Renewable Energy Gives Farmers Another Reason To Love It
Renewable energy is a win-win for farmers seeking to cut energy costs and gain new sources of revenue, but there’s a hydropower catch.
Renewable energy is a win-win for farmers seeking to cut energy costs and gain new sources of revenue, but there’s a hydropower catch.
Energy conservation peels itself off the wall and takes center stage in effort to maximize the carbon savings from renewable energy projects.
The cost of solar power is set for yet another steep slide at the expense of coal, regardless of the love showered on coal miners by the Commander-in-Chief.
If the sage grouse goes down, it’s taking the leading — and bleeding — natural gas fracking company Chesapeake Energy along for the ride.
Promises, shmomises: when US Department of Defense pitches solar panels in Kentucky, it’s game over for Commander-in-Chief’s love affair with coal.
The village of Wappingers Falls, New York, is looking to a new community solar power program for sustainable economic development.
Cranberry growers in Massachusetts hope to install solar panels on their cranberry bogs to cut costs and bump up revenue, but it’s not all smooth sailing.
A new report indicates that EU coal power plants are sliding into a burning pit of financial quicksand, raising the specter of investor (and voter) revolt.
The research activity around perovskite solar cells tells a story with quite an unhappy ending for coal, oil, and natural gas.
Mazda unveils its sporty new MX-30 electric vehicle at the Tokyo Auto Show, and EV lovers may be excused if they drool over it a little bit.