Cadiz Inc. Retains Investment Bank Hannon Armstrong to Lead Water Project Construction Financing Business Wire Tue, 28 Feb 2012 10:42 AM PST LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Cadiz Inc. (NASDAQ:CDZI) (the âCompanyâ) is pleased to announce today that Hannon Armstrong Securities, LLC (âHannon Armstrongâ), an investment bank specializing in the financing of essential infrastructure assets in the United States, including next generation water, energy and telecommunication projects, will lead the Company through the construction financing ... | KCP&L Wants To Raise Rates In Missouri KMBC-TV Kansas City Tue, 28 Feb 2012 10:39 AM PST Kansas City Power & Light is asking Missouri regulators to raise rates an average of 15 percent, citing increasing costs, alternative energy projects and a sharp drop in natural gas prices which has led to a lack of wholesale power sales. | EnerNOC shares tumble after earnings miss Associated Press via Yahoo! Finance Tue, 28 Feb 2012 10:38 AM PST Shares of EnerNOC Inc. dropped sharply Tuesday after the energy services firm missed fourth-quarter financial forecasts and announced its chief financial officer was leaving the company.EnerNOC, which ... | Congressional Republicans seize on gas prices to blast Obama Chicago Tribune Tue, 28 Feb 2012 10:38 AM PST Republicans continued an orchestrated campaign to pummel President Obama for rising gas prices in what has become a routine election year standoff between the political parties over energy policy. | How long does a Photon take to Form? Overclockers Club Tue, 28 Feb 2012 10:32 AM PST The photoelectric effect describes a connection between electricity and optics. The energy of an electron can change based on an interaction with a photon of a proper frequency. For example, when an electron with a lot of energy wants to give some up, it will do so by releasing a photon as it falls to a state of lower energy. Researchers have been wondering how long it takes for this photon to ... | Electrical Grid At Risk From Terrorists Fast Company Magazine Tue, 28 Feb 2012 10:29 AM PST Tethering America's electrical grid to the Internet was a boon for consumers. However, a Congressional hearing revealed that foreign agents could easily hack into energy grids nationwide. Could America's electrical grid be targeted by terrorists or hostile foreign states? Anything's possible. Is a catastrophic electrical grid attack likely? The House of Representatives held a hearing this ... | | |
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