I was down in Las Vegas 
It has been obvious to me that the state is the natural base for geothermal production with solar and wind as a bonus as it applies.  Exporting this power first to California 
The State needs to make it as important as gambling and mining in terms of political support.  It is able to produce thousands of local jobs and will anchor Nevada 
In fact renewables do one thing well.  They pay off their loans.  Then they simply make money at a low cost base forever.  No one can compete with a paid for windmill or a paid for geothermal plant or even paid for solar installations.  Dams are exactly the same.  The Aswan 
To indicate just how important that will be consider that building a super conducting link from James Bay  to New York will possibly double energy supply to New York. (I would love to have real numbers here by the way if you can help)
The initial build out will strengthen the local power base and it is a good bet the Hoover Dam will quickly switch to superconducting lines providing the needed trunk.  The State needs to be part of all that.
In the meantime this item tells me they are all asleep as yet.
RENEWABLE ENERGY: Nevada 
But no one knows where political winds will blow
NEVADANS SPLIT ON ENERGY
If
Just under half — 48 percent — of voters in a new Review-Journal survey said they oppose a ban on offshore oil drilling in the gulf. Another 37 percent said they support a drilling moratorium, while 15 percent remained undecided.
Mason-Dixon Polling & Research of Washington, D.C., conducted the survey from Monday through Wednesday. A total of 625 registered voters were interviewed statewide by telephone. The margin of error is 4 percentage points.
http://www.lvrj.com/business/nevada-shows-powerful-potential-99712784.html
http://media.lvrj.com/images/4684159-5-10.jpg
http://media.lvrj.com/images/4684159-5-10.jpg
Sure,
For green-energy potential, few places beat Nevada 
 But just how much potential the state offers will depend on a multitude of issues, including technological hurdles, financial obstacles and even political will. Some experts say renewables could completely displace fossil fuels such as coal and natural gas in Nevada 
Here's what is not up for debate: Nevada Nevada  offers major access to sunlight, hot springs 
Data from the federal Energy Information Administration show that nearly half of Nevada 
Roughly half the state houses enough underground hot springs to produce at least 80 milliwatts of geothermal power per square meter, and about 25 percent of Nevada has enough wind to host utility-scale wind farms.
So rich is Nevada's renewable-power base that John White, executive director of the Center for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Technologies in Sacramento, Calif., said it's conceivable the state eventually could derive all of its power from alternative sources, and send leftovers to surrounding states.
"Nevada Nevada 
Nevada law requires power utility NV Energy to get 25 percent of its electricity from renewable sources by 2025, up from 12 percent in 2010.
So, the state is already positioned for considerable growth beyond NV Energy's existing renewable portfolio of 1,200 megawatts, or 44 projects completed, planned or under construction. And that's not to mention the dozens of renewable projects in the state that are planned but contracted to sell power to the utility. The utility's 2009 conference for groups interested in offering renewable power to the company drew 240 attendees, so there's no shortage of interest in the state's green-power prospects.
But Nevada Copper  Mountain  solar plant in Boulder  City , which will serve California 
"It's clear the renewable potential in Nevada 
Still, resources alone can't guarantee renewable development.
"It's certainly conceivable that we could fuel our entire (car) fleet from cellulosic sources and get all of our electricity from renewable energy, but the cost would be staggering, in consumer prices, in government support and in other conveniences, such as more variable supplies of power," said Jerry Taylor, a senior fellow with the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank in Washington, D.C.
For an idea of how tough it will be to replace existing capacity, Taylor California 
But many of those portfolio deficits come from temporary travails, experts said. Get past those troubles, renewable advocates say, and green energy could really take off.
Consider financing. Before the real estate bust of two years ago, finding funding for construction of renewable plants was easier, Hicks said. Today, renewable developers have the same problems obtaining loans as any other sector is seeing, and that has made projects harder to finance. As the economy recovers, loans should pick up again, Hicks said.
And then there are transmission lines. Or rather, there aren't transmission lines. Many renewables originate in remote areas far from existing grids, so the power the projects generate is stranded, unable to make its way into power companies' portfolios. Taylor said that's the case in Texas, for example, where some wind turbines yield power that goes nowhere, simply because the farms don't link to transmission networks.
Planned transmission solutions here include NV Energy's One Nevada  line (ONLine), a 235-mile connection that will link the utility to renewable generation in rural Nevada 
White said it would be relatively easy to beef up existing transmission corridors connecting Nevada to California, Arizona 
Technological barriers also could curb renewables' potential in Nevada 
The demand for water could be a big impediment in parched, arid Nevada 
Other technological obstacles could prove more enduring. The sun will always set, and the wind will always stop. That means a constant need for fossil fuel-generated backup power, Taylor 
The intermittent nature of renewables is especially an issue with wind farms. Wind typically blows most intensely during midwinter nights, rendering it useless during peak-power periods on hot summer days, Taylor 
Also likely to stick around are permitting issues. Renewable plants must obtain federal or state approval in a licensing process that can take years. Complying with the National Environmental Policy Act can create uncertainties for projects, as the environmental impact review could either turn up few problems or uncover development killers such as the presence of an en dangered species, Hicks said.
Uncertainties also surround federal subsidies that make today's renewable power economically viable. Many tax credits, grants and loan guarantees are set to expire in the next three years or so, which would leave renewable projects without the funding that makes them economically competitive with conventional energy sources. But White said improving technologies will reduce the costs of renewable power, and that should enable green projects to get built with less funding in the long run.
The great unknown is whether the political will exists to stick with energy forms that can cost two to four times as much as conventional sources. A Mason-Dixon poll conducted for the Review-Journal doesn't show major voter sentiment in either direction, with 47 percent of Nevada  voters saying they would like to keep Nevada 
"As long as voters reward politicians for keeping these programs in place, then renewable-energy preferences, such as subsidies and mandates, will continue regardless of how renewables perform," Taylor 
Still, Taylor 
"There's a tremendous amount of overstatement regarding what will happen in the future given current policy trends," Taylor 
But don't confuse the nation's renewable outlook with Nevada Nevada 
"There are challenges to renewable energy, but there are no show-stoppers."
Contact reporter Jennifer Robison at jrobison@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4512.

 
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