BP, ExxonMobil, Shell, Chevron, and TotalEnergies are pouring billions into unfounded, positive climate spin, a new report finds.
Watch out, Mr. Krabs: Crustacean shells could provide a crucially biodegradable material for batteries.
Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant got a lifeline early Thursday.
In the face of rising energy prices, Germany, California, and Japan are reconsidering early nuclear plant retirement.
The company already has virtual power plants in California and Australia.
Researchers in the UK rolled out a prototype last week of a paper-thin floating fuel cell.
Trade battery life anxiety for a beefy charging case.
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.
Documents reviewed by local journalists show how Florida Power and Light used a local news site to attack its enemies.
Climate change is stressing grids all over the country, so get your supplies ready.
In a baffling decision this week, the bloc said natural gas and nuclear projects can get funding intended for 'environmentally sustainable' activities.
Regulators backed by Georgia Power allegedly changed voting districts to exclude a single Democratic challenger from running for office.
The heater runs on the same propane tanks you use to cook campsite meals.
Turning waste into a renewable energy source has some of the same downsides as fossil fuels, but it doesn't have to.
When the tax is just $0.18 per gallon, how much will consumers really notice? And what's to stop oil companies from raising prices again?
Gas companies have been reluctant to increase production, so these out-of-the-box solutions could either be considered novel or desperate.
Once built, the futuristic system would use satellites to transmit solar energy to receiving stations on Earth.
Coils in the asphalt charge EVs the same way the dock on your bedside table wirelessly charges your phone.
A bill for public power was killed at the 11th hour in Albany by Democratic politicians with corporate interests.