Clean tech has investors' attention
Investors, corporations are warming to the idea that there's money in being green.
Investors, corporations are warming to the idea that there's money in being green.
Technical hurdles, coupled with perceived fickleness of consumers, mean alternative fuels have a long road ahead, panelists say.
The U.S. Ambassador to Sweden appointed by Bush will likely be replaced.
Smart grid player Silver Spring Networks lands on top; energy efficiency and solar players vie for dominance.
Company has plans for a plant that will produce two alternative fuels.
Scientists, entrepreneurs, and venture capitalists are becoming increasingly interested in making more than fuel out of the raw materials for biodiesel fuel and ethanol.The New York Times
This time it's jatropha. It was going to grow all over the unused, dry land of energy hungry nations.
The rise of China and other emerging nations in scientific clout has been outlined in a Royal Society report, which says China will leapfrog the US in peer-reviewed scientific publications by 2013
BP grant aimed at funding 'radical research aimed at probing secrets of bioscience.'
A major mainstream economic writer has just weighed in on the food-or-fuel debate. That's the monster in the closet of the entire biofuel industry.