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How Enectiva reduces the impact of degradation in solar PV (Rooftop and Utility-Scale)

Summary Solar assets lose energy over time for two different reasons: (1) modules slowly produce less power each year (true degradation), and (2) plant equipment fails or drifts (inverters, connectors, combiner boxes, switchgear, cables), creating downtime and hidden losses. Enectiva primarily helps with the second category: it reduces the effect of degradation by detecting underperformance early, triggering alerts, and shortening the time a system spends in a faulted or inefficient state.
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EPBD 2024 BACS Compliance- How to Meet the December Deadline with Enectiva

Introduction: EU energy policy is increasingly clear: modern buildings must not only measure energy use, but also understand it, compare it, and actively improve it. The recast Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) (Directive (EU) 2024/1275) establishes upgraded requirements for Building Automation and Control Systems (BACS), with key deadlines in December 2024, May 2026, and December 2029. What the Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) Requires (In simple terms): For certain non-residential buildings, EU rules now require the installation of a Building Automation and Control System (BACS) particularly where systems are large enough to matter.
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Comparison of latest PV cell technologies 2026

Introduction: This short briefing compares leading photovoltaic (PV) cell technologies and summarises where each stands in terms of record research-cell efficiency and representative commercial module performance (2024–2025). It focuses on high efficiency crystalline silicon architectures, perovskite based tandems and single junction perovskites, and established thin film CdTe and CIGS, highlighting key advantages, limitations, and commercial readiness. 1.1 Advanced single-junction crystalline silicon Single‑junction crystalline‑silicon (c‑Si) cells use one p–n junction in a silicon wafer; modern records rely on n‑type wafers plus advanced surface passivation and low‑recombination contacts (TOPCon/HJT/back‑contact).
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How the EU Green Deal Impacts Your Building’s Energy Strategy

The European Union’s Green Deal framework represents the most ambitious climate and energy policy package in the European Union’s history. With a trajectory toward climate neutrality by 2050, the Green Deal mandates a series of interlinked regulatory reforms, including the Fit for 55 package, the recast Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD 2024), and the expansion of emissions trading schemes. Fit for 55 and the Energy Efficiency Imperative The Fit for 55 package demonstrates the EU’s commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55% by 2030 (relative to 1990 levels).
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ISO 50001: Implementation Process for Energy Management Systems

Efficient energy management has become a key focus for businesses worldwide, helping reduce costs and carbon footprints. ISO 50001 is the international standard that provides a structured framework for implementing an Energy Management System (EnMS). Below is the explanation of the implementation process and why ISO 50001 certification is a smart investment. Step-by-Step ISO 50001 Implementation Process Commitment - Secure management support and define energy objectives. Planning - Conduct an energy review, establish baseline data, set objectives, and identify key performance indicators (KPIs).
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