Solar power has shifted from niche technology to a central pillar of the global energy system, and the pace of change is only ...
New data shows nearly 70 GW of new solar generating capacity is scheduled to come online across 2026 and 2027. That’s nearly a 49% jump over current operating capacity, and a huge boost for our clean ...
Discover the fascinating journey of solar energy in this in-depth video. We trace the history from ancient uses of sunlight to the invention of the photovoltaic cell by Alexander Stoletov and the ...
With its increasingly popular adoption on both a residential and commercial scale, the solar power industry has already changed the face of renewable energy. At the same time, solar continues to ...
After nine years at the helm of U.S. solar’s main trade body, Abigail Ross Hopper announced she would step down as president and CEO of the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA), effective Feb. 1 ...
Despite policy uncertainty from Washington, the U.S. solar industry continues to shine. A new report from the Solar Energy Industries Association and global energy research group Wood Mackenzie shows ...
The Role of China’s Top 3 Manufacturers in the Renewable Energy Revolution. CALIFORNIA, CA, UNITED STATES, February 3, 20 ...
Western Kansas has the potential to capitalize on our region’s growing energy demands even as rural populations shrink. There’s plenty of land, wind and sun to be a center for renewable energy ...
The recently passed One Big Beautiful Bill Act signals a major shift in federal energy policy. Among its provisions, the law accelerates the phase-out of tax credits for new wind and solar projects ...
This transcript was prepared by a transcription service. This version may not be in its final form and may be updated. Annie Minoff: Graham Alexander has been working in solar energy for a long time.
The planet’s third biggest polluter is adding wind and solar and electrifying transport at a faster pace than China did at ...
Solar exports still matter, but network tariff reform is changing how bills work. Rising fixed charges mean exporting energy alone may no longer deliver the savings households expect.