»Building an integrated energy system.«
Interview with Klaus Bonhoff, chief executive of the National Organization for Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technology (NOW),
Interview with Klaus Bonhoff, chief executive of the National Organization for Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technology (NOW),
German business newspaper Handelsblatt has reported that energy company Steag is planning to construct a gigantic battery for energy storage in a decommissioned coalmine in the west of the country.
On the front of the rather nondescript square concrete building in Hamburg are the words “Welcome to the new Stone Age.” But the new electro-thermic (ETES) energy storage facility, which is being tested by Siemens Gamesa, is very much about the future, not the past.
Energy storage is vital to maintaining a sustainable supply of energy. That’s why Eneco and Mitsubishi Corporation constructed Europe’s largest battery system: EnspireME, a subsidized project located in Jardelund, in the northern German state of Schleswig-Holstein. Output: 48 megawatts. Storage capacity: over 50 megawatts per hour.
Germany’s Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action is underwriting electric vehicle research to the tune of EUR 80 million.
Germany’s transition to a clean energy future has picked up additional momentum after the Russian attack on Ukraine. We talked to Thomas Grigoleit, Germany Trade & Invest Director of Energy, Construction and Environmental Technologies about what the future will hold.
Innovative German companies are demonstrating how green hydrogen could help turn the tide toward a cleaner economy.
Throughout 2021, this website featured more than 330 articles and videos about Germany as a business and high-tech location. Below is a list so that you can catch up on anything you might have missed.
The solar industry in Germany has emerged from a period of slow growth and is back on track, thanks to the country’s ambitious climate goals and a little help from international companies.
“The similarities between German and Chinese Greenfield investors often outweigh the differences” – that’s the conclusion drawn by Dennis Wilkens, Germany Trade & Invest’s China director. And that’s why lots of Chinese companies are setting up shop in Germany.
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