Articles by
Paul Gipe
Giant Germany Utility Swears Off New Coal
By
Paul Gipe
RWE, one of Germany’s biggest utilities, has announced it will not build any more new coal plants. RWE currently ... Read more
Italy: Nuclear? Non Grazie!–Again–Berlusconi: Now It’s Renewables
By
Paul Gipe
Conservative Prime Minister Says Italy Must Now Develop Renewable Energy
Italy Sets 23,000 MW Solar Target-Tariffs Remain High Relative to Germany
Solar to Reach ~10% of Supply by 2017
“We Can Do It” Says German Environment Agency on Nuclear Phase Out
By
Paul Gipe
The Conservative German government has issued a 14-page document outlining how Germany can close all its reactors by 2017 ... Read more
Ontario’s Feed-in Tariffs: Setting the Standard in North America
By
Paul Gipe
Presentation by Paul Gipe for VerdeXchange, June 6, 2011, Toronto Ontario, including a proposal for revisions to Ontario's groundbreaking feed-in tariffs . . .
Nuclear Expensive and Uninsurable Say Studies
By
Paul Gipe
New Nuclear Costs as Much as German Solar Today--Up to $0.34/kWh in 2018--Nuclear Insurance Costs More than Electricity Says German Report
Distributed Geothermal in California Can Add 7% of Supply
By
Paul Gipe
What Feed-in Tariff Prices Are Necessary?
Distributed Geothermal in California Can Add 7% of Supply
By
Paul Gipe
What Feed-in Tariff Prices Are Necessary?
Ecuador Adopts Feed-in Tariffs
By
Paul Gipe
The electricity authority of Ecuador adopted a system of feed-in tariffs for the development of renewable energy on April ... Read more
Malaysia Adopts Sophisticated System of Feed-in Tariffs
By
Paul Gipe
3,000 MW New Renewables by 2020
1,250 MW of Solar Photovoltaics by 2020
Request for Proposals, Bidding, & Tendering: Successful Policy Mechanisms or Multiple Paths to Failure?
By
Paul Gipe
While I’ve written extensively about feed-in tariffs as a policy mechanism for rapidly developing renewable energy, I’ve written very ... Read more

Protecting Creation: Solar PV at Religious Institutions Driven by Feed-in Tariffs
By
Paul Gipe
One powerful advantage of feed-in tariff policies for developing renewable energy is that they permit the participation of people from all walks of life.
Fukushima Nuclear Year-to-Year Reliability and German Wind
By
Paul Gipe
German Wind more Stable Year-to-Year than Fukushima Reactors
