#CEGMemberStories
This summer, if you’ve noticed the stronger storms sweeping your town or the heat waves still persisting into September, you’re already on the road to taking action as part of the Clean Energy Generation. We all have the power to recognize the evidence of climate change in our own communities and take action to create a comfortable, healthy, and sustainable world where we can all thrive. And like Clean Energy Generation member Shambhavi Giri says, sometimes all it takes is showing up and wanting to learn.
Shambhavi grew up in Nepal with the tip of Mount Everest in view from her window, but as the years passed, the view of the mountain was replaced by clouds of air pollution, mostly from carbon-emitting transportation. Making this connection to climate change in her own community, Shambhavi’s passion for balancing environmental health and economic development began to bud. She now attends graduate school in Atlanta, Georgia, where she continues to witness the visible impacts and injustices of the climate crisis in the Southeast.
Read on to learn about how all of us, no matter where we are from or how old we are, can spark change as part of the Clean Energy Generation, and about an important lesson Shambhavi remembers learning from her mother: when things go south, look north.
When did you first discover your passion for the environment, and what led you to study clean energy?
I come from Nepal, which has Mount Everest, the tallest mountain peak in the world. Years ago, we could actually see Mount Everest from my house, a small white peak from our windows. As we grew up, we stopped seeing the view, and because of the pollution and the haze that started to surround it, it became completely gone. As a child I asked, why can’t we see the mountain anymore? By the time I got older, the air pollution was so bad in Nepal that almost everyone started wearing masks.
During the pandemic, because everything was shut down and people stayed home, we got to see the mountain again after a really long time. That’s what got me interested in the field of clean energy: how does a country manage to develop, and at the same time not compromise the environment? In Nepal, like anywhere else, you want to have the six-lane infrastructure, the cars, the luxurious life, but you know that some of these things are really bad for the environment.
I got my undergrad in Kathmandu, Nepal in environmental sciences. In my classes, everyone was talking about carbon emissions and how greenhouse gasses exacerbate climate change, so I did my thesis on what my university’s contribution to carbon emissions was, calculating and assessing its carbon footprint. My university was on the outskirts of the city, and everyday students and staff members had to travel about 35 kilometers to get there. It opened up my eyes to different avenues of sustainability like clean energy, including electric vehicles and how difficult it is to actually get electric vehicles implemented.

How does this interest translate to the work you do now with Georgia State University (GSU) in Atlanta?
Atlanta, unfortunately, has a very heavy energy burden, especially for low-income folks. That’s what my graduate research is all about – what are the key practices to lessen our energy burden?
My main project right now is working to transform Georgia State University’s bus fleet – 18 to 20 diesel buses that have been used here for 10 years now – into all electric vehicles. My team got a grant from the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) in July, and we’re working with different stakeholders in transportation, construction, and workforce development. All of these people are coming together to help the university replace all these diesel vehicles. Plus, GSU does not own all its vehicles, they are just under contract, so this project also gives the university an opportunity to have a transportation system that is its own. It also creates a more equitable transportation system by providing services to historically disadvantaged communities in Atlanta. These are some of the biggest value additions, besides reducing carbon emissions and the negative health impacts that diesel vehicle exhaust brings to downtown Atlanta.
My other big project is about all of the university’s other vehicles, besides the buses – everything from police cars, to landscaping vehicles, to golf carts. We’re trying to transition those vehicles to EVs. These projects are both still in the initial stages, but we’re gathering all the information that is required, modeling the environmental, social, and economic benefits. I’m asking questions like, “how many vehicles does the university own right now, how many are older than 10 years?” It is a lot of data analysis and research.
How has researching more about climate change and clean energy strengthened your passion about solving the problem?
The more you learn, the more you discover the skills you can actually use to make things count. Before, you may have an idea of how to make a difference, but it’s always fleeting. As you research and learn about techniques that can help the environment around you, it’s like converting an idea into an actual real world project. To see your ideas making changes is amazing.
In my undergrad, I joined a club where I could learn more about sustainability, and that’s where I realized the potential for people to collaborate on environmental efforts. In that club I learned I could reach out to nonprofits or university organizations and say, “Hey, we want you to come talk to us, we want to know how this works outside of university.” I shared what I learned with other students who then built their own self-sustaining environmental clubs in more rural schools and now host awesome educational events there. I carry this accomplishment close to my heart – a lot of forward giving, I would call it.
Shambhavi speaks at an event in Nepal.
How do you avoid getting discouraged by challenges you face and the overwhelming nature of climate change?
As a middle-class Nepali girl, even thinking about coming to the U.S. to get a master’s degree was a big thing, and traveling miles away from my family to step into a new environment is a journey. A lot of my challenges have been economical. So far, I’m overcoming it with the help of financial aid, but it’s an ongoing thing: you’re given a new hurdle, you overcome it. It is the same as far as studying clean energy and the environment: I think I had already made my mind up before getting into this that things are really bad – in fact I think that is a reason I got into it. It’s hard to be optimistic for our future, but my mom raised me to think that if things go south, you try to look north.
Even though we talk about climate change a lot in the U.S., a lot of people don’t believe in the science of it, and back home, even if people believed in climate change, the problem there is that people are so busy trying to sustain their life that they think climate change cannot be one of their priorities.
It’s frustrating because climate change hits some of us harder than others. Nepal is one of those countries where even though we don’t emit as many carbon emissions, it is still one of the most vulnerable countries to climate change. It is the same for Atlanta: communities that are already overburdened and disadvantaged are the ones that have to suffer the most. It is sad that people who contribute a lot to climate change don’t necessarily understand their responsibility to mitigate it. I want to ask those people, “Why don’t you get it?”
