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Australia is one of the sunniest countries on Earth, offering a powerful opportunity for commercial property owners and managers seeking to lower operating costs, improve sustainability credentials, and add long-term value to their assets.

In Australia, if you have a commercial property, you already know that it is energy-intensive by nature, so running a commercial building efficiently requires a significant amount of energy.

However, as energy price rises and grid reliability becomes less certain, these operational costs are placing increasing pressure on building owners and managers.

That’s why solar energy for commercial buildings becomes the next environmentally friendly step your business should take.

Integrating solar into your building is one of the most effective ways to reduce reliance on the grid, stabilise energy expenses, and create a more sustainable asset that delivers measurable returns.

At Cyanergy, we break down why commercial solar matters in Australia, how it works, what incentives are available, and other solar solutions for commercial property owners & managers to maximise the benefits.

So, if you want to reduce your operational costs and boost your property’s value with high-performance commercial solar solutions, tag along!

Why Solar Is a Strategic Priority for Commercial Properties

In Australia, tenants are increasingly prioritising green buildings, and adopting solar isn’t just an environmental choice anymore. The reason?

Commercial buildings, from manufacturing facilities and office spaces to industrial premises and retail complexes, consume significant amounts of electricity.

Installing solar photovoltaic (PV) systems enables these properties to generate their own clean energy, significantly reducing reliance on the grid and shielding tenant and landlord budgets from volatile electricity prices.

Here’s what makes solar especially compelling for commercial properties in Australia:

1. Slash Energy Bills & Reduce Operating Costs

Solar power can substantially reduce electricity bills, which can be a major overhead for commercial buildings.

By generating power onsite during peak sunlight hours, solar systems enable businesses to reduce grid electricity consumption, lowering bills and fostering economic growth, often with returns that outperform traditional investments.

2. Strengthen Sustainability & ESG Credentials

Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) factors are not an optional field either.

Solar systems significantly reduce carbon emissions associated with grid electricity, helping properties achieve higher sustainability ratings and qualify for green certifications like NABERS and Green Star.

This resonates well with eco-conscious tenants, investors, and stakeholders, contributing massively to Australia’s sustainable development plan.

3. Future-Proof Against Rising Energy Prices

Grid electricity prices in Australia have generally trended upward, driven by market pressures and infrastructure costs.

By generating power onsite, commercial property owners can lock in stable, predictable energy costs over the long term, protecting their business from price spikes and uncertainty.

4. Improve Tenant Satisfaction & Attract Premium Tenants

Businesses increasingly want energy-efficient, sustainable buildings that offer lower operating costs and align with their corporate values.

So, properties with solar not only offer lower energy bills but also represent a commitment to Australia’s net-zero 2050 goals.

How Commercial Solar Works| Guide for Australian Businesses

Solar PV systems convert sunlight into electricity using panels mounted on rooftops or car park structures, feeding that power directly into the building’s electrical system.

Here’s a simple breakdown:

Solar generation Self-consumption Grid export (optional)

A modern commercial solar setup usually includes:

  • PV panels tailored to the roof space and energy demand
  • Solar inverters convert DC to usable AC power
  • Monitoring systems for real-time performance tracking
  • Battery storage to store and use solar power after sunset is optional, though

According to data, a well-designed system enables many commercial buildings to generate 40–75% of their electricity from solar, dramatically saving thousands of dollars in energy bills over time.

Australian Government Incentives & Financial Support for Solar in 2026

One of the most significant advantages for businesses in Australia is the different types of financial incentives designed to accelerate solar adoption and improve return on investment.

For instance,

1. Small-Scale Technology Certificates (STCs)

STCs are tradable certificates issued by solar systems with a capacity of up to 100 kW. The value of STCs reduces upfront costs, often delivering thousands of dollars in immediate discounts at the time of installation.

2. Large-Scale Generation Certificates (LGCs)

For larger commercial systems over 100 kW, LGCs are earned based on actual power generation and can provide ongoing revenue over many years by selling certificates on the market.

3. Tax & Depreciation Benefits

Australian businesses can benefit from accelerated depreciation and tax incentives that enable faster write-offs for solar equipment, thereby strengthening investment.

