https://cleantechnica.com/2018/02/20/reconomy-gupta-plans-ev-plant-australia-powered-solar-storage/
British Billionaire Gupta’s Plans For An Australian Electric Car Factory
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February 20th, 2018  Giles Parkinson

UK-based billionaire Sanjeev Gupta is looking to buy equipment from and use
part of the old Holden factory in South Australia to create an electric
vehicle production line. That would be a significant part of remarkable
transformation of Australia’s car industry and economy.

Gupta, whose GFG Alliance last year bought the OneSteel business in
Australia with a view to powering the Whyalla and other steelworks with
renewable energy and storage, has the backing of the South Australia
government, keen to support what it sees as the “inevitable” transition to
EVs.

The proposal to buy the disused GM assets would be a partial reprise of the
Tesla story in California, which used an old factory in Fremont, once
jointly owned by GM and Toyota, to launch its Tesla Model S electric
vehicle. The plant is now used for the production of the Model S, Model X,
and Model 3.

Any EV production plant at GM’s former operations in Elizabeth, north of
Adelaide, would likely source steel from Gupta’s newly acquired steel
operations, and use renewable energy supplied by its newly merged SIMEC Zen
energy business.

It would underpin Gupta’s plans to build 1GW of solar and storage capacity
in South Australia — a state that already sources half of its electricity
needs from wind and solar. Around half that capacity is earmarked for
Whyalla Steel, but the remainder is looking for other big energy users.

An EV plant would fit the bill perfectly, and would minimize the lifecycle
emissions of any EV built there, given the power sources to manufacture the
plant, and to provide the electricity to charge the EV batteries.

The development, revealed by the Adelaide Advertiser, comes as conservatives
within Australia’s Coalition government looked to extend their campaign
against renewable energy to include EVs, arguing that EVs in some states
would create more emissions than petrol and diesel cars.

Australia stands almost unique in the western world for its lack of emission
standards on vehicles, meaning it has become a dumping ground for polluting
vehicles and has an incredibly low take-up of EVs.

The letter, written by South Australian Treasurer Tom Koutsantonis to GM
Holden, also obtained by RenewEconomy, asks GMH to support Gupta’s plans,
which is to “develop the site as a manufacturing base” for EVs, using
“innovative i-Stream technology.”

The letter, dated January 17, further says:

“We are incredibly excited and supportive of the GFG Alliance’s bid and
subsequent plans to ensure the continuation of our very proud history of
automotive excellence and innovation in South Australia.

“We believe that the GFG Alliance’s plans would put South Australia at the
forefront of the inevitable transition of the Australian market to electric
vehicles and ask that all due consideration be given to their bid and the
potentially significant benefits to the automotive industry and broader
community in South Australia.”

The I-Stream technology was developed by ex-Formula 1 designer and engineer
Gordon Murray. It stands for Stabilized Tube-Reinforced Exoframe Advanced
Manufacturing.

According to this article, it replaces stamped steel with a composite
monocoque bonded to a tubular steel frame and plastic bodywork. The result,
it says, is a factory that requires 80% less capital investment and 60% less
energy.

Gupta is proving to be something of a nightmare for the ideologues and
technology troglodytes in the Coalition government and much of the
conservative media, upturning all their prejudices about clean energy and
new smart technologies.

Gupta has insisted that supplying the Whyalla steelworks with renewable
energy – solar, pumped hydro, battery storage, and demand management – is
critical to reverse its fortunes of the aging Whyalla steelworks and make it
profitable.

The plan is a direct rebuttal of claims that renewable energy would be the
death of manufacturing and energy-intensive businesses in Australia.
Numerous big energy users are now turning to wind and solar to slash their
electricity costs.

Gupta intends to take the same model to his even more energy intensive
operations in Victoria and NSW, which he also bought as part of the OneSteel
package.

Gupta has teamed up with Zen Energy, now SIMEC Zen, to provide electricity
to the South Australia government pending the construction of the new solar
tower and storage facility in Port Augusta. SIMEC Zen’s contribution will be
renewable once its new solar plants and storage are built.

The Australian recently, however, ran as its lead article a push by
conservatives within the Coalition to fight any incentives for EVs in
Australia, apparently on the highly debatable claim that EVs would create
more pollution than petrol and diesel cars.

Of course, the emissions on an EV depend on the electricity it sources. The
same factions within the Coalition – led by the likes of environment
committee chair Craig Kelly, and Nationals MPs Andrew Broad and  John
Williams – are fighting to stop the growth of renewables.

“The risk here is you’ll have the rich person in Balmain buying a Tesla,
subsidized by a bloke in Penrith who’s driving a Corolla,” Kelly told The
Australian.

“And the Tesla will have more carbon emissions than the Corolla.”

A joint submission by the CSIRO, network providers such as Transgrid and
Ergon, generation companies such as AGL, and a host of others, found that a
first generation Nissan LEAF would deliver cleaner outcomes NEM-wide than a
regular petrol car.

But under the scenarios outlined by the Climate Change Authority to meet
Australia’s commitment to the Paris climate treaty, then a first generation
Nissan LEAF would beat even a Toyota Prius hybrid by 2020, and achieve
emission intensity of below 30 gCO2/km by 2030.

That figure, it should be noted, is NEM-wide. In some states, the emissions
would be much lower.

However, the threats by the Coalition’s Far Right element, and the
description in Murdoch media of EV incentives or emissions caps as some form
of a carbon tax has put the terrors into prime minister Malcolm Turnbull and
energy minister Josh Frydenberg.

Turnbull had marvelled at the benefits of EV technology during a visit to
the Tesla factory in 2015 – and hailed the very EV revolution that South
Australia is pursuing – but that was before his pact with the conservative
faction that elevated him to the Lodge.

Frydenberg has admitted that Murdoch headlines are helping to shape
Coalition policy
[© cleantechnica.com]


+
https://electrek.co/2018/02/22/sonnen-smart-home-electric-car-charger/
Sonnen unveils a free smart home charger that always charges your EV from
cheap solar power
Feb. 22nd 2018  sonnen, a Germany-based home battery pack manufacturer, is
expanding its lineup of products today with the unveiling of a new smart
home charge point that can always charge your electric car from cheap solar
power using the company's community of energy storage devices.
https://electrek.files.wordpress.com/2018/02/charger-app-savings.png?w=370&h=&quality=82&strip=all


https://www.mercurynews.com/2018/02/14/electricity-generating-tinted-windows-reveal-a-sustainable-future/
Electricity-generating tinted windows reveal a sustainable future
February 17, 2018  The new solar technology could potentially be used to
power everything from electric vehicles to skyscrapers. Similar to solar
panels currently in use, the windows would be able to generate electricity,
send it to an inverter that changes that energy from a DC current to an AC
current. That energy could then be used to power ...




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