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JA Purity IV JA Purity IV
  • Top Stories
  • ENN Original
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Wildlife
  • Policy
  • More
    • Agriculture
    • Green Building
    • Sustainability
    • Business
  • Sci/Tech
  • Health
  • Press Releases
  • Economics Study Calculates More Accurate Wind Forecasts Net $150 Million in Energy Savings Every Year

    As wind energy occupies an increasingly large share of the energy landscape, a new study by Colorado State University economists and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration shows that more accurate wind forecasts over the last decade have netted consumers over $150 million per year in energy savings.

    The study, published in the Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy, is based on NOAA’s High Resolution Rapid Refresh model, which provides hourly updated weather forecasts, including wind speed and direction data, for every part of the United States. Every few years, NOAA releases an updated HRRR model to the National Weather Service, while working on the next update at the same time.

    Utilities must be able to predict wind patterns accurately and far in advance to determine how much additional energy they must produce from other sources. A bad prediction can cost the utility a lot of money, and those costs are then passed on to consumers. Conversely, a good prediction can result in substantial savings for those same customers.

    Read more at: Colorado State University

    Increasingly accurate wind forecasts have been providing consumers with about $150 million in energy savings each year. (Photo Credit: NOAA)

     

  • U.N. Report Co-authored by OSU Researcher Advocates Big Increases in Sustainable Wood Production

    Increasing sustainable use of the world’s forests would support economic recovery while providing environmentally friendly wood construction materials.

  • As the Grid Adds Wind Power, Researchers Have to Reengineer Recovery from Blackouts

    When the power grid goes down, there’s a step-by-step recovery process – a “blackstart” that up to now has depended on power from gas or hydro turbines spinning away inside a power plant.

  • One Man’s Trash

    Texas A&M graduate Carl McAfee '90 is using polymer chemistry and recycled materials to make a sustainable impact.

  • Regrow, Not Reuse: How Restoring Abandoned Farms Can Mitigate Climate Change

    Around the world, hundreds of millions of acres of land are being abandoned due to what’s known as “rural outmigration,” or people leaving for urban centers.

  • New Tech Aims to Drive Down Costs of Hydrogen Fuel

    Researchers from North Carolina State University have developed a new technique for extracting hydrogen gas from liquid carriers which is faster, less expensive and more energy efficient than previous approaches.

  • Caribbean Coral Reefs Need Our Help

    Vibrant coral reefs teeming with marine life are diminishing throughout the Caribbean as global temperatures rise.

  • Scientists Show How Forests Measure Up

    A new map shows the height of Earth’s forests, from stubby saplings to timbers towering more than 50 meters tall, across the entire land surface.

  • Soil Microbes Use Different Pathways to Metabolize Carbon

    Much of what scientists think about soil metabolism may be wrong.

  • Tracking Agricultural-Related Deforestation

    At the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference, 10 of the world’s largest commodity traders published a ‘shared commitment’ to halting forest loss

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