Skip to main content

Green Energy

See All Stories
Get the best local deal from Electrek
  • New
  • Used
Powered By CarsDirect logo

EGEB: Big Oil and Tobacco share PR and research tactics, Cornwall’s Eden Project pioneers a geothermal project, more

Biden climate

In today’s Electrek Green Energy Brief (EGEB):

  • Big Oil and Big Tobacco use the same tactics to mislead the public, says a new report.
  • Cornwall’s Eden Project and the EU launch a £16.8 million geothermal project.
  • Jane Fonda arrested for a second time for protesting the climate crisis and fossil fuels.
  • Global solar PV market will see “spectacular growth” over next five years


Expand
Expanding
Close

big oil climate change

Big Oil and Big Tobacco use same tactics to mislead the public, says new report

Oil giant ExxonMobil is headed to federal court in Manhattan on Tuesday, October 22 — and that legal battle may closely resemble similar battles in the tobacco industry. The State of New York is suing ExxonMobil on charges that the company misled its investors about the climate crisis. And today, scientists at Harvard, George Mason, and Bristol universities released a report, “America Misled: How the Fossil Fuel Industry Deliberately Misled Americans About Climate Change.”


Expand
Expanding
Close

EGEB: The Guardian makes net zero emissions pledge, what is the Green New Deal? more

Guardian

In today’s Electrek Green Energy Brief (EGEB):

  • The Guardian is the first major news outlet to become a B corporation, pledges to reach net zero emissions by 2030.
  • What exactly is the Green New Deal?
  • Wells Fargo signs a solar deal that will power hundreds of Texas locations.
  • We need to talk about industrial heating as a pollution source.

    Expand
    Expanding
    Close

EGEB: Philadelphia launches climate collaborative, communal EV for Oregon village, more

In today’s Electrek Green Energy Brief (EGEB):

  • The City of Brotherly Love launches the Climate Collaborative of Greater Philadelphia.
  • An eco-friendly Oregon housing development will offer a communal electric vehicle.
  • A group of Montana high schools are using solar panels as teaching tools.
  • How power purchase agreements can help wind and solar get on the grid.


Expand
Expanding
Close

EGEB: World War I shipwrecks are helping green energy, how utilities can keep up with EVs, more

shipwrecks help green energy

In today’s Electrek Green Energy Brief (EGEB):

  • World War I-era shipwrecks are helping green energy.
  • EV sales are exploding. Here’s how utilities can keep up — and why you should care.
  • Google announces it will spend $150 million on green energy projects.
  • Shell’s CEO says it is “entirely legitimate” to invest in oil and gas, and this has environmentalists fuming.


Expand
Expanding
Close

US power grids

EV sales are exploding. Here’s how utilities can keep up — and why you should care

There will be more than 20 million electric vehicles driving on US roads by 2030. The Smart Electric Power Alliance (SEPA) has released a new report, “Planning for an Electric Vehicle Future: How Utilities Can Succeed,” which details how utilities across the US can — and must — prepare to meet the rapidly growing charging needs of all those EVs.


Expand
Expanding
Close

Florida’s auto emissions have skyrocketed since 1990

Florida auto emissions

Transportation is the largest source of CO2 emissions, and the majority of that pollution comes from city and suburb driving. The New York Times created an interactive map that shows the amount of emissions from cars and trucks have risen since 1990. Florida’s auto-emissions rates in its metropolitan areas did not fare well, to put it mildly.


Expand
Expanding
Close

EGEB: Green energy breaks records and call for air miles to be axed in the UK, more

Site default logo image

In today’s Electrek Green Energy Brief (EGEB):

  • Green energy generates more electricity than fossil fuels for first time in the UK.
  • Ax air miles programs to reduce carbon emissions, says British government’s climate-change advisers.
  • As KLM Royal Dutch Airlines turns 100, it’s taking active steps to reduce carbon emissions.
  • Washington, DC’s historic preservation board rejects front-facing solar panels.


Expand
Expanding
Close

EGEB: IMF says tax fossil-fuel emissons heavily; EVs could improve China’s health, more

fossil-fuel emissions tax

In today’s Electrek Green Energy Brief (EGEB):

  • IMF: Tax fossil-fuel emissions heavily to combat climate change.
  • Electric vehicles could benefit health more than climate in China.
  • North Dakota’s power grid is hindering wind-farm projects.
  • Scotland launches a £3 billion Green Investment Portfolio program.


Expand
Expanding
Close

Electric vehicles could benefit health more than climate in China

A new study published in Nature Sustainability finds that China’s fleet of electric vehicles could save lives. In other words, “Fleet electrification in China could have more health benefits than net climate benefits in the next decade, which should be realized by policymakers to develop cost-effective strategies for EV development.”


Expand
Expanding
Close

EGEB: Mayors endorse global Green New Deal at C40 summit, green energy and skiing, more

global green new deal C40

In today’s Electrek Green Energy Brief (EGEB):

  • Nearly 100 city mayors announce support of global Green New Deal at C40 summit.
  • Copenhill, a waste-to-energy power plant in Copenhagen, offers skiing, a climbing wall, and a park, too.
  • The Guardian reveals the 20 fossil-fuel firms behind 35% of all CO2 and methane emissions worldwide since 1965.
  • Fossil-fuel-dependent Poland builds a solar park for a coal mine.


Expand
Expanding
Close

Copenhagen C40 global Green New Deal

Nearly 100 city mayors announce support of global Green New Deal at C40 summit

A coalition of 94 city mayors from across the world have committed to a global Green New Deal and recognize the climate crisis. They are attending the C40 World Mayors Summit in Copenhagen (above), a three-day conference that runs until tomorrow. The summit’s aim is to “build a global coalition of leading cities, businesses, and citizens that rallies around the radical and ambitious climate action our planet needs.”


Expand
Expanding
Close

EGEB: Chemistry Nobel Prize for lithium-ion batteries, interior secretary criticized Green New Deal, more

Alfred Nobel

In today’s Electrek Green Energy Brief (EGEB):

  • Chemistry Nobel Prize win for lithium-ion batteries is a win for green energy.
  • US interior secretary criticized Green New Deal at a New Mexico oil and gas conference.
  • PG&E is cutting electricity to around 800,000 homes and businesses in Northern California to prevent wildfires.
  • Five great green jobs on the rise according to BLS projections to 2026.


Expand
Expanding
Close