• Forvis Mazars hires McCabe as energy director

    Forvis Mazars hires McCabe as energy director
  • Utilities turn to digital monitoring as ageing water infrastructure strains under pressure

    Water utilities across Europe are facing mounting pressure as ageing infrastructure, climate risks and rising operational costs strain existing systems.A report by Smartvatten found that nearly 772 million litres of water were lost to leakages across monitored European properties over one year.
    The loss is equivalent to more than 300 Olympic swimming pools and cost at least £2.6 million.Many European pipe networks are more than 100 years old. Hidden leaks in ageing pipelines can remain un
  • North Wales firms urged to prepare for low-carbon opportunities at Wylfa

    Businesses across north Wales are being encouraged to prepare for potential supply chain opportunities linked to a new nuclear project at Wylfa Nuclear Power Station.
    Supporters say the development could strengthen the regional economy while supporting the UK’s transition to low-carbon electricity.Virginia Crosbie, Chair of Supporters of Nuclear Energy, said the project could create around 3,000 jobs during construction and approximately 800 long-term roles once operational.
    The site on A
  • Government should back biofertiliser to shield farmers from rising costs

    The Anaerobic Digestion and Bioresources Association (ADBA) has called on the Government to support wider use of British biofertiliser, warning that farmers face rising costs as global energy prices push up the price of synthetic fertiliser.In an open letter to Environment Secretary Emma Reynolds, the trade body urged ministers to relax restrictions on digestate, a nutrient-rich biofertiliser produced as a by-product of biogas generation, to help reduce reliance on imported fertiliser.ADBA said
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  • Flexible wearable batteries on the cards?

    Researchers at Empa have developed a stretchable polymer electrolyte that could improve the safety and performance of solid-state batteries, potentially supporting lower-emission energy technologies.Unlike conventional Lithium-ion battery systems, which use flammable liquid electrolytes, Solid-state battery designs rely on solid materials to transport ions between electrodes.This approach improves safety and can enable the use of lithium metal anodes, significantly increasing energy density for
  • £20 of electricity can take EV drivers further than £20 of petrol

    Electric vehicle drivers can now travel significantly further on £20 of electricity than petrol drivers can on the same spend, according to new analysis from char.gy.The charging company said £20 spent using its overnight tariff can power an electric vehicle for around 150 to 200 miles, compared with roughly 120 miles in a typical petrol car.
    For the average UK motorist, that equates to around seven to 10 days of driving from a £20 overnight charge, versus about six days for p
  • Oil price shocks could cost as much as total price of getting to net zero

    A single fossil fuel price shock like the one seen in 2022 could cost the UK economy as much as the entire transition to net zero out to 2050.That’s the call from the Climate Change Committee, which says the financial hit from volatile fossil fuel markets can rival the total additional cost of decarbonising the economy.The findings come in a new report designed to support the CCC’s advice on the UK’s Seventh Carbon Budget.The committee tested its conclusions on costs and energ
  • Good Energy won solar contracts from DESNZ when its CEO’s brother was in senior role

    Contracts worth more than £70,000 to install solar panels on schools were awarded to a company headed by the brother of the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero’s most senior civil servant,
    According to a report by Politico based on a Freedom of Information request, the deals went to Amelio Enterprises, a solar installation firm owned by renewable energy supplier Good Energy whose chief executive Nigel Pocklington is the brother of Jeremy Pocklington, the former permanent sec
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  • Tesla gets energy supply licence

    Tesla has secured a licence to supply electricity to homes and businesses in Great Britain marking a significant expansion of the company’s ambitions in the energy market.Regulator Ofgem confirmed that Tesla Energy Ventures Limited has been granted an electricity supply licence under the Electricity Act 1989 following a seven month approval process.The decision was formally approved by the Gas and Electricity Markets Authority and came into effect yesterday evening.With the licence in pla
  • Revolutionizing Nordic Imbalance Settlement with Unicorn Systems

    Unicorn Systems revolutionized the Nordic electricity market by delivering a major upgrade to the Nordic Balance Settlement model, paving the way for the introduction of Independent Aggregators for Balancing Services across the Nordic countries.Harmonised Nordic Settlement ModelThe Nordic electricity market has reached a unique level of integration, enabling a joint platform (Nordic Balance Settlement) to connect all 4 countries (Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden) and establish a common imbalanc
  • George Clarke teams up with ScottishPower to help households go greener

