Rolls-Royce Starts Construction of Battery Energy Storage Facility in Falkirk
Rolls‑Royce has begun building an 86 MWh, 43 MW battery energy storage system at the Bankside site in Falkirk, Scotland, under an EPC contract with Voltaria Helios Energy Storage. The facility is slated for grid connection later this year and full commercial operation by 2027, marking Rolls‑Royce’s first large‑scale battery project in the UK. A 15‑year full‑wrap service agreement ensures long‑term maintenance. The project aligns with the UK’s Clean Power 2030 Action Plan, which targets 27 GW of battery storage by the end of the decade.

NGEN Building 170MWh Austria BESS; Foresight and EBRD Invest in Germany, Lithuania Developers
NGEN has broken ground on an 85 MW/170 MWh battery energy storage system (BESS) in Wagenham, Upper Austria, targeting commercial operation later this year. The two‑hour plant will bolster grid flexibility and support renewable integration at a key European interconnection point with...
CORRECTION - CLEW Guide – Hungary Sees Solar Boom but Remains Dependent on Russian Energy, Fossil Fuels
Hungary is rapidly expanding solar power, aiming to raise capacity from about 7 GW today to nearly 12 GW by 2030, while still relying heavily on Russian gas and oil, which supplied 74 % and 48 % of its imports in 2024 respectively. The...
Telemetry Data Exposes Scale of Unplanned Power Outages
Telemetry from Wetility’s national solar‑battery network recorded 91,934 unplanned grid outages across South Africa in 2025, showing households endured six to nine outages per month. While Eskom reports an improved Energy Availability Factor of 65.31% and a 46.7% drop in...

From Belt and Road to Belt Tightening: China's Neighbours Get Cold Shoulder on Energy
China has imposed broad bans on fertilizer and fuel exports, citing domestic energy security concerns, while refusing to acknowledge the restrictions publicly. Southeast Asian nations—including Bangladesh, the Philippines, Thailand, Malaysia, and Australia—are pressing Beijing to honor existing contracts and keep...
Fracture Characteristics From Well Flowrate Fluctuations: A Statistical Physics Approach
Researchers propose a statistical‑physics framework that treats well flow‑rate fluctuations as a proxy for subsurface strain changes. By applying Jaynes' maximum entropy principle with energy‑input constraints, they link covariance of inter‑well flow noise to non‑local stiffness tensors. This relationship enables...
Italy, Spain Set Solar Records in March
AleaSoft Energy Forecasting reported that weekly average electricity prices fell across most major European markets, with the average dipping below €90 ($103) per MWh in seven countries. Record‑low prices of €0.18/MWh ($0.21) were logged in Portugal and Spain, the latter...
'Wind Has Grown up – Now Germany's Market Design Needs to Catch Up'
Onshore wind now supplies roughly a quarter of Germany’s electricity, supports over 100,000 jobs and generates billions in regional value. The upcoming EEG 2027 reform will introduce contracts‑for‑difference, shifting to a production‑based hybrid design that pays out when market revenues fall...

EIB Global Agrees $200m Green Financing for Vietnam’s Techcombank
European Investment Bank’s global arm has committed a $200 million green financing facility to Vietnam’s Techcombank. The loan will be deployed to expand the bank’s lending for renewable energy, energy efficiency and sustainable transport projects. This partnership aligns with Vietnam’s push...

What End-to-End Visibility Reveals About Hidden BESS Safety Risks
The article highlights hidden safety risks in battery energy storage systems (BESS) and argues that end‑to‑end visibility across the entire lifecycle is essential to mitigate them. It contrasts BESS with solar, noting that batteries remain energized and demand continuous monitoring,...

