About
Clean Technology is an independent informational resource providing data-driven analysis on the global energy transition.
The clean energy transition is one of the most significant economic transformations in modern history. Trillions of dollars in capital are being deployed. Entire industries are being reshaped. And the policy landscape is evolving rapidly across every major economy.
Yet much of the best analysis on this transition remains locked behind paywalls, buried in technical reports, or fragmented across specialist publications. Clean Technology exists to bridge that gap—providing clear, rigorous, and accessible analysis on the economics, technology, and policy driving decarbonization.
We believe that better information leads to better decisions. Whether you're a student, a policymaker, an investor, an engineer, or simply someone trying to understand the energy transition, our goal is to make the most important data and analysis available and understandable.
Every claim is backed by data. We cite our sources, show our methodology, and distinguish between established facts and projections.
We maintain editorial independence. Our analysis is not influenced by industry sponsors, political affiliation, or commercial interests.
Complex topics explained clearly. We write for an informed general audience, not just specialists.
Covering the full scope of clean technology: from solar panels to green steel, from carbon pricing to battery chemistry.
Cost curves, learning rates, and levelized cost analysis for clean energy technologies. Tracking how solar, wind, batteries, hydrogen, and other technologies are becoming cost-competitive with incumbent systems.
Analysis of the regulatory and legislative frameworks shaping the energy transition: carbon pricing, clean energy standards, industrial policy, trade rules, and international climate agreements.
Deployment data, investment trends, and market dynamics across clean technology sectors. Tracking the pace and pattern of the transition as it unfolds in real time.
Deep dives into the decarbonization pathways for major economic sectors: power generation, transportation, heavy industry, and the built environment.
We draw on publicly available data from leading institutions including the International Energy Agency, BloombergNEF, the International Renewable Energy Agency, national statistics offices, and peer-reviewed academic research. We synthesize and contextualize this data to provide clear, informed perspectives on the state and trajectory of clean technology.
IEA, IRENA, BloombergNEF, Ember, RMI, national energy agencies, academic literature, and company filings.
Levelized cost analysis, learning curve modeling, policy impact assessment, market trend analysis, and scenario comparison.
All data is sourced and dated. Projections are clearly labeled. Assumptions are stated. Corrections are issued when errors are identified.
Have a question, a correction, or a topic suggestion? We'd like to hear from you.