Cogeneration Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Cogeneration stocks.

Cogeneration Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 17 AGRO Adecoagro S.A. (AGRO) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 17 CNQ Canadian Natural Resources (CNQ) is a Top Dividend Stock Right Now: Should You Buy?
May 17 SO DTE vs. SO: Which Stock Is the Better Value Option?
May 17 AGRO Adecoagro S.A. 2024 Q1 - Results - Earnings Call Presentation
May 17 HMC Honda and IBM to co-develop SDV computing
May 16 AGRO Adecoagro declares $0.1682 dividend
May 16 AGRO Adjusted EBITDA of $90.1 million. Solid crushing pace and Farming yield normalization. $35 million cash dividend during 2024.
May 16 AGRO Adecoagro Non-GAAP EPS of $0.22, revenue of $253.8M beats by $8.8M
May 16 HMC Market Chatter: Toyota Motor, Honda, Nissan to Collaborate on Vehicle Software
May 16 HMC Honda Commits $65B To Electrification By 2030
May 16 HMC Toyota (TM) Falls 5% Since Q4 Earnings Beat on Soft Profit View
May 16 SO World's Largest Concrete Thermal Energy Storage Pilot Successfully Tested
May 16 HMC Honda still big on EVs
May 16 HMC Honda Motor Company Raises Investment in Electrification And Software to $65 Billion
May 16 HMC Honda Motor Plans to Invest Over $60 Billion on EV Strategy
May 16 HMC Japanese automaker Honda revs up on EVs, aiming for lucrative US, China markets
May 16 HMC Japan's Honda raises electrification investment to $65 billion through FY2030
May 15 CNQ Wildfire Threat to Oil-Sands City Seen Easing as Wind Shifts
May 15 HMC Honda's (HMC) Q4 Earnings Beat Estimates, Revenues Miss
May 15 HMC Honda, IBM sign MoU to develop next-gen chips for software-defined vehicles
Cogeneration

Cogeneration or combined heat and power (CHP) is the use of a heat engine or power station to generate electricity and useful heat at the same time. Trigeneration or combined cooling, heat and power (CCHP) refers to the simultaneous generation of electricity and useful heating and cooling from the combustion of a fuel or a solar heat collector. The terms cogeneration and trigeneration can be also applied to the power systems generating simultaneously electricity, heat, and industrial chemicals – e.g., syngas or pure hydrogen (article: combined cycles, chapter: natural gas integrated power & syngas (hydrogen) generation cycle).
Cogeneration is a more efficient use of fuel because otherwise wasted heat from electricity generation is put to some productive use. Combined heat and power (CHP) plants recover otherwise wasted thermal energy for heating. This is also called combined heat and power district heating. Small CHP plants are an example of decentralized energy. By-product heat at moderate temperatures (100–180 °C, 212–356 °F) can also be used in absorption refrigerators for cooling.
The supply of high-temperature heat first drives a gas or steam turbine-powered generator. The resulting low-temperature waste heat is then used for water or space heating. At smaller scales (typically below 1 MW) a gas engine or diesel engine may be used. Trigeneration differs from cogeneration in that the waste heat is used for both heating and cooling, typically in an absorption refrigerator. Combined cooling, heat and power systems can attain higher overall efficiencies than cogeneration or traditional power plants. In the United States, the application of trigeneration in buildings is called building cooling, heating and power. Heating and cooling output may operate concurrently or alternately depending on need and system construction.
Cogeneration was practiced in some of the earliest installations of electrical generation. Before central stations distributed power, industries generating their own power used exhaust steam for process heating. Large office and apartment buildings, hotels and stores commonly generated their own power and used waste steam for building heat. Due to the high cost of early purchased power, these CHP operations continued for many years after utility electricity became available.

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