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Muna Al-Fuzai

Kuwait National Petroleum Company (KNPC) will soon name a financial advisor to obtain a KD 700 million loan from local banks for the Al-Dibdibah Solar Power Plant project. According to Kuwait Times, the project’s tender will be offered for bidding at an estimated cost of $1-1.5 billion spread over an area of 32 sq km to the northwest. This new project will generate 1.5 megawatts of solar power, equivalent to 15 percent of the total power expected by 2030.

Kuwait is carrying out ambitious projects related to renewable energy, especially solar and wind power, to reduce dependence on oil for electricity production. The ministry of electricity and water, in cooperation with the Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences, has installed solar panels in the parking lots of several cooperative societies to provide energy for lighting. This project proved to be successful, so the ministry plans to expand its scope to include more locations in the coming period. Perfect move for Kuwait!

I trust that changing the direction of any country by adopting new sources of energy is good, especially in Kuwait, because for many years we didn’t have real change in this field, especially as we are a country that does not lack the sun or the wind almost throughout the year. It is about time to use these two powers.

I think the government is aware that the increasing electricity consumption dictates the development of new practical solutions to reduce dependence on oil as a source of energy generation. The best alternative is to rely on renewable energy. Kuwait also started applying new electricity and water tariffs after lifting subsidies from Aug 22, 2017 on investment properties.

In March, the director of the Kuwait Institute for Scientific Research (KISR) revealed that 85 percent of the first phase of the Shakaya project for the production of renewable energy from wind and thermal solar systems is complete. He added that the project has several stages – the first is Shakaya, the second is Al-Dibdibah with Kuwait Oil Company, and the third phase will be in partnership with the private sector.

I think we need to overcome obstacles between the local community and the real application of clean energy systems in housing, work and elsewhere. Perhaps the problem is that there is a culture prevalent for years, which relied on oil for power generation and there was no encouragement from governments to institutions to support the work in this future sector. But not anymore. Also, the high financial cost to expand power generation means, whether through the sun or wind, is an obstacle for poor developing countries. But, adoption of this trend seriously now is important to Kuwait, because we really need these projects.

While I was reading about this subject, I saw a study online on the same topic that was carried out in Saudi Arabia. Tests were conducted in some areas of Saudi Arabia in the open air to study the properties of solar cells. Tests have shown that exposure of energy cells to dust for six months without any cleaning leads to a 50 percent reduction in energy production. Many solutions were presented to address this issue, and the easiest way was cleaning the panels manually weekly. This requires maintenance companies on long-term contracts.

I do not know about the dust there, but Kuwait has a high dust rate almost throughout the year, so I think such observations should be taken into account if we really want to adopt the use of solar energy. I think energy production from new sources is an amazing step and the private sector and the youth should be encouraged to enter such projects in a developing country like Kuwait.

By Muna Al-Fuzai
Muna@kuwaittimes.net



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Nextera Energy Partners (NYSE:NEP) was downgraded by investment analysts at ValuEngine from a “buy” rating to a “hold” rating in a note issued to investors on Thursday.

Other analysts have also issued reports about the stock. Zacks Investment Research lowered shares of Nextera Energy Partners from a “buy” rating to a “hold” rating in a research report on Wednesday. TheStreet upgraded shares of Nextera Energy Partners from a “c” rating to a “b-” rating in a research report on Wednesday, July 25th. Howard Weil restated a “sector perform” rating on shares of Nextera Energy Partners in a research report on Tuesday, July 24th. Guggenheim restated a “buy” rating and set a $50.00 price target on shares of Nextera Energy Partners in a research report on Monday, July 23rd. Finally, Morgan Stanley lowered shares of Nextera Energy Partners from an “overweight” rating to an “equal weight” rating and set a $50.00 price target for the company. in a research report on Monday, July 16th. Seven investment analysts have rated the stock with a hold rating and five have issued a buy rating to the company’s stock. The company currently has a consensus rating of “Hold” and an average target price of $44.22.

