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Old Posted Mar 3, 2013, 4:21 PM
amor de cosmos amor de cosmos is offline
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Quote:
Infographic — Structural Changes In Germany
March 2, 2013

Throughout history, there have been times when the introduction of technology met the needs of the public and a fundamental shift was set in motion. This has been the case with the steam engine, the automobile, the telephone, the computer, the internet… just to name a few. While all of these technology-driven structural changes had huge macro-economic benefits, they were not beneficial for every one. Especially those with business models that used to provide similar, but inferior, services faced marginalization or even extinction. This process was sometimes painful, but usually not a loss.


http://cleantechnica.com/2013/03/02/...es-in-germany/

Quote:
Shell Bullish On Solar Despite Dropping Solar (But Much More In Its New Scenarios Than That)
March 3, 2013 in CO2 Emissions, Market Research, Solar $, Solar Perceptions & Polls, Solar Policy, Solar PV Manufacturing, Solar Research

The solar manufacturing industry is now a highly competitive industry. Solar module companies that can’t compete are dropping like icicles on a warm spring day. Shell dropped out of the solar module race in 2006, giving its solar business to SolarWorld.

Nonetheless, Shell is still quite bullish on solar energy in the long term. In one of the two future energy scenarios it just released (the New Lens Scenarios), it projected that solar would become the largest source of energy by 2070.

Solar industry enthusiasts (which I assume most of you are) know that solar power has grown tremendously in the past several years — to be specific, from about 1 gigawatt (GW) in 2000 to about 102 GW at the end of 2012. It is still a small piece of the energy or even electricity pie, but it’s growing fast. And, most importantly, it looks like it will have a very bright future.

In both of Shell’s new scenarios, which are led by Jeremy Bentham (Vice President Business Environment and Head of Shell Scenarios), the company sees global CO2 emissions dropping to zero by 2100, but through very different means. In the first, its projection is that solar will account for 37.7% of primary energy use by 2100. The company is also bullish on natural gas, electric vehicles, hydrogen (as a transportation fuel source and resource for electricity storage), biofuels, and wind power (compared to other energy sources). But there’s much more to the story than these simple statements.


http://solarlove.org/shell-bullish-o...ios-than-that/

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