Chevron’s Wheatstone LNG Plant Remains Offline Due to Cyclone Damage
Chevron announced that its Wheatstone LNG plant in Western Australia suffered extensive damage from Tropical Cyclone Narelle, forcing both of its 8.9‑million‑ton‑a‑year processing trains offline. The damage includes fin‑fan arrays and air‑cooled heat exchangers, making repairs complex and time‑consuming. Chevron...
Solar Above 60° North: The Arctic as PV’s Next Frontier
The International Energy Agency’s Photovoltaic Power Systems Programme reports that solar installations above 60° N are expanding rapidly, with capacity reaching roughly 1,400 MWp by 2023 and annual growth rates of 46‑145% in key regions. Cold temperatures boost panel efficiency, while bifacial...
Bull of the Day: Permian Resources (PR)
Permian Resources (PR) has been added to Zacks Rank #1 Strong Buy list as oil prices climb above $100 per barrel following Middle East disruptions. The company’s shares hit a 52‑week high of $21, up more than 50% year‑to‑date, while...
Will California Fund or Kill Its Thriving Virtual Power Plant Program?
California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administration is weighing whether to end the four‑year‑old Demand Side Grid Support (DSGS) virtual power plant program, which now supplies over 1 GW of capacity and offsets peak demand comparable to San Francisco’s load. Lawmakers and clean‑energy advocates...
Arizona Cuts Key Renewables Policy as Clean Energy Market Takes Off
Arizona’s elected Corporation Commission voted unanimously to eliminate the state’s renewable portfolio standard, which required 15% clean electricity by 2025. The repeal is justified by commissioners as a cost‑saving measure, yet utilities remain locked into long‑term renewable contracts that may...

The Nuclear Safety Protections in Federal Crosshairs
President Trump’s recent executive orders are prompting the Department of Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to roll back the long‑standing ALARA radiation‑protection standards that have limited worker and public exposure at federal nuclear sites. The changes could allow up...

ROUNDUP: Non-Lithium Energy Storage System Technology Advances in US, Spain, and Scotland
The roundup highlights rapid progress in non‑lithium energy storage, with Unigrid’s sodium‑ion cells reaching 5,000 full‑depth cycles and projecting a 25‑year lifespan that matches solar PV panels. Inlyte Energy secured a domestic iron‑powder supply partnership to scale its iron‑sodium (ZEBRA)...
Thermochemical Energy Storage Leader Redoxblox Rebrands as Tempo
Redoxblox has rebranded as Tempo, signaling its shift from research to commercial scaling of a thermochemical energy storage platform that delivers continuous, combustion‑free heat up to 1,200 °C. The system can charge fully in four hours, allowing factories to capture low‑cost...

UK Seeks Views on Reshaping Cyber Laws for Downstream Gas and Electricity
The UK government, together with regulator Ofgem, has launched a consultation on revising cyber‑resilience rules for downstream gas and electricity licensees. The proposal would impose baseline cyber security requirements on all Ofgem‑licensed operators, while applying stricter standards to the most...

Hithium Signs 3GWh Long-Duration BESS Agreement with APAC Investor Brawn Capital
Chinese battery maker Hithium announced a strategic cooperation with Hong Kong‑based private‑equity firm Brawn Capital to develop up to 3 GWh of long‑duration battery‑energy‑storage systems (BESS) in the Asia‑Pacific region by 2030. The partnership will leverage Brawn’s investment and project‑development capabilities,...

Dawsongroup Buys First JCB Hydrogen Generator
Dawsongroup Energy Solutions has taken delivery of JCB’s first hydrogen internal‑combustion generator, the G60RS H genset, designed for top‑up and peak‑power alongside battery and grid supply. The unit matches diesel performance while emitting zero carbon at the point of use and...
RepAir Carbon Opens a Luxembourg Office to Scale Its Electrochemical Carbon Capture Tech Across Europe
RepAir Carbon, an Israeli deep‑tech firm, opened a Luxembourg office to drive its electrochemical direct‑air‑capture (DAC) technology across Europe. The solid‑state system claims 70% lower energy use than conventional DAC and already backs projects with Shell, Mitsubishi, and C‑Questra. RepAir’s...

Drone Strike Hits Laden Supertanker Off Dubai as Gulf Shipping Incidents Flare Again
A Kuwaiti‑flagged VLCC Al Salmi, carrying about 2 million barrels of Saudi and Kuwaiti crude, was struck by a drone off Dubai, sparking a fire that was later extinguished without injuries or oil leakage. The incident, reported by UKMTO, follows a recent...

Fuelling Up: The New ‘Obsession’ Drawing Singaporeans to Malaysia’s Johor
Sharp spikes in Singapore’s fuel prices, driven by the Middle East conflict, have made RON97 petrol nearly twice as expensive as in Malaysia’s Johor Bahru (US$2.64 vs US$1.27 per litre). Singapore drivers, bound by a law requiring tanks to be...
ClearVue Awarded International Certification on Rooftop Solar Panels
ClearVue Technologies, in partnership with Helios Power, secured International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) certification for its new building‑integrated photovoltaic (BIPV) rooftop panels. The metal‑backed design offers weatherproofing, fire‑class A safety, and enhanced wind‑load performance, extending roof lifespan. With the certification in...

