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27
Oct

Low-Cost Solar Power Could Triple Georgia’s Solar Capacity

Georgia has not done the best of the US states in adopting solar power. At the same time, it has installed about 138 MW, so it ranks 15th nationally. The state’s utility, Georgia Power, has not been very open to renewable energy, even though Georgia has very strong solar potential. Up until now, it seems most of this potential has

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27
Oct

MGM Installs America’s Largest Rooftop Solar Array but it Only Powers 1/5 of the Hotel

When you think Las Vegas you might not think about sustainability, but that’s all starting to change – in a big way. MGM Resorts announced that it has installed the largest rooftop solar array in the US – the second biggest in the entire world – on top of the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino. Now, before you get too

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27
Oct

Massive Solar Farm Could Pump Clean Energy From the Sahara to England

The blazing Sahara sun may power homes a world away by 2018. The people behind a new $13 million project called TuNur farm propose to build a massive 100-square-kilometer solar farm in Tunisia. The farm would then connect directly to the UK, pumping energy through a 280-mile-long underwater cable. The mega solar farm would be made up of thousands of

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24
Oct

Super stable garnet ceramics may be ideal for high-energy lithium batteries

Scientists at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have discovered exceptional properties in a garnet material that could enable development of higher-energy battery designs. The ORNL-led team used scanning transmission electron microscopy to take an atomic-level look at a cubic garnet material called LLZO. The researchers found the material to be highly stable in a range of aqueous

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24
Oct

World’s fastest manufacture of battery electrodes

New world record: Scientists at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) increased the manufacturing speed of electrode foils coated batch-wise by a factor of three — to 100 meters per minute. This was achieved by a flexible slot die process that enables production of any pattern with high precision and at high speeds. Thanks to the patented new technology, electrode

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24
Oct

Silicon Stretching Could Mean Much Cheaper Solar Energy

Researchers at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) have developed a commonsense way to lower the cost of solar panels, focusing on their most expensive component: silicon. “We’re using less expensive raw materials and smaller amounts of them [and] we have fewer production steps and our total energy consumption is potentially lower,” Fredrik Martinsen and Ursula Gibson of

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24
Oct

Jolt sought for China’s electric vehicle market

China’s electric vehicle industry is looking to make itself competitive by creating vehicles that can appeal to both low-end and high-end buyers alike as the country attempts to reduce pollution levels, reports the Guangzhou-based Time Weekly. There are three factors affecting the successful promotion of electric cars: quality products, good complementary accessories and having smart business models, an industry expert

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24
Oct

Electric-vehicle industry seen to generate 10,000 fresh jobs

The electric-vehicle (EV) industry is seen to generate as much as 10,000 additional jobs if the Philippines would become the EV manufacturing hub in the region, the Electric Vehicle Association of the Philippines (Evap) said on Wednesday. “In a country where mass public transport is not yet that efficient and reliable, the Philippines is finally embracing electric vehicles and, slowly

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24
Oct

Biggest Electric Car Attractions Are Performance & Convenience, Not Environmental Benefits

Humans love to categorize. Actually, we rely on it for our survival. But sometimes we categorize too quickly and too simply. Electric cars are heavily linked to their environmental benefits and being green. But I’d contend (well, I do contend) that electric cars’ performance and convenience benefits are the biggest electric car attractions for most consumers. Hate of oil companies

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24
Oct

Most Of Us Are Horrible Fortune Tellers

CleanTechnica readers are very well aware that most solar and EV market research forecasts are utter shite. Most of us are horrible fortune tellers, and market research firms covering disruptive technologies don’t seem to have much of an advantage there. Many of you are also well aware that most of the news about technology breakthroughs is hype, at best, and

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