Nextera Energy Partners traded up $0.31, hitting $47.12, during midday trading on Thursday, Marketbeat reports. The company had a trading volume of 102,385 shares, compared to its average volume of 173,363. Nextera Energy Partners has a 52-week low of $36.42 and a 52-week high of $48.75. The firm has a market capitalization of $2.55 billion, a PE ratio of 71.39, a price-to-earnings-growth ratio of 1.88 and a beta of 1.20. The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 1.05, a quick ratio of 4.59 and a current ratio of 4.59.

Nextera Energy Partners (NYSE:NEP) last announced its earnings results on Wednesday, July 25th. The solar energy provider reported $1.43 earnings per share (EPS) for the quarter, topping the consensus estimate of $0.48 by $0.95. Nextera Energy Partners had a net margin of 8.88{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} and a return on equity of 6.86{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974}. The company had revenue of $225.00 million during the quarter, compared to analyst estimates of $278.31 million. sell-side analysts forecast that Nextera Energy Partners will post 2.77 EPS for the current fiscal year.

Several institutional investors have recently bought and sold shares of NEP. Summit Trail Advisors LLC boosted its holdings in shares of Nextera Energy Partners by 3,763.4{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} during the first quarter. Summit Trail Advisors LLC now owns 2,096,937 shares of the solar energy provider’s stock worth $2,097,000 after purchasing an additional 2,042,660 shares during the period. Neuberger Berman Group LLC raised its stake in Nextera Energy Partners by 6.6{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} in the first quarter. Neuberger Berman Group LLC now owns 8,428,746 shares of the solar energy provider’s stock worth $337,066,000 after buying an additional 520,952 shares in the last quarter. Neumeier Poma Investment Counsel LLC bought a new position in Nextera Energy Partners in the first quarter worth about $19,326,000. CHURCHILL MANAGEMENT Corp bought a new position in Nextera Energy Partners in the second quarter worth about $18,564,000. Finally, Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors LP raised its stake in Nextera Energy Partners by 36.1{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} in the first quarter. Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors LP now owns 653,075 shares of the solar energy provider’s stock worth $26,103,000 after buying an additional 173,081 shares in the last quarter. Institutional investors own 84.43{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} of the company’s stock.

About Nextera Energy Partners

NextEra Energy Partners, LP acquires, owns, and operates contracted clean energy projects in the United States and Canada. It owns a portfolio of contracted renewable generation assets consisting of wind and solar projects with approximately 3,867 megawatts of capacity, as well as seven contracted natural gas pipeline assets.

Read More: What does RSI mean?

To view ValuEngine’s full report, visit ValuEngine’s official website.

Analyst Recommendations for Nextera Energy Partners (NYSE:NEP)

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Several significant projects are on the Washington County Planning Commission’s agenda for Monday night, including a proposal to build 174 duplex homes off Longmeadow Road.

Also to be presented are proposed site plans for Trammell Crow’s 1.2 million-square-foot distribution center, R+L Carriers’ proposed warehouse, a large solar farm, an expansion for Big Cork Vineyards and proposed retail and milk processing facilities for a Williamsport-area farm.

The meeting begins at 7 p.m. Monday in the county’s administrative complex in downtown Hagerstown.

The duplex project is a revision of a late 2000s proposal for 132 single-family homes for Rosehill Manor. Dan Ryan Builders is now proposing 174 duplex lots on 56 acres south of Longmeadow Road. The proposed development is west of Hunter Hill Apartments and the property goes as far south as Leitersburg Pike.

The multiphase project calls for 174 duplex homes for active adults, ages 55 and older, said Steve Cvijanovich, senior project manager for Fox & Associates engineering firm.

Dan Ryan Builders hasn’t committed to an architectural design yet, but the preliminary plat and site improvement plan being presented Monday night are laid out based on duplexes with two-car garages that would share a wall, Cvijanovich said. With that layout, each of the 87 buildings would consist of a residence, garage, garage and residence, though the design could change.

Cvijanovich did not have a timeline for home construction, but the first phase is addressing the state’s reforestation requirements. Most of that will be covered by existing trees on the west side, but more trees would be planted.

The proposed site plan shows two entry roads off Longmeadow Road. There’s also a possible future connection to Wisdom Way on the east side, connecting to Leitersburg Pike, Cvijanovich said.

