Weather Guard Lightning Tech

Cement Decarbonization, EU Election’s Impact on Renewables, Co-Locating Solar and Wind
Rosemary discusses emerging technologies from companies like Calix and CarbonCure to reduce emissions from cement production. Phil and Joel analyze how the European Parliament election results could impact renewable policies and the growing trend of co-locating wind, solar and battery storage projects. Plus Invenergy’s Purple Skies project is the Wind Farm of the Week!
Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly email update on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary Barnes’ YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us!
Pardalote Consulting – https://www.pardaloteconsulting.com
Weather Guard Lightning Tech – www.weatherguardwind.com
Intelstor – https://www.intelstor.com
Allen Hall: YouTube star Alex Choi, known for his car stunt videos, has been charged with, by federal authorities, for orchestrating a dangerous video involving a helicopter and a Lamborghini. The 24 year old content creator allegedly directed a video called Destroying a Lamborghini with Fireworks, in which two individuals in a helicopter shot fireworks at a speeding Lamborghini in the El Mirage.
Dry Lake Bed in San Bernardino County, of course, California. Troy faces a maximum of 10 years in federal prison if convicted of causing the displacement of an explosive or incendiary device on an aircraft. Now, Rosemary, I assume you have seen this, being the YouTube star that you are. You have seen this video of them shooting off Roman candles from this helicopter?
Rosemary Barnes: It hasn’t come up in my suggested videos, no.
Allen Hall: I’ve seen it like 12 times.
Joel Saxum: Yeah, I’ve seen it and it’s awesome. I feel bad for these guys. They created a cool video. But if you go by the letter of the law, there’s a lot of things illegal about this. It’s like the same concept of if you shoot a drone down with a firearm, you can get the same exact penalty as if you shot down a plane with people in it.
Because they’re both aircraft that are covered under law by the FAA. So the FAA has got some pretty stinch stringent laws, and if you don’t tow the line, you can get in a lot of trouble, as evidenced by This awesome video of shooting fireworks from a fire, from a helicopter at a Lamborghini in the desert.
Philip Totaro: If precedent is anything, we had a guy in Santa Barbara County who, during COVID, took up his little, tiger cub plane or whatever single engine prop, and did a YouTube video of him crashing his plane. He got six years. These guys can probably expect a little more than six.
Allen Hall: Wow.
Don’t mess around with airplanes. I think that’s the whole point of this is don’t do stupid stuff around airplanes. They’re not toys, boys and girls. They are definitely not toys. And the Wild West is over. Maybe you can do that in Australia, but you sure can’t do that in the United States anymore.
Welcome to the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast. I’m Allen Hall, and here’s this week’s headlines. The International Energy Agency’s latest report reveals the clean energy investment landscape across top countries and regions. The United States invested 280 billion in clean energy in 2023, up from 200 billion in 2020.
Europe leads with the highest clean energy to fossil fuels investment ratio, spending more than 10 euros on clean energy for every euro invested. And fossil fuels. China saw the most robust growth in solar, wind and nuclear power, while India’s clean energy investments reached 68 billion in 2023, a 40 percent increase from the 2016 to 2020 average.
In related news, the increasing occurrence of negative electricity prices in Europe is raising concerns among investors about the profitability. Renewable energy projects. Negative pricing has become more frequent as solar and wind production ramp up. While consumers benefit from the free electricity during these periods, investors worry about the impacts on returns.
Germany, Europe’s biggest power market, had about 300 hours of prices below zero last year, and that may double in 2024. The solution lies in building more energy storage systems, such as batteries, to absorb excess electricity and stabilize prices. However, the current scale of energy storage deployment is.
Insufficient to mitigate the impact of negative pricing fully. Experts estimate that Europe’s energy storage capacity needs to increase sevenfold. By 2030 to effectively address the issue. And in Iowa region fiber, a subsidiary of Alliant Energy has opened a wind turbine blade recycling facility. The facility aims to divert 30, 000 tons of scrap wind turbine materials annually by shredding the blades and transforming the extracted components into premium products for use in construction materials such as concrete and asphalt.
The eco friendly process provides a sustainable alternative to burning or land filling the blades. Reduces the carbon footprint of construction projects and enhances the durability and environmental resistance of materials. Region 5 has also established strategic partnerships nationwide to expand its recycling efforts.
That’s this week’s top news stories. Now, here’s our panel. Renewable energy expert and founder of Pardalote Consulting, Rosemary Barnes. CEO and founder of IntelStor Phil Totaro. And the chief commercial officer of Weather Guard, Joel Saxum. Phil, over in Europe, the European Parliament elections are in, and this has caused a lot of consternation in the renewable energy markets.
As is being described in the United States, the European Parliament is shifting right. And the word I hear a lot on the U. S. news is far right. Now, I’ve done some research into that, and I don’t Far right in the United States and far right in Europe are not really the same thing. So it’s moved a little bit to the right and it seems like a little more off center may be the best way to approach it because I think some of the left and the right have picked up some some votes or some elections.
Here’s the rub, and Rosemary, I could use your input on this too. It does seem like the, there is a push within Europe from some portion of the citizenry to slow down renewables and to go a little bit slower than what the current pace is. Now, is that The European Parliament doesn’t have that much oversight, the European Commission seems to have the most oversight over what actually happens in Europe at the moment.
Do these Parliament results really change the landscape for renewable projects in Europe, or is it just a little bump in the road?
Philip Totaro: It changes them from the perspective of Influencing national elections as a result of these parliamentary elections, France already has announced a snap elections, Belgium Belgium’s prime minister announced that he’s going to step down and there’s going to be a reelection for the PM there.
So the real influence of this is in pushing some of the member states in the EU. A little bit further to the right, which could have the consequence of having objection to or non adoption of some of the policies that have been proposed, like around this Green New Deal that they want to and that, frankly, Wind Europe got behind and has also been trying to champion.
The reality of it is it can eventually have an impact. Anything that’s in the pipeline right now, probably unlikely to get affected by it, as long as, they’re far enough along the permitting process. But anything that’s earlier stage, That was hoping to get sped up as a result of permitting reforms in, in, France, Germany, Italy, Spain some of these things are looking a little more tenuous at this point.
And as we know, the markets never particularly capital markets, never like uncertainty. They don’t want to put foreign direct investment into Countries where there’s uncertainty about what the policy regime is going to be because they want to be able to provide certainty to the returns.
Joel Saxum: Phil, let me ask you a question here.
And this is pardon my ignorance on the European Parliament. But do they, they don’t have direct influence over the country? So if I was a German developer and I was selling power within Germany and it’s not crossing my borders, the European Parliament can’t do anything for me or against me. It would only be if I’m going across borders or what is their actual influence?
Philip Totaro: No, it’s a, that’s a great, it’s a great question. So yes, that you’re correct in that the European Parliament only does things at the EU level where it crosses country borders. However Since a lot of the there’s two, two things at play here. One is the shift to towards a little more center, right? In Europe is again, influencing what’s going on in the individual countries.
So as I just mentioned with France, Belgium, you’re even seeing some things in Spain, you’re likely to see things in the Netherlands and a few other countries as well. Where this shift to the, the center right is gonna, play out in the individual countries and their country level parliament elections or, president or PM elections could could end up being influenced by this outcome.
Generally what happens when. Things start becoming more protectionist and more kind of conservative is it slows down free trade, which is bad for the renewable sector, and it slows down foreign direct investment, which is bad for the renewable sector. So as you mentioned, while you’re right, they don’t have a regulatory influence on what happens in any one specific country.
