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Essay Writing Contest:The Search for Energy Youth Leaders

Web Admin Advisory

This is to apprise all essay writing participants that we have scheduled the Awarding Rites on October 14, 2010, with tentative venue at New World Renaissance Hotel in Makati City.

 

We will notify the winners soon.

 

Since the nomination for our selected winner to an overseas conference will  not go along anymore with the deadline for the World Energy Council (WEC) conference in Canada, we are taking the option of sending him/her to the Climate Change Conference in Mexico this December or a nomination to the WEC Program for Youth, which is also overseas. We will correspondingly make announcement on that too during the awarding rites.

 

                                                   --- Essay Writing Secretariat

 

 

 

 

 

Believing in the immense potential of the next generation in helping shape the country’s energy future, the institutional and corporate partners of the Essay Writing Contest for College/University Students have introduced two Special Categories that aims to dig deeper into the ideas of the youth on how the country would be able to move forward from the vicious cycle of energy crisis and how this vital sector can contribute in the preservation of the environment and into abating climate change risks.

 

The two Special Categories revolve on the sub-themes: “Strategic Measures in Ensuring Success of a Competitive Electricity Market”, advocated by institutional partner Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC); and “Clean Energy Solutions”, which is supported by the Aboitiz Power Corporation. They were launched last June 11, 2010 at the Bryant George Hall of the Eduardo Aboitiz Development Studies Center in Cebu City.

 

In view of the latest developments, the organizers have decided to move deadline of submissions to July 31, 2010 (details are provided in the Contest Rules). The awarding rites will be scheduled August this year.

 

 

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PHILIPPINE SOLAR CAR SOCIETY: Blazing the Trail to Solar Technology Leadership

De La Salle University students out to make a mark in the field of solar energy technology could not have chosen a better partner to build SINAG. SINAG, the Philippines’s first solar car, was developed by dedicated and talented university students, in cooperation with what has become the Philippine Solar Car Society.


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VIEW FROM THE REGIONS
VECO raises the bar of customer service for electric utilities

 

 

The massive restructuring in the Philippine electric power sector presents downright challenges with new dimensions. Chiefly for the distribution utilities (DUs) which are the industry’s so-called frontliners, the battle chant is “improvement in customer service”.

 

Of course, no one is under illusion that to be imbued with responsibility of having direct contact with customers, especially in an industry so economically- and politically-charged would be a joyride. When there are sentiments frayed, in no doubt, there may be more drawbacks than one can imagine.

 

 

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We’ll be releasing our first issue soon.

Our e-newsletter can be downloaded here.

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ARTICLES   Back to Main

Solar Power

As promised in the previous article, we will discuss one by one the different sources of renewable energy. We will start with the power coming from the sun – solar power.

The sun’s heat and light provide an abundant source of energy that can be harnessed in many ways. Basically, its use can be categorized into two. They either can be converted into heat or can be transformed into electricity depending on the desired application.
 
When converted to thermal (or heat) energy, it can be used to:
 
Heat water – for use in homes, buildings, or swimming pools.

 

 

Heat spaces – inside greenhouses, homes, and other buildings

 

Photovoltaic (PV devices) or “solar cells” – change sunlight directly into electricity. PV systems are often used in remote locations that are not connected to the electric grid. They are also used to power watches, calculators, street lamps and lighted road signs.

 

Solar Power Plants - indirectly generate electricity when the heat from solar thermal collectors is used to heat a fluid which produces steam that is used to power generator.

 

There are many advantages of solar energy. Just consider the advantages of solar energy over that of oil:
  • Solar energy is a renewable resource meaning, unlimited in supply.
  • Solar cells are totally silent.
  • Solar energy is non-polluting since it doesn’t have any direct by-product.
  • Solar cells require very little maintenance and they last a long time.
  • Solar powered lights and other solar powered products are also very easy to install. You do not even need to worry about wires.
 
On the other hand, here are the disadvantages of solar energy:
  • Initial investment for solar cells/panels can be very expensive although the technology is getting affordable now because of increased production
  • Solar power cannot be created at night and sometimes the amount of sunlight that reaches the surface of the earth is not constant or steady
  • Because the sun doesn’t deliver that much energy to any one place at any one time, a large surface area is required to collect the energy at a useful rate.

As you can see, there are just a few disadvantages in using solar energy as compared to the many advantages. The advantages of solar energy range from benefiting your pocket to benefiting the environment. Given the chance, let’s use this free and clean source in our daily living.

 

 

 

Sources:
http://www.nrel.gov
http://EzineArticles.com
http://www.alternative-energy-news.info
 
 
*Article-contribution by Manila Electric Company

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Rotating brownouts during sweltering summer months. Electricity price spikes at the spot market. And yes, there’s a Department of Energy (DOE) that failed in planning. Familiar scenes? Well, that was the State of California in the past decade before it hurtled into its monumental power market deregulation failure.

 

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