Energy and Environment News Roundup – 12.15.14
A daily roundup of the most important energy, environment, and climate news from around the world.
EMISSIONS
Lawyers gird for fight against EPA’s Clean Power Plan based on states’ rights (via ClimateWire)
Half of Republicans support carbon limits, survey finds (via The Hill)
Fossil fuel companies grow nervous as divestment movement grows stronger (via Grist)
Capturing carbon as a byproduct of running a fuel cell (via New York Times)
Gov. Inslee says if polluters were charged, state would benefit (via Seattle Times)
NATURAL GAS
Can China’s shale gas help it reach peak coal by 2020? (via Motley Fool)
Ukraine says Chevron plans to pull out of $10 billion shale gas deal (via Reuters)
RENEWABLES
EnergyTrend calls 2014 solar demand at 44GW with 2015 to top 50GW (via PV Tech)
The global biofuels industry: A future in doubt (via Navigant Research)
Analysis: Can Japan exceed 10GW of solar capacity installation in 2014? (via Renewable Energy World)
SunEdison to supply 570GWh of solar energy to Chile grid (via PV Tech)
Vestas gets biggest wind order as Africa market accelerates (via Bloomberg)
Solar industry trends: Capital costs continue to drop while solar companies reinvent themselves as energy companies (via Forbes)
South Carolina avoids a battle, reaches settlement on net energy metering (via Greentech Media)
New York State doubles solar net metering cap (via PV Tech)
430,000 advanced energy jobs in California…today (via CleanTechnica)
Solar and wind give California second camel hump (via Renewables International)
Study: Nebraska grid has capacity to export more wind energy (via Lincoln Journal Star)
Minnesota city freezes ground-mounted solar due to zoning concerns (via Greentech Media)
CLIMATE
International negotiators strike last-minute deal to reduce carbon emissions (via ClimateProgress)
UN agrees way forward on climate change but path is unclear (via The Guardian)
Paris climate summit faces tougher job after modest Lima deal (via Reuters)
Catholic bishops from every continent call for “end to the fossil fuel era” (via ClimateProgress)
Most Americans aren’t aware of the health impacts of climate change (via ClimateProgress)
People don’t work as hard on hot days – on a warming planet (via Washington Post)
COAL
Coal demand growth to slow in next five years on China, says IEA (via Bloomberg)
Coal demand set to break 9 billion tonne barrier this decade (via The Guardian)
As Japan burns more coal, climate policies under pressure (via Reuters)
First U.S. coal ash regulations in the offing (via The Hill)
GRID
Fitch: U.S. utilities “well positioned” to deal with upcoming obstacles (via Renew Grid)
MISO board approves $2.5 billion in new transmission (via Renew Grid)
OIL
Mexico shale boom outlook dims as U.S. drillers struggle (via Bloomberg)
Despite lower crude oil prices, U.S. crude oil production expected to grow in 2015 (via U.S. EIA)
Early slowdown signs emerge for U.S. oil states after crude slide (via Reuters)
U.S. taxpayers help fund oil train boom amid safety concerns (via St. Louis Post-Dispatch)
TRANSPORTATION
Electric cars: A review of 2014 (via Forbes)
Gasoline prices tend to have little effect on demand for car travel (via U.S. EIA)
Street lights add EV charging (via Navigant Research)
Tesla’s stationary storage strategy: “Everywhere we look, there’s an opportunity” (via Greentech Media)
ENERGY EFFICIENCY
$140 million DOE innovation hub focuses on energy efficiency in manufacturing (via Energy Manager Today)
ENVIRONMENT
Earth faces sixth “Great Extinction” with 41% of amphibians set to go to the way of the dodo (via Huffington Post)
23 pollinating species in Britain have gone extinct in last 150 years (via Inhabitat)
Congress protects new national parks and wilderness areas for first time in five years (via ClimateProgress)
OPINION
COP20 lays groundwork for Paris climate pact: 7 key developments (via WRI Insights)
Five takeaways from the Lima climate talks (via National Journal)
How the ”war on coal” went global (via Politico)
How the U.S. can beat OPEC in an oil prices war (via Christian Science Monitor)
The basic reason oil keeps getting cheaper and cheaper (via Washington Post)
Insights from the solar industry in rural Peru (via Clean Energy Finance Forum)
10 energy numbers to remember from 2014 (via Outlier)
Will cheap oil kill Keystone XL? (via Politico)