Court Orders New Environmental Review for Notorious Montana Coal Mine

A federal court judge has overturned a plan to expand Montana’s only underground coal mine, ruling that the Interior Department’s Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement (OSMRE) repeated approvals, the most recent in 2020, of the 7,100-acre, 175-million-ton expansion plan by Signal Peak Energy for the Bull Mountains Mine No. 1 near Roundup, Montana,… More Court Orders New Environmental Review for Notorious Montana Coal Mine

Nevada Lithium Mine Gets Conditional Court Approval

U.S. District Court Judge Miranda Du in Reno this week (Feb. 6) gave a conditional green light to a proposed large, new lithium mine in northern Nevada, rejecting attempts by local environmentalists, Indian tribes, and a local landowner to halt the project. Du generally ruled in favor of the Jan. 2021 decision by the Interior… More Nevada Lithium Mine Gets Conditional Court Approval

EIA’s Generation Parade: Solar, Storage Boom; Coal, Gas Retreat

Renewables will lead the new electric generation parade this year, led by solar, according to the Department of Energy’s Energy Information Administration. According to EIA’s Feb. 6 “Today in Energy” report, “Developers plan to add 54.5 gigawatts (GW) of new utility-scale electric-generating capacity to the U.S. power grid in 2023, according to our Preliminary Monthly Electric… More EIA’s Generation Parade: Solar, Storage Boom; Coal, Gas Retreat

Researchers Propose Revolutionary Battery

Aluminum, sulfur, salt. Common, everyday items. They may be the basis for low-cost electric battery storage, supplanting expensive lithium-ion technology. If so, they could provide a low-cost way to store intermittent renewable electricity from wind and sun, using abundant, domestically available material. In an article published last August in the journal Nature, 16 researchers from… More Researchers Propose Revolutionary Battery

In Praise of Skepticism

This is a variation of a column that I have been writing once a year for decades. I write it to remind readers that skepticism has been a driving factor in my over 40 years in journalism, including small and large city dailies, the Associated Press, Congressional Quarterly, Energy Daily, Electricity Daily, POWER magazine, and,… More In Praise of Skepticism

Rare Earths: Plentiful, Important, Difficult to Exploit

Rare earth elements are not rare. Economically exploiting them for commercial purposes is difficult. And some of the 17 rare earth minerals are increasingly important in a world that is increasingly electro-centric. Windmills, electric vehicles, lighting, smart phones, televisions, advanced computing, advanced nuclear power plants, and many other end uses depend on rare earths. Science… More Rare Earths: Plentiful, Important, Difficult to Exploit

Could Eskom Problems Cause South African Blackout?

Is South Africa’s electric grid on the narrow edge of a total collapse? According to South African business website MyBroadband, “The United States Government has advised its stakeholders in South Africa to start thinking about disaster management plans for a total collapse of Eskom’s power grid.” The website reports that the U.S. State Department’s Overseas… More Could Eskom Problems Cause South African Blackout?