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| | NOVEMBER 20256Copyright © 2025 ValleyMedia, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part of any text, photography or illustrations without written permission from the publisher is prohibited. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts, photographs or illustrations. Views and opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the magazine and accordingly, no liability is assumed by the publisher thereof. NOVEMBER 20, 2025, Vol 08 - Issue 23 (ISSN 2832-3963)ValleyMedia, Inc. To subscribe to Energy Tech ReviewVisit www.energytechreview.com EDITOR'S DESKEurope's clean energy transition in 2025 and the rise of solar powered yachts reflect the same underlying shift. Electrification is spreading across sectors, renewables continue to grow and advances in storage are bringing stability to systems that rely on variable generation. Policy incentives now reward low emission operation on land and at sea, guiding capital towards solutions that make clean power dependable. As grids absorb more solar and wind, investment is moving towards storage, flexible demand and smarter integration. A similar pattern is emerging on the water, where efficient solar panels and improved batteries support quiet cruising and lower operating costs. EU frameworks such as Fit for 55 and REPowerEU keep 2030 goals in sight, even as grid congestion and softer rooftop demand push developers to prioritise more resilient, higher quality projects. Utility scale solar combined with storage is gaining momentum because it stabilises capture prices and improves dispatchability. This hybrid logic increasingly shapes yacht design. Solar arrays feed dense lithium packs managed by intelligent software, extending range and reducing generator reliance while meeting stricter port emissions rules and consumer expectations for quieter experiences.Capital and technology flows connect these developments. Europe's growing storage build out through 2029 is creating supply chains, integrators and standards that influence maritime electrification, from battery modules and BMS software to safety norms and financing structures. Shipyards and marine suppliers are adopting lessons from grid scale and EV markets, while marinas begin planning higher capacity charging that draws on local solar and grid services.Challenges also align, including high interest rates, interconnection delays, premium pricing and uneven infrastructure. Both sectors turn to the same toolbox of better batteries, smarter software and targeted policy to accelerate adoption.In this edition, we highlight several influential companies and leaders. Among them is Latif Faiyaz, Head of Energy Trading & Strategy, Northern Gas and Power, and João Amaral, Chief Technology Officer, & Country Manager, Portugal Voltalia. Their perspectives illuminate today's market pressures and the opportunities ahead, offering insights that can support stronger business decisions.Let us know your thoughts!Charlotte SmithManaging Editoreditor@energytechreview.comClean Power, Calm Waters: Europe's 2025 Story*Some of the Insights are based on our interviews with CIOs and CXOsVisualizersMichael WayneChris LynnManaging EditorCharlotte SmithEditorial StaffAaron Pierce Ava GarciaVian IsaacAbner LawrenceEmailsales@energytechreview.comeditor@energytechreview.commarketing@energytechreview.comJoshua Parker Kenny Peruzzi
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