In Focus

Vietnam to build its first nuclear power plant

Guess which country agreed to lend as much as $9b for the project?

Vietnam to build its first nuclear power plant

Guess which country agreed to lend as much as $9b for the project?

World Bank to invest $1.5B in Indian energy sector

The World Bank expects to invest about $1.5 billion in India's energy sector over the next two years.

Korea-Philippines cooperation includes power plant, dam projects

A dam and a coal-fired power plant will be built in the Philippines with the assistance of South Korea.

Laos to hold hydropower plant project on Mekong River

Mekong River nations will meet on December 7 to decide whether to endorse the project.

S.Korea gets Saudi cooperation in nuclear energy

South Korea and Saudi Arabia cooperate in the development of nuclear energy.

Indian solar projects threatened by insufficient funds

The Overseas Private Investment Corp nears its limit for lending to projects in India, and other banks may follow suit.

India’s nuke plants are safe, says Atomic energy chief

Atomic Energy Commission, Dr Sreekumar Banerjee, stressed the importance to generate greater awareness among local residents that nuke plants do not have adverse health effects.

Indian solar projects behind January deadline

More than one third of the PV projects handed out in India’s first national auction look set to miss their January completion deadline, according to an official at the Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency.

Coalition formed against anti-Chinese solar trade petition

The Coalition for Affordable Solar Energy or CASE found support from 25 organizations in responce to the anti-trade action SolarWorld is petitioning.

Vietnam, South Korea to cooperate on nuke project

Vietnam's president agreed on greater cooperations with South Korea on nuclear power plant construction.

Chinese solar firm puts US project on hold due to trade row

CECEP Solar has put a planned $500 million U.S. project on hold over an anti-dumping trade dispute The company's general manager said that a planned installation of China-made panels to generate solar power in California, New Jersey and Texas would be made uneconomic by U.S. anti-dumping moves. "If the solar panel prices increase by, say 30 percent, in the United States, following the move, then we would certainly drop the plan because there's no profit to be made," Cao Huabin, the general manager of CECEP Solar Energy, told a news conference in Beijing. Prices of solar panels in the project, which account for about 70 percent of the costs, are set to jump if Washington imposes duties on imported Chinese products that U.S. rivals say breach agreed global trade rules. "I don't see any alternatives to Chinese solar panels," Cao said, who described Chinese products as having "low prices but good quality." For the source of this story, click here.

Japan's Electric Power Development to build gas power plant in Thailand

J-Power will start work on the 1,600 megawatts scheme by year-end.

US to raise smart grid issue in Nov 20-21 China talks

The United States will push China to take "concrete and measurable" steps to boost U.S. exports. The annual U.S.-China Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade, or JCCT, meeting on Nov. 20-21 "is an important opportunity to address and resolve key trade concerns with China," U.S. Commerce Secretary John Bryson said in a statement. U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack will travel with Bryson to Chengdu for the talks just a week after President Barack Obama hosts Chinese President Hu Jintao and other Asia-Pacific leaders in Honolulu for an annual summit meeting. Obama is expected to press Hu on China's currency practices, which many U.S. lawmakers believe give Chinese companies an unfair trade advantage and has become an issue in next year's presidential election. "Through this year's JCCT, we are pressing China for concrete and measurable results on a number of significant issues including China's policies on intellectual property rights, investment and innovation, as well as a range of sector-specific industrial policies," Kirk said. Last month, the Democratic-controlled U.S. Senate passed a bill to crack down on the practice, but the Republican-run House of Representatives has refused to take up the measure on the grounds it could start a trade war. House Democrats waged another effort on Thursday to force action on the bill, but were turned back. "We will continue to press for action on this measure until the House is allowed to work its will," Representative Sander Levin, a senior Democrat, said after the effort failed. At the 2010 JCCT, China promised action on a long list of U.S. concerns, including the development of "smart grid" standards that threaten to prevent U.S. sales. Administration officials said they believed the JCCT dialogue had opened up significant commercial opportunities in areas such as smart grid electric power transmission systems.

Is South East Asia the next frontier for biorenewables?

Biorenewables will greatly impact several billion dollar markets and revenues can grow to as much as EUR 450b by 2020.

US may require India to amend nuclear laws

US Nuclear Regulatory Commission chairman Gregory Jaczko is expected to tell Indian representatives when they meet next month that its civil nuclear liability law would not pass muster in the US.

Japan paves way to export nuclear technology to India, Vietnam

Japan Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba and his Indian counterpart, SM Krishna, agreed to move ahead with talks toward a civilian nuclear power agreement. This serves as a precondition that would enable Tokyo to export nuclear power plant technology to the South Asian nation. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda and his Vietnamese counterpart, Nguyen Tan Dung, will likely discuss nuclear power cooperation when they meet Monday, a government official said.

Tepco to ask $12b from gov't on fears of bankruptcy

Good thing the government is keen to help the company that supplies power to 29m customers in Japan.