The Energy Information Administration of the DOE will begin including monthly estimates of small-scale distributed solar PV capacity and generation by state and sector; finds distributed PV accounted for 30% of electricity in September.
Pacific Gas and Electric Company unveils details of first tranche of storage contracts offered in the state under California’s Energy Storage Decision, which has targeted procurement of 1.32 GW of storage by investor-owned utilities by 2020.
NextEra Energy will install 17 MW of solar PV at three military bases in Hawaii. Construction is slated for February, with commercial operation expected by the end of 2016.
Kingfisher, owner of companies including B&Q and Screwfix, has announced a £50 million (around US$75 million) investment in renewables, the majority of which will be channeled into solar energy. The move is part of the companys aim to become net positive by 2050.
Africa has pledged its support for renewables in Paris this week by announcing the launch of the African Renewable Energy Initiative (AREI). The goal is to achieve universal access to energy on the continent. 10 GW of new and additional renewable energy capacity is planned by 2020, while the potential to generate 300 GW is expected by 2030.
It’s December, and do we have some gifts in store: from a comprehensive update of India’s solar market to a near-the-knuckle muck-rake of unscrupulous solar sales practices, it’s all in this month’s issue.
According to a new study, removing trade barriers associated with the import of solar PV products into the European Union will positively benefit the European jobs market. Between 2008 and 2014, both the number of jobs created and GVA decreased; growth is forecast between now and 2020, however. Policy makers have “much” to do in realizing Europes solar potential says SolarPower Europes CE.
By the end of the third quarter the U.S. had added more than 100 MW of energy storage capacity for the year, with more than 60 MW coming online in the third quarter, GTM Research finds.
The troubled thin-film giant has cancelled two contracts signed in March for the delivery of BIPV production equipment.
In a move to avoid U.S. tariffs on Chinese and Taiwanese PV, the cell maker plans to begin production in Malaysia with a 70 MW cell line in Q1 2016.
This website uses cookies to anonymously count visitor numbers. View our privacy policy.
The cookie settings on this website are set to "allow cookies" to give you the best browsing experience possible. If you continue to use this website without changing your cookie settings or you click "Accept" below then you are consenting to this.