Wind fight is not over - The Martha's Vineyard Times
- Despite policies favoring fossil fuels, the renewable energy sector is growing due to strong investment and bipartisan support.
- Wind, solar, and battery storage are projected to constitute 93% of new electric capacity added in the U.S. By 2025.
- The U.S. Energy demand is anticipated to increase by 50% in the next 15 years, driven by various technological advancements.
12 Articles
12 Articles
Oil baron with Trump's ear crusades against 'parasitic' renewable energy: analysis
An oil baron is fighting renewable energy production by influencing fellow billionaire Donald Trump, a New York Times opinion piece warned Monday.Fracking pioneer Harold Hamm earned a considerable fortune in fossil fuels and is not willing to watch renewable energy — produced by wind, solar, and hyd...


Offshore wind construction is ignoring President Trump
Overall it looks like the offshore wind construction projects are simply ignoring the Federal investigation into their legitimacy. Even under Biden the federal leasing agency made it clear that a lease is not a right to build, just a right to make a proposal. The leases themselves contain language allowing the Feds to change them with no limit to how big these changes might be.


Op-Ed: Trump makes coal great again
Unlike his predecessor, President Donald Trump understands that abundant and affordable energy is absolutely essential to the future of America. Since his return to the Oval Office, Trump has made
"Trump will lead to the decommissioning of the United States in the strategic battle of decarbonation"
CHRONIQUE. Instead of supplanting Chinese power, as he claims to do, Donald Trump is giving it an extra boost by focusing on fossil fuels, according to his column Stéphane Lauer, editorialist at the "World".
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- 44% of the sources lean Left, 44% of the sources lean Right
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