Other than how that is harmonized throughout the entire EU, so that when they want to enact policies across the entire EU, Parliament, can vote to adopt recommendations from the European Commission and Parliament. If they do that, there’s, presume presumption of ratification by all the member states of the EU and therefore adoption of whatever policies are done at the EU level.
So that can happen. necessarily have an influence again if there are some of these permitting reforms that they were trying to enact that were going to be, you wide, those are things that are potentially in jeopardy at this point, again, also, In each member country, if there are permitting reforms, for example, that they were trying to adopt, the shift to the center right could slow down or stop those country level adoptions, irregardless of, even Poland.
Poland is. Going through a big discussion right now where they’re trying to reduce the setback from 1000 meters to 500, and it would open 41 plus gigawatts of wind energy and solar potential in the market. If they did that, but they, they have to be able to reduce those though and get those setback reductions approved.
If they’re going to adopt that, then, it opens up market potential, but, things shifting to the right a little bit throws that into question.
Allen Hall: Rosemary is the only one that lives underneath the parliamentary system. France just called for general elections, snap elections as it’s being described in the United States.
That’s not something we’re familiar with. We have elections every two years, generally every four years for president. So there’s a set schedule. When snap elections happen in a parliamentary system, Does that just destabilize the government temporarily? Does it, what does it do for investment? I’m just wondering if I want to do some offshore work in France right now, is that, this is, does it seem like the right time to do it?
Because it does seem like there’s going to be some significant change in the government structure.
Rosemary Barnes: I don’t even know the exact amounts of time that it is in Australia, but it’s approximately every three years you have to have an election after a certain amount of time and you can’t have it earlier than a certain amount of time.
And so the government is always, the government has the advantage of getting to choose exactly when in that window that it will have an election. And yeah, they’re always choosing are they doing really well on their opinion polls early? Then let’s have an early election. And if they’re not, they’ll probably push it later.
We also do have another way to have an election outside of that cycle. Most countries probably do. If something really bad happens in Australia the trigger is if the government can’t get its budget passed, then, you And they try, I think it’s twice, then they can yeah, call a double disillusion election where, you know, like all of the, everything is spilled and up for grabs.
Yeah, so I I don’t know exactly how they do it in France. They’ll obviously be a caretaker period between when they announce the election and when the new government starts and how long is that in France? I don’t know.
Allen Hall: If Macron’s party took what they described in the U. S. as a beating in the European Parliament voting, it seems like they’re calling an election at a time of weakness, not of strength.
And I think you described it how I would think of it, is you want to call an election while you are strong, not weak, but Macron’s calling it when he seems to be the most weak he’s been in a couple of years. Why? What’s the play there?
Rosemary Barnes: The European elections feel very separate to the country elections, at least that’s my experience when I lived in Denmark, and sometimes something that happens with the European elections can cause a backlash against it in the next yeah.
The election of the, yeah, president or parliament or whatever it is that the individual countries are doing. So yeah it’s possible that they expecting something like that in France. The other thing is that, yeah, you wouldn’t want to call an election when you’re in a weak position, but if you see your position getting weaker and weaker as every day goes on, then earlier is still better.
Even if you’re currently weak, you better than waiting a year until you’re like really just. So yeah, it’s more to do with how they see the trend going over the next little while rather than where they’re specifically standing now.
Allen Hall: Phil, if Marine Le Pen has more of a say in French government, what does that mean for renewables?
Philip Totaro: Not good things because she’s come out years ago when she was trying to contest an election with Macron and said she wants to gut the renewables industry, particularly wind energy. Not a big fan. So that would be Although, to be honest, if she wins, her party is unlikely to get a significant majority so they’re still going to have to work together and they’re still going to be, opposition from people that are still pro renewables.
She’s very pro conventional power generation and nuclear wants to keep that going. And, at the end of the day, it’s, again, it’s going to destabilize investment and particularly foreign direct investment in France for the, especially with the offshore.
What would you even overthink about that election since they have operations in France? That is a complicated question because it comes at a time when, are they really going to maintain a significant footprint there anyway if they’re You know, are they going to keep LM? That’s an open question.
Are they going to sell off individual factories? Are they going to make those factories GE factories? I have, nobody knows actually at this point. So that is a big uncertainty at this stage.
Joel Saxum: Throw in there for these renewable companies that are based in France as well. We just talked about GE talk NG, EDF, there’s some big players over there.
French labor laws are not friendly to the company themselves. So that adds another layer of complexity into any kind of things that happen in the renewables industry over there.
Allen Hall: It’s an amazing turn of events because the United States, the European Parliament elections were not really discussed before they happened.
And now they’re a very frequent discussion on the news and on podcasts all across the states. It’s amazing how fast things turn. So the new PES Wind Magazine, speaking of Europe, has just arrived from the United Kingdom via the King’s Post, right? It’s not the Queen’s Post anymore, it’s the King’s Post.
Joel Saxum: That’s not Europe.
Allen Hall: Oh, sorry, Joel. It’s You’re right, but some part of the staff is working from France. I do know that. The new PES Wind magazine came out and I just received it. If you haven’t gotten your copy, just go to peswind.com and you can just read it online. This thing is full of really good articles.
The one I saw, I was looking through and I thought of Rosemary was this article by Hitachi Energy because they were discussing about HVDC and how that is going to get implemented wider and wider. And some of the government decisions and the policy and regulatory environment and interest rates are playing into things like Hitachi developing newer and newer systems.
And I thought, wow, this is, Really pertinent to a lot of discussions. We’ve had them on uptime over the last several weeks if you haven’t seen the new PES win magazine Go get it at peswind.com because it’s just full of great information Rosemary there’s been a big push in the United States to decarbonize cement factories And I think that push is happening all around the world And I know you’ve been doing a little more of a deep dive on it than I have Do you want to describe what is happening in the cement world?
Rosemary Barnes: Yeah cement is last time I checked, it’s about 8 percent of global emissions, cement being the like glue that goes inside concrete. So everywhere you see concrete, then yeah, the, the main structural component to that is cement. And also that’s the main contribution to its emissions. And it’s, usually lumped in the, it’s always lumped in the hard to abate category of emissions because it’s not like decarbonizing electricity.
You can use renewables instead of fossil fuels and decarbonizing transport. A lot of that is just going to be swapping out electric cars for fossil fuel powered cars with cement. The emissions don’t mainly come from burning fossil fuels. 60 percent of the emissions actually process emissions because to make cement, you take calcium carbonate, which is limestone.
And you need to yeah, you need to turn that into lime. So you turn limestone into lime and the chemical reaction releases CO2. So it’s CO2 that’s been trapped underground in a fossil. Limestone is essentially fossilized sea creatures. And then you’ve got to release that CO2. And so it’s like a non negotiable part of that chemical reaction.
And cement isn’t the only thing that uses lime. Lime’s used in a lot of different industries, but anywhere that you have you turn limestone into lime, you’ve got CO2 that’s being released. And there’s just no way around that. The technologies that people are looking at to address this include carbon capture, that’s one of the simplest ideas.
And in fact, carbon capture is better suited to cement production than most other places where people were considering carbon capture because the CO2 is quite concentrated. Compared to how it is in in a fossil fuel power plant, usually the CO2 is only coming out, maybe 10, 15 percent of the flue gases are CO2.
So it needs to be concentrated and in the cement plant, it’s much higher. And I was actually recently a few weeks ago, I visited an Australian company, Calix who have a new kind of calciner, which is basically an oven or a kiln. that is used to make this reaction from limestone into lime.
