H2Med Barcelona-Marseille green energy pipeline to reach Germany
Project to supply green hydrogen to central Europe after agreement between four EU countries
Project to supply green hydrogen to central Europe after agreement between four EU countries
'Renewable energy, or Catalonia will lag behind' manifesto warns of energy transition delay
Catalonia behind on renewables, with EU telling president to "speed up" green power
European Commission could fund proposal if 'BarMar' planned under current legislation
Annual meeting held in Catalan capital due to Barcelona-based Fusion For Energy presidency
With Catalonia urgently needing to grow its green energy sector to meet climate change goals, are large-scale wind farms the answer?
Far behind on renewables, Catalonia needs 18 times more green MW for carbon neutrality
Professor Sergi Saladié points finger at lack of initiative and interest from authorities and businesses
Many locals in the Terra Alta region are fed up with the number of wind farms being built in their area
The project will generate equivalent energy consumption of 2,000 families saving around 6,000 tonnes of CO2 each year
There has been discussion among the Nuclear Safety Council (CSN) to approve construction of Spain's Temporary Centralised Storage Facility, more commonly referred to as the ATC (Almacén Temporal Centralizado), and a decision is expected in the coming days. The Spanish Government designated Villar de Cañas in Castilla-La Mancha's Cuenca Province as the location for the ATC at the end of 2011 to temporarily store 6,700 tU of radioactive waste accumulated in the country, including high-activity radioactive materials that could not previously be stored in any facility within Spain's borders. At present, nuclear reactors – including three active in Catalonia – must manage high-level waste on-site, either in light water pools or in dry storage casks until it can be shipped to a completed ATC. While Catalonia's nuclear power plants are licensed far into the 2020s, environmental concerns over the safety of radioactive waste hang over nuclear energy's future.
Joan Herrera, the leader of the Catalan Green Socialist and post-Communist coalition ICV-EUiA, also held his own conference on Catalonia's political future and self-determination road map, after those of the Catalan President, the Spanish Prime Minister and three other political leaders. Despite supporting Catalans' right to vote on independence, Herrera rejected exclusively voting on independence, since after years of budget cuts and corruption scandals, citizens also have to vote on social issues and measures to clean up the democratic system. Herrera strongly criticised the austerity measures approved by the centre-right pro-Catalan State coalition CiU and the People's Party (PP). The ICV-EUiA does not have an official position regarding independence and about half of its leadership and voters would support it, while the other half supports greater powers for the Catalan Government within a federal Spain.
Car manufacturer SEAT, based in Martorell (Greater Barcelona), has set up 53,000 solar panels on the roof of its main factory and on top of parking spaces. The company has just completed the third stage of a €35 million project, which started in 2010, and occupies 10% of the 3 million square metres of its Martorell facilities. The solar panels occupy an extension equivalent to 40 soccer fields and can generate 15 million kWh of clean energy per year. This is equivalent to 25% of the energy needed to produce the Seat Leon or to the “annual consumption of 3,500 households”, said President Jürgen Stackmann. With this eco-friendly project Martorell is now the automation factory with the largest solar plant in the world. Furthermore, the panels were installed over existing facilities and do not occupy additional space.