Here is a look at some of this week’s renewable energy news, including an agreement for the supply of oxide fuel cells to meet energy data center needs.
Occidental Petroleum CEO Vicki Hollub said the next president will be positive for the U.S. energy industry, especially direct air capture.
EQT CEO Toby Rice highlights natural gas' potential to achieve the energy trifecta, affordability, reliability and zero carbon, with the help of carbon capture technology, in this Hart Energy Exclusive interview.
Lyten said it plans to invest up to $20 million to convert the 119,000-sq-ft facility, in San Leandro, California, to produce lithium-sulfur batteries.
Oklo Inc. is working to deliver up to 750 megawatts from site-based fission units, with the first deployment anticipated in 2027.
Located in Kern County, the Windhub Solar B solar project will have 112 acres dedicated to the solar array, Standard Solar says.
BKV is counting on a ‘winning formula’ of natural gas and carbon capture and storage to service the growing power needs of data centers.
alkaLi, a spin-out of water treatment company Gradiant, said its EC2 technology is guaranteed to achieve over 95% lithium recovery for battery-grade conversion.
Mälarenergi aims to capture and permanently store 400,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions annually, a news release states.
With Wall Street and Congress on board, projects may be on the verge of charging forward.