Archive for April, 2009

Oh Yes…Biomass’ Best Blog Is HERE!

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

small-treco-logo

It’s ARRIVED!! TRECO’s Blog is here!

TRECO (along with the lovely lot at Optix) have created a blog to provide you with ALL the best and latest information on Biomass news, Renewable Energy, Green Politics and what TRECO have been up to…Best of all YOU can comment and post your views on any of the issues raised!!

Annoyed with people not caring about Renewable Energy?? Tell us!

Wish that Gordon Brown character would do more?! Blog away!

Frustrated that you couldn’t get your point across to the best in the business?? Let us know!

Mo and the rest of the team are waiting for your views… so CLICK away and GET TYPING!

Britain’s new budget… Over 2 Billion for Renewable Energy!

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

 A Very flowery looking TRECO Tatano boiler

A Very flowery looking TRECO Tatano boiler

(Fairly irrelevant picture I know… but I think we’ve all seen enough of that Gordon Brown character and his crew… So you can have a look at one of our lovely boilers instead!)

Britain commits to cut carbon emissions by 34% by 2020

• An extra £1bn to help combat climate change by supporting low-carbon industries

• £525m for offshore wind projects over the next two years

£435m support for energy efficiency schemes for homes, firms and public buildings

£405m to encourage low-carbon energy and advanced green manufacturing

Totaling £2.365 Bn… a much needed boost for the industry. We are just going to have to wait and see how readily available they make the investment for grants so domestic customers & commercial projects benefit (quickly!).

Drax… Doing enough? Or too little too late?

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

Drax firm plans three new plants

Drax power station   

Bio-mass plants are planned for sites in Yorkshire and North Lincolnshire

An electricity generating company is planning to build three large bio-mass power stations across Yorkshire and North Lincolnshire costing £2bn.

Drax Group, which runs the Drax power station near Selby, aims to run three so-called green power plants at Hull, Immingham and one other site.

The third site could be close to the existing Drax plant.

The firm said the three plants would generate 900 megawatts of power for the national grid.

Bio-mass power plants generate electricity by burning a range of fuels including energy crops, wood chips and other material from renewable sources, the company said.

Carbon footprint

And the firm said planning applications for the plants at Hull and Immingham have already begun.

Company officials said construction of the first of the three plants is expected for late 2010 with power flowing from the unspecified site by 2014.

Drax chief executive Dorothy Thompson said: “We believe our venture into dedicated bio-mass-fired generation underpins our commitment to reducing the carbon footprint of electricity generation from the continued, but necessary, reliance on fossil fuels, whilst delivering secure and reliable supplies of electricity.”

Ms Thompson said that based on current estimates, once all three plants were operational, Drax would be responsible for supplying at least 15% of the UK’s renewable power and up to 10% of total UK electricity.

Greenpeace chief scientist Dr Doug Parr said: “Biomass plants can help us in the fight against climate change, but only if they make the most of the waste heat they produce and use fuel from carefully chosen sources.

“Otherwise they’re cutting down trees, shipping them across the world and then throwing away the energy they get from them.

“Drax already owns the single most polluting power station in the UK, and if they fail to get the technology right on these power plants they could be making their carbon footprint bigger, not smaller.”

Is this enough??? Have your say!

Domestic Biomass Boiler Installation

Monday, April 20th, 2009

Domestic installation

Tatano Kalorina/E 2202 (25kW)

The customer had an old oil fired boiler which had broken and was looking for a biomass alternative to replace it.

The customer needed heating and hot water for his relatively well insulated property (doubled glazed windows & roof insulation). In the light of his situation we recommend- ed a K2202 and also a 3 tonne pellet store to reduce the amount the customer had to refill the hopper.

TRECO custom-made an outhouse to store the boiler and the pellet store. The out-house was specifically designed to be in-keeping with the stye of the house i.e. the tiles are the same, the angle of the roof is in line and TRECO constructed a custom built gate.

The customer received a grant and TRECO custom-built all the components to be in-keeping with the property- perfect!

Brown ‘New Green Deal’…

Sunday, April 19th, 2009

Brown calls for ‘green new deal’

Gordon Brown says Britain should lead the environmental sector

Moving the UK to a low-carbon economy will create 400,000 new jobs over the next eight years, Gordon Brown has told a summit in London.

The prime minister called for an international “green new deal” to boost the environmental sector and help lift the global economy out of recession.

This will increase “confidence and certainty”, he added.

But unions and environmental groups called for more funding for green projects, along with better regulation.

The government has set a target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 80% from 1990 levels by 2050.

