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Markets & Policy

US election: solar, renewable and climate advocates cool on Trump win

While those within the U.S. are understandably nervy after Trump’s victory, global observers have taken a more sanguine view on the potential impact of his Presidency on solar markets.

Fronius Launches Smart Meter for Feed-In Management

Fronius is launching its Smart Meter to manage PV feed-in limits and monitor energy consumption.

Disaster: Donald Trump is U.S. President-elect

The results of the 2016 U.S. Presidential and Senate Elections are a worst-case scenario for the U.S. solar industry, and no federal support is safe.

Florida’s Amendment 1 fails in enormous win for solar

The utility-supported anti-solar constitutional amendment needed 60 percent to pass — and struggled to break 50 percent instead

Vivint Solar shows improved profitability but flat growth in Q3

The residential solar installer is still struggling following SunEdison’s failed acquisition, but reported record low prices and improved results.

TerraForm Power reveals proposed settlement with SunEdison

TerraForm Power has sent a draft settlement agreement to SunEdison creditors under which claims would be settled, noting that it prefers a “collaborative” process.

Project Sunroof offers community-wide solar installation estimates

The new tool measures technical potential, but may not be an accurate indicator of how much solar could realistically be installed in any given city.

Conflicts continue over Duke’s interconnection rules

North Carolina regulators have offered the company relief on a complaint by seven solar developers, but have served complaints against the power company for three other projects.

MLPE makers go vertical sell more units

Solar microinverters and power optimizer suppliers are embracing off-the-shelf integrated solar AC and smart modules as landscape for the MLPE sector evolves and grows, according to an IHS Markit analysis.

All (solar) eyes will be on Florida

As voters go to the polls tomorrow to pick the next U.S. president, voters in the Sunshine State will decide whether the solar industry will move forward — or stay under the control of its utilities

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