Georgia To Lead Electric Vehicle Revolution, ESG Or Not
Despite the attacks on ESG investing, Hyundai roars into Georgia with another new fossil-killing electric vehicle battery manufacturing plant.
Despite the attacks on ESG investing, Hyundai roars into Georgia with another new fossil-killing electric vehicle battery manufacturing plant.
The ESG movement is unstoppable, whether or not anybody calls it ESG.
In Texas, anti-ESG whiners lead the cheer for a massive new green hydrogen facility supported by wind and solar power.
LEGO is catching attention for a new ESG-worthy brick factory in Virginia and a new Peugot hybrid electric hypercar kit, too.
The US green hydrogen industry is poised for rapid growth with an assist from the new $7 billion Regional Clean Hydrogen Hubs program, if all goes according to plan.
Wind energy investors are finding a friendly home in Texas, partly on account of the rising demand for electricity from oil and gas operations.
These “power blocks” house new long duration iron-air energy storage systems, designed to shepherd more renewable energy into the grid.
The secrets of tidal energy are finally beginning to crack open, as demonstrated by an ambitious 200-megawatt tidal project in the Faroe Islands featuring new “Dragon Class” kite-style underwater turbines.
Alabama is now host to a new thin film solar manufacturing facility that will provide solar developers in the US with 3.5 gigawatts’ worth of solar panels per year, every year (courtesy of First Solar).
The Estonian firm Sunly is laying ambitious wind, solar, and energy storage plans for the Baltic region, and top renewable energy investors are here for it.