US Wind Energy Added More Capacity In 2009 Than Any Other Year

April 8, 2010

Iowa gets more of its electricity from wind power than any other state – 14%. Texas has greatest generating capacity and the largest farms.

Across the country, 85,000 people are employed in the wind energy industry, with 10 new manufacturing plants beginning operation last year.

Iowa gets more of its electricity from wind power than any other state - 14 percent. Texas has the most utility-scale farms.

These are the findings of the American Wind Energy Associations annual report on the industry, released Thursday. China is out muscling the United States and most other countries with its efforts to add wind generation and manufacturing capacity.

But the U.S. is not standing still. The study finds that the nation installed 10,000 MW of wind power in 2009, more than any other year. Sure, new project planning slowed during the year, but 36 states now have utility-scale farms and 14 have more than a GW of generating capacity.

Leading the wind turbine market is GE and the largest owner of wind farms is NextEra Energy Resources. Xcel Energy of Minnesota is the utility with the wind power feeding into its distribution gird.

According to the report, 10 manufacturing plants came into operation last year and 20 new ones were announced. Even the market for small, residential, turbines chugged along. It grew 15 percent, with 20 MW of capacity sold.

Obviously the industry has a tough battle ahead considering the gargantuan resources China is putting behind wind energy and that country’s cheap labor. The challenge is all the more daunting give the tight credit conditions that linger in North America.

But look to the bright side. At least credit is not as tight as with solar farms.


Xerox Appears To Be More Confident About Energy Star Goal

April 8, 2010

Despite the spread of the Internet and the growing use of digital documents, paper consumption in offices continues to grow.

The average U.S. employee uses 10,000 sheets a year, according to copier maker Xerox. So does this mean the paperless office, first envisioned 30 years ago, is still a distant dream?

The copier company hopes that 100 percent of its products will be Energy Star qualified in three years.

“I think that’s true,” says Debra Koehler, director of sustainability in the company’s solid-ink products group. This copy-and-print reality of today’s work place has put energy consumption in the cross hairs of a company trying to deliver ecological benefit to its printer and copier customers.

Xerox claims to be making progress. Lowering energy use is a higher priority than it was just six months ago and the aim is to have 100 percent of its products Energy Star qualified within three years. That would be up from 80 percent today.

Xerox appears to be more confident about hitting the target. Koehler says of the solid-ink unit, “I am confident we will deliver on these goals with our next generation of products,” scheduled to hit stores in two to three years. Improvements are being made not just with electronics, but with energy management software, controllers and insulation.

Energy use should be down by 80 percent in the next several years, she said.


Silicon Valley Company Turning Beetle Devastated Colorado Forests Into Biofuel

April 7, 2010

The mountain pine beetle is devastating Colorado’s lodgepole pine forests

Now a California company hopes to put these millions of acres of dead and dying trees to good use. Cobalt Technologies of Mountain View says it has come up with a way to turn the tattered forests to biofuel.

The mountain pine beetle has killed millions of trees. Cobalt Technologies wants to turn them into fuel.

The mountain pine beetle, native to North America, has killed millions of trees in northern Colorado, and its infestation has spread to other western states and to other pines, including the ponderosa pine. It is estimated as many as 40 million acres could be infested in British Colmbia.

“If we use only half of the 2.3 million acres currently affected in Colorado alone, we could produce over two billion gallons of bio-butanol — enough to blend into all the gasoline used in Colorado for six years,” claims Cobalt CEO Rick Wilson.

Colorado State University will begin testing whether Cobalt’s bio-butanol, when mixed with gasoline, will be suitable for use in commercial engines.

“Converting beetle-killed pine for biofuels is an extremely difficult process,” says Colorado State University chemical and biological engineering professor Ken Reardon in a Cobalt press release.


Army Tries Out Mobile Wind Turbine.

April 7, 2010

The military used to cart around mobile generators for power on the go.

WindTamer said it sold a mobile wind turbine to the Army Research Development and Engineering Command

Now it has begun to haul mobile wind turbines. WindTamer said Wednesday it sold its first trailer-mounted wind turbine to the Army Research, Development and Engineering Command (RDECOM) at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland.

The turbine will undergo testing as an energy source for batteries in communications gear. The 1 KW device includes electricity storage.

WindTamer of Rochester, N.Y., said it sees the military as a significant market for mobile turbines.

The demonstration unit, if successful in the field, could lessen the Army’s need to haul fuel and generators to forward positions. RDECOM is a technology development arm of the service.


Analyst: iPhone OS 4.0 Needs Easier Phone Interface, Multitasking, Flash Support…

April 7, 2010

Apple plans to unveil new iPhone features tomorrow. A bit earlier than usual to steal some thunder away from Microsoft's Pink announcement

Analyst Rob Enderle wants amoung other things, multitasking, Flash in the iPhone OS 4.0

Apple will unveil the next version of the iPhone OS tomorrow.