4. State-Level Rebates & Grants

In addition to federal schemes, a range of state rebates and programs can reduce costs or offer favourable financing:

  • Victoria: Solar for Business rebates and interest-free loan options.
  • South Australia: Commercial rebate supports and virtual power plant participation.
  • Queensland and other states: May include export feed-in tariffs and specific solar support mechanisms.

5. Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs)

PPAs allow businesses to install solar with minimal or no upfront cost. A third-party provider owns and operates the system, and the business agrees to purchase solar power at a fixed, lower-than-grid rate, often delivering immediate savings.

How to Choose the Right Solar Strategy for Your Property in Australia

Choosing the right solar strategy for your Australian property doesn’t have to be overwhelming.

With Cyanergy’s expert guidance, you can confidently pick your options and turn solar energy into an investment that delivers long-term savings and sustainability.

Here’s how:

 

Assess Your Energy Profile

Before installation, perform a detailed energy audit to understand your:

  • Current electricity usage patterns
  • Load requirements for daytime and evening
  • Roof orientation and sunlight exposure
  • Potential shading issues, especially from trees, dust and debris.

This helps design a system that matches your energy needs and maximises savings.

Consider Adding Battery Storage

Adding solar batteries can boost self-consumption by storing excess solar energy generated during the day for use at night or peak pricing periods.

Moreover, batteries enhance resilience during grid disruptions, particularly valuable for critical facilities.

Find Accredited Installers

Choose installers accredited with the Clean Energy Council (CEC) to ensure compliance, optimal design, and access to federal incentives.

In Australia, some accredited professionals also offer performance monitoring and maintenance services.

Integrate with Energy Management Systems

For larger commercial properties, solar can integrate with building management and smart energy systems to optimise consumption and reduce peak demand charges

Explore Cyanergy’s Commercial Cases: Solar ROI in Action!

In real-world examples, solar panels already represent strong financial outcomes. Many Australian commercial properties achieve payback within 3–7 years and continue to generate free electricity for decades afterwards.

Therefore, in the following section, we’ve shared several real-world commercial case studies from Cyanergy. Let’s read along!

Cyanergy Case Study: Kew Golf Club (VIC)

  • System size:88 kW
  • Payback period: 63 months (5 years)
  • Yearly savings: $26,165, that’s a 50% reduction in electricity costs
  • Annual generation: 141 MWh

This project represents how even community facilities and sports venues can benefit from solar, decreasing ongoing costs and strengthening their commitment to sustainability.

Sparacino Farms (NSW)

Cyanergy’s portfolio includes a variety of businesses across sectors and sizes.

For example, at Sparacino Farms, a family-run avocado and citrus operation, Cyanergy installed a 99.76 kW commercial solar system. The impact was striking:

  • Yearly electricity cost dropped: from $48,000 to $12,000
  • Monthly savings: $3,000
  • Payback period: 30 months (2.5 years)
  • Annual clean energy generation:87 MWh

This case highlights how a well-designed system not only dramatically reduces energy bills but also supports long-term resilience and sustainability for agricultural businesses, turning rooftop space into a strategic financial asset.

Philter Brewing (NSW)

  • System size: 86 kW
  • Annual energy generated:99 MWh
  • Payback period: 45 months
  • Annual savings: $29,130 as electricity costs cut from $81,900 to $52,770

Philtre Brewing’s transition to solar power demonstrates how medium-sized manufacturing operations can reduce energy while advancing sustainability goals.

Final Takeaways| Why Commercial Solar Is a Smart Move?

Ultimately, we all know solar offers several benefits to property owners and managers, ranging from increased property value to energy independence.

Whether you’re a property owner looking to cut expenses, a facilities manager pursuing efficiency, or a real estate professional positioning your asset for future demand, solar power should always be at the heart of your energy strategy.

The reason is that it’s not just an upgrade; it defines the future of your property!

Need assistance in navigating the entire installation process? Contact Cyanergy today! Now is the time to power your commercial property smarter, cleaner, and more profitably with Cyanergy.

Your Solution Is Just a Click Away

The post Solar Solutions for Commercial Property Owners & Managers appeared first on Cyanergy.