And they’re doing it a bit differently instead of getting the, it needs about 900 degrees Celsius. And instead of getting that with a flame right in the middle next to the ground up raw meal, they’re heating it indirectly from they got a big metal tube. They heat it up from the outside to heat it hot enough that it starts to glow and radiate.
And then the material inside breaks down and the CO2 is released, but because you’re not burning something inside it it, it doesn’t get all mixed in with other stuff. You basically get a very close to completely pure CO2 stream coming out. So you don’t need separation technology. You just need to grab the CO2 and yeah, take it away.
Do something else with it. Yeah, so that’s one option, either traditional CCS or this kind of new CCS from Calix. And then there’s a few other technologies as well in play. Some American startups that are looking really interesting. There’s actually there might be Canadian. I can’t remember exactly, but say North American carbon cure, take CO2 that captured from somewhere else.
And then they use that in the in the concrete curing process, they add CO2. So it’s being sequestered and also improves the chemical properties. There’s another company called Sublime who are making something that is chemically identical to Portland cement, but it doesn’t ever start, it doesn’t start from limestone.
So it starts from materials that never had that CO2 to be released. So you can end up with something chemically identical without having to release any CO2. So that’s interesting. And then some of the biggest gains are going to be made with actually getting better at specifying how much cement we need to use.
Cause it’s, it’s such a cheap and versatile material. It’s, it’s everywhere. Everyone that lives in a city knows how ubiquitous concrete and cement are. But it’s often used in applications where you could use something else instead, or you could use less of it. So there’s a big push to, Yeah, to make sure that all the, I don’t know, building codes and civil codes around bridges and whatever are actually specifying performance rather than telling you exactly how that you’re going to make it and that, the aim is that you will be able to use less.
Allen Hall: Rosemary, has there, have there been demonstrator projects to evaluate these processes and materials?
Rosemary Barnes: Yes. Yeah the, so I was visiting Calix in their facility near Melbourne. So I saw the several stages of calciner, the, calciner is the word for the kind of furnace, oven, kiln, whatever you want to call it, big hot tube.
They’ve been through several different iterations and they have some projects in Europe now in traditional, existing cement manufacturing facilities where they are replacing bits of it at a time. So they’re already reducing emissions there. And the, yeah the cement that comes out the end is pretty good.
is identical. They do all the quality testing. So that’s pretty, pretty far advanced and ready for the scale up. It’s a cool technology because it’s very modular. They’ve got one, one size tube at the moment, and that’s, small scale in terms of the throughput of a traditional cement manufacturing facility.
But to scale up, they just need more of the same tube. They don’t need to, everything is the final size by now. So it will just be a matter of. Of rolling out more of them. Yeah, so that’s pretty cool.
Allen Hall: When do you think you’ll, we’ll see wind turbine foundations using these new processes and materials?
Rosemary Barnes: I haven’t seen anybody that has actually commented on the procurement of concrete.
You could have it immediately. I think one reason why it might not be as fast as you might think, cause it sounds obvious, right? Like a wind turbine manufacturer, of course they should, they’re really worried about their supply chain and everything. A lot of them have net zero commitments.
They’ve been through all their factories and sourced renewable electricity and all that sort of thing. But the way that wind farms are rolled out, usually the foundation is done by a local engineering company. It’s not the wind turbine manufacturer that does it. And so the emissions from it aren’t on their books necessarily.
They’re not on the wind turbine manufacturers books. Maybe the developer or the owner of it would care in the end, but there is a bit of a separation there that probably doesn’t make it as early a target. But it’s one of my hopes for the industry for, yeah, for concrete, but also for other materials like steel, I would love to see government support these new technologies that are needed by procuring the green alternatives, because in, I don’t know, everything that I’ve looked at, there are green alternatives, they cost more, sometimes a lot more, sometimes just a little bit more.
But the way that technologies get cheaper and by where that, that what Bill Gates calls a green premium, the amount of extra costs that you have to add on top for a green version of something compared to a fossil fuel version. The way that shrinks is by having more and more of that product rolling out.
And, in terms of concrete, like that’s, governments are one of the biggest procurers of that. You’ve got to think of all the urban concrete that’s out there. And footpaths sidewalks I don’t know, bridges def, defense. Yeah. It’s just there’s a real opportunity to make a difference if they would start procuring that way.
And it’s easier than forcing it on, private companies who usually don’t like to be told what to do. Yeah, I would say that’s the that’s a big opportunity actually to support these new technologies, which exist. In a lot of cases, cement’s never, it’s never going to be like, like wind energy is cheaper than, a coal power plant and in most places or electric cars are also going to be one day cheaper than buying a petrol car.
Cement with carbon capture is never going to be cheaper than just letting it out into the atmosphere. But the, so it’s always going to be an economic challenge to actually, you have to want to do it. It’s not just going to, the technology won’t take care of itself. So it is going to need some government support.
And I think that’s a, yeah, that’s a really way, good way to support it and get that green premium to shrink as fast as possible.
Joel Saxum: You’re onto something there though. Definitely Rosemary, like in the United States. A lot of these big heavy highway projects so if you’re building a residential home and there’s a crew and we’re pouring concrete, if we pour 20 or 30 yards in a day for a floor and maybe 20, 30 yards for walls or something, that’s a big pour, 40, 50 yards a day that’s massive for a residential construction crew.
Go to a heavy highway project. And they’re pouring thousands of yards a day. That money comes from the government to pay for all those things. So if they, if there’s a place that you want to get to an economy of scale, then those projects could be that, that Trojan horse to get some of this stuff to reduce the cost.
Because if you’re repaving like a, a highway, chunk of a highway from say Austin to San Antonio, there’s hundreds of thousands of yards of concrete there more than they’ll pour. for years in that area. So there’s a vehicle there for it.
Rosemary Barnes: Yeah, I think so too. For steel as well.
All sorts of things. I would much rather see a government supporting in that way than, some of the other support mechanisms that they have chosen.
Allen Hall: Rosemary, you had a video. A couple of months ago, if I remember correctly, that was talking about reducing emissions from cement.
And since you have visited this factory, are you going to have a new video coming out about it?
Rosemary Barnes: Yeah. Yeah. There’s I’ve just got the nearly final edit from from my editor and because he’s European, he’s about to go off on holidays for three weeks. The final version will come out after that.
Allen Hall: That’ll be interesting. So everybody just check out Engineering with Rosie. You’ll see the factory tour and how we’re going to decarbonize cement. That’s fascinating. Thanks, Rosemary.
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Allen Hall: Joel, when we were down in Oklahoma and Texas, one of the things we noticed was the integration of multiple kinds of renewables plenty of solar facilities, a ton of wind, you saw battery storage, you saw data centers, you, we saw all of it gas pipelines being put in still, all energy sources are on the table down in Texas.
But it does seem like the combo of solar and wind on the same plot of land or nearby, not the situation at the moment. Is that something that’s coming up? It does seem like an obvious choice. If you have a wind development site, you have room for some solar. And what are the limitations that prevent people from doing that?
Joel Saxum: It just makes sense, right? There’s numerous benefits for co-locating energy production systems or energy storage systems. You’ve already procured the land. You’re already dealing with those landowners on permits. You’re already have interconnection there. You’ve already developed the roads and pads. There’s so many cost saving mechanisms here that it’s amazing that this hasn’t been more of a thing.
Some people say, if you read a lot of articles online or looking through some of the national lab stuff, some people are pointing at subsidies for saying, this is why we haven’t seen a lot of these things co located or hybridized together because we didn’t need to. Because the subsidies took care of some of the cost balance things, and didn’t force developers to basically optimize the financial models for these things.
