Israeli outfit Solel Solar Systems has won a contract to supply Ibereólica Solar of Madrid with more than 190,000 of its solar receiver systems.
What is thought to be the world’s smallest microwave oven has been demonstrated by researchers at the US National Institue of Standards of Technology and George Mason University
Strathclyde University is taking a role in a £29m initiative to create an informatics and computer science research collaboration in Scotland.
IBM has begun shipping microchips to Nintendo that will serve as the heart of the gaming giant's forthcoming Wii video game system.
Cars may be able to determine weather conditions and adjust speed accordingly in the future, using a sensoring system developed by an EU consortium.
The Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Metal Oxide Technologies (MetOx) of Houston are working together to increase the capacity of superconducting wires.
ABB has been awarded $18m by the Saudi Electricity Company to supply 380kV gas-insulated switchgear equipment for the new Mecca West substation in western Saudi Arabia.
Alstom will receive €78 million from SNCF as part of the French rail operator’s amendment to an order placed in December 2004 for 30 dual-voltage locomotives.
Researchers will gain new insights into engineering materials and pharmaceuticals thanks to the creation of the UK’s most powerful nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) device for solids.
The SeaGen tidal energy system, developed by Marine Current Turbines, has become the first marine renewable energy project to be accredited by OFGEM for Renewable Energy Certificates.