Solar Solutions for Commercial Property Owners & Managers

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EchoBolt’s BoltWave Simplifies Turbine Bolt Inspections

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Weather Guard Lightning Tech

EchoBolt’s BoltWave Simplifies Turbine Bolt Inspections

Allen and Joel are joined by Pete Andrews, Managing Director at EchoBolt. They discuss the company’s new BoltWave inspection device, the shift from routine retightening to condition-based monitoring, and how ultrasonic technology helps operators manage blade stud and tower bolt integrity throughout the turbine lifecycle.

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 YouTubeLinkedin 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!

Welcome to Uptime Spotlight, shining light on wind. Energy’s brightest innovators. This is the Progress Powering tomorrow.

Pete Andrews: Pete, welcome to the program. Good to be back. Yeah. See you face to face. Yeah. Yes. This is wonderful. It’s a really great event to catch it with loads of the. UK innovation that are happening in the supply chain. So it’s, yeah, really nice to be here. 

Allen Hall: This is really good to meet in person because we have seen a lot of bolt issues in the us, Canada, Australia, yeah.

Uh, all around the world and every time bolt problems come up, I say, have you called Pete Andrews and Echo Bolt and gotten the kit to detect bolt issues? And then who’s Pete? Give me Pete’s phone number. Okay, sure. Uh, but now that we’re here in person, a lot has changed since we first talked to you probably two years ago.[00:01:00]

You’re a bootstrap company based in the UK that has global presence, and I, I think it’s a good start to explain what the technology is and why Echo Bolt matters so much in today’s world.

Pete Andrews: Yeah, absolutely. So, um, as you said, we’re a uk, um, SME, there’s a team of 13 of us based here in the uk. Yeah. But we do deliver our services internationally, but really focused on Northern Europe.

Yeah. But increasingly we’ve done more in the US and North America, a little bit in Canada. Um, but our big offering really is to help wind turbine operators and owners reduce the need to routinely retire in bulks. So we have a quick and simple inspection technology that people can deploy, find out the status of their bolt connections, and then.

Reti them if necessary, but the vast majority of the time we find that they’re static and absolutely fine and can be left [00:02:00] alone. So it’s a real big efficiency boost for wind operators.

Joel Saxum: Well, you’re doing things by prescription now, right? Instead of just blanket cover, we’re gonna do all of this. It’s like, let’s work on the ones that actually need to be worked on.

Let’s do the, the work that we actually need to, and instead of lugging, like we’re looking at the kit right here, and I can, you can hold the case in one hand, let alone the tools in a couple of fingers. As opposed to torque tensioning tools that are this big, they weigh a hundred kilos, and those come with all of their own problems.

So I know that you guys said you’re, you’re focused here. You do a lot of work, um, in the offshore wind world as well. Yeah. I mean, offshore wind is where you add a zero right? To zeros. Yeah. Everything else is that much more complicated. It costs that much more. It’s you’re transitioning people offshore to the transition pieces.

Like there’s so much more HSE risk, dollar risk, all of these different spend things. So. The Echo Bolt systems, these different tools that you have being developed and utilized here first make absolute sense, but now you guys are starting to go to onshore as well.

Pete Andrews: Yeah, that’s right. So I mean, as as you said, that there’s really [00:03:00] three main benefit areas we focus on.

The first one is the health and safety of technicians, right? As you said, some of the fasteners used offshore now are up to MA hundred. So a hundred millimeter diameter bolts,

Joel Saxum: four inches for our American friends. Yeah, absolutely.

Pete Andrews: And they probably weigh. 30 kilos plus per bolt. Yeah. Um, so just the physical manual handling of that sort of equipment and the tightening equipment for those bolts is a huge risk for people.

If you think 150 bolts lifting or maneuvering, the tooling around on on its own can cause all the problems. So as well as the inherent risk of the hydraulic kit failing. So occasionally we see catastrophic tool failure. Is, which have really high potential severity, you know, sort of tensioner heads ejecting or crush injuries from Tor.

So that is really a key focus for our customers, just to [00:04:00] keep their teams safe, but also you have to be the cost effective and the the major cost benefit we allow is that we don’t have to revisit every bolt and every turbine like you’d have to do if you were retyping. So we believe there’s something of the order of a million pounds per installed gigawatt saving.

