Wind Hunter, full sail 2.0: from wind to hydrogen
MOL collaborates to create sailboats powered by wind and by hydrogen produced on board
MOL collaborates to create sailboats powered by wind and by hydrogen produced on board
A journey to 2050 between vertical farms, transparent supply chains and robotics: the agriculture of the future as you've never seen it.
This mini tidal turbine with only 3 meters in diameter produces energy like a 180 meter high wind turbine.
Wind energy is constantly evolving: from small efficient turbines for telecommunications, to wooden giants as tall as skyscrapers.
An innovative wind power plant uses compressed air as a "battery" that stores energy and makes it available at any time
Fortum, the Finnish renewable energy giant closes operations in Russia after the seizure of assets by the government
Self-sufficient and innovative homes: from design to insulation, the future of living is surprising.
This new offshore solar system is able to withstand harsh conditions in the open sea: the usable space is boundless
PowerNEST is a combined solution that produces up to 10 times the energy of photovoltaics, silently and also using the wind.
The problem is not the availability of raw materials: to feed the world with renewables we must extract more, but also better.
Jackery AIR-W is a portable, light, waterproof wind energy generator: it can be used anywhere, even when it rains.
A gas pipeline "ready" to bring hydrogen and the result of the agreement between France, Spain and Portugal. It will be ready in 2026: but will they ever use it?
An interesting domestic wind project combines more collection with a management system. Too bad about the size. Or not?
Science fiction cities are often portrayed as self-contained, almost fortified mega-structures. But will this really be the future?
The second life of batteries is a way to make a product last much longer that, far from being perplexed, is really (much) more ecological than fossils.
A clean world that abandons the fossil? It is absolutely worth it. A Stanford study confirms: renewables alone would pay for themselves in just 6 years. What are we waiting for?
A new wind turbine captures the wind from multiple directions and with the particular shape of the blades creates a "self-rotating" movement.
A telephone antenna that is self-powered thanks to renewables can change the rules of the game, covering remote areas and cutting costs
The need to quickly remedy imports of fossil fuels pushes the Danish energy islands project to be completed.
The future focuses on renewable energy sources. A new river turbine (Idénergie) produces energy without harming the environment.
A high-altitude multicopter tied to a cable and equipped with turbines: a few words to describe a refined technology that could revolutionize wind energy.