While floating solar—the emerging practice of putting solar panels on bodies of water—is promising in its efficiency and its potential to spare agricultural and conservation lands, a new experiment finds environmental trade-offs.
While floating solar -- the emerging practice of putting solar panels on bodies of water -- is promising in its efficiency and its potential to spare agricultural and conservation lands, a new experiment finds environmental trade-offs.
While floating solar - the emerging practice of putting solar panels on bodies of water - is promising in its efficiency and its potential to spare
Trump's turn away from green energy will help China dominate the renewable market - and may provide opportunities to other Asian and European countries.
Most major economies are investing in ever-cheaper solar and wind power. The United States risks further ceding a global market to China.
Legal experts said the president was testing the boundaries of executive power with aggressive orders designed to stop the country from transitioning to renewable energy.
Wind turbines offset their environmental footprint within six months, making them a cleaner energy source than fossil fuels
Renewable energy sources supplied a record 46 per cent of electricity in the final quarter of 2024 Read more at straitstimes.com.
South Africa’s Juwi Renewable Energies has announced plans to build three large-scale solar plants with a combined capacity of 340 MW that will serve major players in South Africa’s mining, data centre and energy sectors.
At the end of the day, Canada needs a new energy solution that is sustainable, affordable, effective and reduces our carbon emissions. Bioenergy fuelled by forest biomass ticks all the boxes. “Biomass, no longer a waste stream, is driving a new wave of innovation that is helping meet Canada’s long-term decarbonation goals,” affirms Dakin.
As the world is transitioning from high carbon energy sources to “cleaner, greener” energy sources, it is important that Nigeria should not to be left behind. Over 80% of global energy mix is from fossil fuels.
Developed countries have a tighter deadline for achieving net-zero emissions that developing countries – which requires even faster growth of renewable energy – and all countries are behind schedule.