NewEnergyNews: VETERAN’S DAY SPECIAL: THE MILITARY AND NEW ENERGY/

NewEnergyNews

Gleanings from the web and the world, condensed for convenience, illustrated for enlightenment, arranged for impact...

The challenge now: To make every day Earth Day.

YESTERDAY

THINGS-TO-THINK-ABOUT WEDNESDAY, August 23:

  • TTTA Wednesday-ORIGINAL REPORTING: The IRA And The New Energy Boom
  • TTTA Wednesday-ORIGINAL REPORTING: The IRA And the EV Revolution
  • THE DAY BEFORE

  • Weekend Video: Coming Ocean Current Collapse Could Up Climate Crisis
  • Weekend Video: Impacts Of The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Current Collapse
  • Weekend Video: More Facts On The AMOC
  • THE DAY BEFORE THE DAY BEFORE

    WEEKEND VIDEOS, July 15-16:

  • Weekend Video: The Truth About China And The Climate Crisis
  • Weekend Video: Florida Insurance At The Climate Crisis Storm’s Eye
  • Weekend Video: The 9-1-1 On Rooftop Solar
  • THE DAY BEFORE THAT

    WEEKEND VIDEOS, July 8-9:

  • Weekend Video: Bill Nye Science Guy On The Climate Crisis
  • Weekend Video: The Changes Causing The Crisis
  • Weekend Video: A “Massive Global Solar Boom” Now
  • THE LAST DAY UP HERE

    WEEKEND VIDEOS, July 1-2:

  • The Global New Energy Boom Accelerates
  • Ukraine Faces The Climate Crisis While Fighting To Survive
  • Texas Heat And Politics Of Denial
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    Founding Editor Herman K. Trabish

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    WEEKEND VIDEOS, June 17-18

  • Fixing The Power System
  • The Energy Storage Solution
  • New Energy Equity With Community Solar
  • Weekend Video: The Way Wind Can Help Win Wars
  • Weekend Video: New Support For Hydropower
  • Some details about NewEnergyNews and the man behind the curtain: Herman K. Trabish, Agua Dulce, CA., Doctor with my hands, Writer with my head, Student of New Energy and Human Experience with my heart

    email: herman@NewEnergyNews.net

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      A tip of the NewEnergyNews cap to Phillip Garcia for crucial assistance in the design implementation of this site. Thanks, Phillip.

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    Pay a visit to the HARRY BOYKOFF page at Basketball Reference, sponsored by NewEnergyNews and Oil In Their Blood.

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  • WEEKEND VIDEOS, August 24-26:
  • Happy One-Year Birthday, Inflation Reduction Act
  • The Virtual Power Plant Boom, Part 1
  • The Virtual Power Plant Boom, Part 2

    Friday, November 11, 2011

    VETERAN’S DAY SPECIAL: THE MILITARY AND NEW ENERGY

    Service to this nation truly crowns its good with brotherhood - and sisterhood.

    On the occasion of this 11-11-11 Veteran's Day, a holiday born with the enacting of the treaty ending World War I at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918, this recent piece of original reporting is offered to honor those who have served. It recounts how the military may lead the U.S. and the world to a new birth of freedom, freedom from energy sources that enrich and strengthen the wrong people and burden and harm good citizens.

    The piece is also meant to remember those veterans of the other battlegrounds, good folks who may or may not have worn a uniform but who have fought, and go on fighting, to replace the dangerous and toxic Old Energies with the blessings of this good earth's sun, wind, deep heat and flowing waters.


    Will the Military Be the Bridge to the US Renewable Energy Future? How will the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, and Coast Guard spend a $10 billion renewables budget?
    Herman K. Trabish, September 29, 2011 (Greentech Media)

    With Congress likely to cut federal spending on renewable energy and private funds still awaiting more market certainty, renewables might run out of support -- but for a surprising benefactor, the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD).

    As detailed in the newly released From Barracks to the Battlefield: Clean Energy Innovation and America’s Armed Forces report from the Pew Charitable Trusts’ Project on National Security, Energy and Climate, DoD spending for renewables and efficiency went from $400 million in 2006 to $1.2 billion in 2009, a jump of 300 percent.

