A ‘100 Percent Renewable Energy’ for Power Generation Facilities Targeted in Hawaii

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Power consumption is attributable to fuel consumption of ground transport. Budgetary allocations are eaten up by land vehicles for their energy requirements. To save fuel and money strapped on this premise, a bill for a "100 percent renewable Energy consumption" is due for implementation and this spills out to land transport.

Several countries are now gearing to have their land vehicles utilize renewable energy from the sun. Solar Conversion to Electric Power will fuel our future vehicles. Fossil fuel is the most common fuel and a chunk of it is eaten up by land transport, said Jake Mikulina, Blue Planet executive director.

According to a report in an article in The Detroit News, about 5,000 electric cars running out of about 1million fossil fueled vehicles in the roads of Hawaii. The bill is not a mandate yet. The automotive industry will gradually implement the "bill for a 100 percent renewable Energy" for land transportation when it becomes law. Abrupt implementation will collapse the car industry.

An article from Clean Technica states that two years ago Hawaiian Governor, David Ige, affixed his signature, that targeted the year 2045 as "100 percent renewable energy". The goal is to eliminate the use of fossil fuels.

The State of Hawaii made a new government position that will focus on the goal for a "100% renewable energy" set to 2045. The law means more charging stations and more electric cars on the roads.

The cost of electricity in Hawaii is expensive. At present, 21 percent of its electricity produced is from renewable energy and the rest is dependent on imported fossil fuels which drain the Hawaiian economy by billions of dollars. Renewable energy facilities upgrading could ease the burden of the high cost of electricity.

Last 2015, surpassing the goal set for a "100 percent renewable energy" generation came true. The 15 percent energy derivative from renewable energy went over the benchmark, said State Representative, Chris Lee, Chairman of the committee of Energy and Environmental Protection. Maintaining these figures would likely make Hawaii the first state to achieve "100 percent renewable energy" generation, as mentioned in an article in Ecowatch.

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