Something I’ve learned as someone who has experience in both worlds – the less developed and the most developed – is that climate change is a global issue that is dealt with from different perspectives across the world. We’re all in this together, facing the same problem. It just goes to show how small our world really is.
What advice would you give to someone who is just starting out learning about clean energy in their community?
You have to go out there and talk to people who are actually involved in sustainability and clean energy to keep learning. For me, I just showed up – it’s really important because you never know when things will connect. I started as a research assistant last year at my university, but soon I wanted to get involved in a real world project. I kept asking everyone around, “Can you help find a place for me?” I was so open to learning and wanted to be in a place where I could use my previous experiences and add on to those, to make a difference.
GET INVOLVED IN THE CLEAN ENERGY GENERATION
Like Shambhavi, we all have the power to make a difference by just getting out and being open to learning, whether it’s stopping to notice the impacts of climate change in our communities, talking to a teacher at a local college, or getting involved with an environmental organization. We all have the potential to learn more and share with others the solutions we find, and when we come together as one Clean Energy Generation, the possibilities are limitless.
Join the Clean Energy Generation
Take Action With the Clean Energy Generation
The post Shambhavi Giri: Turning Lifelong Passions Into Real-World Actions appeared first on SACE | Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.
Shambhavi Giri: Turning Lifelong Passions Into Real-World Actions
Renewable Energy
North Sea Summit Commits to 100 GW Offshore Wind
Weather Guard Lightning Tech

North Sea Summit Commits to 100 GW Offshore Wind
Allen covers Equinor’s Hywind Tampen floating wind farm achieving an impressive 51.6% capacity factor in 2025. Plus nine nations commit to 100 GW of offshore wind at the North Sea Summit, Dominion Energy installs its first turbine tower off Virginia, Hawaii renews the Kaheawa Wind Farm lease for 25 years, and India improves its repowering policies.
Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly newsletter on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on YouTube, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary’s “Engineering with Rosie” YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us!
There’s a remarkable sight in the North Sea right now. Eleven wind turbines, each one floating on water like enormous ships, generating electricity in some of the roughest seas on Earth.
Norwegian oil giant Equinor operates the Hywind Tampen floating wind farm, and the results from twenty twenty-five are nothing short of extraordinary. These floating giants achieved a capacity factor of fifty-one point six percent throughout the entire year. That means they produced power more than half the time, every single day, despite ocean storms and harsh conditions.
The numbers tell the story. Four hundred twelve gigawatt hours of electricity, enough to power seventeen thousand homes. And perhaps most importantly, the wind farm reduced carbon emissions by more than two hundred thousand tons from nearby oil and gas fields.
Production manager Arild Lithun said he was especially pleased that they achieved these results without any damage or incidents. Not a single one.
But Norway’s success is just one chapter in a much larger story unfolding across the North Sea.
Last week, nine countries gathered in Hamburg, Germany for the North Sea Summit. Belgium, Denmark, France, Britain, Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, and their host Germany came together with a shared purpose. They committed to building one hundred gigawatts of collaborative offshore wind projects and pledged to protect their energy infrastructure from sabotage by sharing security data and conducting stress tests on wind turbine components.
Andrew Mitchell, Britain’s ambassador to Germany, explained why this matters now more than ever. Recent geopolitical events, particularly Russia’s weaponization of energy supplies during the Ukraine invasion, have sharpened rather than weakened the case for offshore wind. He said expanding offshore wind enhances long-term security while reducing exposure to volatile global fossil fuel markets.
Mitchell added something that resonates across the entire industry. The more offshore wind capacity these countries build, the more often clean power sets wholesale electricity prices instead of natural gas. The result is lower bills, greater security, and long-term economic stability.
Now let’s cross the Atlantic to Virginia Beach, where Dominion Energy reached a major milestone last week. They installed the first turbine tower at their massive offshore wind farm. It’s the first of one hundred seventy-six turbines that will stand twenty-seven miles off the Virginia coast.
The eleven point two billion dollar project is already seventy percent complete and will generate two hundred ten million dollars in annual economic output.
Meanwhile, halfway across the Pacific Ocean, Hawaii is doubling down on wind energy. The state just renewed the lease for the Kaheawa Wind Farm on Maui for another twenty-five years. Those twenty turbines have been generating electricity for two decades, powering seventeen thousand island homes each year. The new lease requires the operator to pay three hundred thousand dollars annually or three point five percent of gross revenue, whichever is higher. And here’s something smart: the state is requiring a thirty-three million dollar bond to ensure taxpayers never get stuck with the bill for removing those turbines when they’re finally decommissioned.
Even India is accelerating its wind energy development. The Indian Wind Power Association welcomed major amendments to Tamil Nadu’s Repowering Policy last week. The Indian Wind Power Association thanked the government for addressing critical industry concerns. The changes make it significantly easier and cheaper to replace aging turbines with modern, more efficient ones.
So from floating turbines in the North Sea to coastal giants off Virginia, from island power in Hawaii to policy improvements in India, the wind energy revolution is gaining momentum around the world.
And that’s the state of the wind industry for the 26th of January 2026.
Join us tomorrow for the Uptime Wind Industry Podcast.
Renewable Energy
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https://cyanergy.com.au/blog/maximise-government-rebates-for-commercial-solar-in-2026/
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