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The U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) on 
October 10 announced that the Department has reached the President's 
goal of authorizing 10,000 megawatts of renewable power on public lands.
 DOI hit the milestone with its finding that the Chokecherry and Sierra 
Madre Wind Energy Project site in southeastern Wyoming is suitable for 
wind energy development. The project is a proposed complex that could 
generate up to 3,000 megawatts of power. Developers expect the proposal 
to create an estimated 1,000 construction, operation, and maintenance 
jobs at peak construction, employ 114 permanent workers, and generate 
enough energy to power nearly 1 million homes. 
The decision authorizes the Bureau of Land 
Management to proceed with site-specific environmental analyses for the 
Sierra Madre and Chokecherry wind farms and infrastructures. Additional 
environmental reviews will be needed for the turbine layouts. The 
proposed project would consist of two sites encompassing up to 1,000 
wind turbines on approximately 219,707 acres of land about 10 miles 
south of Rawlins. It will be developed in phases and operated by Power 
Company of Wyoming LLC. When constructed, the wind complex is expected 
to have a footprint of less than 2,000 acres. 
Since 2009, DOI has authorized 33 renewable 
energy projects, including 18 utility-scale solar facilities, seven wind
 farms, and eight geothermal plants, with associated transmission 
corridors and infrastructures that will enable the projects to connect 
to established power grids. When built, these projects will provide more
 than 10,000 megawatts of power, or enough electricity to power more 
than 3.5 million homes. They would also support an estimated 13,000 
construction and operations jobs, according to project developers. See 
the DOI press release .
    
 
Expanded energy efficiency programs from 
utilities in six Southwestern states could save consumers $20 billion by
 2020, according to a new study. The Colorado-based public interest 
group Southwest Energy Efficiency Project (SWEEP) on October 9 released The $20 Billion Bonanza: Best Practice Utility Energy Efficiency Programs and Their Benefits for the Southwest.
 The report finds that it is feasible to achieve a 21% reduction in 
electricity by the year 2020 through energy efficiency programs 
implemented from 2010 to 2020. The study also states that every dollar 
invested in energy efficiency programs returns more than two dollars in 
savings on business and household utility bills. 
The report identifies the most effective utility
 energy efficiency programs across the country and analyzes the costs 
and benefits of implementing these programs in Arizona, Colorado, 
Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming. The $20 Billion Bonanza  
notes that utilities in the Southwest have made considerable progress in
 helping their customers save electricity, but urges further action in 
related policy. See the SWEEP press release   and the SWEEP website .
 
The U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) recently 
released its "Annual Energy Management Report" for Fiscal Year 2011. The
 441-page document details DOD activities to promote energy security and
 leverage new energy technologies, focusing on energy at its fixed 
installations. The Department's annual energy bill is approximately $4 
billion, partly because it manages more than 500 installations 
comprising nearly 2.3 billion square feet of building space in 300,000 
buildings throughout the United States and overseas. This annual report 
discusses a variety of energy issues, including DOD efforts to manage 
its facility energy program and reduce energy consumption in part by 
increasing the supply of renewable energy. See the DOD Installations and Environment webpage  and the complete report  .
In a new analysis of DOD investments in clean 
energy innovation, The Information Technology & Innovation 
Foundation, a non-partisan research and educational institute, reported 
that DOD’s investments in clean energy innovation were second only to 
the Energy Department in 2012. The group's report, Lean, Mean, and Clean II: Assessing DOD Investments in Clean Energy Innovation ,
 released on October 16, finds that DOD has invested $5 billion in clean
 energy since Fiscal Year 2009. The study also found that DOD now 
invests nearly twice as much in procuring new clean energy technologies 
than it does procuring commercial, off-the-shelf technologies. Also, of 
all the branches of the military, the U.S. Navy invested the most in 
energy innovation by committing nearly $500 million in FY2012 to 
next-generation technologies in electricity, transportation, and 
alternative fuels. See the report  .
 
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A newly published technical standard could cut 
charging time for plug-in hybrid (PHEV) and electric vehicles (EV) from 
eight hours to as short as 20 minutes. SAE International, a global 
industry association, announced on October 15 that its long-awaited 
voluntary standard, which was developed in a consensus with industry 
experts and Energy Department national laboratories, was approved and 
published. 
The standard represents the future of charging 
technology and Smart Grid interaction, according to SAE International. 
The standard will help reduce the amount of time a consumer spends at 
public charging stations and enable consumers to travel greater 
distances in their PHEVs and EVs before needing to charge. Ford Motor 
Company, which participated in developing the standard, issued a 
statement praising the standard because it augments and is compatible 
with the existing electric vehicle charging standard employed by all 
automakers in the United States. See the SAE International press release , a standards summary  , and the Ford Motor Company press release . | 
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The Green Button Initiative aims to provide 
utility customers with their electricity usage data in a simple and 
standard format to help them save energy and money, and it might be 
coming to a utility near you. Kicked off back in January, the Green 
Button has already had quite a year, but it isn't done yet. On October 
1, the Energy Data Initiative announced a further expansion of the Green
 Button to include 12 new or expanded commitments from utilities and 
also the first steps toward allowing customers to directly transfer 
their electricity usage data to third parties, such as app developers. 
First, in terms of the ability to download Green
 Button data, 12 new utilities and energy providers have joined 23 
others that have already agreed to adopt the Green Button 
machine-readable data standard. In total, these 35 companies will enable
 more than 36 million households and businesses to use web and 
smartphone apps to pick the best rate plan for them, take advantage of 
customized energy efficiency tips, utilize tools to size and finance 
rooftop solar panels, and download virtual energy audit software that 
can cut costs for building owners and help get retrofits started sooner.
 That's a growth of nearly 5 million new U.S. households and businesses!
 For the complete story, see the Energy Blog .
 
Croatian Center of Renewable Energy Sources (CCRES)
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