What you’re starting to see a lot more of these come online or at least be in pipelines and be planned. So there’s a couple of things to consider here as well. Co located and hybrid are two different things. So co-located would be like, if I have battery storage, you. And I have wind on the same site, but they’re not connected at whatsoever.
They’re just into the same interconnect and we’ve saved some money by developing them, but a hybrid power plant would be if there’s coordinated operations of the sub components of them.
Allen Hall: Does the financial model look better, Phil, when you throw battery onto a wind site? Does it make economic sense to do it, or are we not in the place like Europe is right now?
We have net, or Australia, where there’s negative pricing in the States.
Philip Totaro: Yeah, you even mentioned at the top of the show, Germany, seeing, or even, Spain and a few other markets in Europe that are facing negative pricing. This is becoming a little more common because of an increase in curtailments that is a natural consequence of adding more variable power generation from renewables to the grid.
Now, you can balance the grid during, the middle of the day with solar and, evening, nighttime, and early morning with wind typically, because we know wind drops off a little bit during the middle of the day. But that’s the whole point of having solar there to pick up. But batteries are becoming much more prominent in places where people want to be able to do energy arbitrage.
And that’s for us in the United States. That’s the Southwest Power Pool and ERCOT and a little bit in, in California as well. Where we’ve seen, periods of negative pricing out here too. But it’s starting to become more commonplace and to go back to your earlier question of why isn’t this necessarily happening everywhere it’s happening where they need to grid smooth or time shift first, but it’s probably going to become more prominent.
I don’t know that every single, wind farm or solar park necessarily needs to have on site co located, or hybrid system, where again, it’s, integrated into the same substation or it’s, even companies like GE and Siemens have investigated putting the little batteries on the turbines themselves just part of the electrical connection.
The question now is You know, we have a lot of storage in the interconnection pipeline as well. And at the end of the day, megawatts or megawatts, it’s just a question of, do you want to be able to produce from power generation, store them in the battery and deploy later, or do you want to be able to.
Just produce your megawatts and produce your electrons and feed that in. It basically comes down to much more sophisticated grid studies that are going to be necessary from the regional ISOs and, anyone else that serves as a, an energy regulator from that perspective.
Allen Hall: So if interconnects are the problem in trying to get an interconnect so you can plug into the grid, why would you not put storage on your site? Because the regulator doesn’t really care what the generation source is, right? It seems If I have a wind site, why would I not, especially in Texas, why would I not be putting storage there?
Philip Totaro: For the most part, yes, there are some technical challenges that I don’t think we have time to get into. And I’m also probably not the most sophisticated expert on the actual battery storage technology to be able to say, how they need to be integrated. But the, at the end of the day, the.
The storage that’s being deployed is usually being deployed hybrid with solar just because of the need to be able to time shift away from the middle of the day where, COVID really caused a lot of shifting patterns in. Electricity consumption demand. We now have with what everybody typically refers to is this duck curve.
We’ve got it in California. They’ve got it down in Australia. As well where you just have this, bit of a peak in the morning dip in the middle of the day. Where people are now, just not consuming as much electricity as they used to, they’re not in the office, they’re not in the house, they go out in the middle of the day, whatever.
And then, late in the afternoon and throughout the evening, there’s a huge spike again. So we need that storage to be able to time shift. We need that storage hybridized or co located. With solar to be able to time shift the the power generation to meet demand wind. It’s a little it’s a little more challenging, because we have a much longer, potentially much longer duration of storage that we’d require because you’re talking about from, 67 PM at night until about 67 PM in the morning.
Is when you have your, ramp up and peak wind and then your ramp down again. But in order to get that wind that’s being produced overnight, time shifted to, 7, 8, 9 o’clock in the morning when the demand is there. You need storage technology that may or may not be capable of time shifting that long.
Normally a lot of these things can only do 3, 4 hours, 5 hours. Starting to talk about doing 12 hours worth of time shifting for, megawatts. We’re talking about hundreds of, potentially hundreds of megawatts. That requires a much different system design. And frankly, a much different business case than what everyone is, has necessarily explored at this point.
Allen Hall: Joel, let me ask you about the data centers we saw in Texas and how prevalent they are and the fact that I’ve read a couple of articles more recently saying the data centers cannot really live on renewable energy because they cannot go down. Those data centers have to continue running. So they’re talking about now putting in natural gas, yeah, peaker plants to keep those data centers up and running.
Does it, first of all, that doesn’t make any sense. I understand what they’re trying to do, but it doesn’t make any sense. But is the demand so high that’s going to be the outcome? That they’re going to be putting in natural gas peaker plants just to keep the, your Apple iPhone running?
Rosemary Barnes: But it’s not the, it’s not the data centers that are saying we need gas peaker plants.
It’s the I don’t know what the system is set up like, but is that, yeah, the grid operator is saying, Oh I’ve heard that AI, I have heard that AI is a thing. And so we’re going to need all this new demand and it can only be done by gas picker plants. And partially because they have left it so late to think about adding new capacity that the only, they can only go for the fastest yeah, the fastest option.
And also what they. And also what they already know. So I, I have seen a lot more cynical takes on it than that, that, they want to guess pica plants and have reverse engineered for, why that should be, but I’ve seen some really creative solutions being suggested for for data centers.
The growth of. Power is not as much as you would expect from data centers. We are still adding new data centers and that’s new loads, but the increased computational requirements for AI have been offset by improved efficiencies with the, within the, yeah the chips are doing more for more calculations for less energy now.
And. AI, AI algorithms are getting better at yeah, just, more efficient at doing the same things, but also not all like when you think of a data center, you’re thinking, Oh, when I send an email or I want to pull something off the cloud, or I want to do a Google search, it has to happen exactly when I want it.
But with AI, like a lot of the energy is spent training new data sets and. That’s for any company that has an idea for a new AI product that they want, it’s like a huge cost that they’re going to have to pay for all that number crunching essentially. And there are companies now that are saying, okay you can If you want to buy this data, these data services from us, it’s really cheap between 10 AM and 2 PM and the rest of the time it’s really expensive.
And for companies that are cost conscious, they’re like, Oh, okay, I can, save a huge amount on my development costs by doing my anything that can be shifted to those hours. I will. And so I think that. People are in the early stages of this AI boom, and it sounds in some ways similar to, I remember when the, the internet was becoming a thing and everyone’s Oh my God, we’re going to need, this many new power plants to supply all the extra energy for the internet.
But actually, electricity usage has been pretty flat over the period since the internet, even though, people were right that the internet was a big thing and everybody is using it. So I think that, yeah, things that people are going from, like a tiny little bit of information and making huge extrapolations far into the future when things will be very different.
And we’re not they’re doing it in the way that’s imagine if. This was a worst case scenario. And we generated electricity in the stupidest possible way and that we use the electricity in the stupidest possible way, then we would need this much. But it turns out that, in a capitalist society, there’s a lot of people whose company was the company’s success will depend on them not doing things in the stupidest possible way.
And nothing’s going to turn out in this worst case scenario that people foresee at the very earliest days of a
Allen Hall: I guess you haven’t met Microsoft, Rosemary.
Rosemary Barnes: I didn’t say the smartest way. I said not the stupidest way.
Allen Hall: That’s what I’m saying. Have you met Microsoft?
Joel Saxum: Taking all these things into consideration, there’s another thing that battery storage does that people don’t regularly think of, right?
