In 2023 we will see the first real movement in a global energy transition—and will hit lots of bumps in the road along the way.
From a dumb Republican war on investing to nuclear energy's renaissance, here are some of the historic moments from this year.
The move comes as renewables are projected to make up the majority of electricity on the grid next year.
Renewable power capacity will double in the next five years, says a new International Energy Agency report.
The reservoir in Spain where the Mequinenza power plant is located doesn't have enough water to keep the lights on.
An exposé reveals how industry interests heavily influenced a peer-reviewed study.
Prominent energy centers at MIT, Stanford, and Columbia may be biased toward natural gas because of funding, a new study says.
A new report finds that investments made during this year's crisis could significantly wean us off fossil fuels in the long term.
An unseasonably warm fall and a big push to import and stockpile natural gas have left energy prices plummeting away from summer highs.
In a global energy crisis, renewables are helping keep back increases in emissions, a new report finds.
Pumped storage hydropower could make solar and wind energy available for nighttime use and cloudy days.
A new report on energy use in 2022 outlines the gains renewables have made and the challenges that lay ahead as the world gets hotter and drier.
A report finds per-acre revenue from offshore wind blows oil and gas out of the water.
A panel of experts tasked with making plans to improve the Texas electric grid is concealing key information from the public.
The state's last coal-fired power plant will close down in September.
The new legislation is a huge step forward for climate action—but Manchin is also making sure he helps out the fossil fuel industry.
Two recent records set by renewables in the U.S. are welcome wins amid climate doom and gloom.
In the decade since a tsunami caused a nuclear disaster at Fukushima Daiichi power plant, solar panels have been built across the surrounding area.
A newly public email lays bare the financial giant’s cozy relationship with a climate-change-denying oil regulator.
Miners moving to the U.S. means that the network is eating up more and more fossil fuel-fired power.