Energy & Utilities: Page 33
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Survey: 57% of cities plan climate action in next year
The survey, conducted by the U.S. Conference of Mayors and the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions, shows cities are investing heavily in renewable energy.
By Jason Plautz • Sept. 13, 2018 -
Outages and coal plant floods are top concerns as utilities brace for Hurricane Florence
Environmental groups are afraid the weather could release toxic coal ash, but utilities say their bigger worry involves cooling ponds at regional power plants.
By Catherine Morehouse • Sept. 13, 2018 -
Report: US almost halfway to achieving Paris goals thanks to city, state action
The study by the America's Pledge initiative slammed federal government inaction and gave lower levels of government pointers on what to do next.
By Chris Teale • Sept. 13, 2018 -
Initiative gives cities equal access to competitive EV bids
The Climate Mayors Electric Vehicle Purchasing Collaborative provides an online portal for cities to bid on the vehicles and charging infrastructure.
By Chris Teale • Sept. 12, 2018 -
Deep Dive
California has a 100% clean energy goal, but not the laws to get it there, critics say
Legislators went big on renewable energy and utility wildfire protections, but went home before kickstarting clean energy procurement or expanding the CAISO market.
By Herman K. Trabish • Sept. 12, 2018 -
Opinion
How residential IoT can help shape a smart city
Once homes and living communities are more connected, they can plug in to larger smart city programs — though we still have a long way to go.
By Paige Leuschner • Sept. 11, 2018 -
Chicago and San Jose, CA achieve 'LEED for Cities' platinum certification
The cities had received grants earlier this year to assist with their work toward certification, and join Washington, DC and Phoenix as honorees.
By Katie Pyzyk • Sept. 11, 2018 -
Lyft commits to 100% renewable energy, full carbon neutrality
The company says it is "doubling down on our climate and clean energy commitments" just in time for the 2018 Global Climate Action Summit in San Francisco.
By Kristin Musulin • Sept. 11, 2018 -
Pepco unveils $15M transportation electrification program for DC
Electric vehicle growth has been uneven in the District of Columbia, where two-thirds of residents are renters and have limited access to charging infrastructure.
By Robert Walton • Sept. 10, 2018 -
Greenlots to demo real-time interaction between EV charging and power grid
The company will partner with Burns & McDonnell to test an open standards charging technology, which will allow real-time visibility into the network and data collection, while intending to move into the utility sector.
By Robert Walton • Sept. 7, 2018 -
Sonnen aims to unify all aspects of the smart home
The company's new smart energy management system will unite home automation, residential solar and energy storage with intelligent load control.
By Robert Walton • Sept. 7, 2018 -
San Francisco announces 4 key environmental commitments
Mayor London Breed committed the city to zero waste, making its buildings carbon neutral, issuing green bonds and using 100% renewable energy.
By Chris Teale • Sept. 6, 2018 -
Kentucky regulators reject smart meter plans
The utilities “failed to provide sufficient evidence" that smart meters would benefit their customers, which continues a troubling trend for advanced metering infrastructure.
By Robert Walton • Sept. 4, 2018 -
Northern Virginia, Phoenix lead global markets with most future data center inventory
Data centers will not only accommodate cities’ growing interest in using blockchain to handle municipal proceedings, but will help with the vast amounts of data necessary for IoT technology.
By Jason Plautz • Sept. 4, 2018 -
Rooftop solar saves New England power customers $20M during July heatwave
Customer-sited solar in New England can reduce peak demand by up to 1 GW, according to a new analysis by Synapse Energy Economics.
By Robert Walton • Aug. 31, 2018 -
California passes landmark 100% clean energy goal
The bill headed to Gov. Jerry Brown's desk would direct state agencies to begin planning to supply 100% of retail electricity sales with carbon-free resources by 2045.
By Iulia Gheorghiu • Aug. 31, 2018 -
Los Angeles has biggest temperature variance among large US cities
Research from Geotab found the city has a 37-degree swing, while Phoenix is home to the hottest average temperature at 111 degrees Fahrenheit.
By Chris Teale • Aug. 30, 2018 -
California passes bill to coordinate EV charger planning
The bill would grant authority to the California Energy Commission to assess charging infrastructure build-out in an attempt to meet the state's ambitious EV goals.
By Iulia Gheorghiu • Aug. 29, 2018 -
Google-backed AI network aids lead pipe cleanup in Flint, MI
The system is helping the city predict which of its 55,000 homes need pipes to be replaced — with a 97% success rate.
By Jason Plautz • Aug. 27, 2018 -
Deep Dive
Pollinator habitats: The bees' knees of rural solar development
Pollinator-friendly solar is a blossoming trend that saves maintenance costs and makes utility-scale solar more appealing to agricultural communities.
By Catherine Morehouse • Aug. 27, 2018 -
Philadelphia sets path to reduce GHG emissions 80% by 2050
Among other steps are an initiative to install more rooftop solar on buildings and incentivizing more efficient thermal systems for buildings.
By Jason Plautz • Aug. 24, 2018 -
19 mayors commit to make all buildings net-zero carbon by 2050
The declaration precedes the Global Climate Action Summit, where leaders from around the world will be encouraged to collaborate on strategies for decreasing GHG emissions.
By Kristin Musulin • Aug. 24, 2018 -
35 California mayors sign on to support 100% EV state transit proposal
As a national leader in the deployment of electric buses, California regulators are proposing to transition the state's entire transit fleet to EV by 2040.
By Iulia Gheorghiu • Aug. 23, 2018 -
Smart meter readings are a valid 'warrantless search,' court rules
Smart meter opponents challenged the public utility of Naperville, IL, over its data collection, which the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit deemed as warrantless, but not unreasonable.
By Robert Walton • Aug. 22, 2018 -
EPA moves to replace Clean Power Plan with modest carbon regulations
The proposed Affordable Clean Energy (ACE) rule would require minor efficiency improvements at some coal plants and give states more latitude to set their own emissions standards.
By Gavin Bade • Updated Aug. 21, 2018