They just think of like energy storage. However, the majority of the battery’s usage on the grid is for normalizing frequencies when power sources are coming up, down, or demand gets spiked, or demand goes low, because that’s how you need to even these things out, right? Say, take the ERCOT grid.
The ERCOT grid is becoming more and more reliant on renewables, which are You know, solar coming online, power coming offline, and you have different frequencies and different, the grid being built out. And basically it was built out in a non smart way, getting smarter now, but to normalize these frequencies, you need that storage as well.
So now if you’re implementing new power generation facilities, Why not put that grid frequency, basically levelizer, right on site where the power coming off of that site is intelligently managed before it even hits the grid. I think that’s another value add for adding storage systems to any renewables.
So it goes, it also goes to show here, there’s, I have some numbers in front of me. This is from a report from 2020, end of 2022. So these numbers are now 18 months old. However, at that point in time. Utility scale, solar plus storage. There was 213 plants in the United States for a total capacity of 12 gigawatts.
And wind plus storage at that point in time, there was only 14 plants in the entire United States that had those combined. And if you go wind plus solar plus storage. So like the trifecta that was only five plants in all of the United States, and that was for like less than 700 megawatts.
It hasn’t been adopted at a huge rate, but it’s looking to be like smart investment and smart build out. We’ll see more of this in the future. Invenergy’s Purple Skies project in southwest Minnesota is going to move forward. They’ve been working on this thing for three to four years now. And it’s as a pseudo replacement for the Sherco coal plant shutting down in Becker, Minnesota I’ve actually lived not too far from that for a little while went to school in St.
Cloud So I know that one. Xcel Energy is huge in this area So Xcel Energy is actually building a new 345 kV line and this project the Purple Skies project will be connected to that Invenergy even opened a regional office in Marshall, Minnesota. So this wind farm facility You Is going to be down by Lake Benton, Lake, by the Lake Benton Wind Farms.
If if you’ve been in the wind industry for a while, the Lake Benton Wind Farms have been along for a long time. They’ve got some Zond Z50 machines, I think from 1998 or something’s installed on those farms. So this one is neighbors to that. So in that area, there’s a geographical feature called the Buffalo Ridge.
And it is a nice high Ridge with a lot of good wind resource. Lateral is wind. Blow there heavily, but it blows regularly and consistent. So it is a very large project. Eventually that’s ultimate goal is to be a thousand megawatts in three phases. It’s across 110, 000 acres. They’re still in the middle of permitting and getting all the permissions for this but they are going to start the first phase, which will be two to 250 megawatts in 2026.
Good thing here, Southwest, Minnesota, a lot of farmers but the locals are used to energy and they’re welcoming the project. Good. So the last thing to think about here is the purple skies project in Minnesota. Is this a tip of the hat to Prince’s purple rain being close to his hometown? Maybe, but we’ll never know.
Allen Hall: That’s going to do it for this week’s Uptime Wind Energy podcast. Thanks for listening. And please give us a five star rating on your podcast platform and subscribing in the show notes below to Uptime Tech News, our weekly newsletter, and also subscribe to Rosemary’s YouTube channel, Engineering with Rosie.
And we’ll see you here next week on the Uptime Wind Energy podcast.
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Vineyard Wind’s $69.50 PPA, Two Offshore Lease Exits
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Vineyard Wind’s $69.50 PPA, Two Offshore Lease Exits
Rosemary reports back on her visit to multiple Chinese renewable energy companies, Vineyard Wind activates a $69.50/MWh PPA with Massachusetts utilities, and Bronze Age jewelry halts a German wind project.
Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly newsletter on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on YouTube, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary’s “Engineering with Rosie” YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us!
[00:00:00] The Uptime Wind Energy Podcast brought to you by Strike Tape protecting thousands of wind turbines from lightning damage worldwide. Visit strike tape.com and now your hosts.
Allen Hall 2025: Welcome to the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast. I’m your host, Allen Hall. I’m here with Yolanda Padron in Austin, Texas, who is back from the massive wedding event. Everybody’s super happy about that, and Rosemary Barnes had her own adventures. She just got back from China and Rosemary. You visited a a lot of different places inside of China.
Saw some cool factories. What all happened?
Rosemary Barnes: Yeah, it was really cool. I went over for an influencer event. So if you are maybe, you know, in the middle of your career, not, not particularly attractive or anything you might have thought influencer was ruled out for you as a career. No one, no one needs engineering influencers in their [00:01:00] forties.
It’s incorrect. It turns out that’s, that’s where, that’s where I, I found myself. It was pretty cool. I, I did get the red carpet rolled out for me. Many gifts. I had to buy a second bag to bring home the gifts, and when I say I had to buy a second bag, I had to mention. Oh, I have so many gifts, I’m gonna need another bag.
And then there was a new bag presented to me about half an hour later. But, so yeah, what did I do? I got to, um, as I was over there for a Sun Grow event. Huge, huge event. They, um, it’s for, it’s for their staff a lot, but it’s also, they also bring over partners. They also bring over international experts to talk about topics that are relevant to them.
Yeah. They gave everybody factory tours in, um, yeah, in, in shifts. Um, I got to see a module assembly factory, so where they take cells, which are like, I don’t know, the size of a small cereal box, um, and assemble them into a whole module. Then the warehouse, warehouse was [00:02:00] gigantic. It, um, was, yeah, 1.8 gigawatt hours worth of cells that couldn’t hold in that one building.
They’re totally obsessed with fire safety there in everything related to batterie, like in the design of the product, but also in, in the warehouse. And they do, yeah, fire drills all the, all the time. Some of them quite big and impressive. Um, I saw inverter manufacturing facility that was really cool.
Heaps of robots. Sw incredibly fast. Saw a test facility.
Allen Hall 2025: So was most of the manufacturing, robotics, or humans?
Rosemary Barnes: Yeah. So at the factory it was like anything that needed to be done really fast or with really good quality was done by robots. So they had, um, you know, pick and place machines putting in. Um, you know, components in the circuit board, like just insane, insane rate.
I’m sure it’s quite, quite normal, but, um, just very fast. Everything lined up in a row. Most of their quality control is done by robots. Um, so it does well it’s done by ai, I should say. [00:03:00] Taking photos of, of things and then, um, AI’s interpreting that. Repairs, I think were done by humans. There were humans doing, um, like custom components as well.
Like not every product is exactly the same. So the custom stuff was done by humans.
Allen H: So that’s the Sun Grove facility, right? You, but you went to a couple of different places within China?
Rosemary Barnes: Yeah, I went to another, a factory, a solar panel, a factory, um, from Longie. That was really cool too. I got to see a bit more probably of the, um, interesting, interesting stuff there, like, uh, a bit more.
Um, yeah, I don’t, I dunno, processes that aren’t, aren’t so obvious. Not just assembly, but um, you know, like printing on, um, bus bars and, you know, all of the different connections and yeah, it was a bit, a bit more to it in what I saw. Um, so that was, but it, it’s the same, you know, as humans are only involved when it’s a little bit out of the.
Norm or, um, where they’re doing repairs, actual actually re [00:04:00]repairing. You know, the robots or the AI is identifying which components don’t meet the standard and then they’ll go somewhere where a human will come and, um, fix them.
Allen H: Being the engineer there. Did you notice where the robots are made? Was everything made in China that was inside the factory or were they bringing in outside?
Technology.
Rosemary Barnes: I didn’t think to look for that, but I would assume that it was Chinese made, also
Allen H: all built in country
Rosemary Barnes: 20 years ago that wouldn’t have been the case, but I think that China has had a long, a long time to, to learn that. Again, it’s not like, it’s not, it’s not rocket science. These are, these are pick and place machines, you know, like I remember working on a project very early in my career, so.
