Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Germany paid people to use electricit­y over the holidays

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GERMANY has sunk some major investment­s into renewable energy over the past few years, and it paid off for consumers over the holidays when an abundance of wind power meant households were actually paid to use electricit­y.

Power demand is low over the holidays, when fewer businesses are open, and warm weather (it hit 10° C in Berlin on Christmas Day) and strong gusts meant there was more wind power available than there was demand for it.

Prices dropped as low as -61€ (-$91 CA) per megawatt hour on the European Power Exchange (EPEX).

This isn’t actually a strange occurrence in Germany. As of November 2017, prices dipped into the negatives over 100 times last year, according to Energy Brainpool,

LIMA – Five decapitate­d human heads have been found on the hood of a taxi in the drug violencepl­agued Mexican state of Veracruz.

Veracruz Governor Miguel Angel Yunes on Saturday attributed the killings to organised crime. The heads were found a day earlier in the municipali­ty of Tlacotalpa­n.

Local media reported that the bodies were in plastic bags found inside the vehicle along with a written message. Parts of Veracruz are battlegrou­nds pitting the Zetas and Jalisco New Generation cartels.

In Mexico City, major newspaper El Universal one of its editors was killed during a robbery.

The newspaper said Jose Gerardo Martinez’s death “does not seem to be linked to his journalist­ic work”. said a German consulting agency.

And it happened again on New Year’s Day, when at around 6 A.M. local time, 100 per cent of the country’s energy was covered by renewables. The addition of coal and nuclear power generated a surplus, German-language paper Süddeutsch­e Zeitung reported.

SMARD, a German electricit­y market data site, reports at midnight on Christmas Eve, consumers were using 42 000 megawatt hours of electricit­y, while 53 000 megawatt hours were being generated (30 000 megawatt hours coming from wind power).

Because Germany hasn’t yet found a way to reliably store renewable energy, or to quickly shut off coal or nuclear power when renewables unexpected­ly ramp up, they need to customers to consume more during times of oversupply. That or the energy needs to be exported to nearby markets.

“We have a lot of stress on the grid,” Ulrike Hörchens, a spokeswoma­n for Tennet, a large grid operator in Germany, told the New York Times.

Unfortunat­ely, the negative cost doesn’t mean energy consumers suddenly get a direct deposit from their energy company in the bank.

Instead, it translates to a discount on their bills over the course of the year.

The German government has pledged to phase out nuclear power by 2022 and have 80 per cent of power come from renewable sources by 2050.

Meanwhile, Swedish police say two people have been injured outside a Stockholm subway station after an unidentifi­ed explosive device detonated, apparently after someone picked it up from the ground to take a look at it.

Stockholm police told Swedish news agency TT the injured people were a 60-year-old man and a 45-year-old woman, with the man in serious condition.

The explosion took place on Sunday just outside the Varby Gard subway station in Huddinge, a residentia­l district that is part of greater Stockholm.

Officials say the blast is not believed to be terrorrela­ted.

Rescue offical Lars-Ake Stevelind told Swedish broadcaste­r SVT that “someone has used some type of explosive material” for the object and that police are investigat­ing it.— AFP.

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