Monday, October 26, 2015

DOE Releases Final Final Report for Hawaii

We think each state should have the same, comprehensive report done to map out their energy future.  Of course, given the unique conditions of their current mix of power, each state will move forward down a slightly different path to, we hope, is 100% renewables.

Hawaii, based on this formula, will have an interesting mix of energy going forward.  More and more we see biomass an integral part of this shift away from petroleum.  Recently we've done many radio shows from Hawaii, and all guests have echoed the sentiments outlined below--Hawaii will move quickly to a very bright and economically beneficial clean-energy future.  Amen.

DOE Releases Final Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for Hawaii

By Jennifer Delony 
                            
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) on Sept. 10 released a final programmatic environmental impact statement (PEIS) for Hawaii to provide federal, state and county governments as well as the public and developers with a reference document for project-specific environmental reviews.

DOE said it developed the PEIS as a guidance document to be used in making decisions that support Hawaii’s goal of meeting 70 percent of the state’s energy needs by 2030 through energy efficiency and renewable energy. The PEIS is based on DOE-defined representative projects that allow for the evaluation of the typical affects associated with respective technologies.

With about 85 percent of its energy derived from imported petroleum and petroleum products, Hawaii is the most oil-dependent state in the U.S., according to the PEIS. Roughly equal amounts of petroleum are used for electricity generation, ground transportation and commercial aviation — about 28 percent each — with the rest used for marine transport, military and other uses.

The Hawaii State Energy Office reports on its website that the state currently produces 12 percent of its electricity from renewables — 5 percent wind, 3 percent geothermal, 3 percent biomass and 1 percent hydro.

For the PEIS, DOE identified 31 clean energy technologies and activities associated with potential future actions and grouped them into five clean energy categories. The PEIS analyzed each of the technologies and activities at a programmatic level for the islands of Kauai, Oahu, Molokai, Lanai, Maui and Hawaii.
The five clean energy categories are:
  • Energy efficiency
  • Distributed renewable energy technologies
  • Utility-scale renewable energy technologies
  • Alternative transportation fuels and modes
  • Electrical transmission and distribution
DOE determined in the PEIS that while the effects from projects would vary by technology, size and location of the projects, some general conclusions could be drawn.

Regarding activities and technologies in the distributed renewables category — biomass, hydroelectric, fuel cells, PV and wind — DOE said potential effects from those technologies are not likely to be significant because the projects typically would be small. In addition, DOE said that implementation of renewable energy projects at the residential scale can exceed the capacity of a local power grid or utility, causing delays in bringing new energy sources to the electrical grid and requiring system upgrades.

DOE said that utility-scale technologies — biomass, geothermal, ocean thermal, solar and wind — had the greatest potential for environmental effects due to the size of project footprints.

While the most common potential long-term effects associated with utility-scale technologies would include changes to land and submerged land use and scenic and visual resources, DOE said that those effects could be minimized or eliminated through the use of location-specific best management practices.

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