Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Wind energy

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

The uneven heating of the earth’s surface causes winds to blow. The earth gets heated in different manner because of the difference in the surface temperatures at various places. The air above the surfaces that get more heated heats up and gets warm. The warm air that is lighter rises up creating a low pressure at the area left vacant. The cooler air from surrounding areas then rushes in to take the place of the warm air and this movement of air is called wind.

Wind possesses kinetic energy which is called wind energy. The sun indirectly provides wind energy and so this is a renewable energy source. Wind energy will be available for as long as the sun shines.

Wind energy is also a clean and green renewable energy source. It neither causes pollution nor does it emit harmful substances that might be hazardous for the health. As a green renewable energy source, wind energy also does not contribute to global warming in any way and prevents the degradation of the environment.

Wind energy companies use wind energy by harnessing it by using wind turbines to produce electricity. This electricity can be used for both domestic and commercial purposes. The development of technology has resulted in wind energy being used as an alternative energy source for the generation of electricity.

Renewable wind energy can produce enough electricity that can meet the power and energy demands of a whole nation. Technologies must be developed that can further promote the use of wind energy as an alternative energy source.

Biodiesel Energy Products

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

Executives at venture-capital backed Greenline Industries Inc., a Larkspur, California, biodiesel energy products production equipment, believe the Obama administration will create a huge demand for biodiesel energy products and other advanced biofuels. The president-elect has said he’ll require that 60 billion gallons of advanced biodiesel energy products are produced by 2030, spurred by tax incentives and government spending. The appointment of former Iowa governor Tom Vilsack as agriculture secretary makes increased demand even more likely, Greenline executives say, because of his commitment to ethanol production in his state.

Greenline, which has 35 employees, declines to offer specific projections but plans to triple its sales staff in the coming weeks. “It’s a reaction to the administration change and to changes we expect as a result of the people [Mr. Obama] has picked — the policies that will be happening and the growth in demand we expect,” says Donn Tice, Greenline’s chief executive. The company’s latest round of venture-capital financing was in March, for $20 million.

In December, Mesilla Valley Transportation signed a deal with Greenline for a 10 million-gallon processing plant, part of a multistage, $25 million project of a company offshoot called Global Alternative Fuels. The election “expedited things,” says Dean Rigg, chief financial officer of the transportation company in Las Cruces, N.M., which started processing biodiesel energy products with Greenline equipment about 2½ years ago. “We’re all betting” that a push toward new biofuels will come quickly from Washington, he says.