Clean & renewable energy

This archive tracks real progress in clean and renewable energy — from solar and wind expansions to grid breakthroughs and policy wins. More than 850 articles document what’s working, where it’s scaling, and who’s driving the shift away from fossil fuels. If you follow energy news for signal rather than noise, this is a useful place to start.

Wind turbine from below, for article on world's first wind farm

U.S. Windpower installs the world’s first wind farm in New Hampshire

The world’s first wind farm spun to life in late 1980 on a New Hampshire hillside, where 20 small turbines fed electricity directly into the grid. Blades broke, towers stood just 60 feet tall, and the project was quietly dismantled within a couple of years. But the proof held, and a direct line runs from those struggling machines to today’s global wind industry.

Solar panels installed on a rooftop representing solar power prices and renewable energy options, for article on domestic solar cell production, for article on silicon solar cell

China launches domestic solar cell production in Ningbo and Kaifeng

Solar manufacturing in China began quietly in 1975, when two factories — one in Ningbo, one in Kaifeng — started producing photovoltaic cells for civilian use, drawing on technology first developed for the country’s satellite program. Total installed capacity that year reached just half a kilowatt, a modest seed for what would grow into the world’s largest solar industry.

Volta amazes Napoleon with his battery, for article on voltaic pile

Alessandro Volta demonstrates the world’s first battery

The voltaic pile arrived in 1800, when Italian physicist Alessandro Volta stacked zinc and copper discs between brine-soaked cloth and produced the first steady electrical current. Within a year, chemists were splitting water into hydrogen and oxygen. Every battery since, from lead-acid to lithium-ion, traces back to that quiet stack.