Before the spike in electricity demand last year, many in the industry had assumed that there would be few new gas plants and that the nation's fleet would gradually retire.
The Growing Threat of Climate Change Climate change is a growing threat to our planet, disrupting its natural balance. Rising temperatures, unpredictable weather, melting polar ice, and increasing sea levels are just some of the visible impacts.
Attacking the Climate Change Authority, as the Coalition did this week, will not change the price of nuclear nor the cost of coal.
Colorado House approves bill to add nuclear energy as a clean energy source, sponsored by Rep. Alex Valdez, marking a significant shift in the state's energy landscape.
“To address resource adequacy and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, I think there’s a large ... pressure on lawmakers to consider building more nuclear. Maryland already has one nuclear power plant, which provides about 40% of all energy produced ...
A volunteer advisory group told the utility that serves Colorado's second-largest city that it should look at adding a small nuclear reactor for additional power generation.
A 360-degree analysis of nuclear power and synthetic fuels, specifically the renewable e-fuels of e-diesel, e-methane and e-methanol, complete a project for EMSA designed to support the European Commission, EU member states, the shipping sector and European ports in the transition to carbon-neutral shipping.
As the North Dakota Legislature considers whether to study the feasibility of bringing a nuclear power plant to the state, its neighbors to the north are conducting the research necessary to build a plant,
The Climate Change Authority has warned a switch to nuclear would lead Australia to miss its climate target for 2030 and struggle to reach net zero by 2050.
Japan’s government adopted new decarbonization targets aiming to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by more than 70% from 2013 levels over the next 15 years, approving a renewed energy plan to help meet
Ameren Missouri chairman and president Mark Birk called the updated plan "an acceleration of things that we would’ve done in the future," in an interview Friday.