‘Imperative’

Business Secretary Lord Mandelson had green custard thrown over him by a protester as he arrived at the launch of the low-carbon summit.

The protester, Leila Deen, told the BBC that she was protesting on behalf on environmental group Plane Stupid.

 

 We need urgent and decisive action, not more token gestures and hot air 
Andy Atkins
Friends of the Earth

She said her actions were motivated by Lord Mandelson’s involvement in the government’s decision to approve a new runway at Heathrow.

Mr Brown used the meeting to release independent research which, it is claimed, shows a total of 1.3 million people will be employed in the environmental sector by 2017 – representing an annual growth rate of 5%.

He said more and more countries were already including “green” measures in their fiscal stimulus packages.

Mr Brown said that, during his talks this week with US President Barack Obama in Washington, they agreed on the “imperative” of investing in cleaner technologies to create jobs and growth.

“We know that the more we are able to co-ordinate these measures internationally, the more confidence and certainty we will build and the more investment we will be able to bring forward,” he said.

“That’s why I want to create a global ‘green new deal’ that will pave the way for a low-carbon recovery and to help us build tomorrow’s green economy today.”

For the Conservatives, shadow environment secretary Greg Clark said: “Instead of indulging in yet another talking shop, ministers should be taking action now to implement a green new deal. This is a time to act, not a time to talk.”

The Renewable Energy Association called for £625m in “green stimulus money”.

‘No better time’

Director-general Philip Wolfe said: “Other countries have already committed huge sums to renewables as part of their stimulus packages, not just because renewables tackle the twin threats of climate change and energy security, but because they also offer the technological stimulus needed in a recession to create high-value jobs and enterprise.

“It is vital for the UK to stage a sustainable economic recovery and our investment package is an essential first step towards that.”

Nathan Argent of Greenpeace said: “If this government wants to create tens of thousands of British jobs and tackle fuel poverty, energy security and climate change in the fastest and most cost-effective way possible then they should invest in renewables and a serious energy efficiency programme.

“With the best renewable energy resources and the worst housing stock in Europe, there is no better time to turn the recession crisis into an opportunity.”

Friends of the Earth’s executive director, Andy Atkins, said the environment needed more than words.

“Today’s summit is an encouraging development, but ministers must grasp the scale of the challenge we face. We need urgent and decisive action, not more token gestures and hot air,” he said.

TUC deputy general secretary Frances O’Grady said: “Moving to a low-carbon economy provides an opportunity to create jobs across the country from high-tech industry to public services.

“But pre-recession tools and techniques will not work. Regulation, government grants and direct government activity may have been unfashionable in the boom years, but they are the only way we can ‘green’ the economy in the midst of bust.” 

What do you think?? Let us know…

Time to Act on Carbon Markets

Friday, April 17th, 2009
Michael Grubb
VIEWPOINT
Michael Grubb

Despite a volatile beginning, carbon markets promise to be a key player in the fight against climate change , says Professor Michael Grubb. However, he warns that governments must not “snatch defeat from the jaws of victory” by failing to take the necessary steps to ensure their longevity.

Patnow power plant near Konin, Poland - 3/12/2008
To create a market that collapses once is unfortunate. Twice is careless; thrice would be outright foolish

Barack Obama wants one; Gordon Brown wants one; the planet desperately needs it, but still an effective carbon market remains stubbornly elusive.

Prices in the EU’s version, the Emissions Trading System (ETS), exceeded 20 euros per tonne of carbon dioxide (tCO2) throughout 2008.

Yet, earlier this year, they fell below 10 euros/tCO2. Prices for international carbon credits that fund emission reduction projects in developing countries have been dragged down further.

However, they are still way above a newly formed carbon market in the US, which languishes at about 2.6 euros/tCO2.

Unlike most markets, these were created by governments to deliver specific policy goals.

They established a market in allowances to emit CO2 to drive emission reductions efficiently, promote low carbon investment, and fund projects internationally on least-cost market principles.

Too cheap to notice wasn’t the idea, because a year or more of rock-bottom prices will gut many emergent carbon reduction businesses. Confidence will be destroyed, low carbon investment deterred and scepticism reinforced.

‘Victim of own success’

It’s only fair to acknowledge that the price variability is partly a problem of success. The carbon savings from credit mechanisms that fund developing country projects have exceeded expectations.

Europe has also been more successful than expected in cutting its own emissions, partly in response to the EU ETS and other policies.

Solar mirrors (Getty Images)

This has cut demand, which is driven by the gap between domestic emissions and targets set out in the Kyoto Protocol.

