Sunday Update

Getting into the conference centre was hugely difficult. A ring of Danish police kept anyone without a reason to be in the centre OUT...and since the centre is closed today for security sweeps....preparing for 100+ world leaders. Bomb sniffing dogs, barriers and barbed wire and I am trying to get in for CTV and Question Period!  I got in.

Waiting to hear US Secretary of Energy Stephen Chu and talking with a Scottish government rep, while a major Danish band entertained (Outlandish- that's the name of the band). The Scottish rep told me their target is 42% below 1990 by 2020.  Pretty amazing.

Stephen Chu is hugely impressive --  Nobel Prize winner in Physics and Obama's Secretary of Energy.  He began by quoting President Obama -- "the days of the US dragging its feet are over."

Made me wonder if this is the first time in history two Nobel Prize winners have been in a US cabinet.

Chu reviewed the major programmes in the US to maximize energy efficiency - appliances, homes and buildings (to save up to 75% of energy used in buildings).  Then he outlined an aggressive US programme in renewable energy.

Crystalline silicon and thin film technology for solar power, he believes, are near a huge price drop. As little as one dollar/watt. He sees it taking off soon without government subsidies.

His biofuel discussion focused on cellulosic ethanol.  Sadly, Chu is keen on nuclear and sees the only obstacle being the threat of nuclear weapons proliferation. He also talked about carbon capture and storage, something he admitted might never be commercially viable. In reviewing countries doing work in this area, he made no reference to Canada. He also discussed the investments in new technologies, such as giant new liquid batteries. As a prototype in research, such a battery worked at the scale of a swimming pool. Storage of energy from renewables, from wind and solar, is very important.

He was keenest on the high risk-high value research they are doing in the US such as his battery description.

He was followed by Dr. Rajendra Pachauri, head of the IPCC. Dr. Pachauri confirmed what I have seen as best science: that we need to ensure GHGs stop rising and start falling by 2015, or it will be too late. He called for large scale grassroots mobilization and citizen movements to push governments.

Neither speaker focused on what must happen here. The best banner of the day was Greenpeace's huge message opposite the Bella Centre. "Politicians talk. Leaders Act."

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I am in Copenhagen

Dear Elizabeth,

Here I am and have been since Friday.

I was at the demo on Saturday - inspiring!

I hope your assessment was not accurate and that I can get in on Monday.

Never seen an international city celbrating an event as Hopenagen is doing for COP 15 - miraculous!

Promising...

It is promising to hear that solar panels that are so cheap the private market will take off for them.  If we all had solar on our roofs it would do wonders for peak reduction which would drastically cut carbon due to coal plants and the like not being needed during those peak periods.  Imagine a hot summer day where people have their air on full blast but their roof is sucking in power as well - it wouldn't be a full balance but it sure would help.

The more it becomes fiscally easy to convert away from carbon the more people will convert regardless of the Harper's of the world.

John Northey
Wellington-Halton Hills

2nd and 3rd Gen Solar

Just an example of what's going on with Thin-film solar panels:

http://www.pv-tech.org/news/_c/thin_film/

Respectfully, D. Scott Barclay