The planning commission also is scheduled to consider site plans for the following projects:

• Big Cork Vineyards, at 4236 Main St. in Rohrersville, is proposing a building addition for its winery and banquet and reception facility. Hours for the reception facility are listed as 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. seven days a week. The tavern and lounge would be open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday and weekends, and from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Fridays.

• Long Delite Farm is proposing a dairy product processing and sales facility that would operate from 10 a.m. until dusk. The building would be at 16230 Long Delite Lane off Spielman Road south of Williamsport.

• Rockdale Solar is proposing a solar-energy generating system with a 7,500-panel array to cover 14 acres south of Clear Spring Road in the Pinesburg area. The company was granted a special exception by the county zoning appeals board in July 2017 for a 2-megawatt solar array.

• R+L Carriers is proposing to build a 52,000-square-foot development, including a truck terminal, an office, a five-bay shop and diesel fuel pumps on the east side of Greencastle Pike, south of Huyetts Crossroads.

• National developer Trammell Crow is proposing an almost 1.2 million-square-foot distribution center in the Vista Business Park, south of Showalter Road. The proposed project involves building the final leg of Crayton Boulevard, so the road connects Showalter to Maugans Avenue. The proposed distribution center is proposed to be built on spec, without having any leases secured. But the use of the building could change.



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Solar panels are seen March 28 in McHenry. SolAmerica Energy Inc. wants to operate a solar energy facility on about 20 acres of a 120-acre plot of agricultural land at the southwest corner of North Valley Hill and North Ridge roads in Bull Valley.

Solar panels are seen March 28 in McHenry. SolAmerica Energy Inc. wants to operate a solar energy facility on about 20 acres of a 120-acre plot of agricultural land at the southwest corner of North Valley Hill and North Ridge roads in Bull Valley.

Residents will be able to voice their opinions during a meeting Monday on a proposed solar farm.

SolAmerica Energy Inc., which has offices in Chicago, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Washington, D.C., wants to put up solar panels on a property at 1015 Ridge Road in Bull Valley.

SolAmerica wants to operate the solar energy facility on about 20 acres of a 120-acre plot of agricultural land at the southwest corner of North Valley Hill and North Ridge roads, according to a public notice on the matter.

The village’s zoning board will hear the matter at 6:30 p.m. Monday at the McHenry County Farm Bureau,
1102 McConnell Road, Woodstock.

SolAmerica’s proposal is one of many that have come before the county and different municipalities in the past year.

Interest in solar farm developments has taken off in the area in part because of the Illinois Future Energy Jobs Act. The law, adopted in 2016, aims for utility companies to provide at least
25 percent of their energy in renewable sources, such as wind and solar energy.

At its July 17 meeting, the McHenry County Board approved two solar farm proposals from Borrego Solar Systems Inc.

Borrego plans to put a solar farm on a 30-acre property at 24704 W. Grant Highway between Marengo and Garden Prairie in Marengo Township. The company also has plans for a Chemung Township development.

The Chemung Township solar farm is planned for a 27-acre plot of vacant land on the east side of Route 14, just north of Oak Grove Road.



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Waterford — While Dominion has cooled off its threats of premature shutdown, officials here have begun planning for a future without Millstone Power Station.

The plant is the town’s top employer and taxpayer, representing nearly 35 percent of the tax base.

“We recognize full well we would not be able to fill that $30 million void overnight,” town Finance Director Kevin McNabola said. “So we’re trying to be proactive. What else could we bring in here to help fill the void?”

The Representative Town Meeting’s re-established Long Range Fiscal Planning Committee recently began evaluating options for economic development. Officials say it’s early in the process, but First Selectman Dan Steward and McNabola say it’s possible Waterford could draw a large company to establish a distribution center with solid access to interstates 95 and 395.

Committee member Susan Driscoll said that, on top of finding ways to cut the budget, “We need to find some business development and get some state support to repair transportation infrastructure.”

Committee member Joshua Steele Kelly said he was pleased town leaders had brainstormed ways to generate cash and save on utilities, such as switching the street lights to LEDs, which officials say could save about $250,000 annually.

