Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

firearms import license

Felex Yukhtman, President
American Vintage Gun & Pawn
Gun Point
4539 Northgate Ct.
Sarasota, Fl 34234
Tel. 941-524-9607
chevysonly@earthink.net

 

Monty Bannerman

ArcStar Energy

646.402.5076

www.arcstarenergy.com

Thursday, December 9, 2010

good/bad news for steel

Increasing demand (economic growth)  and increased commodity prices (inflation) showing up in the foundations.

 

AK Steel Imposes Another Price Hike

Manufacturing.Net - December 09, 2010

WEST CHESTER, Ohio (AP) -- AK Steel said Thursday it will hike the current spot market base prices for all carbon flat-rolled steel products by $40 per ton for the second time in a month.

The West Chester, Ohio, company said the increase would take effect immediately with new orders. It also announced a price hike on Nov. 30. It cited higher demand and the need to recover higher costs it faces for the materials it uses, which were the same reasons used last month.

The company makes metal products mainly for vehicle automotive, appliance, construction and electricity companies.

Shares of AK Steel climbed 17 cents to $14.30 in Thursday afternoon trading.

 

 

Monty Bannerman

ArcStar Energy

646.402.5076

www.arcstarenergy.com

Dual-Axis Tracking Generates More Power - Photovoltaics World

Monday, December 6, 2010

Gas and Electricity Price Comparisons

OEB has (is) prepared (ing) a system for posting and comparing electricity and gas pricing.

http://www.oeb.gov.on.ca/OEB/Industry/Rules+and+Requirements/Disclosure+Statement+and+Price+Comparison+Forms

PV Book-to-Bill in Q3'10 Dips from Previous Eight Quarter High (Dec 1, 2010)

First time I have seen book to bill numbers for the PV sector. Generally a good indicator of demand/supply relationship. This current dip may be only a normal adjustment after a strong ramp.

http://www.solarbuzz.com/news/NewsNAEQ105.htm

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Maple-Copter! - Robotic Craft Mimics Falling Maple Seed | LiveScience

Photovoltaics Wire News: ElectroIQ.com

ORONTO, Nov. 26 /CNW/ - As the latest climate change summit prepares to open in Mexico, Ontarians from all walks of life heard the successes of the Green Energy & Green Economy Act's first year. The Green Energy Act Alliance released a report that underlined how clean energy is rejuvenating the province's economy and helping to close polluting coal plants.

http://www.electroiq.com/index/display/pv-wire-news-display/1311410116.html

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

WMO: GREENHOUSE GASES REACH RECORD LEVELS

GREENHOUSE GASES REACH RECORD LEVELS

 

WMO Highlights Concerns about Global Warming and Methane

 

24 November 2010 (WMO) –The main greenhouse gases have reached their highest levels

recorded since preindustrial times, according to the World Meteorological Organization's

2009 Greenhouse Gas Bulletin. The report also highlights concerns that global warming

may lead to even greater emissions of methane from Arctic areas.

 

According to the Bulletin, total radiative forcing of all long-lived greenhouse gases increased by 27.5% from 1990 to 2009 and by 1.0% from 2008 to 2009, reflecting the rising atmospheric

burdens of carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, "Greenhouse gas concentrations have reached record levels despite the economic slowdown.

 

They would have been even higher without the international action taken to reduce them," said

WMO Secretary General Mr Michel Jarraud. "In addition, potential methane release from northern

permafrost, and wetlands, under future climate change is of great concern and is becoming a focus

of intensive research and observations."

 

Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the single most important anthropogenic greenhouse gas in the

atmosphere and contributes 63.5% to the overall global radiative forcing by long-lived

greenhouse gases. Global radiative forcing is the balance between radiation coming into the atmosphere and radiation going out. Positive radiative forcing tends to warm the surface of the Earth and negative forcing tends to cool it.

 

For about 10,000 years before the start of the industrial era in the mid18th century, atmospheric

carbon dioxide remained almost constant at around 280 ppm (ppm=number of molecules of the

gas per million molecules of dry air). Since 1750, it has increased by 38%, primarily because of

emissions from combustion of fossil fuels, deforestation and changes in land use.

 

During the past 10 years, it has increased by an average annual 1.88%, according to WMO.

Methane (CH4) contributes 18.1% to the overall global radiative forcing and is the second most

important greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide.

