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Showing 9 of 164 news items in Energy & Transport
Rooftop solar and battery storage on Hawaiian Electric grids reach historic milestone
Energy & TransportOctober 13, 2025

Rooftop solar and battery storage on Hawaiian Electric grids reach historic milestone

Excerpt from mauinow.com Hawaiian Electric announced today that customer-sited rooftop solar and battery storage connected to its grids have surpassed 1 gigawatt of generating capacity — the equivalent of about 100 million LED lightbulbs. The achievement comes about 25 years after the company launched its first solar programs and began addressing the technical challenges of integrating large amounts of intermittent solar energy. Today, Hawaiian Electric’s service area has one of the highest rooftop solar adoption rates in the nation, with an estimated 44% of single-family homes equipped with solar systems. Helped by steady customer demand, the rated capacity of rooftop solar systems and battery storage has more than doubled over the past 10 years.

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Scottish Government funding to create EV charging points in rural and island communities
Energy & TransportSeptember 10, 2025

Scottish Government funding to create EV charging points in rural and island communities

Photo credit: news.stv.tv Excerpt from news.stv.tv Scottish Government funding to help install charging points in remote and rural parts of Scotland will ensure “no one is left behind” in the move to electric vehicles (EVs), transport secretary Fiona Hyslop has insisted. Hyslop confirmed £4.5m is being made available to enhance public charging points in “under-served” areas of the country. The cash, from the Rural and Island Infrastructure Fund, will contribute towards meeting the target of having 24,000 additional public charging points by 2030, the government said. Under the scheme, money will be made available to rural and island businesses, landowners and charge point operators to help them with the costs of installation. The funding was announced as Hyslop said Scotland had already made “incredible progress in growing the public charging network in Scotland”.

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Saint Kitts and Nevis receives five bids in geothermal production drilling tender
Energy & TransportAugust 26, 2025

Saint Kitts and Nevis receives five bids in geothermal production drilling tender

Photo credit: Daniel Farrell / Flickr (Creative Commons) via ThinkGeoEnergy.com Excerpt from thinkgeoenergy.com The Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States Commission (OECS) has announced that five bids from internationally recognized firms have been received following a tender for the production drilling phase of the planned St. Kitts and Nevis geothermal power project. Bids from the following companies have been accepted: Iceland Drilling Marriott Drilling Consortium Drilling Ormat Technologies Inc. IPS-USA Drilling is expected to begin by early 2026. The development envisions a 30-MW geothermal power facility that will provide baseload renewable energy to both Nevis and St. Kitts.

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Thousands protest plan to build world’s longest bridge from Sicily to Italy
Energy & TransportAugust 13, 2025

Thousands protest plan to build world’s longest bridge from Sicily to Italy

Excerpt from aljazeera.com Thousands of people have marched in Sicily to protest against a government plan to build a bridge that would connect the Italian mainland to the Mediterranean island, and would be the world’s longest single-span bridge. Some 10,000 demonstrators marched in the Sicilian city of Messina on Saturday to stage their opposition to the 13.5-billion-euro ($15.7bn) infrastructure project.

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Italy gives final go-ahead for landmark Sicily bridge project
Energy & TransportAugust 11, 2025

Italy gives final go-ahead for landmark Sicily bridge project

Excerpt from reuters.com MESSINA/ROME, Aug 6 (Reuters) - Italy's government gave final approval on Wednesday to the construction of what will be the world's longest single-span bridge, linking Sicily to the mainland, despite environmental, financial and other concerns that have delayed it for decades. The 3.7-kilometre (2.3-mile) structure, set to break the record currently held by Turkey's Canakkale Bridge across the Dardanelles, has been under discussion since at least the late 1960s as a tool to develop Italy's poorer south. The right-wing government of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni made it a priority and has set aside 13.5 billion euros ($15.63 billion) over the next 10 years to build it and surrounding facilities. The Interministerial Committee for Economic Planning and Sustainable Development (CIPESS) gave its green light to the project during a meeting in Rome, paving the way for the start of construction work. "It is not an easy task but we consider it an investment in Italy's present and future, and we like difficult challenges when they make sense", Meloni said at the meeting, her office said. The bridge to Sicily, which has a population of 4.7 million, should be ready in 2032, the Messina Strait Company said.

