Wind 12
R-ECO says it is the UK’s only co-operative installer of renewable energy systems. Claire Martin explains
Two-thirds of Britons are in favour of the use of wind power in the UK, with more than a quarter ‘strongly in favour’, according to new research by Ipsos MORI for RenewableUK, the trade and professional body for the UK wind and marine renewables industries.
Hutchinson Engineering has unveiled its newly designed wind turbine tower – a 20m structure manufactured for US-based Bergey Windpower.
The Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) has announced that floating wind turbines are to be the ‘initial focus’ of a new UK-USA agreement.
Dulas, has scored its own home nation hat-trick with the commissioning of three Endurance 50kW wind turbines on large farm sites in England, Scotland and Wales.
Kingspan Renewables has entered into the wind market with the launch of Kingspan Wind and the introduction of two new turbine models.
Wind turbine manufacturer Gamesa has given a boost of confidence to the UK offshore wind industry by announcing plans to build a major manufacturing facility in Leith which will produce the giant wind turbines that are set to be built around the British coast.
Green energy supplier Ecotricity has slammed “scaremongering” from the anti-wind lobby as the company released figures that confirmed onshore wind power added less than £5 to household energy bills last year.
The Government is expected to appeal to the Supreme Court later today (Tuesday 21 February 2012) against a High Court ruling that its plans to cut solar subsidy payments are illegal.
The Renewable Energy Association has welcomed an Energy and Climate Change Committee report acknowledging the potential of marine renewables, but questions the logic of it’s targets.
The European renewable energy industry now maintains more than one million jobs as the latest official figures show employment figures in the sector have increased by a quarter in a year.
New Energy Secretary Ed Davey must announce steps to safeguard the 29,000 solar jobs currently threatened by disastrous Government proposals to reform the solar subsidy scheme when he publishes the results of a public consultation into the plans on Thursday (9 February), says Friends of the Earth.
Miles Thomas, head of operations, Savills Energy says other technologies have been left out in the cold during the DECC FiT debacle
Speaking to Renewable Energy Installer, Thomas said: “A lot of hot air has been blown over in recent days over the Department of Energy and Climate Change’s (DECC) ‘unlawful’ handling of its consultation on the Feed in Tariff (FiT) changes, but much of the debate has centred exclusively on the solar industry with other technologies, such as small-scale wind and AD being left out in the cold.
Bright future: Ian Draisey of Dulas looks beyond recent uncertainty in FiT
The recent Feed-in Tariff announcement has left many in the industry feeling disheartened and uncertain as to the future of the PV sector over the coming months. Whilst recognising the upset the cuts have created, Ian Draisey, of Dulas MHH, is finding positivity in the situation.
Renewable energy company Eco Environments has launched a wholesale division by announcing partnerships with two major German manufacturers.
Small wind turbines are playing an increasingly important role in helping the Scottish government to meet its Renewables Routemap commitments – specifically with reference to the government’s ambitious renewable energy target of 30 per cent by 2020. The 2020 Routemap for Renewable Energy report highlights how innovative migrogeneration technology solutions – such as the Evance small wind turbine – can support community and locally-owned energy generation, and also help address fuel poverty issues in the most remote areas.
Evance Wind Turbines – UK manufacturers of the R9000 small wind turbine – has seen an increasing number of homeowners and farmers across Scotland put small wind turbines to work, with many benefiting from installing multiple small wind turbines rather than one large turbine. During 2011 Evance has seen healthy sales growth in Scotland, especially in the more remote regions. For example, 50 Evance turbines were installed in the Orkney Islands alone, and all have performed strongly during recent storms – despite peak wind gusts of over 130mph.
Evance’s small wind turbines are also proving an attractive option for Scottish residents who are increasingly unable to afford domestic heating oil costs that remained high throughout 2011, and have increased by some 66 percent over the last three years and by over a quarter in the last year alone. For these and other remote residents, fuel poverty is a very real threat. It’s estimated that around 900,000 households in Scotland – more than one in three – are currently in fuel poverty. By installing an Evance R9000 small wind turbine in the right location, remote households and businesses can make substantial energy savings and generate an income through Feed-in-Tariffs (FiTs). Some organisations also offer a service where they provide free wind energy in return for the land to install a R9000 small wind turbine.
“We have had great success in Scotland during 2011, and enter 2012 with a strong order book for Scottish customers – we anticipate 10 turbines per week being installed during the first three months of 2012,” commented Kevin Parslow, CEO of Evance Wind Turbines.
“With impressive wind speeds in most regions across Scotland, especially in the Highlands and Islands, it makes sense for that renewable energy source to be put to good use.
“Working with organisations such as Community Energy Scotland, we have been particularly successful in communicating the benefits of small wind turbines, and helping our customers to realise dramatic energy savings and CO2 emission savings,” he continued.
“Our turbines on Orkney are generating around 870MWh of electricity annually – based on an annual average wind speed of 7m/s – so saving over 370 tonnes of CO2 emissions a year – equivalent to taking over 160 cars off the road. Many of our customers have also been able to reduce energy bills by 50 per cent and some even eliminated their electricity bill over last winter.”
One Evance customer, the Linnitt family from Orkney, saw their R9000 turbine produce 18,500kWh of power in its first year – dramatically reducing energy bills and earning a Feed in Tariff income of over £5,000. According to Mrs. Linnitt: “It’s a great feeling to be producing green energy and to know that over the last year we have saved nearly eight tonnes of carbon emissions. We wanted a reliable turbine with good performance, and the Evance small wind turbine has met all our expectations.”
Following reports at the weekend that blades from a Evoco wind turbine flew off three structures in the recent winds, and that despites an order to be braked, some of the turbines were still spinning in the gales, Evoco has released the following statement:
The Local Government Association (LGA) said ministers had “undermined confidence” in their “green agenda”.
Yorkshire-based Ploughcroft, solar panel installer and renewable energy trainer, has won a prestigious award for its popular new Eco Roof Visitors Centre.
A mid-Wales renewable energy firm has joined organisations from all over the world in a new scheme that recognises a dedication to excellence in Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA).
Sheffield-based company, The Energy Initiative, is encouraging consumers in South Yorkshire to continue to invest in solar power despite recent cuts to a government subsidy.
Farm scale wind turbine manufacturer Gaia-Wind has won the Scottish Renewables Green Energy Award for business growth. The award recognises ‘outstanding business growth or the development of exciting and ambitious plans for the future by a renewable energy business’ and comes just days after the company was ranked at number five in the list of Europe’s fastest growing Cleantech companies.