At the same time we are seeing the implosion of the ESG grift on a broad scale - including fund managers admitting it leads to poor returns and "climate-based" ETFs closing up - Bank of America is now doubling back on statements it once made about no
US thermal coal exporters recorded more than $5 billion in overseas sales in 2023, shipping upwards of 32.5 million metric tons of the high-polluting power fuel, according to Reuters, citing data from ship-tracking firm Kpler.
U.S. manufacturers are recovering from an extended slump in activity and their energy consumption is about to start rising, with the risk of tightening an already tight diesel market.
• https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org, By Andy Corbley
The nation's largest solar energy and storage project came online in California last week, offering 875 megawatt-hours of solar capacity, and 3 gigawatt-hours of storage.
Thoughts about the history of nuclear policy in the Federal Republic, as the government fights to keep secret records related to the shutdown of our last nuclear plants.
How much energy can we make per gallon of diesel fuel? I'll be testing an Army generator's fuel economy while re-charging my off grid solar battery bank.
The military generator is model MEP-831A. It's a single cylinder, Yanmar L-70 diesel engine
New South Wales, Australia, reached a record high and more efficient critical milestone temperature of 803 °C for concentrated solar thermal energy storage.
Tesla claimed that its Cybertruck would supply 320 maximum miles per charge - but reports from those behind the wheel of the new electric vehicle have a very different story.
Power lines today, explains Michelle Lewis writing at Electrek, are mostly 'dumb' which is to say that there is no information about how much more electricity is being delivered than is needed, or how much less.
There have been full scale nuclear thermal rocket engines built and tested on the ground since the 1960s. The US had the NERVA project. The attraction is that the ISP would be up to triple the ISP of chemical rockets.
A Northwestern University team has demonstrated a remarkable new way to generate electricity, with a paperback-sized device that nestles in soil and harvests power created as microbes break down dirt – for as long as there's carbon in the soil.