    TV architect George Clarke has joined forces with ScottishPower to encourage households across Britain to adopt greener technologies and cut energy use, as new research shows many people still see sustainable living as out of reach.The presenter, known for Channel 4 programmes including George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces and The Restoration Man, will lead the ScottishPower Great Green Challenge, a year-long initiative designed to show how practical changes can make homes more energy efficient
  • Anaerobic digestion capacity must expand as food waste collections increase

    Experts are warning that the UK must urgently invest in anaerobic digestion capacity as food waste volumes continue to rise.Around 36 million tonnes of organic waste are currently sent to anaerobic digestion plants each year. The amount is expected to grow further as weekly household food waste collections are introduced across England.The increase follows the rollout of Defra’s Simpler Recycling reforms for businesses with ten or more employees. Since March last year, these organisations
  • Flagship Energy’s Mike Stafford Energy Markets Update – 12th March

    UK gas and power prices remain extremely volatile due to the US / Israel / Iran conflict. The UK front month gas contract has seen intra-day swings of up to 29p/th so far this week, with news headlines eliciting intense reactions from market participants.Comments by US president Donald Trump on Monday 9th were seen as de-escalatory, with Trump telling reporters the war could be over “very soon.” Gas prices for April 26 delivery dropped by 14% in the wake of Trump’s remarks, de
  • Charging difficulties remain barrier to EV adoption

    Difficulties starting or ending charging sessions remain one of the biggest frustrations for electric vehicle drivers, potentially slowing wider adoption of low-emission transport.The analysis from charging firm Fuuse is based on 72,329 calls handled by their own driver support team.It found that 36% of enquiries were from drivers unable to start a charging session, while a further 14% involved drivers struggling to end a session.Additional issues raised by drivers included pre-authorisation pa
  • Study finds seabirds avoid offshore wind turbines

    A new study has found that seabirds are successfully avoiding offshore wind turbines at Vattenfall’s Aberdeen wind farm, with no collisions recorded during 19 months of monitoring.The research was carried out by Vattenfall and biodiversity technology company Spoor using AI powered bird monitoring supported by manual analysis.Between June 2023 and December 2024, cameras installed on one turbine captured around 95% of daylight hours. Researchers recorded 2,007 bird flight paths passing clos
  • Newport schools install solar panels with Great British Energy funding

    Two primary schools in Newport have installed solar panels after securing funding from Great British Energy as part of a £9m programme to decarbonise public sector buildings and reduce energy costs.Glan Llyn Primary School and Jubilee Park Primary School received support through the Wales Funding Programme, delivered by the Welsh Government using funding from the UK Government’s publicly owned energy company, Great British Energy.At Glan Llyn, additional backing from the Welsh Gover
  • Tariffs to be scrapped to allow domestic turbine industry to compete

    The government will scrap tariffs on dozens of industrial components used in wind turbines from 1 April to strengthen the UK’s offshore wind supply chain and make domestic manufacturing more competitive.Ministers say the change will remove import duties on 33 goods used in the production of wind energy infrastructure helping manufacturers cut costs and reinvest in the rapidly expanding sector.The new measure will apply through an authorised use system which allows companies to import comp
  • Tariffs scrapped to allow domestic turbine industry to compete

    The government will scrap tariffs on dozens of industrial components used in wind turbines from 1 April to strengthen the UK’s offshore wind supply chain and make domestic manufacturing more competitive.Ministers say the change will remove import duties on 33 goods used in the production of wind energy infrastructure helping manufacturers cut costs and reinvest in the rapidly expanding sector.The new measure will apply through an authorised use system which allows companies to import comp
  • Targeted grid reforms could cut power constraints by £3.8bn

    A new report from LCP Delta suggests targeted reforms to Britain’s electricity network could cut constraint costs by up to £3.8bn by 2030.
    The measures could also reduce reliance on unabated gas generation and accelerate progress towards the Government’s Clean Power 2030 goal.Constraint costs occur when electricity generated in one region cannot reach areas of demand due to limited grid capacity.In these cases, renewable generators are often paid to reduce output while fossil-
  • Net Hero Podcast – The E-bike revolution are women getting on board?

