WENDY LIKES IT WINDY

Environmental Panorama
London – UK
March of 2005

 

29/03/2005 - Last Saturday, Filipino and Danish engineers successfully raised the first megawatt-scale wind turbine in South-East Asia at Bangui Bay. The event marked a significant milestone in the Philippines’ quest for energy independence by using indigenous and renewable energy.
The Philippines is set on being the biggest producer of wind energy in South-East Asia with the initial construction of a 70meter wind turbine with a rated capacity of 1.6MW. It took the team three days to raise this turbine, affectionately named Wendy the wind turbine.

One down, fourteen more to go

Wendy is just the first of fifteen turbines that will be established in the windswept town of Bangui, Ilocos Norte. Commissioning of the wind farm is slated for April 30th this year. South-East Asia’s first wind farm will have a total capacity of 25MW and will supply power to customers of the Ilocos Norte Electric Cooperative (INEC) starting May this year.

Denmark based VESTAS Wind Systems A/S, the biggest wind turbine manufacturer in the world, is constructing the wind farm on a turnkey basis for the NorthWind Power Development Corporation, a consortium of Filipino and Danish investors.

The NorthWind project is only the first of several wind farms in the Philippines. WWF, in collaboration with private sector partners, is also developing two wind farms in Northern Panay.

Huge potential for wind power

The potential for wind power in the Philippines is huge. Together with the UP National Engineering Center, WWF has determined the country’s practical wind resources at 7,404MW, spread across 1,038 sites all over the country.

WWF has estimated that the country could save US$2.9 billion in avoided fossil-fuel imports over ten years if the country’s vast renewable energy resources are tapped. Through these efforts, the Philippines will also contribute to global efforts to reduce carbon dioxide emission, the main greenhouse gas that causes global warming.

”Along with our highly successful geothermal industry, the construction of South-East Asia’s first wind farm proves that clean indigenous energy can propel the country towards sustainable development,” said Raf Senga, WWF Philippines Energy and Climate Project leader.

Plans to wrap Swiss glacier with insulating foam fails to address climate change
23 Mar 2005
Andermatt, Switzerland – Plans to wrap one of Switzerland’s shrinking Alpine glaciers with insulating foam only deals with the implications of global warming and more importantly fails to address the causes of climate change, warns WWF.

Swiss technicians are to use special insulating foam to wrap a glacier that has been shrinking over the summer months, according to Carlo Danioth, in charge of ski slopes at the central Swiss resort of Andermatt.

The Gurschen glacier is to be partly covered with 3,000km2 of foam starting in May to stop it melting further, a phenomenon attributed to global warming.

"If the trial is a success, we'll wrap the other part of the glacier too," Danioth said.

WWF-Switzerland says that it understands why tourist authorities want to preserve their frozen assets from the consequences of global warming, but it warns that those responsible should also realize that putting glaciers under a blanket can neither hide nor solve the problems of climate change.

On the contrary, the conservation organization says that the pilot project in Andermatt demonstrates how expensive and disproportionate such protective actions are.

A study published last year by Zurich University estimated that the country's glaciers had lost about a fifth of their surface area over the past 15 years. The study, carried out using satellite data, also found that the rate of ice-loss was accelerating. A number of other Swiss ski resorts are reported to be considering similar measures.

WWF-Switzerland wants to see the implementation of effective climate protection measures. This would result in the reduction of climate warming along with huge economic advantages. Useful sanctions to stop the emission of greenhouse gases, and with that the global warming, are to increase energy efficiency and to reduce the waste of fossil energy resources.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
Press consultantship (Adrian Stiefel)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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