AT&T Blames Poor Wireless Service On Network Upgrade

August 31, 2009
Glenn Lurie is AT&Ts president looking after the carriers relationship with Apple

Glenn Lurie (right) is AT&T's president looking after the carrier's relationship with Apple

What’s the point of having an innovative mobile device like the iPhone, when the cellular network just… sucks!

Well according to AT&T, this might be coming sooner rather than later, as the mobile carrier revamps its wireless network in Silicon Valley with “an 850 overlay”, causing even more service disruptions.

But in the meantime, the now centre of the mobile word – being the birthplace of the iPhone –  will have to do with more poor quality calls or worse, dropped calls!

“We’re going to spend $5.5 billion in our mobility networks alone. We’re the biggest spendor of CAPEX in the U.S. of any company… We’re getting massive growth in data usage, not just because of the iPhone, but netbooks, laptops… we’re seeing high level of usage that no other carrier in the world is seeing at this particular time,” said AT&T president Glenn Lurie, who’s also in charge of the carrier’s “relationship” with Apple.

In other words, be patient and it’s going to get a lot better… Just like us, you probably heard that before!

iPhone exclusivity drives innovation

Asked about AT&T’s exclusivity of the iPhone in the U.S., Lurie argued that this was the only way to spur some technology innovation (like the iPhone visual voicemail) in what became the world’s leading mobile market, ahead of Asia and Europe.

“Now guess who’s coming to see us,” jokes Lurie.


Despite Downturn German Solar Market Will Grow 25% This Year

August 31, 2009

Solar markets around the world have suffered mightily from the global recession.

Demand has plummeted and prices have fallen sharply.

German market grows as Spanish market shrinks

German market grows as Spanish market shrinks

In Germany, however, expansion is expected to continue, with the market rising 25 percent and retaking the crown as Europe’s largest.

The country should consume 2,000 MW of new solar capacity this year compared with 1,600 MW last year, says Winfried Hoffmann, president of the European Photovoltaic Industry Association.

Europe’s former leader, Spain, added 2,500 MW of capacity in 2008, but will cap the additions at 500 MW this year as national subsidies dry up.

As a whole, Europe expects solar power will provide 12 percent of its energy by 2020, Hoffmann said.


Israeli Company Targets Small Urban Wind Farms

August 31, 2009

An interesting post on Israel21c about a startup developing products for small urban wind farms.

The fluctuations of urban wind make capturing its energy more difficult

The fluctuations of urban wind make capturing its energy more difficult

Variable Wind Solutions of Tel-Aviv is working on technology to improve the output and efficiency of the wind turbines – not on the turbines themselves.

It claims the fluctuating wind conditions of population centers make it difficult to effectively capture energy from the wind. This is a key reason why urban farms are been slow to take root.

CEO Ian Kaplan hopes a pilot project in California – and follow-on tests in England, Israel and Denmark – will show his technology can change this.

“Our technology can work with any kind of rotor design, so we can easily partner with any small wind turbine company and use their existing rotor setup,” Kaplan says. He predicts the three-year-old company will begin to sell its products commercially in as little as four months.

The company has raised $2.6 million in funding.

If he is right, the skyline of cities could change.


Renewables at 2.5% Of Electricity Generation Have A Long Way To Go

August 31, 2009

Saw this breakdown of U.S. electrical energy generation by source and it reminded me of how far we have to go.

Hard to believe it’s been 33 years since climate scientist Stephen Schneider first predicted global warming and already 11 years since the hammering out of the Kyoto Protocol.

Coal still accounts for 48.5 percent of U.S.electrical energy use with natural gas at a still somewhat distant 21.4 percent.

Sure, petroleum is just 1.6 percent. But renewable is itself only 2.5 percent, according to August figures from the Department of Energy.

What’s interesting is that biomass now generates 53 percent of all renewable electricity and wind, 31 percent. Geothermal comes up with 14 percent and solar, just 2 percent.

It has been 47 years since the publication of  “Silent Spring” kicked off the environmental movement and still tens of thousands of Americans still don’t believe in greenhouse gas warming or understand the consequences. You would think we might do better then that.

Sure, Al Gore won the 2007 Nobel Peace prize for “An Inconvenient Truth.” It is time to translate that fame into progress.

