Renewable Fuels for Alternative Energy
The Germans have really taken off when it comes to renewable fuel sources, and have become one of the major
players in the alternative energy game. Under the aegis of the nation's electricity feed laws, the German people
set a world record in 2006 by investing over $10 billion (US) in research, development, and implementation of wind
turbines, biogas power plants, and solar collection cells. Germany's "feed laws" permit the German homeowners to
connect to an electrical grid through some source of renewable energy and then sell back to the power company any
excess energy produced at retail prices. This economic incentive has catapulted Germany into the number-one
position among all nations with regards to the number of operational solar arrays, biogas plants, and wind
turbines. The 50-terawatt hours of electricity produced by these renewable energy sources account for 10% of all of
Germany's energy production per year. In 2006 alone, Germany installed 100,000 solar energy collection systems.
Over in the US, the BP corporation has established an Energy Biosciences Institute (EBI) to spearhead extensive
new research and development efforts into clean burning renewable energy sources, most
prominently biofuels for ground vehicles. BP's investment comes to $50 million (US) per year over the course of the
next decade. This EBI will be physically located at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. The University is
in partnership with BP, and it will be responsible for research and development of new biofuel crops,
biofuel-delivering agricultural systems, and machines to produce renewable fuels in liquid form for automobile
consumption. The University will especially spearhead efforts in the field of genetic engineering with regard to
creating the more advanced biofuel crops. The EBI will additionally have as a major focal point technological
innovations for converting heavy hydrocarbons into pollution-free and highly efficient fuels.
Also in the US, the battle rages on between Congress and the Geothermal Energy Association (GEA). The GEA's
Executive Director Karl Gawell has recently written to the Congress and the Department of Energy, the only way to
ensure that DOE and OMB do not simply revert to their irrational insistence on terminating the geothermal research
program is to schedule a congressional hearing specifically on geothermal energy, its potential, and the role of
federal research. Furthermore, Gawell goes on to say that recent studies by the National Research Council, the
Western Governors' Association Clean Energy Task Force and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology all support
expanding geothermal research funding to develop the technology necessary to utilize this vast, untapped domestic
renewable energy resource. Supporters of geothermal energy, such as this writer, are amazed at the minuscule amount
of awareness that the public has about the huge benefits that research and development of the renewable alternative energy source would provide the US, both practically and economically. Geothermal
energy is already less expensive to produce in terms of kilowatt-hours than the coal that the US keeps mining.
Geothermal energy is readily available, sitting just a few miles below our feet and easily accessible through
drilling. One company, Ormat, which is the third largest geothermal energy producer in the US and has plants in
several different nations, is already a billion-dollar-per-year businessgeothermal energy is certainly economically
viable.
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