RE+ In Las Vegas Draws 40,000 Clean Tech Professionals And Employers
The post RE+ In Las Vegas Draws 40,000 Clean Tech Professionals And Employers appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Las Vegas, NV – January 23: The nation’s largest rooftop solar array in Las Vegas, NV. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images) Los Angeles Times via Getty Images This week, Las Vegas is hosting the largest clean energy trade show in North America. RE+ brings together over 40,000 participants across the solar, storage, hydrogen, EV infrastructure, and grid-edge sectors, including a solid lineup of international companies. For anyone looking to break into the clean tech space or deepen their industry network, this is the best single place to start. If I were a job seeker in clean tech, I would not miss this event. RE+ offers a rare opportunity to meet the people who are shaping the industry, particularly those with hiring authority. The expo halls are filled with exhibitors ranging from early-stage startups to established players with large pipelines of commercial projects. Whether your focus is batteries, solar, or EV charging, this is where the industry comes together. This year, my attention was drawn to three companies tackling one of the sector’s most pressing issues: battery innovation. What unites these companies is a commitment to improving grid resiliency, though each takes a radically different approach to battery chemistry. 1. Fullmark Energy: Grid-Scale Lithium-Ion Batteries Based in California, Fullmark Energy is a fast-moving independent power producer exclusively focused on storage. With a 4 GW development pipeline, it is building projects that treat batteries not as accessories to solar arrays, but as standalone infrastructure assets central to grid stability and performance. Chris McKissack, CEO of Fullmark, is blunt about the need to shift public perception on battery storage. “Early events in the industry manifested with bad publicity,” he said. “There is no publicity about nothing happening.” In other words, today’s projects are engineered with robust safety…

The post RE+ In Las Vegas Draws 40,000 Clean Tech Professionals And Employers appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Las Vegas, NV – January 23: The nation’s largest rooftop solar array in Las Vegas, NV. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images) Los Angeles Times via Getty Images This week, Las Vegas is hosting the largest clean energy trade show in North America. RE+ brings together over 40,000 participants across the solar, storage, hydrogen, EV infrastructure, and grid-edge sectors, including a solid lineup of international companies. For anyone looking to break into the clean tech space or deepen their industry network, this is the best single place to start. If I were a job seeker in clean tech, I would not miss this event. RE+ offers a rare opportunity to meet the people who are shaping the industry, particularly those with hiring authority. The expo halls are filled with exhibitors ranging from early-stage startups to established players with large pipelines of commercial projects. Whether your focus is batteries, solar, or EV charging, this is where the industry comes together. This year, my attention was drawn to three companies tackling one of the sector’s most pressing issues: battery innovation. What unites these companies is a commitment to improving grid resiliency, though each takes a radically different approach to battery chemistry. 1. Fullmark Energy: Grid-Scale Lithium-Ion Batteries Based in California, Fullmark Energy is a fast-moving independent power producer exclusively focused on storage. With a 4 GW development pipeline, it is building projects that treat batteries not as accessories to solar arrays, but as standalone infrastructure assets central to grid stability and performance. Chris McKissack, CEO of Fullmark, is blunt about the need to shift public perception on battery storage. “Early events in the industry manifested with bad publicity,” he said. “There is no publicity about nothing happening.” In other words, today’s projects are engineered with robust safety…
What's Your Reaction?






