The Renewable Energy Cows Come Home, Now With Green Ammonia
Minnesota eyeballs renewable energy to make fertilizer and fuel from water and air, kicking natural gas and diesel off the farm.
Minnesota eyeballs renewable energy to make fertilizer and fuel from water and air, kicking natural gas and diesel off the farm.
Brush up on your distributed wind knowledge! The following are some key points and fun facts about the U.S. distributed wind market. This article is part of the Energy.gov series highlighting the “Top Things You Didn’t Know About Energy.”
Human civilizations have harnessed wind power for thousands of years. Early forms of windmills used wind to crush grain or pump water. Now, modern wind turbines use the wind to create electricity. Learn how a wind turbine works.
The green hydrogen trend could get help from an international effort aiming to blow the distributed wind sector out of the doldrums.
Everything old is new again as leading US power users deploy distributed wind energy to regain control over their electrical destiny.
The Commander-in-Chief took another poke at wind turbines last week, but it looks like the US wind energy industry will get the last laugh.
The US distributed wind energy market crept over the 1 gigawatt (GW) mark in 2017 according to a US Department of Energy report published late last month, after nearly 100 megawatts (MW) was added last year, bringing the cumulative capacity up to 1,076 MW.
Distributed wind energy company United Wind has garnered its second round of investment in 2016, enabling the company to expand its lease offerings around the US. United Wind is the leading provider of distributed wind energy solutions in the United States, providing distributed wind energy leasing solutions to rural businesses … [continued]
Originally published on EIA. The domestic market for distributed wind turbines has weakened since the record capacity additions in 2012. Last year’s installations of mid-size and small wind turbines were the lowest in a decade. Relatively low electricity prices, competition from other distributed energy sources, and relatively high permitting and … [continued]
An industry shakeout will follow the oil price crash, but the survivors will face new competition from micro wind turbines and the distributed wind sector.