“A little bit of thought … and vigilance on the part of the whole town can help mitigate this before it becomes more of an issue,” Kelly said, noting the committee planned to meet quarterly.

Steward said the town also will save on utilities by putting more efficient energy systems in municipal buildings and installing solar panels at the landfill. He said the town would “ask the state for more grants and more money” but he and McNabola weren’t going to bank on it.

While Millstone’s two operating units are licensed until 2035 and 2045, Dominion has hinted that cheap natural gas in the wholesale energy market threatens the power station’s future. The specter of heavy job losses within the next few years — and questions about how to replace Millstone’s power while meeting the state’s green energy goals — whipped up unwavering support for the plant among area lawmakers.

Regulators this past week said they’d let the plant try to prove it is “at risk” of closure. The designation would let regulators evaluate Millstone’s environmental, economic and grid benefits, giving Dominion’s proposals a boost against solar, wind and hydropower companies in a state-run auction for zero carbon energy.

Local, state and federal officials note that no matter what, Millstone couldn’t close on a dime like a Radio Shack. Even when Millstone decides to cease operations, decommissioning can take years and involves a phased reduction in staffing before the site is maintained only for spent fuel storage, according to Dominion and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Dominion critics point to publicly available data showing Millstone will remain profitable until at least 2035. Millstone’s energy capacity commitments to the New England grid make imminent closure even less likely, some argue.

‘A huge asset’

Analysts say Millstone’s annual economic impact on the state approaches $1.5 billion.

McNabola said in 2018, Millstone paid $29.7 million in property taxes; the town expects about $30.7 million from Millstone in 2019, almost 35 percent of the net taxable grand list.

Steward said even if regulators let Millstone get a favorable deal in the zero carbon auction, Dominion was “still a company we have to watch very carefully.”

“They’re a huge asset to the state,” he said, citing Millstone’s 2,000-plus megawatts, tax revenue and donations to nonprofits and area towns.

Millstone spokesman Ken Holt noted that Millstone employees have contributed more than 25,000 volunteer hours since 2013 and made almost $12 million in charitable donations since 2002, including a scholarship program at Three Rivers Community College.

‘Serious concern’ for schools

School Superintendent Tom Giard said “potential early closure of Millstone is of serious concern to the town and school district.”

“Budget reductions are certainly part of the answer and would be a necessary step,” he said. “The other part of the equation … would be to vigorously engage the state legislature and Department of Education for intervention on the funding front.”

State Department of Education spokesman Peter Yazbak said a significant dip in the town’s taxable property would impact the state Education Cost Sharing Grant formula and result in more funding.

The district has tried to control costs by eliminating top salary tiers for new teachers and requiring higher health care contributions from employees. The moves resulted in savings estimated at about $8 million over the next 20 years, Giard said. The Board of Education also worked with Eversource to extend a gas line to Clark Lane Middle School, with yearly savings in the tens of thousands of dollars.

Giard said he couldn’t speculate on how Millstone’s closure could impact enrollment of the 2,500-student district. But he said school districts often serve as a community’s “center of activity and pride.”

“A drastic reduction in services to our children would certainly have families asking themselves if they have the means to look elsewhere to give their children the best opportunity at success,” he said.

‘We haven’t been back in court’

As of the end of fiscal year 2017, the town’s unassigned fund balance totaled $13.2 million, McNabola said. Officials hope to keep building the fund to help offset the eventual wallop of a Millstone closure.

After the Connecticut Yankee nuclear plant closed in 1996, annual property tax payments to Haddam plummeted from about $13 million to a little more than $1 million, according to Connecticut Yankee spokesman Bob Capstick. A handful of employees overseen by a manager still staff the site 24/7. Forty dry cask storage containers have held 1,019 spent fuel assemblies at the site since 2005.

Today, Millstone’s assessed value is approximately $1.1 billion, McNabola said. Dominion purchased the plant about 18 years ago from Northeast Utilities for roughly $1.3 billion but argued to the town that it was only worth about $900 million.

“We spent about six or seven years discussing that with them,” Steward said, referencing a court battle settled between the town and Dominion in 2008.