A tat earlier than the previous 2 generations launched in past Julys, in order probably to steal some thunder from Microsoft, that is coming next Monday with yet another phone operating system – this one targets at the youngest crowd – code named “Pink.”

Instead of speculating on what the iPhone OS 4.0 will look like, we asked analyst Rob Enderle – the world’s most quoted tech analyst ! – to share his thoughts on the iPhone’s next new features.

The phone functions should be simpler and easier to use, a common complaint (and joke) is that the iPhone is wonderful at everything but being a phone.

Multi-tasking has been turned off and for a device like this that has been a problem. This should be turned on in a way that doesn’t adversely impact performance and the user interface should be updated so this capability doesn’t impact ease of use. This should likely come with some kind of a performance manager so that performance hogs can be identified by the user and Apple and addressed.

Stronger power management/better battery conditioning. One of the common complaints is dead batteries or batteries that have worn out prematurely this could be improved in the OS and should be.

Voice-to-text Google pioneered this in their phones, Apple has Voice Control but it isn’t as good, and given this has no real keyboard better voice to text is critical to saying up with Google.

A single in-box option for folks who want one place to look for email, this is a common complaint with the current product and should be addressed.

Improved phone Sync, SugarSync on the iPhone has been very successful. This likely should be a native feature in this next operating system.

Better support for native music streaming. Third party applications do this but you can’t do it from iTunes. Apple bought LaLa, this should be integrated in the OS this round.

Improved browsing experience. This is a moving target and Apple currently has one of the best experiences but Android is arguably better now with their leading phones. Personally I think they should bite the bullet and support Flash, since this is a “should” not “will” piece I’d include Flash on this list.


PowerSecure’s LED Lighting Acquisition Underscores Enormous Market Potential

April 6, 2010

PowerSecure International’s LED lighting business saw 700 percent revenue growth last year, despite the global downturn.

Now the Wake Forest company that also makes smart-grid products for utilities wants more. It announced Tuesday a move to double down on solid-state lighting, acquiring two-thirds interest in commercial and industrial lighting designer Innovative Electronic Solutions Lighting. It also decided to buy the remaining one-third of EfficientLights that it doesn’t own.

PowerSecure's present LED lighting division, EfficientLights, sells to grocery stores. Revenue rose 700 percent last year.

The transactions – valued together at $14.4 million – significantly expand the company’s bet on a market that CEO Sidney Hinton says will grow 50 percent in each of the next two years.

“Our first hand experience has confirmed to us that the demand for LED lighting is robust,” Hinton said on a conference call. “The opportunity for LED lighting is staggering.”

An LED, or light-emitting diode, is a durable, light-emitting semiconductor that cuts energy use in lighting by about 75 percent. Analysts expect that as their still high price falls, LEDs will power most general lighting by 2020, especially in commercial and industrial settings where companies save labor and replacement costs from longer lasting bulbs.

Hinton characterizes the opportunity as a $100 billion market.

The company’s EfficientLights division currently serves the grocery-store market with LEDs for refrigerator cases. Hinton says expansion is underway. Customers have come seeking lights for drug and convenience store chains, he says.

The company plans to buy the one-third interest in the company is doesn’t own in the second quarter for $10 million in stock.

Innovative Electronic Solutions Lighting will complement the purchase, say Hinton. The North Carolina company presently sells commercial and industrial lighting – including street and security lights. Hinton sees opportunities for amusement park lighting and fluorescent tube retrofits in offices, products under development.

PowerSecure will pay $4.4 million for two-third ownership and have the option to buy the remaining third of the business in 2011 for a minimum of $10 million.

The value of the business is expected to grow, says Hinton.


Router Company Highlights Failure Of Smart Grid Standards, Forms Independent Working Group

April 6, 2010

Smart-grid router company SmartSynch highlighted the failure of smart-grid standards Tuesday by forming an independent industry group to push for needed standards in communications gear.

Stephen Johnston said that despite three years of efforts, standards still are missing for smart meters and network equipment.

GridRouter maker Smartsynch hopes to push for IP-based communications standards on the smart grid. It has attracted a small group of supporters including AT&T and Motorola.

Now with utilities pouring billions of dollars of federal funds into early stage smart-grid efforts, projects risk of falling short from equipment that doesn’t interoperates or which can’t be easily installed.

Smart-grid standards initiatives date back more than three years. Yet smart meters from a company such as GE don’t work alongside one from Elster or Landis-Gyr, or connect smoothly to a GridRouter from SmartSynch.

“Without standards, we could be setting up the smart grid to be not as good as it could be,” Johnston said. “It’s a huge problem.” Prices also could be higher since competition among vendors is reduced.

On Tuesday, SmartSynch hopes to make a dent in the problem by forming an “ecosystem” group around its GridRouter. The group will push for interoperable, IP-based standards and has attracted several big name supporters: AT&T, Motorola, Rogers Communications, Itron, Cooper Power Systems and Battelle Energy. “We anticipate more,” Johnston said.

