Tag Archives: revolution

Move over big power – the micropower revolution is here! Updated for 2026





There is no shortage of shouting and dire warnings about the state of the climate and our need to phase out fossil fuels. But there is a more silent revolution happening too – in micropower.

Small-scale electricity generation is slowly replacing big fossil-fuel driven power plants, which are currently the world’s single largest contributor to greenhouse gas emissions.

These micro-electricity producers are relatively small scale, inexpensive, and most importantly, produce little to no carbon emissions. Last year micropower contributed to around a quarter of the world’s electricity, up from 10% in 2000.

What is micropower?

Rooftop solar may be the first thing that springs to mind, but micropower is much more than just solar panels on roofs. The definition of micropower can sometimes be confusing. Amory Lovins and his coauthors discuss this in The Economist‘s 2002 book of the year Small Is Profitable and define micropower as all renewables except big hydro.

This definition of micropower thus includes wind farms, even though these can be quite large, because of the scalable (you can plant more or less wind turbines), rapidly deployable, and distributed nature of the individual units.

It does not, however, include hydropower plants larger than 50 megawatts or nuclear power plants, even though these are low- or no-carbon.

Most recently, the Rocky Mountain Institute has included industry sales data of cogeneration power plants in its analysis of micropower trends.

Cogeneration on the rise

In essence, cogeneration uses energy twice – once to produce electricity, and a second time as heat. It is often referred to as combined heat and power. By producing heat for buildings and houses, cogeneration is much more efficient than even thermal plants, which only generate electricity.

Cogeneration has risen dramatically in the past 15 years, but is often overlooked in estimates of energy production. It comes in a variety of forms and can even use waste gases from agriculture and industrial production.

An even more efficient process is sometimes called trigeneration, producing both heating and cooling. Have you ever seen those mysterious plumes of steam rising from manhole covers in New York, in films like Martin Scorcese’s Taxi Driver? Much of that steam comes from New York’s steam system, which is used to heat and cool buildings in Manhattan.

Trigeneration can convert as much as 93% of fuel into useful energy.

Although many cogeneration plants still rely on natural gas for power, they produces roughly 40% less greenhouse gas than a coal plant. While many environmentalists advocate an immediate switch to renewables, others argue that natural gas is providing a lower-carbon ‘bridge’ while the use of renewables can be scaled up.

Grids are going micro too

It’s not just power plants that are going micro. Micro-grids are being built all over the world, both to increase energy efficiency and to provide adaptable and resilient power in the case of major storms or natural disasters like Hurricane Sandy. This is particularly important as extreme weather events are likely to increase due to global warming.

These micro-grids, which typically incorporate renewables and cogeneration, are designed to be able to operate independently of the main power grid. If disaster strikes, they can produce islands of power to critical facilities such as police, fire services and hospitals.

While more than 260 such projects are planned or operating in the United States, Connecticut has become the first state to role out a statewide pilot. Micro-grids aren’t just helpful during natural disasters – they avoid long-distance transmission, so can reduce line energy losses which can reach as high as 20%.

Cities, and the way they are powered, will undoubtedly play a huge role in the transition to a sustainable and resilient energy future. New York has reduced its greenhouse gas emissions by 19% since 2005. This is partly from an increased use of cogeneration and natural gas, and upgraded city operations using cleaner vehicles.

In fact, while ‘going green’ often conjures up images of Arcadian off-grid living, New Yorkers have the smallest carbon footprint in America. They generate less than 30% of the average national emissions. Compact cities are more energy efficient for a host of reasons, and as many have pointed out, the way to a green future isn’t urban sprawl.

The central power plants that dominated the 20th century energy landscape are seeing their market share in energy generation fall rapidly. New power plants are becoming smaller, scale-able and more efficient, as renewables and cogeneration continue to increase their production share.

The past and future of micropower

In many ways the rapid growth of micropower is a back to the future scenario.

In 1882, Thomas Edison’s famous Pearl Street plant began generating heat and electricity for lower Manhattan. Natural Geographic has a wonderful explorable infographic about the way “power pulses, information flies, and steam flows” below the streets of New York.

Thomas Edison envisioned similar systems to provide local power and heat into the future. Power grids and centralised power plants changed all that, and the 20th century seemed to prove Edison wrong.

But clearly things have changed since then, as micro-power’s market share pushes upwards. Technological innovation, changes in energy production and extraction, and public concern over climate change and natural disasters have helped power the revolution.

