You’re in a neighborhood garage in Madrid, plugging your electric car into the wall. There’s no sign of sun or spinning blades. Everything seems as everyday as charging your mobile phone. But at the other end of that connection there’s something more powerful and remote: a giant wind turbine on the high seas, whipped by the winds of the North Sea off the coast of Denmark, Germany or the United Kingdom. It may seem exaggerated, but it’s not. Elec…
This story is only covered by news sources that have yet to be evaluated by the independent media monitoring agencies we use to assess the quality and reliability of news outlets on our platform. Learn more here.
You’re in a neighborhood garage in Madrid, plugging your electric car into the wall. There’s no sign of sun or spinning blades. Everything seems as everyday as charging your mobile phone. But at the other end of that connection there’s something more powerful and remote: a giant wind turbine on the high seas, whipped by the winds of the North Sea off the coast of Denmark, Germany or the United Kingdom. It may seem exaggerated, but it’s not. Elec…