Andritz
ANDRITZ wins contract for Khangtang small hydro project in India
ANDRITZ been awarded a contract by Khangtang Hydro Power to supply equipment for the 7.5MW Khangtang Small Hydro Power Project.
Andritz to overhaul turbines at Switzerland’s Ryburg-Schwörstadt hydropower plant
ANDRITZ has received an order from Kraftwerk Ryburg-Schwörstadt AG to rehabilitate turbines at the 120MW Ryburg-Schwörstadt hydropower plant.
Andritz contracted for Portuguese pumped storage plant
Spanish energy utility Iberdrola has awarded a contract to Andritz Hydro to supply the electro-mechanical equipment and penstock for a new pumped storage hydropower plant in Portugal.
360 MW hydroelectric power plant planned for Ireland
A joint Irish-Austrian venture is planning to build what would be Ireland's largest hydroelectric power plant.
World-first tidal lagoon power project in the works
Plans are in the works for the world's first tidal lagoon power project, to be built in the UK.
Andritz Hydro wins order at world’s first tidal lagoon hydro project
Tidal Lagoon Swansea Bay plc. has appointed the consortium by GE/Andritz Hydro as preferred bidder for supply of the electromechanical equipment for the world's first tidal lagoon hydropower project in Swansea Bay, Wales.
UK tidal lagoon boosted as investment target reached
The £1bn Swansea Bay tidal lagoon power plant project received a boost on Thursday with the news that it has met its target of raising £200m from two British institutional investors.
Scottish tidal energy firm signs $82m PPA
Scottish tidal energy firm MeyGen has signed a 10-year, £50m ($82m) power purchase agreement with independent energy company SmartestEnergy, the firms announced yesterday.
Market conditions set to hurt $2.1bn Swiss storage plant
The 900 MW Nant de Drance storage power plant in Switzerland is set to commence operations in 2018, but its owners fear present conditions in Europe will have negative impact on its profitability.
Ocean energy “costing more and taking longer” than predicted
Development and commercialization of marine energy technology is "taking longer than hoped and costing more money than expected", a new report from Bloomberg New Energy Finance has found.