Danfoss Report Advocates For New Ways To Put Waste Heat To Work
Danfoss, a Danish company, has released a white paper that advocates for capturing and reusing waste heat in homes and businesses.
Danfoss, a Danish company, has released a white paper that advocates for capturing and reusing waste heat in homes and businesses.
We’ve got another daily roundup of solar energy, energy storage, and electric vehicle news to share. The cleantech stories just keep rolling in, as more cleantech records are broken and cleantech products make their way into more and more consumers’ hands. In the realm of electric cars, it appears like … [continued]
Electric Vehicle Caravan to Disprove Skeptics Who Doubt Long-Distance Journey with EVs The trip from Sjællandsringen, Denmark, to Le Mans, France, is 3200 km, back and forth. The trip includes 50 electric vehicles, including an electric truck, with approximately 120 participants from six countries. The trip crosses four countries and … [continued]
Heat pumps are pushing gas and oil out of homes and commercial buildings, and now they will put the squeeze on industrial operations, too.
Danfoss’ fleet of Volvo electric semi trucks will be running 24 hours a day, 5 days a week, with minimal downtime.
Globally, data centers are estimated to account for 1 to 2% of electricity usage. The percentage is higher in Europe, where data centers there consumed 104 TWh of electricity in 2020 — about 3% of all the electricity consumed within the EU. Those data centers create a lot of waste … [continued]
Ford, Volvo Cars and broad industry coalition appeals to EU to ensure all new cars and vans are zero emissions from 2035 and to establish mandatory charging infrastructure targets.
An upgrade for the Hyundai IONIQ 5 leads today’s electric car news.
Volvo Penta and Danfoss Editron have joined forces to embrace electrification in a new pilot program to make the wind industry even cleaner!
With an electric powertrain developed by the electric marine experts at Danfoss Editron, some 27 zero-emission passenger ferries will soon replace a hodgepodge of aging diesels in Bangkok’s Chao Phraya River as part of an exploratory bid to improve air quality and clean up the water supply in the Thai capitol.