Here are the rest of the DoE figures: nuclear, 19.4 percent; hydropower, 6 percent; and other, less than 1 percent.

The sources of electricity in the U.S. (DoEs August figures)

The sources of electricity in the U.S. (DoE's August figures)


Shortage Of Offshore Wind Turbines Should Ease Soon

August 28, 2009

Talk about markets with sharp elbows.

The exploding interest in offshore wind turbines is drawing competitors from across the globe and kicking off a fierce struggle that could unsettle leaders Siemens and Vestas Wind Systems.

More than 700 ofshore wind projects are on drawing boards around the world

More than 700 ofshore wind projects are on drawing boards around the world

Offshore wind is presently thought of as among the most promising sources of renewable energy. More than 700 projects are on drawing boards around the world with global generation expected to grow at a 32 percent annual pace over the next decade.

According to ODS-Petrodata, wind farm capacity should expand to 55 gigawatts by the end of 2020, or enough to power nearly 37 million European homes. Less than 2 gigawatts is installed today.

The United Kingdom is so far the biggest market with the greatest number of rigs and projects under construction. Germany may take the lead by 2014, but look for the United States and China to be interested players.

The growing interest stressed the industry’s ability to supply enough wind turbines. But shortages should disappear soon. New European competitors are coming online and a bunch of Asian companies have sights on the market, including Hyundai in South Korea and at least 10 Chinese firms, says ODS-Petrodata in a recent report.

Look for competition to be fierce and prices to fall.


Waste Management Signs On To Convert Garbage To Gasoline

August 28, 2009

One of the nation’s largest waste haulers thinks there is gold in them thar garbage cans.

Waste Management puts money into Texas based Terrabon

Waste Management puts money into Texas based Terrabon

Houston based Waste Management said Friday it has agreed to invest in Terrabon, a Texas startup that hopes to convert organic garbage to high-octane gasoline.

The companies did not disclose the size of the investment. However they said it would help Terrabon expand the size of its conversion plant.

The joint venture puts another oar in the bio-fuel waters, where activity continues at an intense pace. Only recent, scientists at Ohio State disclosed a method of doubling the production of ethanol-alternative butanol, suggesting attractive alternatives to petroleum-based fuels are quickly emerging.

Waste Management said the new initiative would help it double its renewable energy production. The company will supply organic waste to Terrabon.

In  press release, Terrabon said it uses an acid fermentation process to convert biomass into organic salts (or bio-crude), which it ships to a Valero refinery to be processed into gasoline. The company claims the resulting fuel is easier to mix with petroleum-based gasoline than ethanol. It claims to have recently convert sorghum biomass into gasoline at its Bryan, Texas, plant.

Valero also said Friday it added to an investment it made in Terrabon in April.


Tesla Motors To Take Over NUMMI?

August 27, 2009
Tesla CEO expressed would love to take over NUMMI

Tesla CEO recently said he would love to take over NUMMI

A few months ago, I remember Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk warming at the idea of taking over NUMMI, the sole auto assembly plant on the West Coast.

Musk comments did make a lot of people laugh. Back in April, when the prolific entrepreneur spoke at a Churchill Club event, GM and Toyota were still committed to keep the 20-year old joint-venture running and Tesla was still waiting for government loans to help it jumpstart its future sedan “model S” vehicle project.

But after a tumultuous 4-months that  saw GM file for bankruptcy, sever its partnership at NUMMI, Tesla raising nearly a $1 billion from both the government and private investors and finally, Toyota announcing today it will not keep operating alone the Fremont, Calif., car plant, Musk’s “pipe dream” of taking over NUMMI could very well happen!

“Maybe at some point there’ll be an opportunity to acquire NUMMI. That’d be great. I’ll take that in a second. But that isn’t available right now,” added Musk.

A golden opportunity for Tesla indeed, that is required – by receiving the government loans – to find a 20+ year old plant to produce its upcoming all-electric “S” vehicle. And NUMMI just celebrated it’s 20 years anniversary… this year!

“But we can’t afford it right now, unless they give it to us. Which maybe they will,” said Musk 4 months ago!

And “they” (including the state, local and even perhaps the federal governments) might indeed make it so attractive that Tesla could actually find it hard not to move to NUMMI. Wait and see!