A day earlier, executives from Google, Intel, Honeywell, GE, AT&T and venture firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers made news with a letter to President Obama. They called on the Obama Administration to make the distribution of energy-use data to homes and businesses a priority.

But without standards, this could be more difficult than it seems. “If every utility deploys a proprietary system, those utilities can’t benefit from each other,” says Johnston.


Apple iPad Outsells iPhone In First Day; But Disappoints Wall Street!

April 5, 2010
A really skinny Steve Jobs check out the iPad launch at the Apple Store in Palo Alto on Saturday

A really skinny Steve Jobs checking customer reactions after the iPad launch at the Apple Store in Palo Alto on Saturday

Go figure!

Apple announced today that it sold over 300,000 iPads in the US as of midnight Saturday, April 3. These sales included deliveries of pre-ordered iPads to customers, deliveries to channel partners and sales at Apple Retail Stores.

Although these numbers are higher than the 270,000 iPhones Apple sold in the first 30 hours of sales when it launched three years ago, analysts were disappointed. On average they had expected first-day iPad sales of 400,000 to 500,000 units. While Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster, had sales projections of 600,000 to 700,000 units!

Apple also announced that iPad users downloaded over one million apps from the iTunes App Store and over 250,000 ebooks from its iBookstore during the first day. Before the iPad’s release, there were about 2,500 iPad apps in the App Store, according to ad-exchange network Mobclix Inc.


California Solar Market Shows Strength In 1Q, But Financing Hard To Get

April 5, 2010

California’s solar panel market showed solid growth in the first quarter of the year, but financing remained hard to get for many homeowners.

Solar installations were up 43.5 percent in the first quarter in California.

California’s market is the most developed in the U.S. and steady growth here is a signal that other markets, particularly New Jersey and Florida, could follow suit.

According to an analysis of data from the state-funded California Solar Initiative, solar installations in the state rose 43.5 percent in the three months. This comes despite declining state incentives, says FBR Capital Markets analyst Mehdi Hosseini, who crunched the numbers. The greatest growth was in the San Diego area, where installations have lagged northern sections of the state.

And yet, applications for new residential solar systems were soft, increasing just 28 percent. The soft economy and the difficulty with higher credit requirements explain the weakness, says Hosseini. Large commercial projects also suffer from a lack of credit, continuing a trend from last year, he said.

On the other hand, utilities such as PG&E have shown an appetite to finance residential projects, as have some banks, such as U.S. Bank, suggesting a change a foot in financial markets.

SunPower continued to be the largest seller of modules in California. However, China’s SunTech took over the number two spot from Sharp. On the whole, SunPower, Sharp, Japan’s Kyocera, and number one worldwide solar cell maker First Solar all lost share as Chinese and other Asian module makers shifted their focus from Europe and channeled low-price product to California and the U.S. market.


Tesla CEO Musk Gets Big Stock Options Payday For Model S Sedan

April 5, 2010

The Model S sedan is a “must” for upstart Silicon Valley carmaker Tesla Motors.

The designer of the Roadster luxury sports coupe will tone down its lineup with the 2012 introduction of the $49,900 Model S, putting its high-end electric cars within reach of buyers who can’t shell out $101,500 for the Roadster.

The new car also is a bonanza for Tesla CEO Elon Musk. The San Carlos company awarded its top exec 20,135,920 million stock options in December, tying half of them to milestones in the development and delivery of Tesla’s all-important second vehicle. The grants equal about 8 percent of the company.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk will earn more than 20 million stock options with half tied to engineering and production milestones for the electric Model S sedan.

In January, Telsa filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission to offer its stock to the public for the first time. In a revised IPO filing last week, the company updated its paperwork, announcing Musk’s options grants and admitting that it lost more money last year than previously disclosed.

According to the filing, the options are valued at $2.21 each, or $44.5 million.

Musk will get his options in two grants. In the first, 10,067,960 options are to be awarded monthly over the next three years, with 2.6 million granted last December. The three-year period corresponds with the development of the Model S. The other half of the options grant Musk will earn as the new car meets certain milestones: 25 percent when the engineering of the Model S is completed; 25 percent when a prototype is finished; 25 percent when production begins; and 25 percent when the 10,000th Model S rolls off the assembly line.

The SEC filing goes on to report that Tesla lost $55.7 million last year, less than the $82.8 million it lost in 2008. This brings to $260.7 million the company’s accumulated losses. Tesla had previously disclosed 2009 loses of $31.5 million through September.

Also included in the document is a response to the Toyota Prius recall. Tesla says it implemented several algorithms in its vehicle software to reduce the likelihood of unintended acceleration due to a mechanical or electronic failure.

“We stop the flow of electricity to our motor when either the car is placed in neutral or the key is rotated from the ‘on’ position. We also stop the flow of electricity to the motor during normal vehicle operation when the brake pedal is depressed for more than two seconds,” the company says.


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