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EU, Africa team up to boost energy access

GE plans expansion in China
Beijing (UPI) Sep 15, 2010 - General Electric Co. plans to expand aggressively in China, with clean energy playing a crucial role in the company's future development in the country, a company official said. "We expect to grow faster than (the nation's) GDP (gross domestic product)," Mark Norbom, president and chief executive officer for GE China told China Daily newspaper Tuesday on the sidelines of the Summer Davos Forum meetings in Tianjin. Areas GE will pursue as part of its local development plan include cleaner-coal technology, wind and solar power as well as biogas. "China needs to change its present energy consumption structure, as emissions are increasing due to the huge reliance on coal," Norbom said. Coal accounts for about 70 percent of China's energy supply.

China, the world's top emitter of greenhouse gases, aims to reduce its carbon intensity rate -- the amount of carbon dioxide produced per unit of GDP -- by 40 to 45 percent by the end of 2020. Norbom said GE's wind equipment arm would try to form partnerships with local companies and is also involved in discussions with the State Grid on developing smart grid technologies. China is ranked highest worldwide as the most attractive location in which to invest in renewable energy projects, states the Ernst & Young's latest Renewable Energy Country Attractiveness Indices released last week. The United States had held the top spot since 2006. Ringo Choi, Cleantech Leader of Greater China, Ernst & Young, said in a statement, "China's steady rise to pole position has been underpinned by strong and consistent government support for renewable energy.

"This, together with substantial commitment from industry and the sheer scale of its natural resources, means that its position as top spot for renewable energy investment is well-merited." China became the biggest investor in clean energy in 2009, states a Pew Charitable Trusts report, with most of the country's green investments spent on wind and solar power infrastructure. Seeing China as a prime market, GE established its China Technology Center in China 10 years ago, one of the largest and earliest independent research centers opened by an overseas company in China. The center has a research staff of more than 1,400 and more than 60 laboratories, averaging more than 100 projects each year. "Our research center here has the leading technology in areas such as clean energy," Chen Xiangli of the center told China Business Weekly. "We serve customers not only in China but also in other countries around the world."
by Staff Writers
Vienna (UPI) Sep 15, 2010
The European Union has pledged to provide 100 million Africans with clean and sustainable energy by 2020.

The so-called Africa-EU Energy Partnership, launched Tuesday in Vienna by high-ranking officials from the EU and the African Union, is intended to improve Africans' access to electricity and contribute to the continent's 2020 renewable energy targets.

"Today 1.6 billion people worldwide have no access to electricity, most of them in sub-Saharan Africa and Southern Asia," EU Development Commissioner Andris Piebalgs said in a statement. "Africa has a vast untapped renewable energy potential, ranging from hydro, to solar, wind, geothermal and biomass, which could be used to ensure millions of people access to electricity."

Austrian Foreign Minister Michael Spindelegger, in the opening speech of the conference, said better access to energy is "key to Africa's sustainable economic development."

The plan, funded by the EU with an initial $6.5 million, contains pledges to build 10,000 megawatts of hydro power, at least 5,000 MW of wind turbines, 500 MW of solar power facilities and raise energy efficiency.

Energy Commissioner Guenther Oettinger added the EU and the AU had agreed to boost cooperation to "bring access to modern and sustainable energy services to at least an additional 100 million Africans; to double the capacity of cross-border electricity interconnections within Africa and between Africa and Europe and to double the use of natural gas in Africa."

In many African countries, fewer than than 10 percent of the rural population has access to electricity. Most of these households burn kerosene, wood or charcoal for lighting and cooking, resulting in health problems due to indoor air pollution. Only around 7 percent of Africa's hydro power potential is exploited, and much less of its wind and solar energy potential.

This should worry Europe, the commission says.

Global challenges such as "energy security, energy access and climate change mean that the energy futures of Africa and Europe are increasingly tied together," Brussels writes in a brochure about the program, intended to boost European and African investments in Africa's energy infrastructure.

Oettinger lauded as exemplary the $500 billion industry initiative Desertec, which aims to power Africa's as well as Europe's homes with green electricity generated in deserts in Africa and the Middle East.