The Bush Administration said these targets were far too hard to be met, yet they are turning out to be collectively too easy.

The tragedy is that governments now seem determined to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory, with a mantra of non-intervention.

“Not our problem, guv,” they say.

“To make the system stable and predictable, it is important we don’t change the rules.”

Sadly, it’s looking all too predictable.

The UK’s pilot emissions trading system peaked around 20 euros/tCO2 before declining to oblivion.

The first phase of the EU ETS, which started in 2005, also had prices above 20 euros before collapsing slowly to zero.

To create a market that collapses once is unfortunate. Twice is careless; thrice would be outright foolish.

Banking on allowances

Partly, governments are relying on the fact that this time round, companies can “bank” any unused EU allowances for use in the next round, which begins in 2012 – after the current Kyoto commitments expire.

The defining feature of the carbon market – that governments set the quantity – is the key to its salvation

The EU has already put its cards on the table with cutbacks to 2020. In theory, “buy to bank” should bolster short-term prices. but not by much.

The EU’s unilateral commitments might – just – shore up future prices within the EU, but to do that they largely insulate the EU ETS from the global market, and the EU’s targets don’t toughen up without a global deal.

Re-engaging the US around wide-ranging cutbacks after 2012 offers the best long-term solution, and the UN Copenhagen conference at the end of this year is aiming towards this.

But a final, robust and bankable deal will take longer. And twice bitten, thrice shy: markets won’t bet much this year on a successor deal driving prices high after 2012.

The defining feature of the carbon market – that governments set the quantity – is the key to its salvation.

Coal power station's cooling tower, China (Image: AP)

We currently have a unique structure in which supply is fixed and impervious to price.

Not surprisingly, the result of highly uncertain demand is then huge volatility.

Yet this feature also holds the key to stabilisation.

Some of the emission allowances in the EU ETS are to be auctioned, and there is nothing that prevents those auctions having a minimum reserve price.

If companies pay the price, fine; if they don’t, those additional allowances won’t enter the market. It acts as a price floor, in ways clearly and simply set out in advance.

The volume of allowances still to be auctioned in the current phase (to 2012) offers a buffer sufficient to forestall risk of further collapse this year.

Knowing that the only way from the reserve price is up, the markets would settle somewhere above it.

For governments holding these auctions, selling fewer allowances at a moderate price is better than selling a lot of allowances for next to nothing.

Auction reserve prices would need to be co-ordinated, but only a few countries had the sense to retain some allowances for auction, and these are dominated by the UK and Germany.

These two pioneers of global climate change action now find the keys in their hands. Let’s hope they have the wisdom to use them.

Professor Michael Grubb is chief economist for the Carbon Trust and a member of the UK Committee on Climate Change

The Green Room is a series of opinion articles on environmental topics running weekly on the BBC News website


       


Church Biomass Boiler Installation…

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

GULWORTHY Church

BOILER:  Guntamatic Biocom 50

The Church needed to install a new boiler and originally considered the fossil fuel route. How-

ever, having ventured further into the project they realised a biomass alternative would not only

be more cost effective but also beneficial to the environment. The church was not well insulated

and there were no records of previous oil usage (because there had been no boiler) so TRECO

arranged a site survey in order to make the right recommendations. With the relevant informa-

tion gathered TRECO designed, constructed and installed a TRECOPod Special specifically for the

church. This was situated adjacent to the rear wall of the church and designed as not to interfere

with the architecture of the building.

They also received a hefty grant (around approx 80%) for their greener ways… what could be better??!! (well… probably 100%… but you can’t have it all…)

QUOTE from the Church: “The TRECO Team are very approachable, easy to talk to and couldn’t be nicer people to work with. A lot of the time we didn’t know what questions to ask, but the TRECO Team helped us brilliantly!”



Bristol Zoo biomass boiler Installation

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

BOILER: 2x Tatano Kalorina/E 2406 (70kW) Hot Air Machine

Bristol  Zoo contacted TRECO enquiring about the possibility of heating their ‘Butterfly House’ with a Biomass Hot Air Machine.

TRECO underwent a site survey and instructed the Zoo to construct a large enclosure reaching 8 meters high and to section off a control boiler room at either end.

Then TRECO installed the boilers, flues, ducting system and heating control system so the boiler’s would work together. However, in the event that one boiler should break down the other boiler would take over. Due to the nature of this project (being that the butterflies need heat to survive) it was imperative that this contingency plan was put in place.

Would you like more information on this installation- or do you have a similar project in mind… let us know and get in touch!