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Renewable Distributed Energy
Distributed generation refers to a variety of technologies that generate electricity at or near where it will be used, such as solar panels and combined heat and power. Distributed generation may serve a single structure, such as a home or business, or it may be part of a microgrid (a smaller grid that is also tied into the larger electricity delivery system), such as at a major industrial facility, a military base, or a large college campus. When connected to the electric utility’s lower voltage distribution lines, distributed generation can help support delivery of clean, reliable power to additional customers and reduce electricity losses along transmission and distribution lines.
INDUSTRY METRICS
Represents the time, in years, that it takes for a product's use to offset the greenhouse gas emissions of its production.
Represents the levelized cost of battery production per kWh energy capacity.
The GHG abatement potential (in metric tons of GHG emissions) per million U.S. dollars capital investment in waste processing pathways.
The global energy landscape is changing at a rapid pace. The world is moving away from the conventional twentieth-century-style centralized grid, which was fueled by coal and gas power plants. In its place a new market, powered by distributed energy, is emerging.
InPipe Energy is a low-cost renewable energy and smart water technology company. The company’s In-PRV™ product converts water flow in existing pipelines to a predictable, dispatchable source of baseload renewable energy.