The scheme focuses on concentrated solar power and photovoltaic installations, while also integrating wind farms and biomass plants. The companies involved say Desertec could supply most of the local and up to 15 percent of Europe's electricity by 2050. They also promised the African states involved access to green technology.

earlier related report
Levant energy stakes keep getting higher
Tel Aviv, Israel (UPI) Sep 15, 2010 - The energy stakes in the volatile eastern Mediterranean keep getting higher.

U.S. explorer Noble Energy of Houston says the reputedly vast Leviathan natural gas field it found off Israel in recent months could also contain up to 4.3 billion barrels of oil.

If that pans out, Israel could have enough oil to keep it running for decades, as well as enough gas from Leviathan and two smaller fields, Tamar and Dalit, to meet its own requirements for 50 years.

But the new oil claim has sharpened tension with neighboring Lebanon, where Israel's sworn enemy, Hezbollah, reportedly has up to 45,000 missiles and rockets aimed at the Jewish state.

Lebanon claims the gas fields extend northward into its waters and, on Aug. 17, parliament approved a fast-tracked law to allow offshore exploration, setting the stage for an energy battle that is sure to exacerbate the conflict with Israel.

The law left many aspects of offshore exploration unaddressed, such as who would regulate such projects, how the income from any oil or gas fields discovered would be managed and who would control it.

Lebanon conducted seismic surveys in 2006-07 and these indicated that there could be significant gas reserves off the coast, a prospect vastly heightened by the deep-water strikes off Israel.

A study by the U.S. Geological Survey published in March estimated that 122 trillion cubic feet of recoverable natural gas could lie off the coastlines of Syria, Lebanon, Israel and the Palestinian-ruled Gaza Strip.

The Lebanese have alleged that Israel has plundered its river water over the years, particularly between 1978 and 2000 when Israeli forces controlled or occupied south Lebanon.

Political squabbling by Lebanon's fractious leaders, deeply divided by religion and sect, had prevented any serious attempt to delineate the state's maritime boundaries or reach a consensus on exploration and that is likely to continue as domestic sectarian tensions escalate amid the worsening regional crisis.

The Lebanese, Hezbollah in particular, have vowed to prevent Israeli encroachment on what are deemed Lebanon's territorial waters.

Resource-poor Israel in turn has said it "will not hesitate to use force" if necessary to protect its new-found energy wealth that will transform its economy for decades to come.

The big prize for Israel is the Leviathan field 50 miles west of Haifa, the country's main port and naval base. Noble Energy estimates it contains 16 trillion cubic feet of gas.

The nearby Tamar field has proven reserves of 8 tcf and is expected to start delivering in 2012. There are plans to build a major terminal near Haifa.

All told, the gas finds announced by Noble Energy and its Israeli partner, the Delek Group, could eventually total 24 tcf with a value of $300 billion or more.

But even that could represent only a small part of the gas that lies beneath the seabed in the eastern Mediterranean.

The political ramifications of the discovery of the potential offshore energy bonanza are likely to fuel the escalating dispute.

Lebanon is still technically at war with Israel and there has been no sign of a shift toward a peace settlement that would clearly benefit both resource-poor nations.

Indeed, Hezbollah, the strongest military force in Lebanon, has proclaimed the country's need for its military might "has doubled … in light of Israeli threats to steal Lebanon's oil wealth."

The Iranian-backed Shiite movement has been resisting efforts by the Western-backed government of Prime Minister Saad Hariri to surrender its weapons and merge with the national army and the energy spat has added weight to Hezbollah's refusal to compromise.

The oil and gas reserves have gone undiscovered for so long because Western companies didn't want to antagonize Arab producers like Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Kuwait by working with Israel.

But now that the secret's out, Israel and Lebanon seem set to duke it out.

The dispute may extend to Cyprus, which lies to the north close to the Turkish coast. The government in the southern Greek Cypriot part of the divided island is seeking clarification on whether the gas fields lie in its waters as well.



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Tianjin, China (AFP) Sept 14, 2010
China will exhaust all means to hit an energy efficiency target it set for the end of the year, but fulfilling the goal will prove difficult, a top official said Tuesday. China pledged to cut energy consumption per unit of gross domestic product by 20 percent from 2006 to 2010, but such a task was proving arduous, Zhang Xiaoqiang told the "Summer Davos" meeting of the World Economic Forum. ... read more







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