Neoen selects QOS Energy’s O&M management platform to monitor wind farm in Australia
Neoen, a renewable project developer and owner, has selected QOS Energy’s O&M management...
Trending:
Neoen, a renewable project developer and owner, has selected QOS Energy’s O&M management...
Dellner Bubenzer Group is delighted to announce the acquisition of the business of Hydratech Industries.
Five Dellner Group companies have come together to operate as one company under a single new brand, Dellner Bubenzer.
In a recent interview with Kenneth Carter, editor of US-based Wind Systems Magazine, Dellner Brakes’ CEO Marcus Aberg talked about the company’s noise-free systems for braking and gliding processes in wind turbines, its full-service, partnership-based business approach and plans for the future.
While the goal may be green hydrogen from renewable power, blue hydrogen from natural gas with carbon capture and storage will be a cheaper, faster way to reduce industrial emissions and build demand for clean hydrogen over the next ten years. Longer-term, its residual climate footprint means only a massive scale-up of wind and solar power can give the gas industry a climate neutral future. By Sonja van Renssen
With a 600MW installed capacity, Gemini Offshore Wind Farm is the third biggest wind farm in Europe.
The new entity will own concentrated solar power, photvoltaic solar and wind assets in the UAE, South Africa, Jordan, Egypt and Morocco.
Floating offshore wind technology involves a turbine mounted on a buoyant structure that allows the turbine to generate electricity in water depths where bottom-mounted structures are not feasible.
The new Dellner Bubenzer Group is launching its combined product range to the wind energy market at the AWEA Windpower Expo in Houston, Texas, US, taking place from 20-23 May.
Sweden’s Dellner Brakes, Germany’s Pintsch Bubenzer GmbH, and Italy’s Rima Srl have come together to form the Dellner Bubenzer Group, securing a leading position as a customer-oriented, global supplier of braking products for the wind and renewable energy sector.
The Northwest Pacific is the most active tropical cyclone basin around the world, which contributes to about a third of the tropical cyclone activity.