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NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Tamara Yajia about her memoir, Cry for Me, Argentina: My Life as a Failed Child Star and growing up with her unconventional family in the U.S. and Argentina.
Welcome to ALL THINGS CONSIDERED. STEVE COLL: Thanks, Ari. Glad to be here. SHAPIRO: U.S. intelligence has been catastrophically wrong before on the status of a Middle Eastern country's nuclear ...
California s solar energy boom is often hailed as a green success story but a new study reveals a murkier reality beneath the sunlit panels. Researchers uncover seven distinct forms of corruption ...
As another hot summer approaches, KSAT Explains went to a CPS Energy solar facility for a Q&A about how energy generated by the sun works, even when it's cloudy.
The US clean energy industry is starting to buckle under the weight of persistently elevated borrowing costs, President Donald Trump’s anti-renewables policies and high tariffs.
Sunnova Energy, the struggling Houston-based residential solar company, has filed for bankruptcy, according to court and regulatory filings. The Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing comes days after ...
Texas and Florida have joined California at the forefront of America’s solar and renewable energy boom, driven by massive investments, improved technology, and federal incentives.
SEATTLE — Scammers across the U.S. are going door-to-door, pitching “free” solar energy systems. Many homeowners never get any solar equipment installed; those who do often get shoddy work ...
And even if solar grew to 15,000 megawatts of capacity – the same electrical generating capacity Arkansas has from all energy sources like natural gas, coal, nuclear and renewables – only ...
Forward-looking: Recent tests have proven that beaming solar energy to Earth from low-orbiting satellites is theoretically possible with existing technology. If implemented, the method could ...
The Trump administration's Department of Energy has canceled most of its $3 billion partial loan guarantee with Houston-based Sunnova Energy, according to the company.
Researchers in Australia are working on a way to lower the cost of producing solar thermal energy by as much as 40% with the help of shatterproof rear-view mirrors originally designed for cars.