Energy & Fuel
Developing Credibility Is Key In Local Nuclear-Plant Coverage
By TOM HENRY
America has 103 nuclear plants.
Chances are, especially if you work east of the Mississippi River, there's one in your circulation area or one close enough to pose a risk.
WA State Secret Deal on Coal-Plant Emissions Raises Ire
Covering Coal Country: Overcoming The Obstacles To Reporting In Rural America
By AL CROSS
Many if not most environmental stories have their roots in rural places. Those are the places where extractive industries do almost all their extracting, where America ultimately puts much of its solid waste, where farm fields get the fertilizers that create dead zones in the sea.
Energy Dept. Maps, Lists Efficiency Aid for U.S. Cities
Consent Decree Forces Regs on Selected Gas and Diesel Engines
New Science Reports on Climate Change and Energy
Transmission Superhighway May Carry Coal Power to Northeast
Author contact information: David Sassoon
"Some See Daylight at Last for U.S. Feed-In Tariffs"
"With Congress and President Obama championing green energy, the solar industry sees an opening to pursue a goal it long considered unattainable: European-style subsidies for sun-generated power. The national trade group for solar manufacturers is discussing whether it should push for a national feed-in tariff, a funding mechanism that forces utilities to buy green power at premium prices. Popular in Germany and Spain, feed-in tariffs have gained little traction in the United States. But that is changing.