By moving from a routine REIT uh, maintenance strategy to a focused condition based inspection, you significantly reduce the amount of intervention you make and keep your turbines running more and reduce the boots on the ground on the turbine. So three real kind of, um, key. Benefits for people adopting our technology

Allen Hall: because we routinely see tower bolts being reworked or retention depending on who the manufacturer is.

And I’m watching this go on. I’m like, why are [00:05:00] we doing this? It seems, or the 10% rule, we’re tighten 10% this year, and they’ll come back and see how it’s going. That’s a little insane, right, because you’re just kind of. Tensioning bolts up to see if one of them has a problem and then you just do more of them and we’re wasting so much time because echo bolts figured this out years ago.

You don’t need to do that. You can tell what the tension is in a bolt ultrasonically, which was the original technology, the first gen I’ll call it, uh, that you could tell the length of the bolt. If the length of the bolt is correct within certain parameters, you know that it is tension properly. If it’s shrunk, that probably means it’s not tensioned properly.

That’s a huge advantage because you can’t physically see it. And I know I’ve seen technicians go, oh, I could take a hammer and I can tell you which ones are not tensioned properly wrong. Wrong. And I think that’s where equitable comes in because you’re actually applying a a lot of science simply [00:06:00] to a complex problem because the numbers are so big.

Pete Andrews: Yeah, I mean that, that, that’s been the real. Driving force between our offering is to simplify it. So ultimately we’re based on a non-destructive testing technique. It’s an ultrasonic thickness checking technique, but when from the non-destructive testing background, it’s crack detection, people have time, they can be, it’s a very precision measurement.

People have to be trained in the wind industry. We’re trying to inspect. A thousand, 2000 bolts a day at scale. It’s a completely different, um, ask of the technology and the way the technology has been developed historically has required too much technician expertise, too much configuration and set up time, and hasn’t delivered on the, on the speed that’s needed to be efficient in wind.

And that’s where our bolt wave [00:07:00] unit we’ve, that we’ve developed over the last. 18 months, let’s say, where all of our focus has gone to make it as slick and as easy for a client technician to pick up with minimal training. It’s through an iOS interface. Everyone understands it intuitively. Um, it’s a bit like using the camera app on your phone.

You know, you’re just hitting measure, measure, measure, measure, measure 10 seconds a bolt as you move the, um, ultrasonic transducer across, and then the data gets moved. Automatically to the cloud, to our bolt platform. And customers can view it in near real time. The engineer in the office can see the inspections happened.

They can see if there are any anomalous bolts, and then there can be communication there and then whether an intervention is necessary. So it’s sort of really changed the way our customers think about managing their, um. They’re bolted joints.

Joel Saxum: Well, I think these are, these are the kind of innovations that we love to see, right?

Because [00:08:00] we regularly talk about a shortage of technicians, and this isn’t, I was just learning this this week too, like this is not a wind problem. This is a everywhere problem. No matter what industry you’re in. Use are short of technicians. But we’re seeing like a tool like this is developed to be able to scale that workforce as well.

Right. You don’t need to be an NDT level three expert to go and do these things. ’cause there’s a very few of those people out there. Right? Right. We know the NDT people, a lot of NDT people, and that’s a hard skillset to come by. Yeah. This can be put in the hands of any technician. Yeah, a quick training course.

Just, Hey, this is how you use your iPhone. You can check Instagram, right? Yeah. Okay. You can off figure. Yeah, have fun. See you at lunch. Um, but they can, they can make this happen, right? They can go do these inspections and you’re getting that, that, uh, data collected in the field. Centralized back to an SME that’s looking at it and you don’t have to put that SME in the field and try to scale their ability to go and travel and do all these things.

They can be in the office making sure that the, the QA, QC is done correctly. I love it. I think that that’s the way we need to go with a lot of things. [00:09:00]Uh, and you’re making it happen.

Pete Andrews: Yeah. And it’s a real kind of. F change in mindset for us. So originally when we started Ebot, we were using third party hardware.

Yeah. Which required a bit of that specialism. Yeah. A bit of care about the setup of the project, getting multiple parameters configured before you got going. And it wasn’t really something we could put in the hands of a customer.

Joel Saxum: Yeah.

Pete Andrews: Which meant Ebot scale was limited to what our own team could go and do, and regionally as well.

