
Juliana Ennes
Articles
-
Oct 3, 2024 |
reuters.com | Juliana Ennes
Image: REUTERS/Mike Blake Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tabSummaryA new factory shows how sodium ion will gain an increasing share of the U.S. energy storage market as developers seek to reduce global supply chain risks. In August, Natron Energy announced plans for a 24 GW sodium-ion battery factory in North Carolina, scaling up its production capacity by 40 times. The $1.4 billion facility would be supported by a North Carolina Job Development Grant, the company said.
-
Oct 2, 2024 |
reutersevents.com | Juliana Ennes
In August, Natron Energy announced plans for a 24 GW sodium-ion battery factory in North Carolina, scaling up its production capacity by 40 times. The $1.4 billion facility would be supported by a North Carolina Job Development Grant, the company said. The announcement comes amid a surge in U.S. solar and energy storage installations, boosted by tax incentives in the Biden administration's 2022 Inflation Reduction Act.
-
Sep 17, 2023 |
savingseafood.org | Juliana Ennes
September 17, 2023 — The U.S. has allocated its first floating wind leases and aims to install 15 GW by 2035 but participants warn the first large-scale arrays may still be a decade away. Development activity is growing on East and West coasts but transmission grids, ports and supply chains must be expanded to achieve commercially viable projects.
-
Sep 14, 2023 |
reuters.com | Juliana Ennes
Image: REUTERS/Tom Little Acquire Licensing RightsSummaryCalifornia is likely to miss its 2030 floating wind target due to supply and grid risks while pragmatic investments and state legislation are boosting Maine's outlook. The U.S. has allocated its first floating wind leases and aims to install 15 GW by 2035 but participants warn the first large-scale arrays may still be a decade away.
-
Sep 12, 2023 |
reutersevents.com | Juliana Ennes
The U.S. has allocated its first floating wind leases and aims to install 15 GW by 2035 but participants warn the first large-scale arrays may still be a decade away. Development activity is growing on East and West coasts but transmission grids, ports and supply chains must be expanded to achieve commercially viable projects.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →