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Category:Legal-Petition To Intervene/Request for Hearing
MONTHYEARML17100B0132017-04-10010 April 2017 C-10 Foundation Petition for Leave to Intervene ML1030504882010-11-0101 November 2010 Friends of the Coast and New England Coalition Petition for Leave to Intervene, Request for Hearing, and Admission of Contentions Errata ML1029405472010-10-21021 October 2010 2010/10/18-Attachment 5-Declaration of Deborah Grinnell ML1029405492010-10-21021 October 2010 2010/10/20-Cover Letter from Raymond Shadis Transmitting Friends of the Coast/New England Coalition Petition for Leave to Intervene, with Certificate of Service and Notice of Appearance for Raymond Shadis ML1029405502010-10-21021 October 2010 2010/10/12-Attachment 1-Declaration of Diane M. Teed ML1029405582010-10-20020 October 2010 2010/10/20-Friends of the Coast and New England Coalition Petition for Leave to Intervene, Request for Hearing, and Admission of Contentions ML1029302712010-10-20020 October 2010 Beyond Nuclear, Seacoast Anti-Pollution League and New Hampshire Sierra Club Request for a Public Hearing and Petition for Leave to Intervene in Matter of Nextera'S Application to Relicense Seabrook Nuclear Power Plant (Docket No. 50-443-LR ML1029303052010-10-20020 October 2010 Exhibit 1 of 21-Valuing the Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Nuclear Power: a Critical Survey ML1029303752010-10-20020 October 2010 2010/10/20-Exhibit 17 of 21-Maine Offshore Wind Plan, Setting the Course for Energy Independence ML1029405562010-10-18018 October 2010 2010/10/18-Attachment 4-Declaration of Sandra Gavutis ML1029405572010-10-18018 October 2010 2010/10/18-Attachment 7-Declaration of Paul Blanch ML1029405462010-10-18018 October 2010 2010/10/18-Attachment 3-Declaration of Deborah Breen ML1029302732010-10-16016 October 2010 Declarations of Members of Beyond Nuclear and Nh Sierra Club in Support of the Petition to Request a Public Hearing and Leave to Intervene on the Nextera Application to Relicense Seabrook Nuclear Power Plant ML1029303022010-10-13013 October 2010 Exhibit 5 of 21-Google Backs Superhighway for Wind Power ML1029405522010-09-30030 September 2010 2010/09/30-Attachment 2-Declaration of Peter Kellman ML1029306372010-09-30030 September 2010 2010/09/30-Exhibit 21 of 21-Large-Scale Offshore Wind Power in the United States, Assessment of Opportunities and Barriers ML1029405532010-09-29029 September 2010 2010/09/29-Attachment 6-Declaration of Karen Stewart ML1029303672010-09-27027 September 2010 2010/09/27-Exhibit 13 of 21-US Department of the Interior Press Release, Salazar Signs Agreement with 10 East Coast Governors to Establish Atlantic Offshore Wind Energy Consortium ML1029303642010-09-23023 September 2010 2010/09/23-Exhibit 10 of 21-Global Wind Power Capacity May Rival Nuclear within Four Years ML1029302702010-09-21021 September 2010 Declarations of Members of Seacoast Anti-Pollution League (Sapl) in Support of the Petition to Request a Public Hearing and Leave to Intervene on the Nextera Application to Relicense Seabrook Nuclear Power Plant ML1029303662010-09-17017 September 2010 2010/09/17-Exhibit 12 of 21-Google Maps, Offshore Wind ML1029303742010-09-0202 September 2010 2010/09/02-Exhibit 15 of 21-Creating an Offshore Wind Industry in the United States: a Strategic Work Plan for the United States Department of Energy, Fiscal Years 2011-2015 ML1029303912010-08-17017 August 2010 2010/08/17-Exhibit 18 of 21-Deepwater Offshore Wind, a National Opportunity ML1029304582010-06-30030 June 2010 2010/06/30-Exhibit 20 of 21-Assessment of Offshore Wind Energy Resources for the United States ML1029405512010-04-0606 April 2010 2010/04/06-Attachment A-Reliability Engineering and System Safety: Use of Risk Measures in Design and Licensing