Oil-Thirsty Asian Nations Seek Russian Crude as Iran War Strains Supplies
Asian nations are scrambling for Russian crude as the U.S.-Israel war with Iran has cut roughly one‑fifth of global oil supply, especially through the Strait of Hormuz. The United States temporarily eased sanctions on Russian shipments, first for India and...

FTSE 100 Live: Stocks Inch up; Fuel Shortage Fears Hit Airlines; Unilever Nears Food Deal
Oil prices surged in March, with Brent crude climbing over 51% since February and staying above $110 a barrel, marking the largest monthly gain on record. The spike follows the outbreak of war in Iran and heightened threats to the...

Hydrogen Set to Be Broad Demand, Strong Growth Sector, Valterra Platinum Highlights
South Africa’s Valterra Platinum says platinum‑group metals are critical catalysts for the expanding hydrogen economy, which is seeing strong global growth despite short‑term challenges. The company highlighted the role of PGMs in fuel‑cell trucks, electrolyzers and green‑hydrogen projects, while noting...

Volvo, Daimler Truck and Toyota Unite on Fuel Cell Venture
Volvo Group, Daimler Truck and Toyota have signed a non‑binding memorandum of understanding to make Toyota an equal, third shareholder in cellcentric, the fuel‑cell joint venture owned by Volvo and Daimler. Toyota will contribute more than three decades of fuel‑cell...

VOC Port Authority Commence Generation of Carbon Credit From Renewable Energy
V.O. Chidambaranar Port Authority has begun generating carbon credits from its renewable energy portfolio, registering five projects with a combined 12.4 MW capacity. The mix includes rooftop solar, ground‑mounted solar, and wind farms ranging from 400 kW to 6.3 MW. Over the next...

Reopening Hormuz Is ‘Easier Said Than Done,’ Starmer Says
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer warned that reopening the Strait of Hormuz for commercial traffic will be challenging, emphasizing the need for de‑escalation before safe navigation can resume. He hosted senior military officials and executives from Lloyd’s, Goldman Sachs, HSBC,...
Why National Security Is Reshaping the Energy Transition
The energy transition is being re‑framed around national security, replacing the classic trilemma of security, affordability and sustainability. Policymakers now prioritize resilience, diversification and controllability as the core pillars of energy policy. Supply chains for batteries, solar panels and critical...
Oil Companies Set to Make €24 Billion in Excess Profits From European Drivers This Year
Oil majors are projected to earn about €24 billion ($26 billion) in excess profits from European road fuels by the end of 2026, driven by price spikes after the US‑Israeli attack on Iran. So far they have already captured €1.3 billion ($1.4 billion) this...
Transmission Superhighways Will Revolutionise Energy, but Distribution Network “Roads” Will Drive the Transition
Australia’s energy transition is being driven by massive transmission projects, but Ausgrid argues that existing distribution networks hold untapped value. By leveraging sub‑transmission assets in the Hunter‑Central Coast Renewable Energy Zone, 1 GW of renewable capacity is set for delivery by...
SwitchedOn Podcast: The Plug-In Solar Hack That’s Now Booming in Germany
Balcony solar plug‑in systems have exploded in Germany, now used by millions of households. The growth is driven by cheap panels, micro‑inverters, regulatory reforms allowing self‑installation, and high energy prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The market has shifted from...
Home Battery Rebate Numbers Surge Past 300,000 as Storage Shields Grid From Overseas Shocks
Australia’s federal "Cheaper Home Batteries" rebate has crossed the 300,000‑installation threshold, prompting a final push before a tiered discount structure takes effect on May 1. The new scheme will slash the 30% upfront rebate for batteries larger than 14 kWh, scaling down...
Peak Load Tipped to Double as Industries Flock to Australia’s World-First 100 Pct Renewables Grid
South Australia’s peak electricity demand is projected to more than double, rising from 3.3 GW today to over 6.5 GW within 15 years, as mining, steel, defence, AI and other industries flock to the state’s 100 percent net‑renewables grid. The region already generates...

