Tag: battery industry news

19
May

Sun Edison Interconnects 117 MW Of Utility-Scale Solar Projects In United Kingdom

“We just entered the UK solar market this year and have already interconnected eight plants,” stated Jose Perez, president of SunEdison Europe, Africa, and Latin America. “This is a testament to our ability to enter a new market and efficiently execute projects that add to the company’s bottom line. We attribute much of our success to our ability to find

Read more

19
May

Tesla Gigafactory Could Help Your Car Last For Decades

Imagine if the next new car you bought lasted the rest of your life? The Tesla Gigafactory could make that possible, selling new batteries to old Teslas. This could have an even more profound impact on the auto industry than Tesla’s direct sales model, keeping cars on the road for decades instead of years. Elon Musk sure seems to be

Read more

19
May

Solar Power & Other Renewables – Will California’s SB 43 Ensure Access To Solar For Everyone?

California’s SB 43 promises to bring solar and other renewables within reach of those who don’t currently have access. Will the legislation achieve that lofty goal? When it comes to solar power, how do we ensure participation and access? Sachu Constantine of the California Center for Sustainable Energy posed this question at a recent Agrion event on the California Shared

Read more

19
May

Up To 200 MW Of Energy Storage Proposed For Hawaii

60 to 200 megawatts — that’s the size of proposed energy storage development for the Hawaiian island of Oahu, according to a recent announcement from the Hawaiian Electric Company (HECO). “We want someone to do the whole project, from design to testing to commissioning. Beyond that, we could own it, we could turnkey it, we could do it on a

Read more

19
May

Smallest CoolMOS MOSFETs in ThinPAK 5×6 Reduce Parasitics

Infineon Technologies AG today introduces a new leadless surface mounted (SMD) package for CoolMOS™ MOSFETs named ThinPAK 5×6. Chargers for mobile devices, Ultra High Definition TVs and LED lighting all have to meet numerous conflicting requirements. Consumers long for slim yet high performing products. Therefore, manufacturers demand compact, cool and cost efficient semiconductor solutions. These considerable space constraints can be

Read more

19
May

What’s Delaying Tesla Model X Production?

In last week’s quarterly report, Elon Musk admitted that Tesla Model X production might be pushed back. Are the falcon-wing doors holding up the Model X? Or is the extra weight of the Model X and its all-wheel drive system reducing range too much for customer expectations? No doubt, the falcon-wing doors are one of the coolest features of the

Read more

19
May

UBS: 10% Of Global Electricity Capacity By 2020 Could Come From Solar

Global investment bank UBS says solar is likely to account for 10 per cent of global electricity capacity by 2020, as production costs continue to fall, and demand soars in the world’s major economies and in other markets. In the latest bullish solar analysis released by a major investment bank – see Alliance Bernstein says solar’s dramatic cost fall may

Read more

19
May

What oil companies do is bad for the climate

Climate campaigners have a new weapon in their arsenal: they say that if shareholders want value for money they had better start questioning the high-risk, high-cost projects oil companies are undertaking on a massive scale. And not just because of climate risks, but for purely economic reasons as well. The Carbon Tracker Initiative, which first put the idea of ‘stranded

Read more

19
May

Why Rooftop Solar Is The Best Choice For The UK Economy Right Now

In April of this year,​ ​t​he British Government​,​ through its Department of Energy & Climate Change​,​ announced “​…plans to turn the Government estate as well as factories, supermarkets and car parks into solar hubs​.​” This is huge! ​Translation? Government support for solar PV distributed generation (DG). ​Yay!​ The UK solar industry (at least some companies) do​ not share my excitement

Read more

19
May

After the goldrush: Japan’s second solar boom

A first gold rush driven by generous subsidies led to an uncontrolled boom in solar power projects in Japan, of which, however, only a very small percentage actually got built. Now, however, the government has taken charge and serious developers are entering the market. The liberalisation of the Japanese retail market in 2016 is expected to give another boost to

Read more