Offshore Wind Power: From Denmark to Virginia Sandy Hausman, a 2015 Media Fellow of Heinrich Boell North America, investigates the secrets behind Denmark's success with wind power in part one of her series. By Sandy Hausman
Offshore Wind Power: No Promises for VA's Coast Part two of a series by Sandy Hausman, a 2015 Energy and Climate Media Fellow for Heinrich Böll North America, on offshore wind power in the US and Europe. Part 2 explores the linkages between wind farming in Denmark and Virginia. By Sandy Hausman
The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2015 Four years after Fukushima, global nuclear power generation continues to slow. This year's World Nuclear Industry Status Report takes a look at the current empirical facts and figures of the nuclear industry worldwide. By Mycle Schneider and Antony Froggatt
The Green Peace Dividend- Why Green Technologies Matter for International Security Violent conflicts and security crises around the world have many different causes and effects. The vast majority of them, however, are in one way or another related to energy policy. Yet making this link apparent to policy makers has been challenging. Experts from the foreign policy, security and energy communities have been reluctant to fully grasp the security implications of promising green energy technology and market developments. By Charlotte Beck and Rebecca Bertram
On A Tiny Danish Island: Making Electricity Demand Meet Supply Stephanie Joyce, a 2015 Energy and Climate Media Fellow for Heinrich Böll North America, investigates how the tiny Danish island of Bornholm makes electricity demand meet supply in part one of her series. By Stephanie Joyce
What Germany can learn from California's innovative start-up culture - An Interview with Cem Oezdemir Smart energy infrastructure and an entrepreneurial spirit will play an important role in driving energy transitions around the world. At the end of June, Cem Oezdemir, Co-Chairman of the German Green Party, travelled to San Francisco to witness how innovative solutions are driving low-carbon development in the Bay Area. We spoke with him about how California could serve as a model for German start-ups.
Germany’s energy transition is not an island of its own The restructuring of the energy system in one of the world’s leading industrialized nations is undoubtedly a highly ambitious undertaking. There is no blueprint for this energy transition that would offer a simple step-by-step procedure to follow. There is one thing that the German energy transition certainly is not: an island of its own that isolates Germany’s energy economy. On the contrary, a quick overview of the world’s state of affairs with regard to energy shows that the global energy transition is now picking up speed. By By Ralf Fücks
On Denmark’s Road To Renewable Power How does Denmark plan to transition to 100 percent renewable energy by 2050 -- and how does it already get almost half of its electricity from renewables? Stephanie Joyce, a 2015 Energy and Climate Media Fellow for Heinrich Böll North America, has an answer in part three and the final installment of her series from Bornholm, Denmark. By Stephanie Joyce
“Scarce resources are among the main causes for today’s wars" During his recent visit to Washington, D.C., we spoke with Jürgen Trittin, Member of the German Parliament, about European energy independence in the wake of the Ukraine crisis, the role of TTIP in enhancing energy security across the Atlantic, and how the German Energiewende can serve as a model for policy makers worldwide.
Grid Guinea Pigs On A Tiny Danish Island Part two of a series by Stephanie Joyce, another 2015 Energy and Climate Media Fellow for Heinrich Böll North America, in Bornholm, Denmark - or as she puts it, "a real-life test lab for the grid of the future." Listen and read more at Inside Energy: By Stephanie Joyce