
Watch debates for duel on energy
By Keith Johnson The Wall Street Journal During the 2008 campaign, Americans worried about dwindling oil supplies, rising demand and skyrocketing prices. Today, a revolution

By Keith Johnson The Wall Street Journal During the 2008 campaign, Americans worried about dwindling oil supplies, rising demand and skyrocketing prices. Today, a revolution

By Ryan Randazzo BUSINESS BUZZ Blog/The Arizona Republic Recent stories about Salt River Project’s 3.9 percent rate hike coming in November have prompted some harsh

By Howard Fischer Capitol Media Services/East Valley Tribune The outcome of next month’s race for the Arizona Corporation Commission will determine how much more solar

Public support has cooled for stricter environmental regulation of hydraulic fracturing for natural gas, a drilling method that has lowered U.S. energy prices while raising

By Patrick O’Grady Phoenix Business Journal Valley Forward Association recognized the Maricopa County Master Watershed Stewards Program with its top honor Saturday at its annual

By Neela Banerjee and Don Lee Los Angeles Times President Obama, in a rare move, blocked the acquisition by a Chinese-owned company of four wind

By Herman K. Trabish greentechmedia.com First Solar (NSDQ: FSLR) has no projects built or under construction in China. That is significant because the company signed

By Dawn Alexander CBS5 The Salt River Project (SRP) is helping make a dream come true for the Gila River Indian Community. The Community has

The Arizona Republic In the olden days of four years ago, the Arizona Corporation Commission had some long-established and well-defined duties. The commissioners set utility

Chinese company has large plant in Goodyear, Ariz. Struggling amidst a severe downturn of orders for photovoltaic solar panels, China’s behemoth solar panel maker, Suntech

By Chris Morris Las Vegas Sun When the Legislature required the state’s power company to produce a certain percent of its electricity from renewable energy,

Dean Bibles of the Public Lands Foundation, BLM State Director for Arizona Ray Suazo, and ASU West History Professor Dr. Eduardo Pagan, discuss the history,

EE Publishing The oil boom raging in North Dakota is unlikely to come to South Dakota, according to a study this week from the office

By Parker Leavitt The Arizona Republic The fluoridation system that was shut down last year at a Gilbert water-treatment plant likely failed because of faulty

WINDOW ROCK — (AP) The Navajo Nation and the U.S. Department of the Interior have reached a financial agreement to have the tribe build 43

First Solar’s hot climate white paper titled “Performance Characterization and Superior Energy Yield of First Solar PV Power Plants in High-Temperature Conditions” has been published in

Solar Industry What lies ahead for PV manufacturers that can make it through the current market struggles? Companies that survive through 2013 are set for

California Governor Jerry Brown signed a bill on Tuesday clearing the way for Google Cars and other self-driving cars to jockey with human-operated vehicles to

National Journal Energy Experts Blog. Natural gas is now tied with coal as the United States’ top source of electricity. It’s a milestone that caps

By Doreen Hemlock Renewable Energy World For solar energy to spread mainstream on U.S. homes, installation will need to move beyond specialized solar contractors to

By Joel Kirkland E&E Publishing A well-organized campaign to convince local governments in New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio to ban natural gas drilling poses a

By Mike Sunnucks Phoenix Business Journal Thirty Arizona chambers of commerce are coming to the aid of coal-fired power plants as the U.S. Environmental Protection

By Doug Young Young’s China Business Blog Traditional consolidation in industries suffering from overcapacity typically sees stronger companies merge and weaker ones close, resulting in

By Tony Davis Arizona Daily Star Rosemont Copper says it plans to reduce truck traffic, energy use and air emissions at its proposed mine, while

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
Rose Law Group pc values “outrageous client service.” We pride ourselves on hyper-responsiveness to our clients’ needs and an extraordinary record of success in achieving our clients’ goals. We know we get results and our list of outstanding clients speaks to the quality of our work.

By AZ Mirror Private equity firms own nearly 3 million apartment units, about 13% of the total apartments across the country, according to a new analysis from

By Jakob Thorington | Arizona Capitol Times Key Points: Arizona’s yearly legislative session is approaching its end and lawmakers still haven’t settled on a state

By Jordan Gerard | Arizona Capitol Times Key Points: The majority of Arizona’s lawmakers have ties to education, yet the state still struggles to find