IBM To Study Largest Global Electric Car Field Test

March 19, 2010

IBM wants to understand the impact electric cars will have on the electricity power grid.

So it agreed to be a part of the world’s largest field test of electric cars, involving 3,000 cars and 11,000 recharging stations across the United Kingdom.

British trial to involve 3,000 electric cars and 11,000 charging stations.

Big Blue said Friday it had hired Energy Technologies Institute to determine the infrastructure changes necessary to support a mass market for electric cars and plug-in hybrids. The test is to begin next year and continue in 2011.

The project is the result of a number of stars aligning. The British government has agreed to kick in 300 million pounds for infrastructure development and is providing grants of 5,000 pounds to consumers who buy the ultra low-emission vehicles. It is possible a billion pounds of investment will ultimately be needed.

The effort hopes to lead to the development of a smart electric grid capable of handling the recharging a large fleet of cars. Some estimates predict electric cars will consume as much power as an average home running air conditioning on a summer day.

Along with examining infrastructure needs, the study will gauge the potential reduction of greenhouse gas emissions. The charging stations will be installed in London, the South East, the Midlands and the North East.

Also involved in the research will be EDF Energy and Imperial Consultants.


UK Awards World’s First Commercial Leases For Wave And Tidal Energy Farms

March 16, 2010

United Kingdom bet big on tidal and wave energy Tuesday, awarding leases for a string of projects along its lengthy, rugged coastline.

Forty bids were received from 20 energy companies and utilities, suggesting optimism about generating electricity from the sea.

The leases were the first in the world granted for the commercial development of offshore wave and tidal farms.

The active competition for the rights suggested companies are optimistic about obtaining significant amounts of energy from the sea. Forty bids were filed from 20 energy firms and utilities.

Doubts have dogged the industry about the ability of its equipment to withstand powerful offshore storms and the corrosive salt-water environment, though firms say they will overcome this.

The leases provide the right to develop 1.2 GW of electricity by 2020, 600 MW wave and 600 MW tidal energy. Britain manages its coastline up to 12 nautical miles offshore, as do all nations.

The United Kingdom is among the leaders in marine energy, however so far only small pilot projects are underway. Developers expect the level of activity to increase sharply in the next three years.

Among the winners Tuesday were Marine Current Turbines, which recently received an investment from Siemens, and the Irish firm OpenHydro, which secured permission for a 200 MW facility in the Pentland Firth and near the Orkney Islands off Scotland, top spots for tidal development.

Another winner was Aquamarine Power, which already has a trial wave energy machine in the Orkney waters. Aquamarine plans to deploy its next generation Oyster wave machine in small clusters along the coast.

Also successful were the ScottishPower utility, Iberdrola of Spain, Southern Energy PLC and Germany’s E.ON AG.

A day before awarding the leases, the United Kingdom unveiled an ambitious plan meant to guide the domestic development of marine energy. The nation hopes to have 1 to 2 GW of energy generation in place by 2020 and enough capacity to power 15 million homes by 2050. Officials project the industry could create up to 16,000 jobs.

Britain’s long coastline makes it ideal for tidal and wave power.


UK Threatens To Displace Japan As The Second Largest Gaming Market

February 2, 2009

Video games sales in 2008 rose 11 percent in the world’s three largest markets as strong growth in the United States and United Kingdom offset a slump in Japan.

The performance discrepancy was so great that sales in the U.K. (which are measured by units and which have doubled since 2003) last year overtook those in Japan for the first time, according to a Top Global Markets report. The report is put together by the NPD Group, GfK Chart-Track and Enterbrain.

“Although (the U.K. is) still behind on revenue, the gap has narrowed considerably and it will be interesting to see how things develop during 2009,” said Dorian Bloch, business group director at GfK Chart-Track.

Game sales in the three combined markets rose to 410 million units, with 15 percent growth in the U.S., 26 percent growth in the U.K. and a decline of 13 percent in Japan.

Japan’s decline came as sales of Sony’s PlayStation 2 tumbled 46 percent. However, several key titles that could improve sales are coming in 2009, including Nintendo DS’ Dragon Quest IX: Hoshizora no Mamoribito and the console games Monster Hunter 3 and Final Fantasy XIII.


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