U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
DOE's Solar Futures Study sees a "unique and central" role for solar in grid decarbonization but calls for cost cuts and new approaches for transmission.
Joe Mabel, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
There is a lot of disagreement on the need for carbon capture and sequestration technology, but DOE’s Shuchi Talati believes that the conversation can change.
Panels of electrochemists and engineers at DOE's "Hydrogen Shot Summit" discussed the challenges of industrial-scale electrolysis technology.
The opening session of the DOE Hydrogen Shot Summit provided an overview of the critical role hydrogen could play in the global energy transition.
In the growing hydrogen market frenzy, Evercore ISI analyst James West sees involvement with green hydrogen as a “critical success factor” for companies.
Congress may be on summer break, but clean energy advocates are busy with recommendations for the budget reconciliation bill.
The U.S. Department of Energy will invest almost $34 million in bioenergy technology in a bid to lower the country’s reliance on fossil fuels.
Natalie Edwards, global diversity officer at National Grid, said businesses must see their workforce and potential talent “as having infinite possibility.”
Reducing power plant carbon emissions may ultimately be in the hands of electric utility customers with the technology to automatically reduce their usage.
Technological advances and refined regulatory processes could unlock U.S. geothermal capacity and contribute to decarbonization, according to an NREL report.
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