    As International Women’s Week shines a light on who gets seen and who gets left out, this week’s Net Hero Podcast asks a simple question: who are our streets really designed for?I sat down with Laura Elms from Forest to talk about e-bikes, safety and why getting more women cycling matters just as much as cutting carbon.Laura told me the shift is already happening. “In the UK there’s been a huge growth since 2019 and 2020,” she said. “We’ve seen about a 3
  • Iran war already adding extra 1% to inflation

    The war involving Iran could push UK inflation about one percentage point higher this year if energy prices remain elevated, according to a senior member of the Office for Budget Responsibility.Professor David Miles warned that the surge in oil and gas prices triggered by the conflict is already feeding into the inflation outlook.He told MPs at the Treasury Select Committee, the spike in energy markets since the conflict escalated has been substantial and could quickly filter through to househo
  • More nations commit to nuclear future

    A growing coalition of countries is backing a major expansion of nuclear power, as governments look for reliable low carbon energy to support climate targets and energy security.Belgium, Brazil, China and Italy have joined the international declaration to triple global nuclear capacity by 2050 bringing the number of supporting nations to 38.The announcement was made at the Nuclear Energy Summit in Paris, where governments industry leaders and international organisations gathered to discuss nucl
  • Earth warming twice as fast as its ever done say scientists

    The planet is now warming nearly twice as fast as it did in previous decades raising fresh concern about how quickly global temperature limits could be breached.A study, reported by New Scientist, found the rate of global warming has accelerated sharply over the past decade compared with the second half of the twentieth century.Researchers estimate the planet warmed by about 0.35°C per decade in the years to 2025 compared with roughly 0.2°C per decade between 1970 and 2015.Scientists sa
  • Scots still support windfall tax

    Public support for the windfall tax on oil and gas companies remains strong in Scotland with more than twice as many people backing the levy as opposing it, according to new polling.The survey found 41% of Scots support the Energy Profit Levy while 19% oppose it suggesting the policy retains broad public backing despite industry pressure to scrap it.The tax was introduced in May 2022 after record profits across the oil and gas sector following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the surge in
  • Net Zero won’t fail if we miss 1.5C target

    Missing the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C target does not derail the global path to net zero but it will reshape how climate policy is designed and delivered.That is the central finding of new research from the Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change which says temporary “overshoot” of temperature targets is increasingly seen as likely but does not change the core requirement to reach net zero emissions around mid century.The study published in Nature Climate Change analysed
  • Solar on new builds more attractive to house buyers

    Three quarters of people say they are more likely to buy a newly built home fitted with solar panels than one without, according to new research commissioned by E.ON UK.The nationally representative survey of 2,500 adults found 75% would favour a property with rooftop solar highlighting growing consumer demand for renewable power generation in new homes.Support for making solar mandatory on new builds is also strong.More than two thirds of respondents, 68%, said they back a government requireme
  • EU’s dream of energy for the people is far away

    Europe’s vision of a citizen led energy revolution is falling short of expectations with legal confusion and technical barriers slowing progress, according to new auditors.A report from the European Court of Auditors warns that energy communities were supposed to transform how people generate and share power across the bloc but the rollout has been far slower than planned.Energy communities allow citizens local authorities and small businesses to jointly produce manage and consume electri
  • EPC delay will help fine tune effectiveness

    The government has delayedthe rollout of new energy efficiency rules for rented homes until autumn 2027, as ministers rethink how sweeping reforms to Energy Performance Certificates will work.Officials said the shift follows industry feedback on the planned overhaul of the Energy Performance of Buildings regime which underpins EPCs across England and Wales.The delay will give the government more time to redesign how building energy performance is measured and presented to consumers landlords an
  • Gas supplies are not running out says Labour

    Labour says the UK’s gas supplies remain secure as conflict involving Iran continues to rattle global energy markets.Officials from the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero said Britain benefits from a diverse energy system and does not rely heavily on gas from the Gulf.Britain imports some liquefied natural gas from the region but most supply comes from a combination of domestic North Sea production, pipeline imports from Norway and interconnectors with Europe.DESNZ also pointed t
  • Investor swoops for stake in O&M outfit TAKKION

    Investor swoops for stake in O&M outfit TAKKION

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