2,113,716 research outputs found

    Wind Powering America Initiative: The Wind and Water Power Program (WWPP)

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    The U.S. Department of Energy\u27s Wind Powering America initiative engages in technology market acceptance, barrier reduction, and technology deployment support activities. This fact sheet outlines ways in which the Wind Powering America team works to reduce barriers to appropriate wind energy deployment, primarily by focusing on six program areas: workforce development, communications and outreach, stakeholder analysis and resource assessment, wind technology technical support, wind power for Native Americans, and federal sector support and collaboration

    Otro título: ECREEE Business Plan 2011–2016

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    Presented to the Executive Board of ECREEE in April 2012The ECREEE Business Plan (2011 to 2016) provides a powerful strategic long-term framework which allows continued monitoring of the achievements of the Centre. By mapping out a clear vision, the plan serves to guide the Centre towards a position of relevance and sustainability in the coming years. The strategy includes the definition of objectives and milestones, performance indicators, activities, and human and financial resources requirements. It also highlights the peculiarities and specific challenges facing the region with respect to energy, while presenting the opportunities and barriers for renewable energy and energy efficiency deployment as well as a country-by-country review of the needs, opportunities and key issues within the sector

    Energy Efficiency: Efficiency or Monopsony?

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    The cliché in the electricity sector, the "cheapest power plant is the one we don’t build," seems to neglect the benefits of the energy that plant would generate. Those overall benefits could be countered by benefits to consumers if "not building that plant" was the result of monopsony. A regulator acting as a monopsonist may need to avoid rationing demand at monopsony prices. Subsidizing energy efficiency to reduce electricity demand at the margin can solve that problem, if energy efficiency and electricity use are substitutes. We may not observe these effects if the regulator can set price as well as quantity, lacks buyer-side market power, or is legally precluded from denying generators a reasonable return on capital. Nevertheless, the possibility of monopsony remains significant in light of the debate as to whether antitrust enforcement should maximize consumer welfare or total welfare.energy efficiency, monopsony, consumer welfare, total welfare, electricity

    Energy Efficiency: Efficiency or Monopsony?

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    The cliché in the electricity sector, the “cheapest power plant is the one we don’t build,” seems to neglect the benefits of the energy that plant would generate. Those overall benefits could be countered by benefits to consumers if “not building that plant” was the result of monopsony. A regulator acting as a monopsonist may need to avoid rationing demand at monopsony prices. Subsidizing energy efficiency to reduce electricity demand at the margin can solve that problem, if energy efficiency and electricity use are substitutes. We may not observe these effects if the regulator can set price as well as quantity, lacks buyer-side market power, or is legally precluded from denying generators a reasonable return on capital. Nevertheless, the possibility of monopsony remains significant in light of the debate as to whether antitrust enforcement should maximize consumer welfare or total welfare.energy efficiency, monopsony, consumer welfare, total welfare, electricity

    Annual Report on Energy-Efficient Purchasing, Motor Vehicle Management, Fiscal Year 2014-2015

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    https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/govpubs-tn-general-services-energy-efficiency-reports/1014/thumbnail.jp

    Annual Report on Energy-Efficient Purchasing, Vehicle and Asset Management, Fiscal Year 2019-2020

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    https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/govpubs-tn-general-services-energy-efficiency-reports/1009/thumbnail.jp

    Jobs from Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency

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    According to research by Roger Bezdek for the American Solar Energy Society (ASES), the renewable energy (RE) and energy efficiency (EE) industries created a total of 8.5 million jobs (direct and indirect) in 2006; 450,000 jobs in RE and 8 million jobs in EE throughout the United States. As many as 1 out of 4 workers in the United States will be working in RE or EE industries by 2030. The 40 million jobs are not just engineering?related, but also include millions of new jobs in manufacturing, construction, accounting, and management.  

    Annual Report on Building Energy Management, Real Estate Asset Management, Fiscal Year 2015-2016

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    https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/govpubs-tn-general-services-energy-efficiency-reports/1016/thumbnail.jp
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