Smaller, Cheaper Flow Batteries Throw Out Decades-Old Designs
A new approach holds promise for storing intermittent renewable energy at scale. Nian Liu
A new approach holds promise for storing intermittent renewable energy at scale. Nian Liu
In Camden County, Plug Power is producing hydrogen energy that is powering Amazon forklifts. In Smyrna, Georgia Power’s Plant McDonough last year tested a hydrogen fuel mix. Atlanta’s Southern Co.
Group to promote state as center for hydrogen energy amid surge in public and provide investments.
Sub-millimeter microtubular (hollow fibre) bundled membranes could shrink the size of flow battery reactors, according to the Georgia Institute of Technology.
Rich Simmons, director of research and studies of the Strategic Energy Institute at Georgia Tech discusses latest energy news updates and innovations with the state of Georgia public service commissioner Tim Echols in his Energy Matters radio show. Click here to listen to the conversation.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s proposal to increase biofuel blending mandates through 2025 would lead to a near-term increase in greenhouse gas emissions, before yielding reductions in the longer-term, according to agency documents.
Researchers from Georgia Tech are using funding from the U.S Department of Energy to reimagine Atlanta’s electric power infrastructure. Part of the project includes educating communities about energy planning.
A pair of 2,000-gallon water tanks standing 15 feet tall occupy a cordoned-off portion of a parking lot down the street from Georgia Tech University's Carbon Neutral Energy Solutions Laboratory. They're being used to grow algae, but in an extreme and novel way. Researchers at Georgia Tech are seeing if it's possible to take existing carbon dioxide in the air, capture it and feed it to the algae. Once the algae is refined, it can be used in things from food to fuel.
South Korean conglomerates SK Innovation and Hyundai Motor Group plan a sprawling electric vehicle battery plant in Bartow County, northwest of Atlanta, a project that is expected to create more than 3,500 jobs and rank as the third-largest corporate investment in state history.