Displaying 51 - 75 of 160
51
Article
They can be swapped out without end-users needing to make substantial changes to their processes or equipment.
by Sarah Golden
52
Article
One small letter change in an acronym; one giant leap for a clean energy future.
by Sarah Golden
53
Article
Two new international agreements are taking aim at one of the most challenging sectors to decarbonize.
by Sarah Golden
54
Article
A confluence of factors is making construction materials, shipping costs and components more expensive. At the same time, renewable energy demand is running high.
by Sarah Golden
55
Article
The major corporate renewable energy deals announced in the third quarter of 2021 tracked higher than the year-earlier period, but well below contracts announced for the same period in 2019.
by Sarah Golden
56
Article
One thing these shortages have in common: They’re related to fossil fuels extracted in other countries than where they’re needed.
by Sarah Golden
57
Article
Long-duration energy storage is the linchpin technology that will let the economy run off of intermittent renewable energy sources and backup power after grid disruptions.
by Sarah Golden
58
Article
Incumbent energy providers are cleverly focusing on the upfront expense of clean technologies, playing into a meme that climate tech options are luxuries of the elite.
by Sarah Golden
59
Article
With extreme weather becoming the norm across the United States, communities and companies are in need of clean backup power that can be deployed today.
by Sarah Golden
60
Article
The new code passed by the California Energy Commission will include electric heat pumps as a baseline technology for new construction starting in 2023, taking a towards removing natural gas from buildings and requiring all new builds to be electric-ready.
by Sarah Golden
61
Article
A new paper, 'Decarbonizing our toughest sectors — profitably,' makes the case that deep decarbonization isn’t a cost: It’s an investment that will make communities and companies money.
by Sarah Golden
62
Article
When distributed energy resources are aggregated, these assets can do more than just help the owners; they can help the entire grid become more resilient by providing new, dispatchable resources to utilities.
by Sarah Golden
63
Article
The capacity of new renewable energy contracts disclosed by U.S. companies topped 3.2 gigawatts, beating last year's activity.
by Sarah Golden
64
Article
The danger of low-carbon initiatives: If the premium is too high for decarbonized products, consumers could move to cheaper, less climate-aware brands.
by Sarah Golden
65
Article
Here are three priorities to ensure the grid is resilient as the climate gets chaotic.
by Sarah Golden
66
Article
The Uncommon Dialogue agreement outlines a process by which existing dams in the U.S. can either be upgraded to generate power or torn down to better support fish populations.
by Sarah Golden
67
Article
The current design makes blades difficult to recycle, but innovators are experimenting with ways to repurpose them for things such as playgrounds or to make them from different materials that can be reused at end of life.
by Sarah Golden
68
Article
Google just announced an investment in the energy source that hasn’t gotten a lot of airtime recently.
by Sarah Golden
69
Article
With corporations oriented towards net-zero goals, more organizations are considering the emissions avoided as a result of clean energy deals, rather than just counting the megawatts.
by Sarah Golden
70
Article
Last year was a record one for renewable procurements, with new U.S.-based capacity topping 10 gigawatts.
by Sarah Golden
71
Article
For energy buyers, procuring clean energy alone isn’t enough. As clean energy is poised for growth, make sure you’re supporting organizations that properly value their worker force.
by Sarah Golden
72
Article
The move to electrify appliances and other equipment only decarbonize if there is ample and affordable clean energy on the grid to feed the growing demand.
by Sarah Golden
75
Article
It's the perfect time for big ideas to reimagine the U.S. grid infrastructure for the 21st century.
by Sarah Golden