Town officials at the time said the $2.7 million they spent in legal fees was worth it because of the resulting settlement.

But can the town and Dominion prevent a legal tussle over assessed value when the plant eventually closes?

Steward and McNabola said the relationship between Waterford and Dominion had improved over the years.

“We haven’t been back in court,” Steward said. “We’re on top of what they’re doing and they’re willing to share.”

‘Who’s going to absorb us now?’

Dominion Energy employs more than 1,000 workers at Millstone. Ninety-two percent of Millstone’s full-timers live in New London County, said Holt, the plant spokesman. About 37 percent of them live in either East Lyme or Waterford.

One of those employees, Ernie Babcock, isn’t eager to find a new career.

A maintenance mechanic at Millstone Power Station since 1997, Babcock started working at the Waterford plant during refueling outages in the early 1980s. Back then, he had a similar gig at West Springfield Generating Station in Massachusetts before a 10-year stint at Haddam’s Connecticut Yankee.

“When Connecticut Yankee closed, they did help find places for guys to go,” said Babcock, a 58-year-old member of Millstone’s Fix It Now (FIN) team of mechanics, electricians, operators and instrument and control technicians. “Most of us who wanted to keep working were absorbed by Millstone. But if this place shuts down, who’s going to absorb us now?”

Over the last five years, competition from natural gas and economic and political uncertainty have driven a handful of nuclear plants out of business.

The federal government recently said it was considering ways to rescue unprofitable coal and nuclear plants, and some states have either created subsidies or adjusted energy markets to benefit nuclear power. But nuclear companies still plan to shutter a half-dozen plants in the U.S. in the next few years.

“The concern is real,” said Babcock, who lives in Waterford with his wife, Monica. He is the father of Melissa Johnson, a copy editor at The Day. “We talk about it all the time. We have a lot of younger employees here, they’re trying to get to 36 years in the industry like me. But even the older guys, we don’t want to have to run out and find new employment at this point in our careers.”

Babcock said the company keeps employees up to speed on developments with regulators and lawmakers. He said he wouldn’t know what to do if Millstone shut down within a few years, especially since so many power plants have closed and others, like the West Springfield Generating Station, are “peak plants” manned by skeleton crews until demand on the energy grid spikes.

He added that a closure would hit the bottom lines of local auto dealers, big box retail stores and small businesses like Giuliano’s Bakery in Niantic, one of his favorite spots to pick up a breakfast sandwich.

b.kail@theday.com



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With an aim to promote usage of solar energy, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal inaugurated solar power plants at Dwarka’s residential societies on Saturday.

The total capacity of the plants is 416.5 KW. The five societies which have 505 flats, will be the first-ever projects on a large scale after IP Extension’s Milan Colony to have their own solar power plant.

The societies included are Ispat CGHS, Saksham apartments, Supriya apartments, Balaji Apartments and Navrattan apartments. Read More

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Rain, rain go away: We’re not suggesting a drought, but after a week of more drenching downpours, a balanced weather pattern would be nice.

Which brings us back to our discussion of climate change. And before you stop reading, take a moment to learn about a positive movement underway in our region and in Pennsylvania.

On a recent humid Wednesday evening with a heavy rain interruption, more than 90 people packed a clean energy forum at West Chester University. The event was sponsored by PennEnvironment and WCU and featured area legislative leaders to promote clean energy solutions and support legislation that would transition Pennsylvania to 100 percent renewable energy.

The state currently ranks 18 out of all fifty states for solar electricity generation, 19th for wind electricity generation, 11th for efficiency, 15th for number of electric vehicles sold, and 8th for increase in battery storage, according to a report released by PennEnvironment on July 25, the day of the forum.




But of total energy consumption, only 2.7 percent comes from wind and solar generation, ranking Pennsylvania 34th in the country.

Progress is being made, but there’s a long way to go.

The recent forum featured presentations by state Sen. Andy Dinniman, D-19 Dist.; state Rep. Carolyn Comitta, D-156th Dist.; West Chester Mayor Dianne Herrin, and West Chester University Director of Sustainability Bradley Flamm. Dinniman and Comitta told the standing-room-only crowd about legislation on which they are co-sponsors that would require Pennsylvania to transition to 100 percent renewable energy by 2050.

