Hawaii’s Governor Dumps Oil and Gas in Favor of 100 Percent Renewables

David_42

Registered Democrat.
Aug 9, 2015
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This is good news.
At the Asia Pacific Resilience Innovation Summit held in Honolulu, Hawaii, this week, Governor David Ige dropped a bombshell. His administration will not use natural gas to replace the state’s petroleum-fueled electricity plants, but will make a full-court press toward 100 percent renewables by 2045. Ige’s decisive and ambitious energy vision is making Hawaii into the world’s most important laboratory for humankind’s fight against climate change. He has, in addition, attracted an unlikely and enthusiastic partner in his embrace of green energy—the US military.

signed into lawa bill calling for Hawaii’s electricity to be entirely generated from renewables in only 30 years. He also directed that the University of Hawaii be net carbon zero in just 20 years.

As a set of islands, Hawaii faces special energy difficulties. Residents pay the highest rates for electricity of any state in the union. Last year, before the recent oil price drop, residential electricity averaged around 36 cents per kilowatt hour (the US average is 12 cents/kwh). On the mainland, states that do not generate enough electricity themselves can import it from their neighbors. Islands in the middle of the Pacific just have what they can make themselves. Because Hawaii’s energy plants were built before it was economical to ship natural gas as LNG, they for the most part use petroleum. The high oil prices of the past decade are estimated to have cost Hawaii some $5 billion extra that was not anticipated. Part of the impetus for the current drive toward renewables is to escape the volatility of fossil-fuel markets.

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Senator Brian Schatz, a Hawaii Democrat, also addressed the summit, insisting that wind, solar, and other renewables are now competitive with fossil fuels and no longer “alternative.” Rather, they are practical today, because of significant price drops in the cost of photovoltaic panels and of wind turbines. He argued that change comes only when it is demanded. Several years ago, he said, Hawaii set what seemed like unrealistic green energy goals at that time. The senator’s point is valid. By 2015, officials wanted 15 percent of electricity generation to come from renewables. In 2014, it was already 21 percent. At the federal level, Schatz said that the Senate is coming around on climate change issues, with all Democrats backing renewables and even a lot of Republicans privately admitting the climate-change crisis. He said that the United States must lead at the UN’s Climate Change Conference later this year in Paris, but that the real test will be in the implementation of the goals adopted there.

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Luis Salaveria, director of the Department of Business, Economic Development, and Tourism, made the argument that green energy research in the islands could be the sought-after third leg of the stool for Hawaii’s economy, which now mainly depends on tourism and the military. The state is creating a number of research institutions and working with a consortium of private companies in what it calls an Energy Excelerator, which has generated $400 million in investment. Attendees at the summit were largely engineers, entrepreneurs, or military personnel seeking the first two, all of them confident that Hawaii can meet its stated goal.

HAWAII’S GOVERNOR DUMPS OIL AND GAS IN FAVOR OF 100 PERCENT RENEWABLES

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The state’s major utility, the Hawaiian Electric Company (HECO), is on board with the rapid turn to renewables and is partnering with the state and US military bases to meet the 2045 goal. Alan Oshima, the utility’s CEO, pointed out that 15 percent of homes in Hawaii already have rooftop photovoltaic panels, and he expected that number to triple.

The rapid drive to renewables faces significant challenges. Environmentalists insist that flora and fauna be protected, and permitting is often a challenge. Some engineers are suggesting offshore floating wind turbines as an alternative to onshore wind, because they would be less intrusive. The Big Island of Hawaii has substantialgeothermal potential, with an active volcano, but some native Hawaiians object to pursuing it lest the goddess of the volcano, Pele, be desecrated. On the other hand, other Hawaiians have been impressed by the positive experience of fellow Polynesians, the Maori of New Zealand, in profiting from geothermal energy on their land. Geothermal has the advantage for the Hawaiian grid of being steady and so able to provide baseload support offsetting the variability (called “intermittency”) of wind and solar, which can be generated only at some times of the day.

Some 50 percent of the electricity generated in Hawaii is bought by the US military. The Department of Energy has a mandate from the Obama administration to use more green energy, and Governor Ige and HECO are finding the admirals and generals enthusiastic partners in their plans for 100 percent renewables. In fact, the Navy, the Army, and the Marines all hope to generate up to a gigawatt of electricity themselves on bases throughout the United States. The Navy’s self-imposed deadline for doing so is only 18 months away.

The state’s military bases want green energy in part to ensure base security. Amanda Simpson of the Army Office of Energy Initiatives told the summit that Army bases throughout the United States have seen a quadrupling in electricity outages during the past decade, some of them caused by more frequent extreme weather events, others by aging equipment and infrastructure. It seems clear that Hawaiian bases want back-up solar farms and biofuel plants in case the civilian grid falters. Simpson pointed out that all Hawaiian energy plants presently are on the coasts and so are vulnerable to a tsunami or to rising sea levels caused by the melting of polar ice because of global warming. She said that the planned biofuel electricity plant at Fort Schofield is the only power plant in the islands to be built inland. Pro-army GOP representatives and senators may be climate change denialists, but the actual US Army is in no doubt that human-induced climate change is causing the seas to rise, and that this phenomenon poses a security threat to military installations on the coasts.

US military installations in Hawaii not only have big plans for solar farms and leasing land and facilities to HECO for green-energy projects; they want to put their own uniformed engineers to work in research and innovation, partnering with Hawaiian and mainland entrepreneurs. Even a lot of their research money is coming from private investment in this research and development activity, with hopes of patents and future revenue streams going to the private sector. These military research centers, coupled with the state-backed Excelerator and other R&D enterprises, have the potential to make Hawaii an indispensable center for green-energy innovation and to allow the state to profit from breakthroughs and from selling them abroad.
 
Considering Hawaii is so isolated i don't think any of their decisions bare any implications on the mainland. Whatever works for them is fine by me.
 
Your thread doesn't conform to USMB rules. In fact, I don't think you even read it before you copy/pasted it. Douche.
 
Considering Hawaii is so isolated i don't think any of their decisions bare any implications on the mainland. Whatever works for them is fine by me.

Geothermal is conisidered "renewable", and I think being on top of a large thermal hotspot would be cheating.....
 
Its a great idea for the islands as long as its viable for them.

Everything on the islands has to be imported at great cost so if they can use geothermal good for them.
 
Its a great idea for the islands as long as its viable for them.

Everything on the islands has to be imported at great cost so if they can use geothermal good for them.

The issue is our usual "something from nothing" renewable advocates will trump this as something other States should emulate.

Considering most of them lack large hot pools of liquid magma underneath them, this is not feasible for them.

(read this in a Dr. Evil voice for fun)
 

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