We certainly aren’t in the clear yet, and the world desperately needs a global climate agreement. The future may still be cloudy, despite the groundbreaking deal between the US and China.

But the micropower revolution bodes well for a resilient, secure, and low-carbon energy future. Perhaps every cloud does have a silver lining.

 


 

Morgan Saletta is a Doctoral Candidate in History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Melbourne. A trained anthropologist and historian of science, his research interests include the Neolithic transition in Europe, transnational environmental history (particularly in the Pacific and Indian Ocean worlds), as well as the many interactions between science, technology and society. He does not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has no relevant affiliations.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

The Conversation

 




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London’s ‘Tarpaulin Revolution’ lives another day Updated for 2026





Last evening I when I returned for the Day 3 night shift at Occupy London, I was confronted with violent mayhem.

Forty peaceful sitting protestors were surrounded by a three deep circular kettle of 150 police, with screams renting the air.

There were 3 man snatch-squads forcibly removing the non-violent protestors from within the kettle, one by one.

I saw one young man having his face forced into the muck, as riot police-officers hands grappled his throat, as they handcuffed him.

What was their crime? To sit peacefully in Parliament Square discussing the capture of Britain’s democracy by the rich and its disastrous consequences for social and environmental justice, on a plastic tarpaulin.

Night-long harassment

Eventually when they were all removed, they confiscated the tarpaulins and frog-marched off in an extraordinary warrior-like formation two-by-two.

It was 8pm by then and we simply convened our democratic assembly and continued with the peaceful protest. The event led to jocular demands for the launch of The Tarpaulin Revolution!

We were constantly harassed all night long with the farcical declaration by Boris Johnson’s main representative at the scene declaring that “cardboard was sleeping equipment” and therefore illegal to lie on in the square.

This followed their ruling the previous evening that plastic bags used to shelter our legs from the rain were also “sleeping equipment” and so illegal in Parliament Square.

The harrassment went on almost all night long but we managed to negotiate each attack peacefully without any further threatened arrests.

Russell, cheers for all the pizza!

Russell Brand arrived near midnight kindly laden with pizzas and drinks, and I had an interesting conversation with him about revolutionary versus evolutionary politics.

Thankfully it was a mild and dry night and having survived the full scale assault and persistent harassment, Occupy Democracy London greeted the beautiful dawn unfurling our reclaimed “Real Democracy Now!” banner opposite Westminster’s Parliament once more.

And finally some of the mainstream press arrived including Reuters and the Evening Standard. We relayed to them how badly Boris’s Johnson’s vicious and farcical attempts to squash Occupy London compared to the fairer treatment of the Occupy Central protesters in Hong Kong.

Jenny Jones, the Green Peer, arrived with flasks of tea and immediately promised to demands answers from both Boris Johnson and the Metropolitan Police, for an urgent explanation for the reported aggressive attempts to harass the peaceful protesters.

Despite the police clampdown, numbers doubled

We were delighted that despite all the above, numbers prepared to spend the sleepless Day 3 night had doubled from the previous Day 2, with people outraged at what they were seeing on Indymedia.

So please people, come today and help build momentum for this peaceful protest for real democracy in Parliament Square, that the Occupy London heroes have fought so hard and peacefully for.

Let us show Boris Johnson that his brutal travesty of ‘policing’ will not close down this week-long series of positive talks and lectures on Britain’s broken democracy.

 


 

See also:Less freedom in Westminster’s Parliament Square than in Hong Kong!!

Information on the Occupy Democracy week-long protest, 17th-26th October.

Evening Standard article: standard.co.uk/news/london/occupy-london-protesters-start-week-long-demonstration-9803689.html

Donnachadh McCarthy FRSA has been one of the Occupy London participants this week. A former Deputy Chair of the Liberal Democrats, he can be reached via his website 3acorns.

Copies of his book ‘The Prostitute State – How Britain’s Democracy Has Been Bought‘ are available from theprostitutestate.co.uk.

E-book version available from www.Lulu.com.

 

 




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London’s ‘Tarpaulin Revolution’ lives another day Updated for 2026





Last evening I when I returned for the Day 3 night shift at Occupy London, I was confronted with violent mayhem.

Forty peaceful sitting protestors were surrounded by a three deep circular kettle of 150 police, with screams renting the air.

There were 3 man snatch-squads forcibly removing the non-violent protestors from within the kettle, one by one.

