Universal Community Solar Revolution Brewing Under COVID-19 Crisis
The Energy Department revives an Obama-era program aimed at universal, affordable renewable access by 2025, through community solar programs. No, really!
The Energy Department revives an Obama-era program aimed at universal, affordable renewable access by 2025, through community solar programs. No, really!
The cutest fight for survival you’ll ever see on television is also an Earth Day rallying call for the future scientists of the world.
Support for a COVID-19 recovery fueled by renewable energy just got $38 million in love from the US Department of Energy, for new hydrokinetic research.
The COVID-19 outbreak has provided one last opportunity for fossil fuel stakeholders to beat back the renewable energy revolution. One especially interesting example is the notorious Keystone XL tar sands oil pipeline. The once-dormant project suddenly sprang into action last week, while protesters have been sidelined by the virus. That may be so, but the window for fossil fuels is already narrowing and it’s about to slam shut. Key US states are already taking action to accelerate their renewable energy plans, virus or no virus.
Moody Air Force Base in Georgia demonstrates why the Armed Services are pursuing solar power and other new energy technologies.
An old project to harvest low cost wind power from the nation’s midwestern “wind belt” gets new life from the leading renewable energy comany Invenergy.
No matter how much Trump talks up coal, renewables are making big moves into power generation, and Forbes magazine is toting up the damages.
The Trump administration pitches coal, but Nebraska catches wind power fever with a new 320-megawatt wind farm for a new Facebook data center.
Energy companies are beginning to bail on Canada’s tar sands oil fields and even Koch Industries is joining the rush out the door — or maybe not.
A new report finds three million workers in the clean energy field, including energy efficiency jobs, nuclear and natural gas along with renewables.