You know, so we’re UK based. Probably 60% of our customers are uk, but now we have this Northern Europe offshore wind is obviously on our doorstep, but then increasingly we’ve done more and more in North America, so we’ve probably been to five or six sites now in North America and expect that to be a growth market because we can, we can now ship the devices over there, give some virtual training help.

Uh, [00:10:00] people set themselves up and then that opens up that market, you know, so it’s been a real change in strategy for us, but has allowed us to have far more impact than we otherwise would just try to be a pure service.

Allen Hall: Well, let’s talk about the big problem in the states of a minute, which are the root bushing or inserts that are loose in some blades.

When you lose that pushing, you also lose the tension on the bolt that can be measured. Is that something you’re getting involved with quite a bit now because of just trying to determine how many bolts are affected and, and where we are on the safety scale of can we run this turbine or not? Is that something that EE bolt’s been looking into?

Pete Andrews: Yeah, absolutely. So I, I’d say there’s sort of two halves of what we do. There’s the, there’s the bulk wholesale monitoring of. Typically static connections to eliminate this routine retitling where it’s not needed typically, typically. But then we have these edge cases of certain [00:11:00] connections and certain platforms that have known bolt integrity problems, and we are working with clients to really, um, manage those integrity risks.

Blade stud is an absolute classic, you know, sort of, I think almost every turbine OEM on some, if not all of their platforms has got. Embedded risk into their blades, pitch bearing connections. Um, so yeah, exactly as you said, our customers are using the technology for two things really. One is to ensure the bolts have been tightened to the preload that was specified or the target window.

And quite often we find there is an opportunity to increase the preload and therefore increase the resistance to fatigue failure. So. You know, particularly on older sites where the bolts perhaps not in the condition they were on day one. Well, they definitely won’t be. Um, when people have gone and retti them, they haven’t got back to where they, they should be.[00:12:00]

So we can prove that and increase a bit of that resilience, but then also start to look for the segments around the joint where, um, the bolt might start loosening or failures are occurring, and find areas where they can really hone in. And actively manage risk. And that sort of leads to what we’ve decided to do for the next year, particularly with Blade Stud in mind, is evolve this technology.

So whilst it’s also measuring the elongation, we will do a defect scan at the same time. So you’ll monitor your blade stu, um, connection and we’re hoping that we can set the device to flag to you there and then. We believe this bulk has got a defect while you’re here, get it changed out before it fails and, and all the knock on problems, um, from there.

Joel Saxum: So what you’re just pointing to there is a, is a workflow, right? So to me that is typical [00:13:00] of some of the amazing, innovative companies in the UK that I’ve run into throughout my career. And that is, you’re a group of SMEs, you know, bolted connections. That’s what you do, right? But then you’re like, hey. If there’s a tool, we could make a tool that would make our lives a bit easier, then it’s like, well, we could make the entire industry’s lives a little bit easier as well.

So let’s iterate on that. And now you’re able to send these kits around the world to look at these things. Hey, you have a problem with this specific model. We can help you with this because we know the failure mode and we know how to look for it. Let’s do that for you. Also here, you’re doing bolt bulk measurements.

We got that for you. But it all kind of flows back to the fact that Echo Bolt is a team. A bolted connection, SMEs that are making tools and being able to also provide consulting if need be. Yeah. Right. Um, to, to an entire industry. And I think that, um, this is my take on it, right? Wind is stop number one. I think you guys are gonna do a fantastic year, but there’s a lot of, uh, opportunity out there in bolted [00:14:00] connections as well.

Allen Hall: A tremendous amount blade bolts being broken from defects in the crystalline structure. What appears to be a more. Rapidly developing issue across fleets that I’ve seen. I went to a farm this summer and the number of blade bolts that were there on the table that were broken on the conference room table was And the whiteboard office.

Yeah. Yeah. This one,

Joel Saxum: this one.

Allen Hall: Your hard head is not gonna protect you from this one. It’s, it’s, it was this, um, I couldn’t imagine the amount of time they were spending hunting these things down. And of course, the only way they were finding ’em was they were broken. You like to catch ’em before they break because it becomes

Joel Saxum: a safety risk.

Just not too long ago we saw an insurance case where there’s an RCA going on and it is pointing at an entire tower came down. Right. And it is pointing at a mid, mid tower section bolted connection. How often do you guys run into those problems? Or are you contacted by insurance companies or anything like that to, to take a peek at those?

