News

A Greenacres man says what was supposed to be a normal Saturday of back-to-school shopping for his son turned into one of the most frightening days of his life.
The company says fires sparked by batteries in devices such as vapes, old cellphones, laptops and power tools put both employees and first responders in danger.
First it was nitrate, then lithium. Today, green hydrogen. And history threatens to repeat itself. The history we did not ...
In July alone, Rumpke reported nine fires linked to batteries at its recycling facilities: five in Columbus, three in ...
Highlights Nano One, via Arkansas Lithium Technology Accelerator (ALTA), expands and catalyzes its network across Arkansas ...
The newly minted “Harbor Charger” — weighing in at more than 11 subway cars — is expected to bring faster and quieter service to the tourist and ecological spot on 70% ...
The Seaside, Sundial and Constable battery projects bring the Oregon utility’s large-scale storage capacity from 17 MW to 492 ...
Joel Jackson, BMO Capital Markets, joins 'Power Lunch' to discuss Jackson's optimism around Ablemarle, lithium price trends ...
"We received 911 calls from the occupants saying they had smoke in their basement," says New Bedford Fire Chief Brian ...
Princeton NuEnergy’s black mass facility has opened, while Washington seeks comments on its battery EPR rulemaking and two ...
Albemarle's La Negra lithium processing plant in Chile is operating normally after an "incident" last week, the company told ...