Literally 20 years ago, um, I was working with pick and place machines. It’s the same, it’s the same thing. Um, some of them are bigger ’cause they’re, you know, hauling whole, um, battery packs around. It’s just the, um, the way that it’s set up, but then also the scale that they can achieve. You just, you can’t make things that cheap if you don’t have the [00:05:00] scale to utilize everything.
A hundred percent. Like I said, wind turbine towers is a really good example. ’cause anyone, any steel fabricating
Allen H: shop
Rosemary Barnes: could make a wind turbine tower. Right? They, they could, they could do that. You know, the Chinese, um, wind turbine tower factories have the exact right machine. They don’t have a welder that they also use for welding bits of bridges or whatever.
Uh, they have the one that does the exact kind of world that they need, um, for the tower. They, you know, they do that precisely. Robotically, uh, exactly the same. And, you know, a, a tower section comes on, they weld it, it moves off to the next thing, and then a new one comes on. They’re not trying to move things around to then do another weld in the same machine.
You know, like they’re, um, but the exact right. Super expensive machine for the job costs a whole bunch to set up a factory. And then you need to be making multiple towers every single day out of that factory to be able to recoup on your cost. And so that is [00:06:00] the. The, um, bar that is just incredibly hard slash impossible for, um, other countries to clear.
Allen H: Can I ask you about that? Because I was watching a YouTube video about Tesla early on Tesla, where they wanted to bring in a lot of robotics to make vehicles and that they felt like that was the wrong thing to do. In fact, they, they, they kinda locked robots in and realized that this is not the right way to do it.
We need to change the whole process. It was a big deal to kind of pull those. Specialized piece of equipment, robots out and to put something else in its place in that they learned, you know, the first time, instead of deciding on a process, putting it in place and then trying to turn it on, see if it works, was to sort of gradually do it.
But don’t bolt anything down. Don’t lock it in place such that it doesn’t feel like it’s permanent. So you engineer can think about removing it if it’s not working. But it sounds like this is sort of the opposite approach of. A highly specialized [00:07:00] machine set in place permanently to produce. Infinite amounts of this particular product, does that then restrict future changes and what they can make or, I, I, how do they see that?
Did, did you talk about that? Because I think that’s one of an interesting approaches.
Rosemary Barnes: I didn’t actually get as much chances I would’ve liked to speak to engineers. Um, I was talking mostly to salespeople and installers. Um, so they know a lot, but I couldn’t, um, like in the factory tours, I was asking questions.
Um. That kind of question and, and they could answer all, all that. Um, but outside of that, and I couldn’t record in the factory obviously. Um, but I did, I did take notes, but what I would say is that they would have a separate facility where they would be working out the details of new products and new manufacturing processes and testing them out thoroughly before they went and, you know, um, installed everything correctly.
But what I do hear is that, you know, especially with solar power. Maybe to [00:08:00] batteries to a lesser extent. You, you know, you like, you have these kind of waves of technology. Um, so you know, like everyone’s making whatever certain type of solar cell and then five years later, um, there’s a new more efficient configuration and everybody’s making that.
And I know that there are a lot of factories that kind of get scrapped. Um, and the way that China’s set up their, like, you know, their economy around all this sort of thing is set up is that it’s not that, like every company doesn’t succeed. Right. They SGO was a big exception because they’ve been going since 1997, I think it was.
It was started by a professor quid his job and hired a room across the, across the road from his old university and, you know, built his first inverter and, um, you know, ’cause he, he could see that. Uh, the grid was gonna have to change to incorporate all of the solar power that was coming, which to be honest, in 1997, that was like pretty, pretty farsighted.
That was not obvious to me when I started working in solar in mid two thousands. And it was not obvious to me that this was a winner.
Allen H: Well, has sun grow evolved then quite a bit? ’cause if you’re [00:09:00] saying that they’ve minimized the cost to produce any of their products by the use of robotics, they have been through an evolutionary process.
You didn’t see any of the previous generations of. Factories. You, you were just seeing the most modern factory that that’s actually producing parts today. So is that a, is that a, is that just a cost mindset that’s going on in China? Like, we’re just gonna produce the lowest cost thing as fast as we can, or is it a market penetration approach?
What are, what were, were the engineers in management saying about that?
Rosemary Barnes: I think there’s a few different aspects to that, like within China. So Sun Grow is the big company with a long track record and they’re not making the cheapest product out of China. So I think that they are still trying to make the cheapest product, but they’re not thinking about it just in the purchase price.
Right. They’re thinking more in terms of the long, long term. You know, they’ve been around for 30 years and probably expect to be around for another 30 years. They don’t wanna be having [00:10:00] recalls of their products and you know, like having to, um. Installers in particular are probably working with them because they know that they won’t have to go back and do rework and the support is good and all that sort of thing.
So they’re spending so much money on testing and you know, just getting everything exactly right. But I don’t think that that’s the only way that China is doing it. There’s, you know, dozens, probably hundreds of companies. Um. Doing similar stuff between Yeah, like solar panels and associated stuff like inverters and, and batteries.
So many companies and all of them won’t succeed. You know, sun Girls Facility in, I was in her and it’s huge, you know, it’s like a, a medium sized country town. Just their, um, their campus there, they’re not, they’re not scrapping that and moving to a new site, you know, they’re gonna be. Rejiggering and I would expect that, you know, like everything’s set up exactly the way it needs to be, but it’s not like gigantic machines.[00:11:00]
It’s not like setting up a wind turbine blade factory where it’s hard if you designed it for 40 meter blades, you can’t suddenly start making 120 meter blades. Like it’s, they will be able to be sliding machines in and out as they need to. Um, so I, I, yeah, I guess that it’s some, some flexibility. But not at the cost of making the product correctly.
Allen H: Did you see wind turbines while you were in China?
Rosemary Barnes: I, the only winter I saw, I actually, I saw, because I caught the train from Shanghai, I actually caught the fast train from Shanghai to, which is about, it depends which one you get between like an hour 40 or three hours if it stops everywhere. Um, and I did see a couple of wind turbines on the way there, out the window, just randomly like a wind turbine in the middle of a, a town.
Um, so that was a bit, a bit interesting. But then in the plane, on the way back, the plane from Shanghai to Hong Kong, I, at the window I saw a cooling tower of some sort. So either like a, yeah, some kind of thermal [00:12:00] power plant. And then. Around all around, well, wind turbines, so onshore wind turbines. So I don’t know.
Um, yeah, I, I don’t know the story behind that, but it’s also not a particularly windy area, right? Like most of the wind in China is, um, to the west where, uh, I wasn’t
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Whether you’re an industry veteran or new to wind, PES Wind has the high quality content you need. Don’t miss out. Visit PS win.com today. So there are two stories out of the US at the minute that really paint a picture of the industry. It was just being pulled in opposite directions. The Department of Interior announced agreements to terminate two more.
Offshore wind leases, uh, [00:13:00] Bluepoint wind and Golden State wind have agreed to walk away from their projects. Global Infrastructure Partners, which is part of BlackRock, will invest up to $765 million in a liquified natural gas facility instead of developing blue point wind. Ah. And Golden State Wind will recover approximately $120 million in lease fees after redirecting investment to oil and gas projects along the Gulf Coast, and both companies say they will not pursue further offshore wind development in the United States.
