
Wind industry sprints to the fiscal cliff
By Matthew L. Wald The New York Times The wind industry’s main trade association is predicting that new installations will fall to zero without a

By Matthew L. Wald The New York Times The wind industry’s main trade association is predicting that new installations will fall to zero without a

By Herman K. Trabish greentechmedia.com “We are prepared to deal with whatever we need to deal with to play in the market.” A recent panel

revmodo.com Some 80,000 people in the Navajo Nation in Arizona may soon have access to much-needed clean water after 20 years of severe drought in

The Daily Courier It’s been more than eight years since the City of Prescott and the Town of Prescott Valley decided to buy the former

“As the great Court Rich put it, ‘ACC leadership has been key in fact in making Arizona the solar State,’ and in fact, in part

By Patrick O’Grady Phoenix Business Journal Southwest Solar Technologies is taking a step toward production of solar dish mirrors and designing a way to cut

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is considering a collaborative conservation and management initiative along the Lower San Pedro River that could become a national

Solar Industry Solar power’s detractors frequently describe solar as “secretly” non-environmentally-friendly. They point to the PV module manufacturing process, utility-scale arrays’ potential impacts to land

By Harold Kitching Casa Grande Dispatch Two contracts allowing the city of Casa Grande to begin work toward a recharge facility for effluent from the

By Tony Davis Arizona Daily Star Pima County plans to drop its appeal of an April decision by the state’s environmental agency approving a groundwater

By Cindy Barks The Daily Courier An agreement that obligates Prescott and Prescott Valley to put several million dollars into expanded groundwater examination in the

By Cyndy Cole Flagstaff’s mayor made a tough-to-keep promise in 2006: The city would cut its greenhouse gas emissions by about one-third by 2012, to

Existing lines are maxing out, especially as the push intensifies to bring online more renewable energy By Susan Montoya Bryan The Associated Press Pick any

Half are willing to pay more for it By Adam Johnston Clean Technia Two recent studies commissioned by Vestas show there is a strong appetite

By Pamela King E&E Publishing Over the next three years, the University of Houston Law Center will host five attorney scholars to do research and

Arizona made one of the biggest gains in new solar installations. Energy Prospects West The solar-energy market enjoyed its second-best performance in history during the

By Jim McElhatton The Washington Times Government officials blame unfair competition from China for the collapse of solar panel manufacturer Solyndra, but such concerns didn’t

Figuring out whether you save money depends on a lot of factors — especially where you live. By Yuliya Chernova The Wall Street Journal The

Taking wind out of the sails U.S. government sued over windfarm development ban WindPower Monthly A company-owned Chinese turbine manufacturer, Sany Electric, is suing the

Risky business for tribe By Suzanne Adams Kingman Daily Miner The Hualapai Tribal Council could lose the Skywalk as the eventual result started by the

There have been many prior versions; most were defeated. By Howard Fischer Capitol Media Services/East Valley Tribune Seven times now, voters have rejected ballot measures

By Joyce Lobeck Yuma Sun More solar power generating activity is coming to Yuma County with the announcement that the permitting process has begun for

The Republican belief that politics played a heavy role in the loan guarantee is reflected in the bill. By Pete Kasperowicz and Ben Geman The

If approved, the project would create 500 temporary jobs and provide royalties to a variety of landowners in Arizona. By Keith Rosenblum Inside Tucson Business

Installers are in a tough spot. They have a tenuous relationship with APS. By Patrick O’Grady Phoenix Business Journal It seems to be an annual

Middle Eastern countries figure the less oil they consume, the more they have to export By Beboit Faucson The Wall Street Journal Middle Eastern members

The wind industry argues that companies that burn coal and natural gas get a subsidy too, in that they are allowed to dump pollutants into
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Photo via Pinal County By Justin Mathews | Pinal Post San Tan Valley’s Town Council approved an ESI employee cost agreement for the Public Works

(Disclosure: Rose Law Group represents Central Arizona College.) By Phoenix Business Journal Central Arizona College is preparing to break ground on a $102 million performing arts center on

By Real Estate Daily News Maricopa County is asking residents, landowners and business stakeholders to weigh in on Framework 2040, a draft comprehensive plan intended