coupled by a sharp drop in demand and use has shown not only the vulnerable complexity of artificial price structures; but also a significant decrease in air pollution, which will be a driving force in our future attempts to deal with climate change as we rebuild our societies.  The continued decline of coal due to cheaper renewables continues here and across the globe.  That, too, is encouraging.  The nuclear industry continues to drain our dollars, this time not for energy production, but for costly shutdowns, decommissioning, and waste management.  The current administration still subsidizes the unattainable myth of cheaper and safer small modular reactors, the boondoggle of fusion power, and even the expansion of uranium mining on public lands.  The fight for money goes on!

Here in California, we are still bumbling through the bankruptcy of PG&E, and the impacts that it is having and will continue to have on our high electricity and gas prices. The future of the Diablo Canyon nuclear complex is very unclear as to when it will shut down, will PG&E sell the license, when decommissioning will actually begin, how long will it take, and most importantly, how much will it cost and who will pay for it.  There is also the unsolved dilemma of the high-level spent fuel, the hundreds of dry casks to be stored on site, and the unknown impacts of climate change, earthquakes, etc. Similar issues are facing the San Onofre units, and the shutdown of Indian Point unit 2 in New York, with unit 3 to soon follow.  Other cleanups continue at a handful of shuttered plants, as well as difficult and costly cleanup at the many military and industrial facilities throughout the nation.

The future does not bode well for the supply side of the nuclear industry.  If we remember back to around 2005, when the “nuclear renaissance” was put forth by the Bush Administration, guaranteeing subsidies for construction of new plants that were then deemed to be necessary, and could be built on time and on budget..  Out of the 30+ plans that were submitted, 5 units were chosen.  One in Texas never broke ground, the two units in South Carolina were abandoned after being about 50% completed and billions of dollars over budget, leaving the two Vogle units in Georgia currently still in process.  Fifteen years later, and at a current estimated cost of $25 billion (up from the original $8 billion) and still only 60% constructed, here is another glitch.  The foundation of unit 1 is sinking!!!!! Read the article below…mindboggling!!!!  The rest of the nuclear industry continues to suck up taxpayer dollars for the development of small modular reactors which supposedly will be built by the hundreds to provide cheap electricity.  That will not happen…it is the same myth/hoax the industry has plied us with for over half a century.  Those reactors suffer with not only their costs, but the main issue not addressed, which is the creation, management, and disposal of all the high-level and low-level nuclear wastes that are produced through the vast infrastructure and supply chain.

Low-level wastes are currently disposed of in a handful of waste dumps in Utah, Texas, Idaho, and Nevada.  The nuclear industry is currently optimistic about the storage of high-level spent fuel, with a couple of companies taking the lead.  The biggest is Holtec, a private company that back in the early 2000’s just manufactured dry casks.  Humboldt Bay bought 6 of these, and the spent fuel from the decommissioned reactor is encased in these huge cannisters in a facility located on Humboldt Bay.  At the time, the casks were rated to last about 40 years, the idea being that they would eventually go to Yucca Mountain for permanent disposal.  Politics aside, that is not going to happen, since the geology of that repository is unsuitable for containment of the wastes for a minimum of 10,000 years.   Holtec has almost cornered the market today for dry casks (some 15,000 at $1million/cask will eventually be needed) and has ventured out into the full range of decommissioning business.  They have bought up licenses from utilities with shut down plants, and are making money in their dismantlement and low-level waste disposal.  Their latest attempt is currently in process to buy Indian Point.  I would not be surprised if they try for Diablo Canyon!  But the real clincher is their attempt to receive approval from the various federal and state agencies to build a facility in southern New Mexico, which would accept dry casks from all over the US, and place them on a very large pad out in the desert.  This concept, called Monitored Retrievable Storage, was proposed about 30 years ago for a site in Utah, but was dismissed as a potential environmental, economic, technological, military, etc. disaster.  Picture thousands of casks concentrated out in the open…for how long?  Transportation issues—getting them there, eventually shipping them to a permanent place?  What is the time frame - how long will the cask survive, how will they be repackaged, monitored, safeguarded from natural and terrorist attacks???  How much will all this cost, who will pay…all this is great for Holtec! They can be in position to control the whole decommissioning process…dismantle the plants, use their products to transport and store both high and low-level wastes, and have citizens and ratepayers foot the bill.  This will be a booming business over the next 50 years.

In the very near future we will be forced to re-examining all our energy systems.  The old school, big money utilities, large scale centralized power plants and the grid, the incredible impacts on air, water, land, and public health will all be in the forefront as we seriously address climate change, and embrace the cheaper (in so many ways) and sustainability of small scale local microgrids and the continued development of solar, wind, and other renewables, and the coming surge of electricity storage.  As a peer of mine once said, we are transitioning from a hunter-gatherer society (keep your hands off of that oil…I found it…it’s mine) to energy farmers, capturing the solar energy available to us in so many forms, and learning to manage and store it as nature did for us over the millions of years.  At the forefront is an amazing new economy with jobs, lower costs in every aspect, and a verdant sustainable future.  It is just common sense, but will depend on changing the current politics of greed and capitalism.  Let the sun shine.!!!!!