Utilities: Page 52


  • A detailed landscape design plan showing topographic contour lines, orange building illustrations, green trees, and directional arrows. The layout includes winding paths and clustered vegetation. A triangular scale ruler lies on the left, and three colored pencils, colored blue, green, and yellow, rest on the lower right corner of the page.
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    Opinion

    Aging infrastructure: how municipalities can make smart upgrades with community support

    Stantec Principal Engineer Paul Marshall explains the assets municipalities can leverage when upgrading infrastructure.

    July 19, 2017
  • South Miami mandates rooftop solar for new homes

    The Florida city is the fifth nationwide to require private homes to include photovoltaic technology.

    By Mary Tyler March • July 19, 2017
  • Deep Dive

    Going green: What’s in it for sports venue owners?

    Athletics facilities are used for a few hours each week, yet the ability to reduce energy use and costs is clear. However, the bottom line isn't the only driver.

    By Kim Slowey • July 18, 2017
  • Connecticut leads US states in highest home energy bills

    Meanwhile, states in the South reported the highest energy consumption per user, according to a WalletHub analysis of monthly energy use across the country.

    By Mary Tyler March • July 14, 2017
  • A detailed landscape design plan showing topographic contour lines, orange building illustrations, green trees, and directional arrows. The layout includes winding paths and clustered vegetation. A triangular scale ruler lies on the left, and three colored pencils, colored blue, green, and yellow, rest on the lower right corner of the page.
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    Toa55 via Getty Images
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    Column

    Students design street sweeper wrap in Kansas

    An Elgin Pelican street sweeper in Kansas now features an environmentally themed wrap that was designed by some fifth-grade students at New Stanley Elementary School. The students were the winners in a sweeper wrap design contest.

    July 13, 2017
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    Cody Boteler
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    How Philips Lighting, Cree are illuminating the future of smart buildings

    By placing sensors in light fixtures and deploying "lighting as a service," buildings and cities could collect massive amounts of practical data.

    By Cody Boteler • July 13, 2017
  • Solar installation faces challenges ahead of projected growth

    The rooftop solar market will contract for the first time in 16 years as installers adapt business models, driving a rebound that will see more owners adopt PVs.

    By Joe Dyton • July 13, 2017
  • Bloomberg: 33% of global car fleet will be electric by 2040

    Growing automaker commitment to electric vehicles and falling battery prices are predicted to be the two biggest drivers of EV adoption.

    By Cody Boteler • July 11, 2017
  • A detailed landscape design plan showing topographic contour lines, orange building illustrations, green trees, and directional arrows. The layout includes winding paths and clustered vegetation. A triangular scale ruler lies on the left, and three colored pencils, colored blue, green, and yellow, rest on the lower right corner of the page.
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    Toa55 via Getty Images
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    Column

    Incentivizing sustainability

    Cities are enticing citizens to take more environmentally friendly actions — and they're seeing results.

    By Jason Axelrod • July 11, 2017
  • Report: Chicago has the most green office space in the US

    The city boosted its percentage of LEED- and Energy Star-certified office space by 6.5% in the last year, ousting San Francisco from the top spot on the list.

    By Kim Slowey • July 7, 2017
  • Alphabet lab turns out new geothermal company for residential heating, cooling

    Dandelion will operate as a standalone company outside of Google's parent company Alphabet, offering geothermal heating and cooling to residential customers. 

    By Robert Walton • July 7, 2017
  • Deep Dive

    In Denver, ‘nature doesn’t care’ about per capita measurements for sustainability

    Denver's Office of Sustainability doesn't use per capita measurements, putting it behind in some rankings — but the chief sustainability officer says those measurements are not what's important.

    By July 6, 2017
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    Kendall Davis/Smart Cities Dive
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    Opinion

    How data analytics is adding value in the smart home

    As the concept of a smart, connected home gains traction, stakeholders are increasingly exploring analytics solutions to push this vision forward.

    By Paige Leuschner • July 6, 2017
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    Kristin Musulin
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    US Ignite adds 5 cities to network of Smart Gigabit Communities

    By entering the network, each city will develop two gigabit applications per year to advance technology solutions and provide support for other SGCs.

    By Kristin Musulin • July 6, 2017
  • Deep Dive

    North Carolina wind moratorium threatens hard-won solar compromise

    Duke Energy and solar advocates worked for months on reforms to PURPA, third-party ownership and net metering. A last-minute hold on new wind projects could unravel the whole bill. 

    By Herman K. Trabish • July 6, 2017
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    Wikimedia
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    Hawaiian Electric proposes new, cheaper grid modernization plan

    A previous grid modernization plan was rejected in December for being too costly.

    By Peter Maloney • July 6, 2017
  • Opinion

    Keys to developing an effective utility EV charging program

    ChargePoint's Dave Packard argues simplicity and customer choice are critical elements for utilities building out electric vehicle charging networks. 

    By Dave Packard • July 5, 2017
  • New York Supreme Court upholds state prohibition on ESCO sales to low-income customers

    The court also reiterated that the state's Public Service Commission has regulatory jurisdiction over energy service companies.

    By Robert Walton • July 5, 2017
  • McKinsey: Cheaper batteries present imminent threat of load defection for utilities

    Battery storage is already cost-effective for commercial customers and further price declines could lead some to cut their utility ties entirely, a new McKinsey report warns. 

    By Peter Maloney • June 30, 2017
  • EEI: 7 million electric vehicles could hit the road by 2025

    The Edison Electric Institute and the Institute for Electric Innovation say roughly 5 million charge ports will be required to support the boom in electric vehicles. 

    By Robert Walton • June 30, 2017
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    Photo by Cody Boteler
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    Does the federal government’s inaction on clean water leave an opening for cities?

    The Environmental Protection Agency's goals for clean water haven't been updated since 1972. Should cities start to step up?

    By Cody Boteler • June 29, 2017
  • California lawmakers mull expanding electric vehicle incentives

    A proposed measure could designate up to $3 billion towards getting more zero emissions vehicles on the road.

    By Robert Walton • June 28, 2017
  • Deep Dive

    New York expected to set high bar for energy storage after target bill passage

    Two bills passed last week only direct the state to establish storage targets, but analysts say it's likely regulators will opt for an ambitious mandate.

    By Peter Maloney • June 27, 2017
  • US mayors pass resolution for 100% renewable energy goal by 2035

    Leaders of more than 250 U.S. cities said they are committed to holding up their end of the Paris climate agreement, despite President Trump's decision to withdraw from the pact. 

    By Robert Walton • June 27, 2017
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    Fotolia
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    GTM: Proposed solar tariffs could put 47 GW of planned installations at risk

    The analysis firm predicts "unprecedented demand destruction" if Suniva's tariff proposal is approved, threatening up to two-thirds of planned solar deployments. 

    By Robert Walton • June 27, 2017