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Malta receives three bids for its first offshore wind concession
Energy & TransportJuly 28, 2025

Malta receives three bids for its first offshore wind concession

Excerpt from splash247.com Three submissions were made in Malta’s initial call for the development of the country’s first offshore wind project. Two consortia and a Greek company submitted preliminary qualification questionnaires for Malta’s first offshore wind farm concession. Submissions were made by the Code Zero Consortium, led by SEP Malta Holding, with partners Kornelio Energy 1, M. Demajo, and NMK Renewables. A second submission was made by the Atlas Med Wind consortium, led by GreenIT, partnered with Seatrans Shipping, Central European Advisors, and CI V Transfer Coöperatief. The third submission was by McKedrick from Greece. The concession will be awarded through a competitive dialogue process involving the design, construction, operation, and decommissioning of a wind farm offshore Malta. The project will also include the operation and maintenance of an offshore substation and export cable system, which will remain owned by the government. The project will have an expected installed capacity of around 300 MW. “It is a key component of Malta’s National Energy and Climate Plan, which outlines the strategic transition toward a sustainable, decarbonised energy mix,” said Ismail D’Amato, CEO of Interconnect Malta. An evaluation process to verify compliance, technical experience, and financial capability is now underway.

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Japan switches back to nuclear, 14 years after Fukushima
Energy & TransportJuly 14, 2025

Japan switches back to nuclear, 14 years after Fukushima

Japan is laying the groundwork to proceed with next-generation nuclear energy plants once its fleet of idled reactors has been restarted, as soaring gas prices and power-hungry data centres have prompted a rethink on atomic power in the earthquake-prone nation. Asia’s second-largest economy signalled late last year that it would allow construction of new atomic reactors at existing sites, marking a significant policy shift in the country’s aversion to the controversial electricity source following the Fukushima nuclear disaster in 2011. Japan is reactivating nuclear reactors that were shut down in the wake of the accident, reopening 14 out of 54 that were closed to date.

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St Kitts opens bids for geothermal energy production ​
Energy & TransportJuly 14, 2025

St Kitts opens bids for geothermal energy production ​

The Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States Commission is pleased to announce another major milestone in the region’s sustainable energy journey: the official opening of bids for the production drilling phase for the St. Kitts and Nevis geothermal power project. A total of five bids from internationally recognised firms were received for the initiative on Nevis, a cornerstone of the Federation’s Sustainable Island State Agenda (SISA), which marks a significant step towards energy sovereignty, resilience, and a cleaner future for an OECS Member State. Drilling to produce geothermal energy to drive an electric turbine at Hamilton Estate is expected to begin in early 2026 following the awarding of the contract to the successful bidder.

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Clean energy shouldn’t be wasted
Energy & TransportJuly 7, 2025

Clean energy shouldn’t be wasted

Photo credit: EFE / Canarias7 – Image of the Los Guinchos power plant in La Palma. This text has been translated with minor modifications. In the midst of a transition towards a sustainable energy model, Gran Canaria faces an alarming contradiction: they are wasting part of the renewable energy they generate. This is called ‘curtailment’ or ‘supply cutting’, and it means that when the sun shines or the wind blows strongly, part of that clean electricity goes unconsumed because the island’s electrical grid cannot absorb it. An inadmissible luxury in the midst of a climate emergency. The data is compelling. According to [Red Eléctrica de España](https://www.ree.es/es), in just the first 5 months of 2025, the percentage of renewable energy wasted in Gran Canaria has exceeded 19.38% (being 24% in April and 25% in May), multiplying by 2.2 the value from the previous year (an increase of 10.72%). This is not a one-off failure, but a structural symptom of island electrical systems. Furthermore, the inability to evacuate all the energy generated not only represents environmental waste, but also a direct reduction in the profitability of renewable projects, which see their income reduced without compensation in many cases. The underlying reason is clear: our networks are not prepared to manage a large-scale renewable system. It is necessary to strengthen distribution networks to be able to adequately integrate both renewable energies and storage systems. And this is where a key piece comes into play: energy storage. Without it, Gran Canaria cannot unleash the full potential of our clean energies. In Gran Canaria, steps are already being taken. The [Salto de Chira hydraulic pumped storage hydropower project](https://www.power-technology.com/projects/salto-de-chira-pumped-storage-hydropower-plant-spain/), with capacity to cover up to 36% of the island’s peak demand, is underway. Various battery initiatives being promoted by the Consejo Insular de la Energía are also advancing. And green hydrogen, still emerging, is beginning to take shape as a long-term storage solution with multiple applications. In this regard, the RESH2PORT project stands out, led by Megaturbinas de Arinaga (with participation from the Cabildo, the Port Authority and ITC), which plans to install an electrolyser at the Port of La Luz and produce 40 tonnes of hydrogen annually to supply between five and six zero-emission public buses. But a few good projects are not enough. Gran Canaria needs political will, adequate financing and agile procedures.

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