I saw one young man having his face forced into the muck, as riot police-officers hands grappled his throat, as they handcuffed him.

What was their crime? To sit peacefully in Parliament Square discussing the capture of Britain’s democracy by the rich and its disastrous consequences for social and environmental justice, on a plastic tarpaulin.

Night-long harassment

Eventually when they were all removed, they confiscated the tarpaulins and frog-marched off in an extraordinary warrior-like formation two-by-two.

It was 8pm by then and we simply convened our democratic assembly and continued with the peaceful protest. The event led to jocular demands for the launch of The Tarpaulin Revolution!

We were constantly harassed all night long with the farcical declaration by Boris Johnson’s main representative at the scene declaring that “cardboard was sleeping equipment” and therefore illegal to lie on in the square.

This followed their ruling the previous evening that plastic bags used to shelter our legs from the rain were also “sleeping equipment” and so illegal in Parliament Square.

The harrassment went on almost all night long but we managed to negotiate each attack peacefully without any further threatened arrests.

Russell, cheers for all the pizza!

Russell Brand arrived near midnight kindly laden with pizzas and drinks, and I had an interesting conversation with him about revolutionary versus evolutionary politics.

Thankfully it was a mild and dry night and having survived the full scale assault and persistent harassment, Occupy Democracy London greeted the beautiful dawn unfurling our reclaimed “Real Democracy Now!” banner opposite Westminster’s Parliament once more.

And finally some of the mainstream press arrived including Reuters and the Evening Standard. We relayed to them how badly Boris’s Johnson’s vicious and farcical attempts to squash Occupy London compared to the fairer treatment of the Occupy Central protesters in Hong Kong.

Jenny Jones, the Green Peer, arrived with flasks of tea and immediately promised to demands answers from both Boris Johnson and the Metropolitan Police, for an urgent explanation for the reported aggressive attempts to harass the peaceful protesters.

Despite the police clampdown, numbers doubled

We were delighted that despite all the above, numbers prepared to spend the sleepless Day 3 night had doubled from the previous Day 2, with people outraged at what they were seeing on Indymedia.

So please people, come today and help build momentum for this peaceful protest for real democracy in Parliament Square, that the Occupy London heroes have fought so hard and peacefully for.

Let us show Boris Johnson that his brutal travesty of ‘policing’ will not close down this week-long series of positive talks and lectures on Britain’s broken democracy.

 


 

See also:Less freedom in Westminster’s Parliament Square than in Hong Kong!!

Information on the Occupy Democracy week-long protest, 17th-26th October.

Evening Standard article: standard.co.uk/news/london/occupy-london-protesters-start-week-long-demonstration-9803689.html

Donnachadh McCarthy FRSA has been one of the Occupy London participants this week. A former Deputy Chair of the Liberal Democrats, he can be reached via his website 3acorns.

Copies of his book ‘The Prostitute State – How Britain’s Democracy Has Been Bought‘ are available from theprostitutestate.co.uk.

E-book version available from www.Lulu.com.

 

 




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A Solar Revolution Updated for 2026





One of the very first big pieces of research that Forum for the Future conducted was for BP in the late 1990s, looking at the prospects for the growth of solar PV in the UK; BP had its own solar business in those days. Prospects were good, we argued, just depending on the speed with which costs in manufacturing PV could be reduced and average efficiencies in the solar cells themselves increased. I’m sorry to say that our report made little impact, and BP axed its solar business just as soon as it could.

Since then, as we all know, costs of solar PV have plummeted, primarily because of Chinese manufacturers driving them down. Efficiencies (in converting that solar radiation into electricity) have also improved, though much more slowly. More importantly, costs are continuing to come down by an astonishing 6–8% per annum. Most experts in the industry believe that this will continue for quite some time to come, as will be the case with the inverters and other bits of kit associated with any PV installation, be that roof-mounted, ground-mounted, embedded in building materials (roofing tiles, cladding, and so on), grid-connected or off-grid.

Solar energy brings instant benefits
So let’s cut to the quick here: the Solar Revolution that has been talked about for so long is with us here and now. It’s not ‘for the future’, or ‘just over the horizon’: it’s our reality today – which explains a new-found sense of excitement about the global implications of this technology-driven transition.

All sorts of mainstream organisation (such as the World Bank and the International Energy Agency, as well as various UN agencies) are now talking up the prospects for solar, especially for the hundreds of millions of people who are not connected to the grid. Policy think tanks are increasingly interested in modelling the potential impact of this transition on all sorts of bigger economic, social and cultural agendas. Could capitalism itself – eventually – be transformed?

