Copyright © DELINIAN (IJGLOBAL) LIMITED, Company number 15236229, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX. Part of the Delinian group. All rights reserved

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Search results for

Tip: Use operators exact match "", AND, OR to customise your search. You can use them separately or you can combine them to find specific content.
There are 12,599 results that match your search.12,599 results
  • Starwood Energy is looking to finance 60 MW of solar photovoltaic projects in Central California and an undisclosed number of PV projects in Canada.
  • Hong Kong commodities firm Noble Group has agreed to buy Sempra Energy Solutions for $317 million from Sempra Energy and Royal Bank of Scotland.
  • Clipper Windpower is in discussions with minority owner United Technologies Corp about a complete takeover as the turbine manufacturer looks to bring in additional cash.
  • Xcel Energy wants to secure 250 MW of wind generation through a request for proposal aimed at projects throughout its service territory which covers eight states in the Midwest and Southwest.
  • First Solar is banking on growth in the U.S. to make up for the solar market contraction in Germany as government subsidies phase out.
  • South Korea is planning a KRW9 trillion ($7.8 billion) 5 GW offshore wind project in the Yellow Sea.
  • JPMorgan and Credit Suisse cut pricing and increased the size of the term loan B financing the merger of Mirant and RRI Energy into GenOn Energy, surprising some in the market who thought a price increase was in order.
  • Feed-in tariffs are widely regarded as a key component of European renewables generation economics. Last week’s Industry Current examined legal hurdles that need to be cleared in the U.S. for FiT implementation. This week’s piece focuses on how FiTs are fairing in California.
  • Great Lakes Ohio Wind will initiate talks with lenders early next year for financing backing its roughly $130-140 million, 20 MW offshore wind farm in Lake Erie.
  • Unregulated power companies are facing roughly $8-10 billion in term loan B maturities over the next two years, a tall order in a market where the number of lenders and the demand of power has decreased.