Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The church publishes the ...
Mingyang Smart Energy, maker of the world's largest wind turbines, has just unveiled its latest gigantic floating offshore wind turbine creation. The OceanX is a two-headed, deep-water behemoth ...
Growing concern from government across the globe regarding renewable power source is anticipated to boost floating wind turbine market growth. According to a report published by Allied Market Research ...
About 140 kilometers off the Norwegian coast, 11 wind turbines stand in open ocean where the seabed plunges far below the ...
Floating wind farms offer a solution to harness stronger winds in deeper waters where traditional fixed turbines are not feasible. This technology presents environmental advantages, including less ...
The University of Maine is contributing to the global effort to improve floating machines to harness wind over deeper offshore waters. Researchers envision turbine platforms floating in the ocean ...
T-Omega's pyramid-based floating wind turbines are designed with the sole common-sense focus of keeping the cost of offshore wind down to an absolute minimum. With wave tank testing done, the company ...
Somewhere off the coast of China, a platform the size of a small city block is rising and falling with the ocean swells — and sitting on top of it is a single wind turbine rated at 16 megawatts.
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about biodiversity and the hidden quirks of the natural world. This article is more than 2 years old. Engineers have been ...
Britain’s push towards net zero by 2050 is driving a new frontier in renewable energy: floating offshore windfarms, but ...
SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aikido Technologies, a floating wind startup whose technology lowers costs, reduces fabrication timelines and brings serial production to the floating wind sector, ...
About 15 miles off the Norwegian coast, five turbines are spinning in water roughly 260 to 300 meters deep. They are bolted to nothing on the seafloor. Instead, each 8.6-megawatt machine sits atop a ...