June 11th, 2009 by EBR_EBdaily
New climate-energy legislation progressing in Congress would highlight the biggest shift in United States energy policy in 30 years, pushing the economy toward renewable energy and away from fossil fuels. If the bill, which cleared a key House committee May 21, is ratified by Congress, it would be the biggest leap by the United States [...]
February 18th, 2009 by EBR_EBdaily
The European Parliament proposal is aimed at meeting EU emissions targets, which call for a 20% decrease in carbon emissions by 2020. While this deadline is too close to allow carbon capture and storage to take hold, the EU is aware that, with coal becoming ever more prominent in the European generation mix, CCS will [...]
December 3rd, 2008 by EBR_EBdaily
There is much talk about alternative (or “green”) energy sources these days. Although there a several different types-ethanol, biomass, hydroelectric, and geothermal heat pumps, to name just a few-two types have risen to prominence in the political debates: solar cells and wind turbines. Opponents of these renewable energy sources point out that wind and solar [...]
September 23rd, 2008 by EBR_EBdaily
Read more about Global Energy Industry Outlook 2008
September 4th, 2008 by EBR_EBdaily
Read more about Major U.S. Nuclear Power Plants: Profiles and Market Analysis
If state governors sanction the company’s 2009 fuel-cost projections, clean-air expenses, nuclear pre-construction costs and other elements, the residential monthly bill for 1,000 kilowatt-hours (kWh) would increase $34.27 (31 percent) over present-day charges of $110.59 to $144.86 starting in January 2009.