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Canada approves its first Small Modular Reactor (SMR), but critics argue it's a costly, high-risk distraction from cheaper, proven renewables. Ontario Clean Air Alliance explains the financial and security risks
Plug-and-play solar is finally coming to the U.S., launching in Utah this summer with no permits or installers required. EcoFlow's new modular solar kits, with similar kits already popular in Europe and China, they could revolutionize backyard and balcony power for American homeowners.
Also this week: Thames Water warns that London may face water restrictions following the driest spring in nearly 70 years. As Brian plans his summer visit, the city's leaky infrastructure—losing enough water daily to fill 230 Olympic-sized pools—adds urgency to the crisis.
– EcoFlow's new "Stream" solar energy system starts at $599, with optional battery backup. See ZDNet.
– Manitoba's skyrocketing EV charging prices spark backlash—$700 for two hours?
– Mazda switches to Tesla's NACS charging plug in Japan, adding to the global shift.
The Lightning Round:
– U.S. budget cuts all tax incentives for new nuclear – Sweden hits 63.3% EV adoption – U.S. could be powered 1x over by solar-covered parking lots – GM unveils a lithium manganese-rich battery promising higher range and lower costs – Plus: A look at Onox, the all-electric tractor with swappable battery packs via Electrek
Email us at [email protected] or leave a voice message at speakpipe.com/cleanenergyshow
Donate via PayPal.
By James Whittingham and Brian Stockton4.4
1414 ratings
Canada approves its first Small Modular Reactor (SMR), but critics argue it's a costly, high-risk distraction from cheaper, proven renewables. Ontario Clean Air Alliance explains the financial and security risks
Plug-and-play solar is finally coming to the U.S., launching in Utah this summer with no permits or installers required. EcoFlow's new modular solar kits, with similar kits already popular in Europe and China, they could revolutionize backyard and balcony power for American homeowners.
Also this week: Thames Water warns that London may face water restrictions following the driest spring in nearly 70 years. As Brian plans his summer visit, the city's leaky infrastructure—losing enough water daily to fill 230 Olympic-sized pools—adds urgency to the crisis.
– EcoFlow's new "Stream" solar energy system starts at $599, with optional battery backup. See ZDNet.
– Manitoba's skyrocketing EV charging prices spark backlash—$700 for two hours?
– Mazda switches to Tesla's NACS charging plug in Japan, adding to the global shift.
The Lightning Round:
– U.S. budget cuts all tax incentives for new nuclear – Sweden hits 63.3% EV adoption – U.S. could be powered 1x over by solar-covered parking lots – GM unveils a lithium manganese-rich battery promising higher range and lower costs – Plus: A look at Onox, the all-electric tractor with swappable battery packs via Electrek
Email us at [email protected] or leave a voice message at speakpipe.com/cleanenergyshow
Donate via PayPal.

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