As you all know we at the Embassy work hard on helping green energy take off in Jordan. For economic and security reasons green energy is a particular good idea for Jordan. There is a great but yet unexploited local potential for this - and this we gotta change.
So to my great pleasure I discovered a long story in Jordan Times today about some of the lessons we have learned in Denmark about renewable energy. The article is not on JT’s website, but for your information I have reproduced it below with the help of this site.
Basically, a small Danish Island with 4000 inhabitants have decided to go carbon neutral with the help of wind, sun, and bio-fuel. And at the same time created new jobs…of course this can and must be reproduced elsewhere on the Globe. They have gone far beyond official Danish and EU targets for cutting emissions and their success have become quite a story in the international press – hence the article in JT. The New Yorker did a serious if not rather scary piece on it as well.
It shows that with a bit of private initiative and ingenuity you can achieve amazing results. And for those seeking further information the small island community have made their own elaborate homepage called the Samso Energy Academy. Have a look at it.
One worrying thing though – the demand for wind turbines is so high and still rising that one have to plan quickly and move fast in order to secure delivery within a reasonable time span.
Here goes the article:
Living the Green Dream
Martin Burlund of Reuters visits the Danish community that has become self sufficient in renewable power.
Concerns about energy security may run high elsewhere in Europe, but on the windswept Danish island of Samso the inhabitants have achieved a decade-long target of self sufficiency in renewable power.
It’s a challenge their government set the island in 1997 and which has been largely funded through local taxes and individual investments, in one of Europe’s wealthier countries – Denmark’s GDP per capita was more than $35,000 in 2006.
“The windswept Danish island of Samso has achieved a decade-long target of self sufficiency in renewable power.”Now the islanders have shown that where there’s a wind, there’s a way – and in the process mounted a global showcase for one of the prize export industries in Denmark, which is home to the world’s largest wind-turbine maker, Vestas.
“I often use Samso as an ambitious example of how to cope with the big challenges that our own country faces in the race to become independent of fossil fuels,” said Randy Udall, a US energy sustainability activist.
Based in Colorado, Udall imports ideas from all over the world on how to make communities self-sufficient in energy.
Sustainable Samso
On Samso, which is home to just 4,000 people, wind turbines tower over green fields and rise from the choppy waters of the North Sea; rye, wheat and straw are used to heat the one-storey buildings and solar panels have sprouted on roof tiles.
“I think Samso has set an agenda for the climate issue and, alongside other projects, it has shown that this is possible,” said Soren Hermansen, director of the Samso Energy Academy and one of the project’s main drivers.
Without any construction subsidies, the islanders have invested kr400m ($84.35m) – an average of more than $20,000 a citizen.
“We invested $84m – a big number for 4,000 people – but in reality it’s not a whole lot,” said islander Jorgen Tranberg, who describes himself as a milk producer who ‘owns a couple of turbines’.
In Denmark’s geographical centre, Samso used to be best known for its early-season potatoes. Now 11 onshore wind turbines cover all local electricity demands and 70% of the island’s homes are heated using biofuels or solar power.
While some homes have opted to stay with oil furnaces for heating and cars are still common, the island has become carbon neutral by erecting ten offshore wind turbines, in addition to the 11 on land, to offset the automobiles’ carbon emissions and those from the 30% of homes still heated by oil.
“We even produce far more electricity than we need,” said Hermansen. The surplus is sold to the mainland.
To promote wind power, the Danish government subsidises wind energy production to the tune of about 20% to 50% of the final cost of power to consumers.
Beating the EU
The islanders’ efforts dovetail with European Union policy but have gone much further than official targets.
“Wind turbines tower over green fields and rise from the choppy waters of the North Sea.”The European Union has committed to cut its greenhouse gas emissions by a fifth by 2020 from 1990 levels, and to get one fifth of all energy demand from renewable sources such as wind, solar and biomass.
Some islanders say the renewable project has been helped by developing as a grassroots venture rather than having targets and regulations imposed by a bureaucracy. “First of all you need determination and can-do spirit, and then you need an economic foundation to make it possible,” Tranberg told Reuters in the cockpit of his wind turbine.
Many islanders own shares in the onshore wind turbines, an investment that they originally hoped would pay back after eight to ten years. A stronger-than-expected wind – blowing 10%-15% more force than expected into the blades – cut the payback time and now Samso Energy Academy says a share in a wind turbine generates about kr500 a year in income.
“We held a lot of meetings, but we managed to do it because we hired good experts and trusted our own instinct,” said Tranberg, who bought one early turbine himself and then a second offshore one with a partner.
“What is intriguing about Samso is their ability to make this project a sport for them, to show that this can be done,” said the US activist Udall.
There have been secondary benefits for islanders too: cement was needed to build the turbines’ foundations, solar panels had to be installed and homeowners began to demand better insulation. This gave blacksmiths and cement workers a reason to stay on the island at a time of economic slowdown: five families moved in to take on new ‘renewable energy’ jobs.
Overseas interest
The project has attracted great overseas interest: ambassadors representing foreign countries in Denmark, on a recent trip to see Samso’s small towns driven by solar panel farms and wind power, were impressed.
“Without any construction subsidies, the islanders have invested kr400m ($84.35m) – an average of more than $20,000 a citizen.”"What we’re trying to learn is how to do it, how to achieve that level of energy renewable self-sufficiency that Samso and the community here have achieved,” said Frederica Gregory, Canadian ambassador to Denmark.
It has also helped draw attention to Denmark’s wind-power prowess. Jutland-based Vestas last week reported a 67% rise in its order backlog to over €7bn, and estimated wind power will account for at least 10% of global power output in 2020, from a little over 1% today.
This translates into annual growth of between 20% and 25% over the next 12 years.
“Using resources [that are] locally available and producing it in a way that is self-sufficient for the island while exporting green energy is something many nations would love to see,” said Slovenian ambassador Rudolf Gabrovec.
September 18, 2008 at 14:14
Very interesting indeed. I am very interested in seeing how this would work for us. I would want to hear more about the progress you achieve with our government. This is a very important. It would be nice to read one day an article about living a green dream in Jordan
September 21, 2008 at 11:14
Great initiative in Denmark. As for Jordan, I realy suggest the following important steps for having a green Jordan:
1. Recycling (at Home and businesses)
2. Factories and Manufacturers waste
3. CO2 from factories, cars, buses (Cleaner diesel)
4. Burning of Garbage in Jordan
5. Noise pollution
6. Garbage Pollution in forests, desert
7. Quality of water in households
Thats all I can think of for now for problems that needs to be addressed
October 12, 2008 at 00:01
I have just finished reading last week’s TIME magazine when I found that Soren Hermansen the native guy who has sparked the progress of the eco-community in the last decade has been selected as one of the Heroes of the environment in 2008.
April 2, 2009 at 08:12
[...] be it financially or morally to get a positive development going. I have written about the “Samsø” experience before but always felt that it was important that Jordanians could hear directly from the people [...]