 

Before the start of the industrial era, atmospheric methane was about 700 parts per billion. Since

1750, it has increased 158%, mostly because of increasing emissions from human activities such

as cattle-rearing, rice planting, fossil fuel exploitation and landfills. Human activities now account

for 60% of methane emissions, with the remaining 40% being from natural sources such as

wetlands.

 

After a period of temporary stabilization from 1999 to 2006, atmospheric methane has risen again

from 20072009. The Greenhouse Gas Bulletin reports that the likely causes were above average

wetland methane emissions due to exceptionally warm temperatures at high northern latitudes in

2007 and heavy precipitation in tropical wetlands in 2007 and 2008. However, it cautions that the

reasons for the recent increases are not yet fully understood.

 

Northern permafrost contains large reservoirs of organic carbon and methane clathrates (a form of

water ice that contains a large amount of methane within its crystal structure). Rapid warming and

melting of the permafrost therefore has the potential to release large quantities of methane into the

atmosphere which would contribute further to global warming.

 

Nitrous oxide (N2O) contributes 6.24% to the overall global radiative forcing. It is emitted into the

atmosphere from natural and anthropogenic sources, including the oceans, biomass burning,

fertilizer use and various industrial processes. Globally averaged nitrous oxide in 2009 was 19%

higher, at 322.5 parts per billion than the preindustrial era.

 

Other greenhouse gases: The combined radiative forcing by halocarbons is 12%, nearly double

that of nitrous oxide. Some halocarbons such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), previously used as

refrigerants, as propellants in spray cans and as solvents, are decreasing slowly as a result of

international action to preserve the Earth's protective ozone layer. However, concentrations of other gases such as HCFCs and HFCs, which are used to substitute CFCs because they are less damaging to the ozone layer, are increasing rapidly. These two classes of compounds are very potent greenhouse gases and last much longer in the atmosphere than carbon dioxide.

 

WMO, through its Global Atmosphere Watch (GAW) Programme, coordinates the observations of

greenhouse gases in the atmosphere through a network of stations located in more than 50

countries, including high in the Andes and Himalayas. The measurement data are quality

controlled, archived and distributed by WMO's World Data Centre for Greenhouse Gases, hosted

by the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA).

 

The 2009 Greenhouse Gas Bulletin is the sixth in the series, which began in 2004. The Bulletins

report the global consensus of the WMO Global Atmosphere Watch community on the latest

changes and atmospheric burdens of the main greenhouse gases.

 

Notes to Editors

The 2009 Bulletin, translated in all UN languages, as well as earlier issues, are available through

the WMO GAW Programme Web page at the following URL:http://www.wmo.int/gaw

A three minutes video on greenhouse gases, featuring an interview with Mr Leonard Barrie,

Director, Atmospheric Research and Environment, WMO, is available online:

http://www.wmo.int/pages/resources/multimedia/greenhousegases.html

 

The World Meteorological Organization is the United Nations System's

authoritative voice on Weather, Climate and Water



--
Monty Bannerman
ArcStar Energy
646.402.5076
www.arcstarenergy.com

Re: Mafia cash in on lucrative EU wind farm handouts - especially in Sicily - Telegraph

Where are you?

On Nov 30, 2010, at 9:52 PM, Monty Bannerman wrote:

Aren't you happy we are safe from this kind of thing dealing in the waste biz over here?:)

 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/energy/renewableenergy/7981737/Mafia-cash-in-on-lucrative-EU-wind-farm-handouts-especially-in-Sicily.html


Albert Pope
President & CEO
EnWise Systems, LLC
245 Park Avenue
NY, NY 10167
Tel: 212-372-8877
Fax: 212-792-4001




News from DSIRE: week of 11/29/10 updates on FL, NJ and PR incentive programs

Friday, November 26, 2010

Solar power projects in California face challenges - POWER-GEN WorldWide

Large scale concentrating solar plants not only have their fundamental problems of sourcing  water to feed their steam plants in the desert and getting new rights of way for expensive new transmission lines . They are also facing turtles and lizards as hostages to the environmentalists and  regulators with no spine.

http://www.powergenworldwide.com/index/display/articledisplay/3001436241/articles/powergenworldwide/renewables/solar/2010/11/California-solar-challenges.html

Tessera’s plants are very innovative, using hundreds of dish concentrators and integrated Sterling engines in their architecture.  

http://www.tesserasolar.com/north-america/index.htm

 

 

 

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

FW: FIT Compliant Heliene 245W / 250W mono solar modules IN STOCK

Note the % contribution number.

