[…] Agorameter and Fraunhofer’s Energy Charts only cover some 90 percent of all power generation (see this report as well).…
On Will Germany reach its 2020 target for renewable power this year?
[…] Energy Transition […]
On Renewable energy production stagnates in Germany in 2016
[…] the standstill on the biogas market, power from bioenergy increased. Biogas units are dispatchable and hence less dependent on…
On On Biofuels, Part 1: Dispelling myths about biopower
[…] was down for two reasons: 1) in 2015, Grafenrheinfeld was online until May, and 2) a number of nuclear…
On Germany’s next nuclear plant closes for good
[…] item shows how great subsequent adjustments can be. Last year’s post on the AGEB’s preliminary data for 2015 assumed…
On Germany is 20 years away from 100 percent renewable power – not!
The kicker, which Jan has missed, is that the technical lifetime of solar photovoltaic panels appears to typically be over…
On Will power prices ever support new nuclear build?
@ henningflessner: The power demand of Germany is decreasing since 2011 http://www.ag-energiebilanzen.de/4-1-Home.html (see "Strommix") Slight increases are followed by decreases,…
On Will power prices ever support new nuclear build?
[…] Temperatures are falling in Europe, and warm thoughts are doing little to help – let alone the European Commission’s…
On A tsunami in winter: Europe shakes up its energy policy
I find this an extremely disappointing article. The title and overview imply that the article will be about biofuels and…
On On Biofuels, Part 1: Dispelling myths about biopower
Science Magazine has a cover story on this same topic this week. See http://science.sciencemag.org/content/355/6320/18.full.
On On Biofuels, part 2: Climate science for bioenergy is lost in the woods