UK Committee wrong to dismiss 'shale gas' worries as 'hot air' EARTHtimes.org Tue, 24 May 2011 06:43 AM PDT The UK's Energy and Climate Change Committee gave 'shale gas' the green light in the UK yesterday - with the Chair, Time Yeo, dismissing pollution worries as 'hot air'. Given that regulators in both the US and France are putting 'fracking' in the environmental dock, the decision by the Parliamentary Committee seems decidedly rash. | El Paso rallies after setting spinoff plans Market Watch Tue, 24 May 2011 06:42 AM PDT The energy specialist says it intends to separate into two publicly traded companies, joining others in the energy sector that have recently split off units. | New technologies can slash bakersâ energy usage and cooking times - research Food Production Daily Tue, 24 May 2011 06:41 AM PDT In the first part of FoodProductionDailyâs special edition on alternatives to carbon heavy processes, Birgitta Raaholt, the LISS project leader, talks about the benefits of these new baking technologies and how bakery manufacturers can get involved in the projectâs developments. | Fishing for Evidence: Identifying How Marine and Hydrokinetic Devices Affect Aquatic Environments Renewable Energy World Tue, 24 May 2011 06:40 AM PDT A relatively new generation of waterpower technologies, broadly categorized as "marine and hydrokinetic" (MHK) energy systems, offers the possibility of generating electricity from water without dams and diversions. The potential power that could be derived from currents, tides, waves, and ocean thermal gradients is enormous, and there are numerous plans in the U.S. and internationally to ... | Harvest Power grows Series B financing to $58M Mass High Tech: The Journal of New England Technology Tue, 24 May 2011 06:38 AM PDT Harvest Power Inc., a Waltham producer of energy and fertilizer from organic waste, has bumped up its Series B funding, adding $6.3 million to its previous $51.7 million financing announced in March. | Pennsylvania's solar-energy industry suffering from success Philly.com Tue, 24 May 2011 06:36 AM PDT The Pennsylvania solar-energy industry is collapsing under the weight of its own good fortune. Spurred by hundreds of millions of dollars in federal and state incentives, solar developers have built so many projects in recent years that they have created an oversupply of solar-energy credits, the market instruments that provide the developers with a critical income stream. | | |
|
No comments:
Post a Comment