British open new front with Afghan renewable energy push

BusinessGreen staff
clock

Ministry of Defence invites firms to supply green technologies capable of reducing risk of fuel tanker attacks

Remote British military bases in Afghanistan could be powered by solar panels or wind turbines as part of a project designed to cut the number of fuel tankers risking attack by driving deep into Taliban...

To continue reading this article...

Join BusinessGreen

In just a few clicks you can start your free BusinessGreen Lite membership for 12 months, providing you access to:

  • Three complimentary articles per month covering the latest real-time news, analysis, and opinion from Europe’s leading source of information on the Green economy and business
  • Receive important and breaking news stories via our daily news alert
  • Our weekly newsletter with the best of the week’s green business news and analysis

Join now

 

Already a BusinessGreen member?

Login

More on Energy

 IEA downgrades low carbon hydrogen production forecasts

IEA downgrades low carbon hydrogen production forecasts

Sector has been struck by wave of project cancellations, but agency claims 'robust expansion' by 2030 is still possible

clock 12 September 2025 • 3 min read
How reaching net zero could cut global fuel costs by $1tr a year

How reaching net zero could cut global fuel costs by $1tr a year

New modelling from BloombergNEF suggests investing just 0.7 per cent of GDP in the net zero transition could unlock huge financial savings - and avert a rolling climate crisis

James Murray
clock 04 September 2025 • 8 min read
Bolton Wanderers FC kicks off new smart grid service

Bolton Wanderers FC kicks off new smart grid service

Football club teams up with Voltaris to install flexible grid technology that reduces power demand during peak periods

clock 04 September 2025 • 2 min read