The Group presents its new organisation aimed at effectively responding to industry trends
The PUBLICATION was launched today identifies multiple issues that should be systematically considered to guide national decision making on resource endowments and comparative advantages, as well as the existing and emergent threats to a highly complex and integrated new energy paradigm, as governments make significant investments in infrastructure for systems that are increasingly electrified, digitalised and decentralised.
The Greater Changhua offshore wind farm will produce clean energy equivalent to the reduction of 830,000 tons of CO2 emissions. Located in the Taiwan Strait, this complex, which will be the largest in the country, has a planned total capacity of 2.4GW that will be able to supply clean energy for approximately one million Taiwanese households.
EIB provides €150 million in financing for renewable energy investment
Saudi Arabia is focusing on increasing the share of non-oil fuels to meet its increasing power demand and diversify its power mix.
The agreement for Mitsubishi HC Capital Inc. to purchase a 20 percent stake in European Energy A/S has received approval from relevant authorities, and the transaction has been completed
117 GW of new wind capacity were added in 2023. The report is now available to download!
WWEA Secretary General Stefan Gsänger chairs the Empowering People working group, WWEA Vice President Monica Oliphant continues as a member of the Steering Group
Wind turbines face dynamic loads, with vibrations affecting their efficiency, lifespan, and reliability. Design optimization and continuous monitoring are vital for cost-effective operation.
Former Minister Chris Skidmore declares support for Labour policy in interview with CEO Chris Caldwell of United Renewables
The EU Commission today announced that it will launch an inquiry into Chinese suppliers of wind turbines under the new Foreign Subsidies Regulation. The announcement comes as Chinese wind turbine manufacturers are pushing hard and winning some orders in Europe. They offer cheap turbines and generous finance which distorts the integrity of the European market and disrupts fair competition.
The Energy Ministers of 8 Baltic Sea countries – Lithuania, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Poland and Sweden agreed the Vilnius Declaration, pledging closer collaboration to secure critical offshore energy infrastructure in the Baltic Sea region. This comes after the Russian invasion of Ukraine and various acts of sabotage to energy infrastructure in the Baltic Sea have created new security concerns. The signatories commit to deter possible malign activities against offshore and underwater infrastructure within NATO and EU.
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