“As Pennsylvanians, we have a constitutionally-protected right to ‘clean air, pure water and the preservation of the natural, scenic, historic and esthetic values of the environment.’ We must continue to assert ourselves in defending and supporting those rights,” said Dinniman.

A coalition of nearly 150 groups is urging the House and Senate to consider the legislation, HB2132 and SB1140.

The support cuts a broad swath of organizations beyond the obvious environmental activists. The Pennsylvania Council of Churches, business groups, educators, and a bipartisan coalition of legislators came out last April when the bills were introduced, according to a report in PennLive.

“We don’t just have a climate problem. We have a looming crisis of economic strain and weather conditions that are not life-sustaining,” Herrin said at the local forum. “I believe strongly in the power of community to lead the charge to a clean energy economy that will produce good jobs while protecting our health and our children’s future.”

West Chester is among the municipalities that have committed to a goal of 100 percent renewable energy.

According to PennEnvironment, Hawaii became the first state in the country in 2015 to set a 100 percent renewable energy requirement. Sixty-one American cities, including West Chester and Downingtown, and universities including WCU, have joined the pledge.

Speakers at the forum also noted the economic benefit to clean energy in Pennsylvania, despite its long standing history in fossil fuel extraction. The clean energy sector — solar, geothermal and wind power generation — now provides 85,000 jobs, more than all fossil fuel sectors combined.

In Harrisburg, however, there is opposition from the natural gas industry as well as the Pennsylvania Chamber of Business and Industry.

Both groups claim renewable energy sources will not be able to fully meet Pennsylvanians’ energy needs barring some significant technological breakthrough, according to PennLive.

The West Chester forum was one of many events PennEnvironment is holding this summer to raise awareness of the need to transition from fossil fuels to renewables.

The education and legislative push by these organizations and lawmakers like Dinniman and Comitta are two parts of the three-pronged effort to address climate change.

Also at work is an increasing push to change consumer habits, reducing use of plastics, buying locally grown food, recycling, composting and converting heating and cooling systems to solar and geothermal.

Why not consider an electric car for your next vehicle?

The reality of climate change is inescapable, but solutions are not out of reach.

Educating, changing habits and legislating are forces at work: Join them.



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Have you used your cellphone camera to take a photograph today? If so, you have used NASA technology. Yes, the digital image sensor used in your cellphone camera and in video devices was developed for NASA and eventually commercialized. This type of technology transfer is known as a spinoff and is defined by NASA as “a commercialized product incorporating NASA technology or expertise that benefits the public.” Since 1976, NASA has documented more than 2,000 technology transfers in its annual publication titled “Spinoff.”

A few of the 50 new spinoffs documented in “Spinoff 2018” include:

A sterilizing fogger that cleans ambulances making it safer for paramedics and patients. This was developed from a special coating used on the International Space Station’s solar array blankets.

Controlled-release plant food which replaces liquid fertilizer and the need for multiple applications. This was developed for hydroponic growing systems in space.

Special insulation known as radiant barrier technology which is being used to keep beer kegs cold all day. This was developed to keep spacesuits insulated against the extreme temperatures in space.

Gold coatings used to keep the Oscar trophies used in the Academy Awards shiny and bright. This was developed for coating space telescope mirrors.

NASA spinoffs benefit the health and medicine, information technology, transportation, public safety, consumer goods, energy and environmental, and industrial productivity areas, so they have impact in many facets of our lives.

Visit spinoff.nasa.gov to learn more NASA spinoffs and to receive a free copy of “Spinoff 2018.”

August Skies

Brilliant Venus is the unmistakable beacon low in the western sky after sunset. See it near the moon during evenings of the 13th-14th.

Bright Jupiter is southwestern sky after sunset as well. The moon will glide by Jupiter during the evenings of the 16th-17th.

Saturn and Mars appear in the southern sky a few hours after sunset this month. The moon will glide by Saturn during the evenings of the 20th-21st and by Mars on the 22nd-23rd.