LNG vs Pumped Hydro: Will NZ Choose to Import Risk or Build Cleaner Resilience?
New Zealand is weighing two contrasting projects to secure its electricity supply amid a global fuel shock. The fast‑track LNG import terminal in Taranaki would cost over NZ$1 billion (≈US$600 million) and deliver power at roughly US$120‑150 per megawatt‑hour, a price deemed uneconomic...
Giant Oil Tanker Off Dubai Hit by Iranian Strike, Trump Threatens to Obliterate Iran Energy, Oil Plants
Iran struck the Kuwait‑flagged crude tanker Al‑Salmi off Dubai, igniting a fire on a vessel loaded with about 2 million barrels of oil worth over $200 million. The attack prompted a brief spike in crude prices, pushing U.S. gasoline above $4 a...

ARENA Backs Victoria Electric Truck Charging Network
The Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) is committing up to AUD 25.3 million (approximately US$16.7 million) to NewVolt to build a shared fast‑charging network for electric trucks in Victoria. The first of three open‑access hubs will open in late 2026, with two more slated...
Sunshine State Sets a New Renewables Record – Before the Sun Comes Up
Queensland set a new wind‑generation record on Monday, delivering 30.1 percent of state demand at 2:35 a.m. with a peak output of 1,704 megawatts. The achievement was driven by the partially commissioned MacIntyre wind farm and the newly operational Clarke Creek and Coopers Gap...

Oil Jumps Above $115 After Drone Strike on Kuwaiti Tanker
Crude oil prices jumped above $115 per barrel after a drone attack struck a Kuwaiti‑flagged tanker transiting the Red Sea. The incident heightened concerns over potential supply disruptions in a key shipping corridor, prompting traders to bid up Brent and...
Valuation of Solar Development Pipeline
Zenith Energy Ltd announced an independent re‑valuation of its Italian solar pipeline, now totaling 173.5 MWp and worth €54.7 million (≈$59 million), nearly double the €27.5 million valuation from December 2025. The company plans to divest 50 MWp—about 20 MWp operational and 30 MWp ready‑to‑build—for roughly €41 million...

Spring Temps Are All Over the Place—Don’t Wreck Your HVAC
Spring’s shoulder season brings temperature swings of 30°F or more, forcing homeowners to toggle between heating and air‑conditioning multiple times a day. While modern HVAC systems can technically handle these rapid changes, frequent cycling can increase energy use and accelerate...

Global Economic Chokepoints Grow at Cost of Resilience- #CapitalMarkets #Finance
Michael Spence warns that the global economy is riddled with single‑point chokepoints, from the Strait of Hormuz and Malacca to the Suez and Panama canals. Concentrated supply chains—such as Japan’s micro‑controller firms, the ASML‑TSMC‑Samsung semiconductor trio, and China’s rare‑earth dominance—have...
T1 Energy Inc (TE) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript
Energy Transfer reported a record full‑year Adjusted EBITDA of $16 billion, a 3% increase, and Q4 Adjusted EBITDA of $4.2 billion, surpassing the prior year. The company raised its 2026 Adjusted EBITDA outlook to $17.45‑$17.85 billion, driven solely by the USA Compression acquisition....

Pundits Fret over Oil Prices as War Widens
Houthi rebels have entered the Middle East war, raising concerns over oil supply disruptions. Brent crude rose to $116.75 per barrel and WTI topped $100 as the rebels threatened to close the Bab al‑Mandab strait, which handles about 6 million barrels...

Why Nuclear Won’t Shield Europe From Energy Price Shocks
Europe’s existing nuclear fleets, exemplified by France, blunt gas‑price spikes but cannot fully insulate electricity markets. New nuclear builds such as the UK’s Hinkley Point C are delayed to 2030 and now cost roughly $61 billion, far higher than the original $22.5 billion...

Oil Turns Lower on Report US May End War Without Hormuz Opening
Iran struck a fully‑laden Kuwaiti tanker in Dubai, igniting a fire and damaging the hull. The attack pushed West Texas Intermediate futures up almost 4% to around $107 a barrel and Brent crude near $115. President Donald Trump responded with...
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PANIC AT THE PUMPS: Fuel Supply Woes Persist as Government Reassurances Fail to Ease Motorists’ Fears
The Fuels Industry Association of South Africa says overall fuel supply is stable but diesel is tight ahead of the April 1 2026 price adjustment. A planned shutdown of the Cape Town refinery, set for mid‑April, will rely on imports and is...