    The DoD is the biggest institutional energy consumer in the world. It takes 22 gallons of fuel to support each soldier each day in Iraq and Afghanistan and fuel shipments account for 80 percent of all supply convoys. One in 46 convoys suffered a casualty in 2010, leaving some 3,000 wounded or dead.

    click to enlarge

    Because military leaders believe investments in renewables, which began during the George W. Bush administration, preserve lives on the battlefield, protect the nation’s security and save taxpayer money, current plans call for an increase in the DoD’s spending on renewables to $3 billion by 2015 and to over $10 billion per year by 2030.

    In 2010, 450 renewable energy projects produced or obtained 9.6 percent of the DoD’s energy, just short of the National Defense Authorization Act goal of ten percent
    Besides its profound impact on military operations, this promises a major infusion of funding for renewables just when they need it.

    The DoD is now planning the world’s biggest rooftop solar initiative at 124 bases as well as a groundbreaking 500-megawatt CSP project at Fort Irwin in California.

    click to enlarge

    DoD spending is expected to be almost 15 percent of the microgrid market in 2013 and to reach $1.6 billion per year by 2020.

    In August, a $510 million co-investment from the Navy and the Departments of Energy and Agriculture was designated for the building and retrofitting of advanced biofuels plants and refineries by 2014.

    The innovations “of our uniformed men and women, and their civilian Department of Defense counterparts,” wrote former West Virginia Republican Senator and former Secretary of the Navy John Warner in the Pew report’s foreword, are “lessening our nation’s dependence on imported oil by finding many ways to achieve energy efficiencies, utilize renewable sources and harness advanced biofuels.”

    Warner noted (1) the Experimental Forward Operating Base programs at Marine Corps bases in Quantico, VA, and Twenty-Nine Palms, CA, that are rapidly taking renewables and efficiency initiatives from testing to operational, (2) a program at Fort Bragg to get to net zero in energy and water consumption and waste generation, and (3) a cooperative uniformed/civilian personnel effort at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard to build LEED-certified buildings, co-generate heat and power and use solar to back up communications systems.

    click to enlarge

    Budget cuts, Warner speculated, will not necessarily slow the DoD initiatives, because they “result in substantial financial savings and often encourage similar initiatives in nearby civilian communities,” which encourages private sector buy-in. Also, Warner noted, many of the programs are financed by multiple federal agencies and/or service branches, spreading costs and benefits.

    The DoD is focusing on three key areas: vehicle efficiency, advanced biofuels, and energy efficiency and renewable energy at bases.

    The DoD now spends $11 billion of its $15 billion yearly energy budget on liquid petroleum fuels. Military leaders want to move away from risks associated with transporting liquid fuels to the battlefield, oil price volatility, operational effectiveness limitations, the fragility of energy supplies, and the burden of complying with federal energy policies.

    To find non-petroleum technologies for air, land and sea vehicles, the DoD plans to spend $2.25 billion per year by 2015. It wants to cut non-tactical land fleet fossil fuel use 30 percent by 2020. The entire Navy/Marines operational platform is scheduled to be using 50 percent alternative energy by 2020. The Air Force intends to use advanced biofuels for 50 percent of its domestic aviation needs by 2016. The DoD’s Installation Energy Test Bed Program has more than 45 demonstration projects underway and aims to cut new building energy use 70 percent and existing building demand 50 percent.



    Advanced battery technologies are being pursued for the Army’s Rucksack Enhanced Portable Power System and for renewables storage and the military is also working toward advanced fuel cells.

    A way in which renewables will benefit the military, as well as the U.S. economy, is through jobs. A recent estimate put military veterans’ jobless rate at an unacceptable 30 percent, costing the military $882 million yearly in unemployment benefits. This could grow significantly as some 200,000 active duty personnel leave the services each year over the next quarter century.

    Meanwhile, job opportunities in renewables and efficiency are growing twice as fast jobs in the economy as a whole. The U.S. solar industry saw 6.8 percent job growth last year.

    click to enlarge

    And a recent report estimated U.S. utilities will lose some 200,000 workers to retirement by 2014. Military personnel with service experience in renewables and grid technologies should be among the best candidates applying for such jobs.

    Military spending in support of energy is not new. Winston Churchill’s decision in 1911 to move the British Navy, then the world’s then most dominant military force, from coal to oil changed the world’s energy marketplace. The emerging trend in DoD spending on renewables is an equally historic marker.

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