 

Monty Bannerman

ArcStar Energy

646.402.5076

www.arcstarenergy.com

From: Andrew Wilkins [mailto:awilkins@matrixenergy.ca]
Sent: Wednesday, November 24, 2010 4:25 PM
To: Andrew Wilkins
Subject: FIT Compliant Heliene 245W / 250W mono solar modules IN STOCK
Importance: High

 

Good day

 

This is to inform you that Matrix Energy currently has FIT Compliant Heliene HEE215M-A67 (245W) and HEE215M-A68 (250W) solar modules IN STOCK.  

 

The datasheet is here:

http://www.heliene.ca/Userfiles/File/215M-EN1.pdf

 

These modules qualify for 13% and 15% domestic content for MicroFIT and FIT projects respectively.

 

Heliene Canada uses high quality Suniva (USA), Bosch (Germany) and Arise (Germany) monocrystalline solar cells in their module assembly. Their modules are cUL1703 listed, have a 10yr workmanship and standard 90% nominal power after 10yrs / 80% nominal power after 25yrs performance warranty.

 

Modules are packed 25 / pallet, double stacked.  We are offering them in multiple of 50 (double stacked pallets) only.

 

If you would like a quotation with freight included, please advise quantity and shipto commercial address with dock.

 

Best regards

 

Andrew Wilkins BSc

Account Manager - Commercial & Government 

MATRIX ENERGY INC

TF: 1-866-630-5630 x216

F: (514) 426-9123

http://www.matrixenergy.ca/stand-alone-systems/energy-catalogue-sections.html

 

Come visit us !

PM Expo, Booth #1922 - Metro Toronto Convention Center, Dec 1-2-3

CanSIA, Booth # 1021 - Metro Toronto Convention Center, Dec 6-7-8

 

Heliene Canada (FIT Compliant), SolarWorld, Kyocera, Solyndra (Mounts - FIT compliant), Solectria (FIT compliant), Satcon (FIT compliant), Schneider / Xantrex, OutBack Power Systems, Magnum Energy, Morningstar, MidNite Solar, DEKA Solar / UNIGY II, Surrette / Rolls, IOTA, Iron Ridge (FIT compliant), True North (FIT compliant), Multi Contact, DEGER trackers (FIT compliant), Unistrut Roof & Ground mounts (FIT compliant)

 

American Physical Society: Energy Storage Crucial to Grid, November 16, 2010

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Fwd: Announcing 15 Year Fixed Rate for Ontario Solar Financing



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Future Acceptance <peter@futureacceptance.ca>
Date: Tue, Nov 23, 2010 at 8:35 PM
Subject: Announcing 15 Year Fixed Rate for Solar Financing
To: ddguest@arcstarenergy.com


ANNOUNCING

15 Year Fixed Rate for Solar Financing

 

Use this section to describe your event in full. Be sure to


t 





 
 
Peter Duffus
Managing Partner

390 Bay St., Suite 1706
Toronto, Ontario
M5H 2Y2

Tel:   (905) 483-4748
Fax:  (905) 248-5051

General Inquiries:

Peter Duffus:


It was great seeing so many of you when I spoke last week at the OSEA Convention on creative financing.

Today, Future Acceptance Corp. announces a 15 year term with a fixed rate of 8.25% with only 10% down on approved credit.

Future Acceptance is your "one stop shopping" for the best terms and the best rates in Ontario.

Our floating rates start at under 3% per annum.

We are very excited about these new programs!
floating
  
Please contact
for any inquiries.
 Future
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
ist Price:
S & H: $
 

 

 

Safe Unsubscribe
Future Acceptance | 390 Bay St., Suite 1706 | Toronto | Ontario | M5H 2Y2 | Canada



--
Monty Bannerman
ArcStar Energy
646.402.5076
www.arcstarenergy.com

EIA - Annual Electricity Data, Analysis, Surveys

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Current US retail electricity production and pricing

Electric Power Monthly (EPM) (11/15/2010)
The latest EPM issue (November 2010) is now available on EIA's Electricity page. Data are for August 2010, which shows net generation in the United States rose by 7.4 percent. Coal consumption for power generation also rose 9.0 percent compared to August 2009. The average retail price of electricity for August 2010 was 10.45 cents per kilowatthour (kWh), 0.5 percent higher than July 2010, and 0.9 percent higher than August 2009. Note: Tables ES3 and ES4 have changed. Historical copies of the EPM tables in Excel format are located at: http://www.eia.gov/cneaf/electricity/epm/epm_ex_bkis.html