Pete Andrews: We haven’t done anything directly for insurance [00:15:00]companies, but we have been engaged by. Engineering consultancies that are doing RCA type activities. Okay. Um, things like at the end of defect liability periods mm-hmm. A customer has, has seen, they’ve had a lot of, uh, issues from an OEM, maybe an OE EM has offered a modification or an upgrade, assessing whether that upgrade is actually solved the problem or not.

We’ve got involved in, um, but the tower. Issue specifically. It’s actually very rare we find, um, problems with tower connections, but where we do is often where they haven’t achieved good flange flatness, ah, during installation or the bolts have been, let’s say, left out in the elements for a period and lubrication has been, has deteriorated before the bolt’s been installed.

So there are cases out there, but what I would say is. [00:16:00] To think about your whole life cycle, so ensure the bolt’s installed correctly and we can help with that with a QA to say, yes, this torque or tightening method has got you to the load that you want. Do some through life monitoring, but often if you install it correctly, it will it’s operational life.

You will have very little concern. But then in the UK market, we’re increasingly getting involved again at the end of life, right? Life extension where life extension turbines are 20, 25 years old. How does an operator make a decision to carry on running without replacing all bots? Um, and that’s where increasingly we being asked to use the technologist just to say, actually the joint is fine.

The bolts have run in a good, um, operational envelope. Run them on. Don’t replace a hundred percent of them like you might have been recommended to from your, um, yeah. Turbine supplier side. [00:17:00]

Allen Hall: So Pete, if someone’s doing a repower where they’re basically putting a new one in the cell on an existing tower, they’re making a lot of assumptions about all the bolts from the ground up that they’re gonna be okay.

And I know we’re talking about that. We’re in a lot of installations where. If the turbine has gone through a repowered or two. So now those bolts are 20 years old. Yeah. And trying to get ’em to

Joel Saxum: 30 35. 35

Allen Hall: 40. Yeah. I don’t know what they’re doing. By those bolted connections. Are they just like replacing the bolts?

Are they hitting ’em with a hammer again? Is that the, yeah,

Pete Andrews: I mean, they might replace ’em, but you’ve got a problem with the foundation bolts. ’cause they’re obviously often anchor bolts set into concrete, so you have to reuse them and. With the projects, both in wind and in process power industry with the chimney stacks to try and ascertain whether foundation bolts that are set into concrete are still suitable for operations.

So look for corrosion losses, look for [00:18:00] defects. Um, so yeah, they’re all things that need thinking about before you just make the snap decision to repower. But I think

Joel Saxum: a lot of that, uh, going back to a couple minutes ago, you were talking about at the commissioning phase, making sure that you have proper qa, QC of how these things were installed day one, and then making sure that before commissioning of a turbine, they’re checked.

I think that’s really important. We’re starting to see that in the blade world now too, where we’ve been talking about it for a long time, and now when you talk to operators, they’re like, we’re getting inspections done on the blades before they’re hung. Or at the factory before they’re hung. After they’re hung.

Like they want a good foundation baseline. Are you seeing that in the bolted connection world too?

Pete Andrews: Yes. Sort of. It’s just emerging for us. What we’ve found is, so most of our customers are in the operational phase ’cause they are the ones feeling the pain. Yeah. Of the routine retitling work. When they do major components, they sometimes engage us to come and say, can you check [00:19:00] before and after the blade was removed?

What was it? Before we took it off from a a bolt load perspective, what is it afterwards? Can you then recheck after 500 hours When we retalk it? And what we’ve seen there often is the initial install hasn’t got them to where they needed to be and they’ve had to go and do the break in maintenance or the 500 hour REIT to get the bolts to the right load.

So one of the questions that we have is whether. Some of the defects are actually being initiated very early on in that initial running in period and whether if, if actually you’d taken the time at, at the point of assembly to make sure you were correct, whether that avoids some of the knock on integrity concerns.

So yeah, it’s interesting area.

Allen Hall: Well, bolts are what hold wind turbines together and you better know you have the right. Tension and [00:20:00] torque on your bolts to get to the lifetime of the wind turbine and to, and to check it once in a while. And I know there’s a lot of operators I can think of right now in the United States that are sort of doing that job somewhat.

