IRISH RENEWABLE ENERGY GROUP NTR Plc has announced losses of €210.6m after tax for the year ending 31 March. NTR said its total assets amounted to €1.38bn and it had earned €30.8m in that year. It spent €106.5m on its solar and wind energy business and central overheads, up from €75.6m in 2009. NTR’s directors are recommending a final dividend of 4.94c per share.
Renewable Energy
# renewable-energy - Thursday 24 January, 2013
Poll: Do you welcome the announcement of plans to export wind energy to Britain?
Up to 30,000 jobs could be created under new plans but they could lead to hundreds of wind turbines being built in the midlands. Do you welcome the plans?
# renewable-energy - Sunday 25 November, 2012
These islands are first to be powered by solar energy alone
Tokelau islands in the Pacific have population of 1,500 and were using 2,000 barrels of diesel a year to power generators.
# renewable-energy - Friday 23 November, 2012
Potential for 10,000 extra jobs in green economy by 2015 – Bruton
The Green economy is worth more than €3 trillion worldwide and employs more than 30 million people.
# renewable-energy - Thursday 4 October, 2012
IWEA claims 30,000 jobs could be created in wind energy sector by 2020
The Irish Wind Energy Association today launched a new policy paper, which describes renewable energy exporting was “a significant national opportunity”.
# renewable-energy - Sunday 29 April, 2012
Column: Why I’m bringing the DeLorean back – as an electric car
Electricity is more readily available and cheaper than petrol, but people need to be converted to electric cars and realise that you can still get high performance from those vehicles, writes Stephen Wynne.
# renewable-energy - Thursday 10 November, 2011
Transport pollution falls by 10 per cent in recession
Ireland’s overall greenhouse gas emissions fell by one per cent in 2010, meaning we are on track to meet our Kyoto targets.
# renewable-energy - Tuesday 4 October, 2011
Column: Renewable power can save the environment… and our economy
Ireland’s weather is an incredible resource – and learning to use it could be the key to our future, writes Pat McGill.
# renewable-energy - Monday 12 September, 2011
Column: Wind farms aren’t the answer, they’re the problem
Wind farms are touted as the green solution to our energy needs, but just try living near one, writes Peter Crossan.
# renewable-energy - Wednesday 24 August, 2011
Column: ‘The very mention of nuclear power sends people into a flutter’
After Fukushima, nuclear power has become a bogeyman – but we shouldn’t dismiss it out of hand, writes physicist David Robert Grimes.
# renewable-energy - Tuesday 16 August, 2011
Airtricity to increase prices by up to 21 per cent this autumn
Electricity prices will be increased by 12.3 per cent from next month, while gas prices go up by 21.2 per cent in October.
# renewable-energy - Tuesday 10 May, 2011
Japan scraps plans to build any further nuclear plants
Following the result of the country’s nuclear crisis, the Japanese Prime Minister has announced that Japan needs to “start from scratch” and embrace renewable sources of energy.
# renewable-energy - Wednesday 27 April, 2011
Financial supports for wind, wave and tidal energy creation “not appropriate”
ESRI Review of Irish Energy Policy also makes case for bringing Corrib gas field to production “rapidly” – and says nuclear power will not work for Ireland.
# renewable-energy - Friday 12 November, 2010
# renewable-energy - Friday 20 August, 2010
THE CONSTRUCTION OF a cooperative wind farm project in Co Clare will create up to 300 jobs in the region.
West Clare Renewable Energy (WCRE) plans to build the largest community-owned wind farm in Ireland, with 28 turbines.
WCRE says the project will be able to produce enough electricity for every business and home in Co Clare.
Planning permission has been granted for the project, based between Ennis and Miltown Malbay.
It involves an investment of €200m and will be collectively run by 30 farming families.
The wind farm will take up to two-and-a-half years to construct.
# renewable-energy - Thursday 12 August, 2010
A BORD GAIS REPORT says that a significant amount of Ireland’s demand for natural gas could be fulfilled by using unusual fuels like grass, animal manure, and municipal waste.
The report, commissioned by the energy provider and carried out by a team from University College Cork and by Ernst & Young, believes the ‘green tech’ sector in Ireland could be boosted by using alternative fuels to create biomethane.
The ‘grass to gas’ process, as they have named it, could provide 7.5% of Ireland’s natural gas requirements – providing enough fuel to heat 300,000 homes every year.
Bord Gais is so enthusiastic with the study’s findings that it believes refining such a process could make a significant dent in solving Ireland’s renewable energy problems, as well as helping to manage the country’s waste.
The technology has already been used to great effect in Germany and Denmark where farmer-run co-operatives pay for the building and operation of gas facilities.
Bord Gais says that while translating the technology to Ireland would not be straightforward, any hitches could be overcome reasonably quickly.
The notion of using agricultural droppings for the production of methane is not necessarily a new one; agriculture is responsible for about 14% of the world’s greenhouse gases, the majority of which is produced by flatulent cows.
Yesterday, the BBC reported on how shops in Britain throw away about 1.6m tonnes of food every year – proving that there is a significant body of organic waste that could be used for biomethane production.


