--
Monty Bannerman
ArcStar Energy
646.402.5076
www.arcstarenergy.com

IREC Releases First Model Program Rules for Community Renewables

 

 

Monty Bannerman

ArcStar Energy

646.402.5076

www.arcstarenergy.com

From: Interstate Renewable Energy Council [mailto:jane@irecusa.ccsend.com] On Behalf Of Interstate Renewable Energy Council
Sent: Thursday, November 18, 2010 9:18 AM
To: mbannerman@arcstarenergy.com
Subject: IREC Releases First Model Program Rules for Community Renewables

 

 

Interstate Renewable Energy Council

 


 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 18, 2010
 

Contact: Jane Pulaski  janep@irecusa.com  (512.789.7885)

         Or Joseph Wiedman  jwiedman@keyesandfox.com (510.314.8202)

 

 IREC RELEASES FIRST MODEL PROGRAM RULES FOR COMMUNITY RENEWABLES
Best Practices for Community Solar and Wind Generation Projects

 
Latham, NY -- The Interstate Renewable Energy Council (IREC) today released its first Model Program Rules for
IREC's Model Program Rules for Community RenewablesCommunity Renewables. Based on best practices, the model rules are presented to facilitate co-investment in local renewable power facilities.

 

IREC's new model program rules consider many of the basic issues facing community renewables programs.  These include: renewable system size, interconnection, eligibility for participation, allocation of the benefits flowing from participation, and net metering of system production. IREC developed the model program rules for community-scale renewable systems working closely with The Vote Solar Initiative, a California-based not-for-profit working to bring solar energy into the mainstream.

 

"The goal of this effort is to provide stakeholders with best practice program rules they can tailor to the individual circumstances and policy preferences of their state, without having to reinvent the wheel at each turn," said Joseph Wiedman, author of the model rules.

 

Interest in community solar and wind initiatives stems from recognition that many utility customers are not able to host an on-site renewable power system, yet they would like to invest in local renewable generation. Examples include occupants of multi-tenant residential and commercial buildings, and properties not conducive to an on-site system, due to shading or structural restrictions.

 

"We believe community policies, if well designed, can provide the right approach to create additional opportunities for customers to support solar development," said Jane Weissman, IREC executive director. "And there are cost benefits, as community systems can harness economies of scale."

 

Wiedman, a partner with the law firm Keyes & Fox, represents IREC in state-level rulemakings on many topics essential to building sustainable markets for renewable energy, including net metering rules, interconnection standards, plug-in electric vehicles (PEVs), smart grid, and community renewables.

 

Two key principles greatly influenced the development of the Model Program Rules, and IREC's consideration of the various policy choices available in designing a community renewables program:

1.     Participants in a community renewables program should have an experience that is as similar as possible to that of customers investing in on-site renewable energy; and

2.     Community renewables programs should not undermine successful on-site renewable energy programs. Rather, they should expand options for participation.

 

The model rules are the product of more than a year's work, including the release of proposed rules in April 2010, which generated significant feedback from utilities, industry participants and

other stakeholders.  In addition to stakeholder comments on the proposed rules, IREC engaged in detailed discussions with stakeholders and reviewed current community renewables efforts at the municipal and state levels in Massachusetts, Colorado, California, Washington and Utah.

 

Some highlights from the 2010 Model Program Rules for Community Renewables include:

  • Using virtual net metering (VNM) to allocate benefits of participation onto a customer's monthly electric bill;
  • Allowing kWhs generated by a community renewables project be given a monetary value that can be applied to a participant's bill;
  • Valuing kWh credits received by customers who are on the same distribution circuit as the community renewables project at the participant's full retail rate;
  • Requiring utilities to include system purchase costs, operations and maintenance, necessary investment returns and other costs related to a utility-owned system in their offerings to potential participants; and
  • Allowing utilities to administer a community renewables program.

 

The Model Rules also include definitions, general provisions and net metering provisions. 

 

IREC's Model Program Rules for Community Renewables are available as a PDF on IREC's website: www.irecusa.com.

 

  

###

 


The Interstate Renewable Energy Council (IREC) is a non-profit organization accelerating the use of renewable energy since 1982. IREC'­­­­s programs and policies lead to easier, more affordable connection to the utility grid; fair credit for renewable energy produced; best practices for states, municipalities, utilities and industry; and quality assessment for the growing green workforce through the credentialing of trainers and training programs.