The Perseid meteor shower peaks during the night of the 12th and the early morning of the 13th. Go out after midnight and look up. No binoculars or telescope are needed to see this amazing sky show.

David Abbou of Stafford County is a volunteer for the NASA/JPL Solar SystemAmbassadors Program and is a member of the Rappahannock Astronomy Club.Contact him at davidastronomy@comcast.net

David Abbou of Stafford County is a volunteer for the NASA/JPL Solar System

Ambassadors Program and is a member of the Rappahannock Astronomy Club.

Contact him at davidastronomy@comcast.net



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After an unusual rainstorm in Santa Fe, The New Mexican ran a front-page story on July 25 with the headline, “A 1,000-year event.” But here’s something that needs to be noted: In the future, this will not be a 1,000-year event. Most of the media in this country appears to be unaware of climate change, which will change our world profoundly.

Human activity is increasing the amount of solar energy being injected into our climate, and as a result we are seeing, and can expect to see continuing:

• Average global temperature increase, year by year.

• More record highs, more record lows, but with highs outnumbering lows.

• More extreme weather of all kinds (like, for example, what happened in Santa Fe recently); more “1,000-year events.”

• More droughts, fires, floods, blizzards, hurricanes, on average, of increasing intensity.

• Sea-level rise, in the long term forcing mass displacement of human population, with attendant social strife.

• Increasing regions of the planet that are uninhabitable by humans because it’s just too hot, again with mass human migration.

• Increasing stress on agriculture.

• Movement of species toward cooler habitat, with many going extinct in the process.

The list goes on. The effects will continue to get worse, year by year, until we do something — actually, until long after we do something. If we quit burning fossil fuels entirely today, it will take another 20 to 30 years for the climate to stabilize. And then, it will not go back “to normal.” It will remain at some warmer, more agitated state that we can scarcely imagine now.

Don’t get the idea that merely transforming entirely our fuel supply is enough. We need to, in addition, take action to remove carbon from our air. There are techno-fixes in the works that may or may not bear fruit. We might also transform our agriculture so that the soil, an amazing potential carbon sink, lives up to its potential. It might well come down to a need for an entirely different economic system that is capable of observing limits.

If a new world war started or if space aliens invaded Earth, I am certain that The New Mexican would devote a significant portion of its space to coverage every single day, for the duration. Why do you not cover this equally huge threat to humankind? The “1,000-year event” is no longer a 1,000-year event, and we deserve to know why, to see the bigger picture. Please, take this seriously.

Chuck Wright has been a resident of Dixon for seven years and is active in matters of climate and energy.



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DUBLIN–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Aug 3, 2018–The “Global Solar Power Window Market – Analysis of Growth, Trends and Forecasts (2018 – 2023)” report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com’s offering.

The presence of a large number of skyscrapers makes rooftop solar power systems unviable. However, the windows of these tall buildings have the potential to be converted into solar power panels, which can produce at least a third of the buildings’ power requirement.

The return on investment of the solar power windows is expected to be about two years. As of 2018, most of the other types of renewable technologies have a return on investment between five to ten years, and sometimes as high as twenty years in some cases, this technology has more potential for deployment. The solar power windows are about 40{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} costlier than the conventional solar control window films.

The Asia-Pacific region is one of the potential markets for solar power windows, as the construction sector is one of the major end-user industries for solar power windows. With consistent economic growth in the Asia-Pacific countries, coupled with growing tourism and improving business potential, the demand for infrastructure in countries, such as India, China, Malaysia, and Indonesia, is growing at a significant rate.

China is the largest building construction market in the world, with up to 2 billion square meters constructed annually. China’s 13th Five Year Plan for Building Energy Efficiency and Green Building Development includes aggressive goals for green building construction and renovation, including a requirement for 50{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} of all new urban buildings to be certified green buildings. The plan also specifies pilot programs for constructing and renovating energy efficient buildings.

Companies Mentioned

Brite Solar
EnergyGlass
Onyx Solar Energy S.L
Physee
Polysolar
Solar Infra Systems
Solar Window Technologies Inc.
SolarGaps
Solaria Corporation
Ubiquitous Energy Inc.

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