2022年3月14日,我们还有a long way to go to reach Ha- waii’s goal of 100% renewable energy gener- ation by 2045 — a mere 23 years from now. The state has made significant advances in developing renewable energy, primarily solar and wind, the most efficient and cost-effective renewables available today. However, the sun doesn’t always shine and the wind doesn’t...
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March 9th, 2022 By Chelsea Jensen In addition to increasing pain at the pump as gas prices rise, Big Islanders could see electric bills increase substantially in the coming months following an outright ban on the U.S. import of Russian oil, natural gas and coal amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. “As the U.S. and other nations stand with the people of Ukraine and impose...
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March 1st, 2022 Claims made in Dylan Ramos’ letter, “Burning wood for energy isn’t clean” (Star-Advertiser, Feb. 21), are factually incorrect. Based on scientific fact, growing more trees than used to produce energy is clean, renewable and dramatically reduces greenhouse gas emissions. Stated plainly, trees consist mainly of carbon. Photosynthesis turns CO2 and water into tree biomass...
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February 22, 2022 Regarding the ongoing waste-of- taxpayer-money saga between the Public Utilities Commission and Hu Honua Bioenergy’s power purchase agreement (“Court rejects bid to delay approval hearing for wood burning power plant,” Star-Advertiser, Feb. 16), the PUC should simply follow the law. Per amended statute HRS 269-6(b), the PUC “shall explicitly consider … the State’s...
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In a recent opinion piece, Henry Curtis and Dylan Ramos featured a statement on the importance of forests in mitigating climate change (“Burn some biomass to generate electricity — but not trees,” Island Voices, Star-Advertiser, Feb. 1). In that case, they should support the Honua Ola Bioenergy project, as it will reduce greenhouse emissions and be the first energy project in the...
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