Back to Mobile View
Ucilia Wang

Ucilia Wang

SUBSCRIBE TO:
RSS
Twitter
Amid health concerns over smart meters, which can wirelessly transmit household energy-usage data to utilities and customers, California's largest utility has proposed a plan that would allow homeowners to opt for regular meters -- at a cost. Here are some facts for consumers to consider.
Billions of dollars of electricity is wasted annually by inefficient power-conversion systems. But a fledgling company called Transphorm believes its technology can cut electric bills significantly -- and hike mileage for hybrid electric cars and boost output flowing from solar panels.
The big solar panel installer has announced its second East Coast deal in a month: It's buying the residential solar business of Vermont-based groSolar, after picking up Maryland's Clean Currents. And SolarCity isn't the only West Coast solar player heading East for growth.
Tesla Motors, which went public with much fanfare last June, nearly tripled its losses for 2010 as it invested heavily to engineer and get ready for producing the Model S, its second offering and the first that targets a broader consumer market.
In the State of the Union address in January, President Barack Obama set a goal of getting 1 million electric cars on the road by 2015. Now he's proposed $7,500 rebates, instead of tax credits, to reach that goal. Will that be enough to make it doable?
Zipcar members in San Francisco, Portland and Boston can try out Toyota's Prius plug-in hybrid, providing valuable info to Toyota before rolling the cars out to consumers in 2012. And Zipcar gets another way to make its greenhouse-gas- conscious customers happy.
The automaker has licensed technology from the Energy Department's Argonne National Laboratory that will boost the performance of lithium-ion battery cells for its electric Chevy Volt. The next-generation power packs will be made at a new plant in Michigan by Korea's LG Chem.
China's plans to cut exports of rare earth minerals -- used in alternative energy technologies -- has the rest of the world scrambling. In the U.S., the country's first new rare-earth mine in more than a decade is set to reopen.
First Solar, one of the world's biggest solar manufacturers, is looking toward 2011 with plenty of good cheer. According to its latest forecast, released Tuesday, the company expects sales to heat up some 46% in spite of lower subsidies in Germany, the world's largest solar market.
Fueling up your car at a church seems like a novel idea. But the emergence of an electric car market has resulted in a charging station at the Wooden Cross Lutheran church some 25 miles northeast of Seattle.

Market Movers

SymbolLastChange / %Volume

Most Actives

BAC
Bank of America Corp
8.18+0.05
+0.62%
479.63M
C
Citigroup Inc
33.66-0.57
-1.67%
54.64M
F
Ford
12.69-0.15
-1.17%
52.28M
S
Sprint Nextel Corp
2.39-0.02
-0.83%
45.92M

% Gainers

YGE
Yingli Green Energy Hold. Co. Ltd. (ADR)
5.90 +1.00
+20.41%
25.32M
TSL
Trina Solar Limited (ADR)
10.95 +1.72
+18.63%
23.39M
JKS
JinkoSolar Holding Company
10.07 +1.47
+17.09%
3.66M
DQ
Daqo New Energy Corp.
4.01 +0.57
+16.57%
807,740

% Losers

NPD
China Nepstar Chain Drug
2.17-0.35
-13.89%
120,184
HDY
Hyperdynamics Corp
2.19-0.31
-12.40%
5.61M
ARX
Aeroflex Holding Corp.
11.60-1.34
-10.36%
1.10M
SWS
SWS Group, Inc.
5.94-0.65
-9.86%
422,733
Newswire

Follow Us

Headlines From DailyFinance Partners

CNN Money
CNBC
Smart Money
Consumer Reports
Huffington Post
AOL Energy
AOL Jobs
Business News Personal Finance Investing Our Partners

DailyFinance Sitemap | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Trademarks | HELP | Advertise With Us

© Copyright 2012 AOL Inc. All Rights Reserved