Industry leaders delivered what they termed “uncomfortable truths” on the use of natural gas in the UK at a major renewables and low-carbon industry event this week.
Offshore wind has featured on the conference programme at All-Energy, the UK’s largest renewable and low carbon energy exhibition and conference, since the very first show in February 2001 here in Aberdeen.
All-Energy, the UK’s largest annual renewable and low carbon energy exhibition and conference, will make its return on August 18 and 19 next year, organiser Reed Exhibitions said yesterday.
All-Energy, the UK’s largest annual renewable and low carbon energy exhibition and conference, is now scheduled to take place on May 12-13, 2021 at the Scottish Event Campus (SEC).
Orsted’s UK boss last night called on the country’s offshore wind sector to pick export “battles” like to the North Sea oil and gas industry and “win them on a global stage”.
There is no “utopian answer” to meet the UK’s 2050 net zero goal as the solution will require a “whole host of technologies”, the boss of a utility giant has claimed.
Shell's UK county chair Sinead Lynch, will be delivering a keynote address in the opening plenary session of All-Energy and the co-located Smart Urban Mobility Solutions (SUMS) on 2 May 2018 at Glasgow’s SEC.
As a result of environmental regulation, consenting authorities must consider the environmental impacts of marine renewable energy projects before granting consent.
Offshore wind is a real UK success story and is helping us to build a world-leading, low cost, low carbon power system that will ensure the UK economy can decarbonise whilst remaining internationally competitive.
The controlled production of brine from rocks deep beneath the North Sea can greatly increase the amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) that can be injected for storage, new research claims.
Launched in 2015, the Biorefinery Roadmap for Scotland set out a plan for biorefining to contribute to growing the industrial biotechnology (IB) sector in Scotland from £189M in 2012 to £900M by 2025, as laid out in the Scottish Government’s National Plan for Industrial Biotechnology.