RENEWABLE AND GREEN ENERGY SERVICES
What Is Carbon-Free Energy?
When energy sources are labeled carbon-free, the energy is produced by a resource that generates no carbon emissions, such as nuclear or large hydroelectric.
RENEWABLE AND GREEN ENERGY SERVICES
When energy sources are labeled carbon-free, the energy is produced by a resource that generates no carbon emissions, such as nuclear or large hydroelectric.
What & Why
Carbon-free is electricity generation either does not use fossil fuels or does not emit carbon. For example, a state is carbon-free if all of its electricity is from clean energy sources like wind, solar, and nuclear.
Renewable energy is energy that comes from resources that are naturally replenished, such as sunlight and wind. Unlike fossil fuels, such as oil, natural gas, and coal, which cannot be replaced, renewable energy regenerates naturally in a short period.
The terms carbon-free and renewable are often used in similar contexts, but these two resources create different environmental and economic impacts.
On the other hand, renewable energy is classified as a naturally replenishing resource that produces zero emissions. Renewable energy sources include solar, wind, geothermal, biomass and biowaste, and eligible hydroelectric.
In addition, the energy projects may create additional environmental benefits on top of their emissions reductions, such as pollinator-friendly solar programs, or economic job benefits, through the construction of new projects.
When energy sources are labeled carbon-free, the energy is produced by a resource that generates no carbon emissions, such as nuclear or large hydroelectric.
While all renewable energy is carbon-free, not all carbon-free energy is renewable. Only naturally replenishing sources are renewable.
“Clean” energy emits little to no greenhouse gas emissions and includes renewable and carbon-free sources.
This is in contrast to fossil fuels, which produce significant greenhouse gas emissions, including carbon dioxide and methane.

Wind, solar, biomass, geothermal, and small hydropower

Larger hydropower and nuclear as well as all renewable energy resources including: wind, solar, biomass, geothermal, and small hydropower

Natural gas, coal, and oil
Carbon neutral means that any CO2 released into the atmosphere from a company’s activities is balanced by removing an equivalent amount.
Climate-positive means that the activity goes beyond achieving net-zero carbon emissions to create an environmental benefit by removing additional carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Carbon negative means the same thing as "climate positive."
Climate Neutral refers to reducing all GHG to zero while eliminating all other negative environmental impacts that an organization may cause.
Net-Zero carbon emissions mean that an activity releases net-zero carbon emissions into the atmosphere. Net-Zero emissions balance the amount of greenhouse gas (GHG) released and the amount removed from the atmosphere.
Carbon positive is how organizations describe climate positive and carbon negative. Unfortunately, it's mainly a marketing term and understandably confusing–we generally avoid it.
Carbon-free energy is generated using resources and technologies that do not emit carbon dioxide during electricity production, such as renewables, nuclear power, and certain advanced methods like hydrogen and marine energy.
Carbon-free energy is essential for reducing greenhouse gas emissions and combating climate change, and is generated using a diverse set of renewable, nuclear, and advanced non-carbon-emitting technologies.
Carbon-free energy is essential for reducing greenhouse gas emissions and combating climate change, and is generated using a diverse set of renewable, nuclear, and advanced non-carbon-emitting technologies.
Technologies that qualify as carbon-free energy under EPA rules include those that generate electricity without emitting carbon dioxide during operation, as well as certain fossil-fuel plants equipped with robust carbon capture systems that meet EPA criteria.
TPI Efficiency supplies clients with carbon-free energy using a comprehensive approach that combines renewable energy procurement, electrification upgrades, energy efficiency projects, and carbon offset solutions.
TPI Efficiency enables clients to realize carbon-free energy through a mix of renewable supply contracts, efficiency upgrades, grid optimization, and verified carbon offsetting practices, aligning energy use with climate and regulatory goals