Stltoday - Quarterly losses continue to mount for Peabody; Company says bankruptcy again an option
https://www.stltoday.com/business/local ... 42d8d.html
https://www.stltoday.com/business/local ... 42d8d.html
https://www.stltoday.com/business/local ... 881a2.htmlThe city of St. Louis is taking steps to ensure that an inclusive workforce is prepared to help usher in the steady expansion of solar power, and take advantage of the rising tide of renewable energy jobs. The office of Mayor Lyda Krewson announced last week that “recruitment is now underway for a new green jobs development effort,” set to be piloted this fall.
The pilot looks to place 10 to 20 participants in an environment with supervised field training and mentoring from solar installation experts, who will consider hiring the trainees. The initiative will include an emphasis on boosting diversity in the field while addressing barriers faced by unemployed and underemployed city residents.
Does the article mention how much more expensive coal will get compared to free energy, though?sc4mayor wrote: ↑Nov 12, 2020Ameren is planning a six-megawatt solar array in Montgomery County. This will add to the one-megawatt array they have at Lambert that is currently sold out. By the end of 2025 Ameren plans on having around 300 megawatts of solar capacity.
In addition to that, the City is launching a workforce development initiative to train residents to work in green industries:
https://www.stltoday.com/business/local ... 881a2.htmlThe city of St. Louis is taking steps to ensure that an inclusive workforce is prepared to help usher in the steady expansion of solar power, and take advantage of the rising tide of renewable energy jobs. The office of Mayor Lyda Krewson announced last week that “recruitment is now underway for a new green jobs development effort,” set to be piloted this fall.
The pilot looks to place 10 to 20 participants in an environment with supervised field training and mentoring from solar installation experts, who will consider hiring the trainees. The initiative will include an emphasis on boosting diversity in the field while addressing barriers faced by unemployed and underemployed city residents.
Are the panels made locally?sc4mayor wrote: ↑Nov 12, 2020Ameren is planning a six-megawatt solar array in Montgomery County. This will add to the one-megawatt array they have at Lambert that is currently sold out. By the end of 2025 Ameren plans on having around 300 megawatts of solar capacity.
In addition to that, the City is launching a workforce development initiative to train residents to work in green industries:
https://www.stltoday.com/business/local ... 881a2.htmlThe city of St. Louis is taking steps to ensure that an inclusive workforce is prepared to help usher in the steady expansion of solar power, and take advantage of the rising tide of renewable energy jobs. The office of Mayor Lyda Krewson announced last week that “recruitment is now underway for a new green jobs development effort,” set to be piloted this fall.
The pilot looks to place 10 to 20 participants in an environment with supervised field training and mentoring from solar installation experts, who will consider hiring the trainees. The initiative will include an emphasis on boosting diversity in the field while addressing barriers faced by unemployed and underemployed city residents.
The newly constructed, 400-megawatt project comprises 175 turbines in Schuyler and Adair counties, near Kirksville, in northern Missouri. Ameren expects the facility to produce enough energy to power 120,000 homes in 2021.
The High Prairie Renewable Energy Center marks the start of Ameren’s commitment to wind. A 300-megawatt project in northwest Missouri’s Atchison County is almost finished, and Ameren recently outlined plans to dramatically increase renewable energy production over the next two decades. Technology is making new wind and solar facilities increasingly cost-effective.
By 2030, the now coal-dominated company plans to invest $4.5 billion toward 3,100 megawatts of combined wind and solar generation, which includes the $1.2 billion devoted to the two wind projects. The St. Louis-based utility aims to reduce carbon emissions by 50% in the next decade, compared to 2005 levels, and to reach “net zero” emissions by 2050. It hailed the High Prairie project Wednesday as its “largest step yet” toward those goals.
Ugh would that put Ameren in line to be acquired? They look pretty small compared to NextEra.sc4mayor wrote: ↑Dec 24, 2020^ I had read some reporting that floated Ameren as a buyer for Evergy...but it would be a pretty big long shot.
In the meantime...NextEra did make an offer on Evergy earlier this year:
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-ever ... SKBN27P2S8
Not a whole lot. But a small pocket in the far northwest - Nodaway, Atchison, Worth and Gentry counties - are pretty prime, almost as good for wind as what neighboring Iowa, Nebraska and Kansas are working with.quincunx wrote: ↑Dec 24, 2020How much acreage in MO is suitable for wind?
Not much. It’s basically limited to the Iowa Border.quincunx wrote:How much acreage in MO is suitable for wind?
Totally agree. That mix will finally start to change with Ameren's closure of the coal burning Meramec Plant (St. Louis County) in 2022 and Sioux Plant (St. Charles Country) in 2028, and as more wind capacity comes online.GoHarvOrGoHome wrote: ↑Dec 24, 2020I hope Missouri really embraces renewable energy such and wind and solar in the coming decades. Our energy mix is straight up regressive compared to other states.
Energy Mix by State
