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Winds of change: How onshore wind can power the transition to 100% clean energy
Onshore wind is the cheapest, quickest, and easiest form of new energy to develop. So why does the UK Government prefer to support nuclear power and fossil fuels?
Onshore wind is the cheapest, quickest, and easiest form of new energy to develop. So why does the UK Government prefer to support nuclear power and fossil fuels?
BHESCo’s Solar Bond Offer successfully raised £550,800 to install solar panels across schools and businesses in Brighton and Hove
BHESCo’s business model offers customers an opportunity to reduce energy costs and carbon emissions for no upfront cost. Yet many potential customers prefer to keep things as they are and do not have the confidence to take a step towards energy independence. Kayla Ente looks at why it is so hard to be a changemaker.
In its 2010 briefing to House of Commons Energy and Climate Change committee, the National Audit Office reported that a £100 billion investment in the national grid was needed to accommodate the home grown clean electricity needed for the UK to reduce its dependency on volatile global oil and gas Read more…
In January & February 2024 BHESCo installed two large new rooftop solar arrays at Middle Street School in Brighton and Goldstone Primary School in Hove