Contact Information

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

email: janep@irecusa.org

web: http://www.irecusa.org
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

 

Safe Unsubscribe

This email was sent to mbannerman@arcstarenergy.com by janep@irecusa.org.

Interstate Renewable Energy Council | P.O. Box 1156 | Latham | NY | 12110-1156

Solar Combiner sports top weight to KW ratio | ECN: Electronic Component News

Transmitter Sends Power, Data for RF Energy Harvesting and Wireless Power Systems | ECN: Electronic Component News

Canada's GDP expected to grow by 3%

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

How Residential Solar as a Service Began | Renewable Energy Podcast

I highly recommend you take the time to click on this link and listen to the interview of SunRun execs. You will instantly recognize their business model, hear about what they have gone through and see what’s down the road.

http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/podcast/2010/11/how-solar-as-a-service-began

Monday, November 15, 2010

FW: GATS SREC Renewable traders status

Let’s try that again.

 

Monty Bannerman

ArcStar Energy

646.402.5076

www.arcstarenergy.com

From: Monty Bannerman [mailto:mbannerman@arcstarenergy.com]
Sent: Tuesday, November 16, 2010 12:42 AM
To: 'mbannerman1.watts@blogger.com'
Cc: 'Albert Pope'
Subject: GATS SREC Renewable traders status

 

 

 

Monty Bannerman

ArcStar Energy

646.402.5076

www.arcstarenergy.com

GATS SREC Renewable traders status

 

 

Monty Bannerman

ArcStar Energy

646.402.5076

www.arcstarenergy.com

U.S. building next wave of supercomputers

Two months after the Chinese took the lead for the first time! We seem to need a kick in the ass to get going, but watch what happens now, because this is strategic.

How do you say Sputnik in Chinese?

http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/111310-us-building-next-wave-of.html?source=NWWNLE_nlt_daily_pm_2010-11-15

Solar-power initiative fails again in Pennsylvania | Philadelphia Inquirer | 10/26/2010

SunPower Reports Third-Quarter 2010 Results (Nov 12, 2010)

City Of Madera Activates 1.1 MW Solar System at Waste Water Treatment Facility (Nov 11, 2010)

New Solar Panel Assembly Plant To Be Built In Hamilton (Nov 11, 2010)

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

PCT vs. STC solar panel ratings of solar panel output

PTC refers to PVUSA Test Conditions, which were developed to test and compare PV systems as part of the PVUSA (Photovoltaics for Utility Scale Applications) project. PTC are 1,000 Watts per square meter solar irradiance, 20 degrees C air temperature, and wind speed of 1 meter per second at 10 meters above ground level. PV manufacturers use Standard Test Conditions, or STC, to rate their PV products. STC are 1,000 Watts per square meter solar irradiance, 25 degrees C cell temperature, air mass equal to 1.5, and ASTM G173-03 standard spectrum. The PTC rating, which is lower than the STC rating, is generally recognized as a more realistic measure of PV output because the test conditions better reflect "real-world" solar and climatic conditions, compared to the STC rating. All ratings in the list are DC (direct current) watts.

Neither PTC nor STC account for all "real-world" losses. Actual solar systems will produce lower outputs due to soiling, shading, module mismatch, wire losses, inverter and transformer losses, shortfalls in actual nameplate ratings, panel degradation over time, and high-temperature losses for arrays mounted close to or integrated within a roofline. These loss factors can vary by season, geographic location, mounting technique, azimuth, and array tilt.

 

 

Monty Bannerman

ArcStar Energy

646.402.5076

www.arcstarenergy.com

KPMG on pass-thru of depreciation in Canada

Canadian Renewable and Conservation Expenses

The tax rules allow certain “principal-business corporations”, whose principal business is the generation of clean energy, to transfer their deductions for “Canadian Renewable and Conservation Expenses” to the corporation’s flow-through share investors. The budget amends the definition of “principal-business corporation” to clarify that flow-through share eligibility extends to corporations in the principal business of producing fuel, generating energy, or distributing energy. These measures have effect for taxation years ending after 2004.

http://www.kpmg.com/Ca/en/IssuesAndInsights/ArticlesPublications/TNF/Pages/tnfc1012.html

 

 

Monty Bannerman

ArcStar Energy

646.402.5076

www.arcstarenergy.com