of Future Reactors ML1029303062010-02-23023 February 2010 Exhibit 8 of 21-Electric Power from Offshore Wind Via Synoptic-Scale Interconnection ML1029303142010-01-31031 January 2010 2010/01/31-Exhibit 9 of 21-Eastern Wind Integration and Transmission Study ML1029303102010-01-0707 January 2010 Exhibit 7 of 21-Renewable Energy (Wind, Solar & Tide Power) Will Be Distributed Through a Super-Grid in Europe ML1029303042010-01-0606 January 2010 Exhibit 6 of 21-European Countries Unite to Invest $40 Billion in Huge Off-Shore Renewable Energy Super-Grid ML1029303652009-12-31031 December 2009 2009/12/31-Exhibit 14 of 21-Final Report of the Ocean Energy Task Force to Governor John E. Baldacci ML1029306352009-09-30030 September 2009 2009/09/30-Exhibit 11 of 21-Oceans of Opportunity, Harnessing Europe'S Largest Domestic Energy Resource ML1029303762009-06-18018 June 2009 2009/06/18-Exhibit 16 of 21-Deepwater Offshore Wind in Maine: the Plan, the Timeline ML1029405542009-05-31031 May 2009 2009/05/31-Attachment B-The Eastern Massachusetts Sea Breeze Study ML0824211712008-08-29029 August 2008 Request for Hearing and Leave to Intervene, Seabrook Station ML1029303952008-07-31031 July 2008 2008/07/31-Exhibit 19 of 21-20% Wind Energy by 2030, Increasing Wind Energy'S Contribution to Us Electricity Supply ML1029405482008-02-24024 February 2008 2008/02/24-Attachment D-Survey of Cost Arising from Potential Radionuclide Scattering Events 2017-04-10
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Bloomberg, September 23, 2010 http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-09-23/global-wind-capacity-to-reach-200-gigawatts-in-2010-gwec-says.html Global Wind Power Capacity May Rival Nuclear Within Four Years By Jeremy van Loon - Sep 23, 2010 7:03 AM ET Installed power capacity from wind turbines around the world will probably rival the potential generation of electricity from nuclear plants within four years, the Global Wind Energy Council said.
Installed wind capacity by 2014 will probably reach 400 gigawatts, Steve Sawyer, secretary-general of the council, said in an e-mailed statement. Current nuclear power capacity is about 376 gigawatts, according to the World Nuclear Association.
Investments in wind power last year exceeded money spent on all other energy technologies including nuclear power, according to the International Energy Agency. Fifty-nine reactors are presently under various stages of construction globally, the World Nuclear Association said on its website.
Growth of wind power in China and elsewhere is offsetting a decline in the U.S. and is little changed in Europe this year, GWEC said. China, the worlds most populous nation and second-biggest economy, will likely more than double the amount of wind power potential this year to about 18 gigawatts, Bloomberg New Energy Finance estimates.
As wind power is becoming more competitive, it is rapidly expanding beyond the traditional markets in North America and Europe, Sawyer said. In fact, around half of the growth is now happening in emerging economies and developing countries.
China is leading the world in clean-technology investments. It attracted $11.5 billion in financing for wind turbines and other low-carbon equipment in the second quarter, 72 percent higher than the year-earlier period, New Energy Finance said. Thats more than the U.S. and Europe combined, it said.
This year wind capacity will reach close to 200 gigawatts with 40 gigawatts of new capacity added. By 2020, there may be as much as 1,000 gigawatts of wind power installed around the globe, GWEC, which promotes wind development, said today.
To contact the reporter on this story: Jeremy van Loon in Berlin at jvanloon@bloomberg.net To contact the editor responsible for this story: Reed Landberg at landberg@bloomberg.net