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Chinese and EU Clash Over Airline Emissions

Doug Young

Contrails

China’s increasingly contentious trade relations with Europe
suffered another setback late last week, when the EU threatened to
fine Chinese airlines that were refusing to comply with a new
controversial program to reduce greenhouse gases. China responded
with its own threat by saying it won’t accept the EU’s planned
carbon tax, raising the prospect of a dangerous new trade war. This
latest in a recent series of trade conflicts between China and both
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Tesla Motors Repays DOE Loan 9 Years Early

U.S. electric vehicle maker Telsa Motors has paid back its 2010 loan awarded by the Department of Energy. Following payments made in 2012 and earlier in 2013, the May 22 payment of $451.8 million repays the full loan amount with interest.

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Tesla Motors Repays DOE Loan 9 Years Early

U.S. electric vehicle maker Telsa Motors has paid back its 2010 loan awarded by the Department of Energy. Following payments made in 2012 and earlier in 2013, the May 22 payment of $451.8 million repays the full loan amount with interest.

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UK Urged to Boost Clean Energy Over Natural Gas

Britain, under pressure to build new power stations, could save as much as 100 billion pounds ($150 billion) through 2050 by spending on wind, nuclear and carbon capture rather than gas, the government’s climate adviser said.

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Streamlined Permitting Can Significantly Reduce Costs, Time for Installing Residential Solar

A recent report from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBL) looks at how the permitting process can impact the costs and time it takes to install solar. The report, “The Impact of City-level Permitting Processes on Residential Photovoltaic Installation Prices and Development Times: An Empirical Analysis of Solar Systems in California Citie

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EU Solar Import Duties Seen Hurting China-U.K. Companies

The European Union is poised to penalize imports of Chinese solar products, a move that would increase Europe’s cost for most photovoltaic panels an estimated 45 percent overnight.

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US Equipped to Grow Serious Amounts of Pond Scum for Fuel

A new analysis shows that the nation’s land and water resources could likely support the growth of enough algae to produce up to 25 billion gallons of algae-based fuel a year in the United States, one-twelfth of the country’s yearly needs.

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Lead-Acid Batteries: Merely A Launch Pad for Something Better?

There’s finally been some good news for a change: According to a recent analysis performed by market research company IHS, the market for photovoltaic storage systems is about to boom. In Germany alone, the total capacity is set to increase from eight to 4,900 megawatts (MW) between now and 2017. The success of storage systems is dependent on one condition, however: They must be able to pay for themselves within the estimated 20-year lifetime of ...

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Re-Igniting America’s Solar Impulse

First came the Wright Brothers. Then it was Charles Lindbergh crossing the Atlantic in the Spirit of St. Louis. In 1990, Eric Raymond made aviation history to much less fanfare with the first solar airplane crossing of the United States. Now it is Bertrand Piccard and André Borschberg making history by flying across America in SOLAR IMPULSE, a 100

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Rumors of US-China Trade Settlement Talks Fuel Solar Stocks

If short-term traders really have hijacked the sector, which seems probable, it would mark a relatively big setback for stocks that were once popular among aggressive longer-term investors who liked the strong prospects of solar energy. Of course that doesn’t mean that serious investors will never return to the sector if it ever manages to stabiliz

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