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Category Archive 'Energy'
30.03.09

RP to host int’l renewable energy confab

- Conferences, Energy, Renewable Energy -

The Philippines will host the annual International Renewable Energy Conference (IREC) in July this year.

The Congressional Commission on Science and Technology and Engineering (COMSTE), headed by Senator Edgardo Angara, will organize the IREC 2009.

Participants in this year’s IREC would include local and foreign academics, scientists, energy investors, and entrepreneurs.

Similarly, there is another IREC that started in 2004 as a result of the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development, where renewable energy was discussed a critical component for worldwide development.

Nigeria was last year’s host.

In a statement, Angara said the hosting of IREC in the Philippines would strengthen the country’s plans to use renewable energy sources after Senate Bill 2046 or the Renewable Energy Act was passed in 2008.

Angara expects that results of the IREC would include programs to help the Philippines develop its domestic renewable energy sources.

Angara also hopes to create linkages with Spain and Brazil, which are already establishing their own domestic renewable energy sources.

“The Philippines, as cited by Moody’s, moved a step in the right direction with long term solution of passing a comprehensive renewable energy law.But more importantly, it is a step towards sustainable growth, towards clean development,” Angara said.

25.03.09

Energy debates shouldn’t just end with slogans

- Energy, Environment, Going Green -

By Dennis Posadas
Contributor

THE ongoing debate between the environmentalists and the pro-nuclear advocates simply illustrates what is missing in most arguments around the world on clean energy and climate change. Too often, the typical argument by the environmentalists is to position renewable energy as the alternative to nuclear energy.

What many people don’t realize is that it is not as simple as not going nuclear, not going with coal and then just going renewable. It is nice to hear, and as a clean energy blogger (I run a blog called GO Clean Energy), I am also not that naive to say that renewable energy will solve all our problems in the near future. This notwithstanding the fact that technology is advancing in this arena; for example on the day of Barack Obama’s inaugural address as President, the firm FirstSolar announced that it had breached the $1/watt mark, at $0.98c/watt for its solar photovoltaic thin film cells.

Granted that we can do a lot by conserving energy both voluntarily and technologically (think microchips to make appliances automatically adjust their demand), and that we Asians can tap energy sources like geothermal, and maybe even some good operating practices like staggered turn-on of large electricity consuming appliances like chillers and motors in our factories and shopping malls, the fact is that Asian societies have to move beyond simply mouthing phrases like No to Nukes or No to Coal, and actually educate themselves about what is out there as well as what is the state of the art.

[Read the rest of this entry »]

12.03.09

Philippines should take lead in clean energy

- Energy, Environment, Going Green -

By Dennis Posadas
Contributor

IT looks like the previous prediction by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) on sea level rise back in 2007 is actually an underestimate, according to scientists who presented their findings at the Copenhagen Climate Conference this week. This means that 600 million Asians living in low-lying coastal areas, including us Filipinos, will experience increased occurrences of flooding inland. Already, stronger storms and seawater creep into previously arable areas are some of the early signs of what to expect.

Now we have a new Renewable Energy (RE) Act patterned after those in Europe and the U.S. which is actually key to our climate change efforts. Aside from incentives to renewable energy companies and investors, this RE Act actually requires the power utilities like Meralco to purchase a certain percentage of their power from renewable/clean energy sources. It also features incentives to spur the development of a local clean energy sector.

But it does not stop there. Even with this RE Act, a lack of societal commitment by Filipinos to clean energy may undermine the success of this law. After being a top priority at $140/barrel, clean energy is again quickly becoming an afterthought. During my time as an electrical engineering student at UP Diliman, the evidence of renewable energy research was all around us in our laboratory. But now, very few engineering students are doing power and energy research. After all, for a time, crude was flowing cheaply from the Middle East until last year. Unfortunately, a clean energy commitment that ebbs and flows will not encourage its development, and will not encourage large scale innovation in this arena.

[Read the rest of this entry »]

09.03.09

Green advocates launch E-jeepney

- Electric Cars, Energy, Environment, Going Green -

By Marjorie Gorospe
INQUIRER.net

THE Philippine Utility Vehicle Inc. (PhUV) and Green Renewable Independent Power Producer, Inc launched an electric powered utility vehicle, dubbed E-jeepney, which can carry up to 14 passengers .

This electric-powered vehicle comes with a battery that needs to be charged six to eight hours before use. The vehicle can travel up to 90 kilometers when fully charged.

The vehicle can reach up to 60 kilometers per hour but proponents said it would be more efficient to travel at 45 KM per hour. It also uses manual stick shift.

[Read the rest of this entry »]

19.11.08

Filipino inventor turns used oil to fuel

- Alternative Fuels, Energy, Environment, Inventions, Science (general) -

By Anna Valmero
INQUIRER.net

Can used oil be recycled as fuel for vehicles?

“Yes,” according to Teodorico Badua, the inventor of a so-called “fuel energy saving device.”

This device, he says, transforms used oil and other combustible liquid waste into flammable gas that can be added to the engine fuel, which can translate to fuel savings of up to 30 percent.

This La Union-based inventor says the device harnesses the energy from used oil by heating the combustible liquid waste into a gas generator. This process then generates fuel vapor that can be used for gasoline-based engines.

The device has been tested to work with used cooking oil, engine oil and washing fuel, the Filipino inventor says.

“The device promotes safe disposal of combustible liquid waste into the combustion chamber of the engine, which burns it as fuel,” says Badua.

[Read the rest of this entry »]

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