Follows the video excerpt where Tesla CEO Elon Musk eluded at the idea of taking over NUMMI:


Green Scooter Gets 25 Miles On 10 Cents Of Electricity

August 27, 2009

I’m still not sure where the new crop of Segway-style scooter is supposed to be used.

GoPet scooter reaches a top speed of 16 miles per hour

GoPet scooter reaches a top speed of 16 miles per hour

On the sidewalks of New York City? Perhaps In a suburban downtown, when you live a couple miles away? Are we supposed to give them to our college-bound children instead of cars? Or to our community police?

Despite their lack of utility, they are pretty cool feats of engineering. Here is one from MyGoPet that was previewed on the Gizmag and Ubergizmo Web sites.

The tricycle-looking device goes 25 miles on 10 cents of electricity and has a top speed of 16 miles per hour. It runs on a 48V, 350W motor and comes with batteries that recharge in six hours or less.

The Village of Greene, N.Y., police are reportedly using them on the beat.

I don’t fault manufacturers for trying. Someday they will come up with a green locomotive device a broad group of consumers can use. Today the best prospects lie with the electric motorcycle.


Breakthrough With Butanol Raises Hopes Of Gasoline Replacement

August 27, 2009

Butanol is an alcohol-based fuel long thought to be a replacement for gasoline.

Its prospects just received a big boost. Scientists from Ohio State University reported a breakthrough that doubles the production of the biofuel and significantly lowers its price.

Ohio State researchers deveoped a process for doubling fermentation of butanol

Ohio State researchers deveoped a process for doubling fermentation of butanol

While biolfuels have been slow to catch on in the United States, they hold promise in the fight against global warming. They do emit the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide when burned, but only the amount their source plant absorbed from the atmosphere. In that sense, they are more neutral than fossil fuels.

They come with another benefit. They could go a long way toward weaning the country from its oil addiction since they can be produced from crops such as sugar beets, sugar cane, corn and cassava – all renewable resources.

Today, butanol is typically made in a bacterial fermentation tank. (It also can be generated from oil.) The bacteria generally produce 15 grams of the chemical for every liter of water before the tank becomes too toxic for them to survive.

To sidestep this hurdle, the Ohio State researchers developed a mutant strain of bacteria (Clostridium beijerinckii) that can double the production to 30 grams.

The research, led by Shang-Tian Yang, a professor of chemical and bio-molecular engineering, was reported at a meeting of the American Chemical Society.

Yang believes the development can lower the cost of butane from today’s $3 a gallon price. “The recovery and purification of butanol accounts for about 40 percent of production costs,” he said.

Today, butanol is generally used as a solvent or in industrial processes. But it has several advantages as a gasoline replacement over other biofuels, such as ethanol.

First, it is less corrosive than ethanol, so could be distributed through the same pipelines and infrastructure as gasoline.

Second it has an octane rating similar to gasoline, suggesting that a motor might need little adjustment to burn it, and it better resists water contamination.

It’s impact on overall mileage is not yet known. But given the Ohio State research and the promise of a sub-$2-a-gallon cost, it is worth the effort to find out.


Ground Broken On California’s First Utility Scale Solar Farm

August 26, 2009

Cleantech America said it broke ground earlier this week on California’s first utility-scale solar farm – the largest project the state has so far approved.

The solar plant is located in Mendota, a sunny central valley city close to Fresno. It will provide 5 megawatts of power to Pacific Gas & Electric and is expected to be operational by the end of the year.

The CalRENEW-1 plant is to be the largest solar facility in the state

The CalRENEW-1 plant is to be the largest solar facility in the state

The facility, called CalRENEW-1, will help California toward its goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The state has required investor-owned utilities to generate 20 percent of their power from renewable sources by 2010 and 33 percent by 2020.

It will use thin-film solar modules from Sharp and contract engineering services from Quanta Services. Cleantech America was recently purchased by Meridian Energy, New Zealand’s largest generator of renewable power. The plant is its first in the United States.

According to a company press release, CalRENEW-1 will cut statewide greenhouse gas emission by 6.3 million pounds of CO2 and 6,905 pounds of nitrous oxide a year.

The plant will create 165 long- and short-term jobs.


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