I I think they have missed out on opportunities to save a lot of money and to call it echo bolt. How do people get ahold of you? Because that’s one thing I run into all the time. Like, Hey, hey, you gotta talk to Ebol, call Ebol. How do they get ahold of you?

Pete Andrews: So the easiest ways are via our website. Which is echo bolt.com.

Um, LinkedIn, you’ll find us at Echo Bolt on LinkedIn. Reach out. Our email would be info@cobolt.com. So any of those route and you’ll, uh, reach me and the team and more than happy to speak to you about any of your faulting concerns or problems. We are, uh, yeah, we’re passionate about your problems.

Allen Hall: Pete, thank you so much for being on this podcast.

I, it is great to actually see you in person and see the bolt wave technology. It’s really [00:21:00] impressive. So anybody out there that needs bolt tensioning to checking tools, you need to get ahold of Pete at Echo Bolt and get started today. Thank you Pete. Thanks guys. It’s great to be here.

EchoBolt’s BoltWave Simplifies Turbine Bolt Inspections

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How the U.S. Is Regarded Internationally

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At left is a statement from Germany about RFK, Jr. and the crackpot conspiracy theories he’s inflict on Americans’ health.

How the U.S. Is Regarded Internationally

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ACORE Announces 2026 Board Chair, Leadership, and New Members

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  • Press Releases

ACORE Announces 2026 Board Chair, Leadership, and New Members

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, ACORE announced its 2026 Board class and the appointment of Berkshire Hathaway Energy’s Pat Reiten as Board chair. Alongside Pat as new chair, the following individuals will also serve in leadership positions on the Board. 

  • Chair: Pat Reiten, Senior Vice President, Public Policy — Berkshire Hathaway Energy
  • Vice Chair: Meghan Schultz, Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer — Invenergy
  • Treasurer / Finance Committee Chair: Steve Ryder, Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer — Clearway Energy
  • Secretary: Shannon Kellogg, VP of AWS Public Policy – Americas, Amazon Web Services — Amazon
  • Development Committee Chair: Mit Buchanan, Managing Director — JP Morgan
  • Governance Committee Chair: Elizabeth Kaiga, Chief Commercial Officer For Energy Systems — DNV

The following have also joined the ACORE Board of Directors:

  • Melissa Shute, Senior Vice President of Corporate Affairs — RWE
  • Phil Musser, Senior Vice President, Government Affairs — NextEra Energy
  • Ray Wood, Chairman, Natural Resources & Energy Transition — Bank of America

“ACORE plays a significant role in advancing the key role clean energy investment has in meeting customer needs and the country’s strategic aims; the strength of its membership and impact across the energy industry is substantial. I’m honored to serve as ACORE’s new Board chair and look forward to working alongside the many companies and individuals leading American clean energy development,” said Pat Reiten, Senior Vice President of Public Policy, Berkshire Hathaway Energy.

“At this time of massive and unprecedented electric demand growth, we’re grateful to have this group of professionals serve on ACORE’s Board of Directors,” said ACORE President and CEO Ray Long. “The Board, like our membership, includes a diverse set of interests representing the institutions that are financing, developing, building, buying, manufacturing, and operating the US electric energy system. Their leadership and expertise will help drive policy analysis and research, the bedrock of ACORE’s work, particularly as we move through this important era for American energy.”

For more information and a full list of ACORE’s Board of Directors, please visit https://acore.org/about/board-of-directors/.

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About ACORE:
ACORE is a nonpartisan nonprofit organization that operates at the intersection of affordability, reliability, and clean energy deployment. Our work is focused on stabilizing energy prices, strengthening the electric grid, and driving investment in cost-effective technologies to ensure that clean energy delivers for people, businesses, and the U.S. economy.

ACORE’s membership includes clean energy investors, developers, energy buyers, power generators, manufacturers, and energy providers. In 2024, nearly 80% of the booming utility-scale domestic clean energy growth was financed, developed, owned, equipped, or contracted by ACORE members.

Media Contacts:
Sophie Stover
communications@acore.org

The post ACORE Announces 2026 Board Chair, Leadership, and New Members appeared first on ACORE.

https://acore.org/news/acore-announces-2026-board-chair-leadership-and-new-members/

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