Clean Air by 2015: The Billion-Dollar Compliance Race
Which utilities and states will be most affected by the new rules?
Which utilities and states will be most affected by the new rules?
Environmental Emissions: The cost to power markets of the Clean Air Interstate Rule depends on the ability to trade mercury.
The decision to limit mercury provides cover for utilities reluctant to spend on controlling NOx and SO2, while boosting other companies
Corporate Environmental Programs: How can utility employees participate in greenhouse-gas reduction? Start with sustainable travel programs.
How can utility employees participate in greenhouse-gas reduction?
DER: This final installment of Oak Ridge National Laboratory's series on distributed energy resources investigates efficiency, the environment, and generation displacement.
The Environmental Protection Agency reviews how the multi-pollutant control concept is to work.
Currently, 132 areas do not meet the new National Ambient Air Quality Standards for fine particles or ozone, affecting some 160 million people, or 57 percent of the U.S. population. What efforts are under way by the EPA to bring these areas into compliance?
Utilities will face stark tradeoffs in meeting the next round of emissions controls.
The UK offers a model for renewable energy growth.
Pressure for national legislation builds as the Northeastern U.S. goes it alone and carbon trading takes off in the European Union.