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Clean technology news website
CleanTechnica Type of site
News Available in English Created by Scott Cooney
[1] Editor Zach Shahan
[1]
Revenue Advertisement, optional subscription URL
cleantechnica .com Commercial Yes Registration Optional Launched January 7, 2008; 16 years ago (2008-01-07 )
[2] Current status Online
CleanTechnica is a US-based website dedicated to aggregating news in
clean technology ,
sustainable energy , and
electric vehicles , with a focus on
Tesla .
[3]
[4]
Content
CleanTechnica publishes stories on a wide range of topics that are cited by
mainstream media such as
Business Insider (on
Lindsey Graham ),
[5]
Reuters (on
nanotech for energy storage),
[6]
ThinkProgress (on
wind power in
Texas ),
[7]
The Washington Post (on suburban living),
[8]
Forbes (on the
Byton M-Byte )
[9] and
Slate (on
mask stockpiling during the
COVID-19 pandemic ).
[10] ThinkProgress have also published their stories in full.
[11]
In addition to their own stories, CleanTechnica publish interviews with notable individuals within clean technology such as fellow at the Post Carbon Institute
Richard Heinberg .
[12] In collaboration with the quarterly magazine The Beam Magazine, CleanTechnica publish their stories.
[13]
[14] Starting in 2015 CleanTechnica have held an annual vote among its readers to select a Car of the Year.
[15]
Staff
The site director is Zach Shahan, who in 2013 was found by an
Appinions Auto Tech Influence Study to be a top 20 influencer in
fuel economy with the top three being
Elon Musk ,
The New York Times ' s John Broder and
Barack Obama .
[16]
Apart from its own staff, CleanTechnica have accepted guest contributions from others, such as California Governor (then mayor of San Francisco)
Gavin Newsom .
[17]
References
^
a
b
"Our Team" . cleantechnica.com . Retrieved 2020-04-30 .
^
"cleantechnica.co WHOIS, DNS, & Domain Info – DomainTools" .
WHOIS . Retrieved 2020-04-30 .
^
"Cleantech News — #1 In EV, Solar, Wind, Tesla News" . cleantechnica.com . Retrieved 2020-04-30 .
^ Hockenson, Lauren (2012-06-10).
"5 Startups Improving Society Through Technology" .
Mashable . Retrieved 2020-04-30 .
^ Winfrey, Graham (2010-01-08).
"Republican Senator Lindsey Graham Defects To Climate Change Activist!" .
businessinsider.com .
Archived from the original on 2011-10-20. Retrieved 2020-05-16 .
^ Kuo, Iris (2010-09-29).
"On the GreenBeat: Amyris weathers first day of trading, California to double solar capacity" .
reuters.com .
Archived from the original on 2010-10-27. Retrieved 2020-05-16 .
^ Spross, Jeff (2014-03-31).
"Wind Reaches Its Highest Generation Level Ever In Texas, Heralding A Challenge To Natural Gas" .
thinkprogress.org .
Archived from the original on 2020-05-16. Retrieved 2020-05-16 .
^ Mooney, Chris (2014-12-24).
"How solar power and electric cars could make suburban living awesome again" .
washingtonpost.com .
Archived from the original on 2016-01-11. Retrieved 2020-05-16 .
^ Blanco, Sebastian (2018-08-30).
"Byton's First Drivable M-Byte Prototype Ready For Testing" .
forbes.com . Retrieved 2020-05-16 .
^ Hadavas, Chloe (2020-03-25).
"Why Did Tech Companies Stockpile Millions of Medical Masks?" .
slate.com .
Archived from the original on 2020-03-25. Retrieved 2020-05-16 .
^ Marcacci, Silvio (2012-08-15).
"Michigan Renewable Energy Ballot Initiative Would Double State's Green Jobs, Concludes Study" . cleantechnica.com .
Archived from the original on 2020-05-16. Retrieved 2020-05-16 – via thinkprogress.org.
^
Heinberg, Richard (2017-04-21).
"Heinberg interview published at CleanTechnica" .
postcarbon.org .
Archived from the original on 2017-09-25. Retrieved 2020-05-16 .
^
"The Beam, Author at CleanTechnica" . cleantechnica.com . Retrieved 2020-05-16 .
^
"Partners" . the-beam.com . Retrieved 2020-05-16 .
^ Field, Kyle (2015-11-30).
"Announcing the CleanTechnica Car of the Year Award" . cleantechnica.com . Retrieved 2020-05-16 .
^
"Appinions Auto Tech Influence Study" .
Appinions . 2013-03-26. Retrieved 2020-04-30 .
^ Garthwaite, Josie (2009-02-27).
"Will Cali's Latest Wave Power Project Sink or Sail With Regulators?" .
nytimes.com .
Archived from the original on 2014-12-26. Retrieved 2020-05-16 .
External links