With the transmission line now up and running, it’s time to ask: Just how much extra juice will New England get?
The U.S. solar industry’s federal incentive ecosystem has been drastically reshaped by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) ...
The United States needs more energy to get through the cold snaps of the future. The question is where it will come from.
Tech Xplore on MSN
How policy, people, and power interact to determine the future of the electric grid
When energy researchers talk about the future of the grid, they often focus on individual pieces: solar panels, batteries, nuclear plants, or new transmission lines. But in a recent study, urban ...
As an electricity crunch drives bills higher around the country, big tech companies building power-hungry data centers are increasingly offering to pay for more of the energy they consume, so everyday ...
As global energy demand surges—driven by AI-hungry data centers, advanced manufacturing, and electrified ...
NRG Energy (NYSE:NRG) dropped 4.7% over the past week while the S&P 500 slipped just 0.5%. Year to date, NRG is down 5.1% versus the market’s 1% gain. So why does Wall Street keep betting on this ...
A longstanding Coachella Valley solar power company, Renova Energy, is closing. It will be reborn under a new name with a new ...
The Texas Tribune on MSN
Texas forecast to be top market for data centers in two years, increasing grid demand
As artificial intelligence pushes demand for more data centers, companies are drawn to the state’s relatively inexpensive land and natural gas that can run on-site power plants.
The energy interruption from the new Canada-to-New-England line raises questions about the region’s electricity mix.
Morning Overview on MSN
What would really happen if the US power grid suddenly collapsed?
The modern United States runs on an invisible machine of wires, transformers, data centers, and control rooms. If that machine failed all at once, life would not simply get less convenient, it would ...
A former manufacturing site in Bridgeport is now producing enough low-carbon electricity to power more than 3,000 homes.
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