What makes this so compelling is the universality of the benign impacts of mass solar roll-outs, both in the rich world and in developing and emerging countries. It’s impossible not to be moved by the instant, dramatic improvements in the lives of some of the world’s poorest people: light where there was once darkness; refrigerated vaccines where there was once death and disease; access to markets (via solar mobiles) where there was once ignorance and poverty.

Most governments just don’t get it
But it’s a big deal too in the rich world. I had a chance to see this at this year’s Large-Scale Solar Conference in the UK. From a standing start, 4,000MW of ground-mounted PV has been installed over the last couple of years, with the strong support of both farmers and local authorities – an 81% success rate on planning applications shows just how acceptable this particular form of renewables has become. And there’s every prospect of this growing to 20,000MW within a few years.

Sounds great, doesn’t it? Unfortunately, as ever, it’s not quite as easy as that. The biggest threat to this unfolding revolution is ineffective, backward-looking and increasingly dysfunctional policymaking by governments. Most governments – even now – just don’t get it, and most politicians (particularly here in the UK) still see solar power as ‘a nice little niche’ to distract people’s attention from the still grim reality of their dependency on fossil fuels.

Fracking jeopardizes investment in renewables
That continuing collective idiocy has been compounded by the fracking fantasy that is now sweeping the world – even to the extent of some companies describing fracked gas as “renewables-lite”! There’s no doubt that, as a less carbon-intensive source of energy than both coal and oil, gas can help reduce overall greenhouse-gas emissions, especially where it helps to kill off coal – but, sadly, that’s not what’s happening.

More often than not, fracked gas comes on stream in addition to coal, not as an alternative to it. And that’s already jeopardising both the speed and the scale of new investments in renewables – at exactly the time where the rate of uptake is making even the most sceptical investor sit up and open up those fossilised brain circuits. I can pretty much guarantee that the following data points (from the USA) will be unknown to all but a tiny minority of Resurgence & Ecologist readers:

•    Wind and solar provided 80.9% of new installed US electricity-generating capacity for February 2014.
•    For the first two months of 2014, renewable energy (biomass, geothermal, solar, water and wind) accounted for 91.9% of the 568MW of new electricity-generating capacity installed.
•    Coal, oil and nuclear provided none, while natural gas and 1MW of ‘other’ provided the balance.
(My thanks to Ben Adler of Grist for directing my attention to those figures from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.)

Don’t panic – the transition to renewables will happen
So we shouldn’t panic. In the worst of all worlds, a short-lived, over-hyped fracking bubble will just slow the transition to solar and other renewables. That transition will still happen – though from the perspective of accelerating climate change, it is of course a big deal whether it happens in the next 5 years or the next 15 years. As costs fall and efficiencies rise, some of those much-touted laws of competitive markets will eventually kick in. It’s not necessarily governments, fixated as they still are on fossil fuels, that will call the shots. It’s more likely to be capital markets.

Subsidy-free solar will reshape the energy system
And there are all sorts of positive signals here. Back in May, Barclays downgraded the bond market for the whole electricity sector in the USA on the grounds that over the next few years all electric utilities will be threatened by “a confluence of declining cost trends in distributed solar photovoltaic (PV) power generation and residential-scale power storage”. Paul Barwell, the Chief Executive of the UK’s Solar Trade Association, said at the time: “In the USA, the penny has dropped. We are up for the challenge of ‘properly costed’ policy, based on fact, not emotion. The simple fact is that with stable, logical policies, solar should be competing with fossil fuels by the end of this decade. When it does, subsidy-free solar will fundamentally reshape the energy system.”

Paul is being appropriately conservative here. The truth is that solar PV is already competing with fossil fuels in many countries – especially when you take account of the insane subsidies that fossil fuels still receive. This all-important indicator continues to move in the right direction year on year.

Companies like BP once had a chance to be on the right side of this historic, destiny-driving divide. Unfortunately, BP made the wrong choice, and to all intents and purposes, it is now dead in the water.

And, frankly, as one amongst many who tried hard to point to the extra‑ordinary significance of that decision, all I can say is good riddance.


Jonathon Porritt is Founder Director of Forum for the Future. His latest book is The World We Made (Phaidon). www.forumforthefuture.org

 

 




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