Well, we’ll see how that plays out. Right? Meanwhile. In Massachusetts Vineyard Wind, which has been fighting with GE Renova recently has activated its long awaited power purchase agreement with three utilities. The contract set a fixed electricity price of drum roll please. [00:14:00] $69 and 50 cents per megawatt hour for the first year and a two and a half percent annual increase.
Uh, state officials say the agreements will save rate payers $1.4 billion over 20 years. So $69 and 50 cents per megawatt hour is a really low PPA price for offshore wind. A lot of the New York projects that. Renegotiated we’re somewhere in the realm of 120 to $130 a megawatt hour, and there’s been a lot of discussion in Congress about the, the usefulness of offshore wind.
It’s intermittent blahdi, blahdi, blah. Uh, but the, the big driver is what costs too much. In fact, it doesn’t cost too much. And because it’s consistent, particularly in the wintertime, uh, electricity prices in Massachusetts in the surrounding area are really high. ’cause of the demand and ’cause how cold it is that this offshore wind project, vineyard wind would be a huge rate saving.
And [00:15:00] actually the math works out the math. Math everybody. Do you think this is, when we go back five years from now, look back at this. This vineyard wind project really makes sense for Massachusetts.
Yolanda Padron: I think it really makes sense for Massachusetts. I’m really interested to know what the asset managers are thinking on the vineyard wind side, um, and if they’re scared at all to take this on.
I mean, it’s great and I’m sure they can absolutely deliver. Like generation I don’t think should be an issue. Um. I just don’t know. It’s, it sounds like they’re leaving a lot of money on the table.
Allen H: I would say so, yeah. But remember, the vineyard win was one of the early, uh, agreements made when things were, this is pre Ukraine war, pre Iran conflict on a lot of other, a lot of other things.
It was pre, so I remember at the time when this was going on that. P. PA prices were higher than obviously a lot of other [00:16:00] things. Onshore solar, onshore wind, it would, offshore is always more expensive, but I don’t remember $69 popping up anywhere in any filing that I remember seeing. So even if they had said $69 five years ago, I think that would’ve still been like, wow, that’s pretty good for an offshore wind project.
And now it looks fantastic for the state of Massachusetts
Yolanda Padron: because I know that there’s sometimes, and we’ve talked about this in the past, right? There are sometimes projects where, you know, you think you, you’ve got a really good price and you’re really excited about it, and then it goes into operation and then like a couple years down the road, prices increase quite a bit and it’s not the worst thing in the world.
But you do just kind of think a little bit like, I wish I could. Renegotiate this or you know, just to get, to get our team a bit of a better deal or to get a bit more money in operations and everything.
Allen H: Does this play into Vineyard wind claiming $850 [00:17:00] million in dispute with GE Renova that at $69 PPA, there’s not a lot of profit at the end of this and need to get the money out of GE Renova right now, and maybe why GE Renova wants to get out of this because they realize.
The conflict that is coming that they need to separate the, the themselves from this project. It’s, it’s very, as an asset manager, Yoland, as you have done this in the past, would you be concerned about the viability of the project going forward, or is all the upfront costs. Pretty much done in that operationally year to year.
It’s, it’s not that big of a deal.
Yolanda Padron: As an asset manager taking this on, I’d probably have started preparation on this project a lot earlier than other of my projects like I do. I know that usually there’s, you know, we’ve talked about the different teams, right, throughout the stages of the project until it goes into operations, [00:18:00] but.
And usually you don’t have a lot of time to prepare to, to make sure all of your i’s are dotted and t’s are crossed, um, by the time you take the project and operations from a commercial standpoint. But this project, I think would absolutely, like you, you would need to make sure that a lot of the, of the things that you’re, that might be issues for some of your projects like aren’t issues for this project.
Just to make sure at least the first few years you can. You can avoid a lot of, a lot of turmoil that the pricing and the disputes and the technical issues are gonna cause you, because I feel like it’s just, there’s, there’s just so many things that just keep this side, just keeps on getting hit, you know?
Allen H: Well, I, I guess the question is from my side, Yolanda, is obviously inflation, when this project started was pretty consistent, like one point half, 2%. It was very flat for a long time. And interest rates, if you remember when this project started, were very, very low. Almost [00:19:00] nonexistent, some interest rates.
Now that’s hugely different. How does a contract get set up where a vineyard can’t raise prices? It would just seem to me like you would have to tie some of the price increase to whatever the inflation rate is for the country, maybe even locally, so that if there were a, a war in Ukraine or some conflict in the Middle East.
That you, you would at least be able to, to generate some revenue out of this project because at some point it becomes untenable, right? You just can’t afford to operate it anymore. And,
Yolanda Padron: and I think, um, I, I haven’t, I obviously haven’t read the, the contracts themselves, but I know that there’s sometimes there, it’s pretty common for a PPA to have some sort of step up year by year.
And it’s usually, it can be tied to, um, the CPI for. Like the, the change in CPI for the year to year. So you’re [00:20:00] absolutely like, right, like maybe, I mean, hopefully they’re, they’re not just tied to the fixed 69 bucks per megawatt hour. Um, but, but yeah, to, to your point like that, that price increase could, could really save them.
Now that we’re, we’re talking the, the increase in, in inflation right now and foreseeable future,
Allen H: if you think about what electricity rates are up in the northeast. I think I was paying 30 cents a kilowatt hour, which is 300. Does that sound right? $300 a megawatt hour. Delivered at the house, something like that.
Right? So
Yolanda Padron: prices in the northeast are crazy to me,
Allen H: right? They’re like double what they are in North Carolina. Yeah.
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Yolanda Padron: you millions.
Allen H: Well, sometimes building a wind farm turns out more than expected construction workers at a 19 turbine wind project in lower Saxony Germany under Earth. What experts call the largest Bronze age Amber Horde ever found? The region, the very first scoop of an excavator brought up bronze and amber artifacts that stopped construction and brought archeologists back to the site.
Uh, the hoard has been dated between [00:22:00] 1500 and 1300 DCE and is believed to have belonged to at least three. Status women possibly buried as a religious offering. Now as we push further and further across Germany with wind turbines and solar panels for, for that matter, uh, we’re coming across older sites, uh, older pieces of ground that haven’t been touched in a long time and we’re, we’re gonna find more and more, uh, historically significant things buried in the soil.
What is the obligation? Of the constructor of this project and maybe across Europe. I, I would assume in the United States too, if we came across something that old and America’s just not that old to, to have anything of, of that kind of, um, maybe value or historically significant. What is the process here?
Rosemary Barnes: I assume that they’ve gotta stop, stop work. Um, yeah, that’s my, my understanding and I don’t think, do you have [00:23:00] grand designs in America?
Allen H: I don’t know what that is. Yes.
Rosemary Barnes: So missing out by not having that chat. It’s a TV show about people who are building houses or doing, um, ambitious renovations, and it just, it follows, it follows them.
You can learn a lot about project management or. The consequences if you decide that you don’t need to, project management isn’t a thing that you need to do. Um, anyway. I’m sure that in some of those ones I’ve seen they have had work stop because in their excavation they found a, um, yeah, some, some kind of relic, um, from the, from the past.
So based on that very well-credentialed experience that I have, I can confidently say that they would be stopping stopping work on that site. I mean, it’s so bad, bad for the developer, I guess, but it’s cool, right? That they’re, you know, uncovering, uh, new archeology and we can learn more about, you know, people that lived thousands of years ago.
Allen H: It, it does seem [00:24:00] like, obviously. Do push into places where humans have lived for thousands of years. We’re going to stumble across these things. Does that mean from a project standpoint, there’s, there’s some sort of financial consequence, like does the lower Saxony government contribute to the wind turbine fund to to pay the workers for a while?
’cause it seems like if they’re gonna do an archeological dig. That that’s gonna take months at a minimum, may, maybe not, but it usually, having watched these things go on it, it’s. It’s long.
Rosemary Barnes: But wouldn’t that be something that you’d have insurance for?
Allen H: Oh, maybe that’s it.
Rosemary Barnes: You know, it seems to me like an insurable, an insurable thing, like not so hard to, it would’ve affected plenty of other, like any project that involves excavation in Europe would come with a risk of, um, finding Yeah.
An archeological find. And having work stopped, I would assume.
Allen H: Yolanda, how does that work in the United States do, is there some insurance policy towards finding [00:25:00] a. Ancient burial ground and what happens to your project?
Yolanda Padron: I don’t know. I, um, the most I’ve heard has been, it’s just talking to like the government and like the local government and making sure that you have all your permits in place and making sure, you know, you might need to, to have certain studies so you know, you might not have to get rid of the whole wind farm or remove the hole wind farm, but at least a section.
Of it has to be displaced from what you originally had thought. I don’t know. I know it happens a lot in Mexico where you get a lot of changes to construction plans because you find historical artifacts or obviously not everybody does this, but like. Tales of construction workers who will like, find, they’re so jaded from finding historical artifacts that they just kind of like take and then dump them to the next plot over to not deal with it right now.
Not that it’s anything ethical, uh, or done by everybody, [00:26:00] uh, but it’s, but, but it’s a common occurrence, a relatively common occurrence.
Allen H: You would think it where a lot of wind turbines are in the United States, which is mostly Texas and kind of that. Midwest, uh, wind corridor that they would’ve stumbled across something somewhere.
But I did just a quick search. I really hadn’t found anything that there wasn’t like a Native American burial ground or something of that sort, which they previously knew. For the most part. It’s, so, it’s rare that, that you find something significant besides, well, maybe used some woolly mammoths tusks or something of that sort.
Uh, in the Midwest, it’s, it’s, so, it’s an odd thing, but is there a. A finder’s fee? Like do does the wind company get to take some of the proceeds of, of this? Trove of jewelry.
Rosemary Barnes: I, I would be highly surprised.
Allen H: Well, how does that work then? Rosemary?
Rosemary Barnes: I’d be highly surprised if that’s the case in Europe. I bet it would happen like that in America.
Allen H: Sounds like pirate bounty in a sense.
Rosemary Barnes: In, in Australia it wouldn’t be like that because [00:27:00]you, when you own land, you don’t actually. You, you own the right to do things from surface level and above, basically. I don’t know how excavation works. So you don’t generally have a a right to anything you find like that?
I mean, you shouldn’t either. It’s not, it’s not yours. It’s a, it belongs to the, I don’t know, the people that, that were buried. When you then to the, the land, like, I guess. The government in some way. I mean, in Australia it’s, um, like we don’t have so many archeological fines that you would find from digging.
I mean, it’s not that there’s none, but there’s not so many like that. But it is pretty common that, you know, there are special trees, um, you know, some old trees that predate, uh, white people arriving in Australia. And, um, you know, that have been used for, you know, like it might have a, a shield that’s been, um.
Carved out of it. Or, uh, hunting. Hunting things, ceremonial things, baskets, canoes, canoe like things, stuff like that. They call ’em a scar [00:28:00] tree ’cause they would cut it out of a living, living tree. And you know, so when you see a tree with those scars and that’s got, um, cultural significance. There’s also, you know, just trees that were, um.
That that was significant for cultural reasons and so you wouldn’t be able to cut down those trees if you were building any, doing any kind of development in Australia and a wind farm would be no different. I know that they are, there are guidelines for, if you do come across any kind of thing like that or you find any anything of cultural significance, then you have to report it and hopefully you don’t just move it onto the neighboring property.
Allen H: I know one of the things about watching, um. Some crazy Canadian shows is that. Uh, you have to have a Treasure Hunter’s license in Canada. So if you’re involved in that process, like you can’t dig, you can’t shovel things, only certain people can shovel. ’cause if they were to find something of value, you.
You’ll get taxed on it. So there’s just a lot of rules [00:29:00] about it. Even in Canada,
Rosemary Barnes: if I was an indigenous Australian and you know, some Europe person of European descent came and found some artifacts, uh, aboriginal. Artifacts. I would be pissed if they just took it and sold it. Like that’s just clearly inappropriate right.
To, to do that. So you, I don’t think it should be a free for all. If you find artifacts of cultural significance and you just, it’s, you find its keepers that, that doesn’t sound right to me at all.
Allen H: Can we talk about King Charles II’s visit to the United States for a brief moment?
Uh, he is a really good ambassador, just like, uh, the queen was forever. He’s, he does take it very seriously and the way that he interacted with the US delegation was remarkable at times in, in terms of knowing how to deal with somebody that there’s a war going on right now. So there’s a lot [00:30:00] happening in the United States that, uh, not only could it be.
Uh, respecting both sides of the UK and the United States’ position in a, in a number of different areas, but at the same time being humorous, trying to build bridges. Uh, king Charles, uh, had the scotch whiskey tariffs removed just by negotiating with President Trump, and sometimes that’s what it takes.
It’s a little bit of, uh. Being a good ambassador.
Allen H: Yeah. The very polished you would expect that. Right? But this is the first visit of. The king to the United States, I believe. ’cause he, he’s been obviously as a prince many, many, many times to the United States. [00:31:00]But this time as, as a, the representative of the country, the former representative or head of the country, which was unique.
I think he did a really good job. And I wish he, they would’ve talked about offshore wind. Maybe he could’ve calmed down the administration on offshore wind.
Rosemary Barnes: I bet that’s one of the, the goals. I mean, that’s an industry that’s important to. So
Allen H: I wonder if that happened actually. ’cause that’s not gonna be reported in, in the news, but how the UK is going on its own way in terms of electrification and I guarantee offshore wind had to come up it.
Although I have been not seen any article about it, I, I find it hard to believe that King Charles being the environmentalist that he is, and a proponent of offshore wind for a long time. Didn’t bring it up and try to mend some fences.
Rosemary Barnes: Maybe he’s playing the long game though. I mean, Trump is pretty, he’s transactional, but he also, you know, he has people that he really likes and you know, will act in their interests.
So maybe it’s enough to just be [00:32:00] really liked by Trump, and then that’s the smartest way you can go about it.
Allen H: Did you see the gift that King Charles presented to, uh, the US this past week?
It was a be from, uh, world War II submarine, which was the British, I dunno what the British called their submarines, but it was, the name of it was Trump. So they had the bell from. The submarine when it had been commissioned and they, they gave that to the United States, or give to the president. It goes to the United States.
The president doesn’t get to keep those things, but it was such a smart, it’s a great president. It’s such a smart gift, and somebody had to think about it and the king had to deliver it in a way that got rid of all the noise between the United States and the uk. Brought it back to, Hey, we have a lot in common [00:33:00] here.
We shouldn’t be bickering as much as we are. And I thought that was a really smart, tactful, sensible way to try to men some fences. That was really good. That wraps up another episode of the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast. If today’s discussion sparked any questions or ideas, we’d love to hear from you. Reach out to us on LinkedIn.
Don’t forget to subscribe, so you never miss this episode. And if you found value in today’s conversation, please leave us a review. It really helps other wind energy professionals discover the show. For Rosie and Yolanda, I’m Allen Hall and we with. See you’re here next week on the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast.
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