tri

Australian Dollar(AUD)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Australian Dollar = 4.4156 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Chinese Yuan Renminbi(CNY)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Chinese Yuan Renminbi = 0.9552 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar



  • Chinese Yuan Renminbi

tri

Hungarian Forint(HUF)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Hungarian Forint = 0.0209 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Philippine Peso(PHP)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Philippine Peso = 0.1338 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Kenyan Shilling(KES)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Kenyan Shilling = 0.0637 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Latvian Lat(LVL)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Latvian Lat = 11.1716 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Egyptian Pound(EGP)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Egyptian Pound = 0.4342 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Botswana Pula(BWP)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Botswana Pula = 0.5564 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Bulgarian Lev(BGN)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Bulgarian Lev = 3.7428 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Canadian Dollar(CAD)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Canadian Dollar = 4.8208 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Euro(EUR)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Euro = 7.4134 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Mexican Peso(MXN)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Mexican Peso = 0.2855 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Brazilian Real(BRL)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Brazilian Real = 1.1789 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

United Arab Emirates Dirham(AED)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 United Arab Emirates Dirham = 1.8397 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar



  • United Arab Emirates Dirham

tri

Sri Lanka Rupee(LKR)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Sri Lanka Rupee = 0.0362 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar



  • Sri Lanka Rupee

tri

Algerian Dinar(DZD)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Algerian Dinar = 0.0527 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Indonesian Rupiah(IDR)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Indonesian Rupiah = 0.0005 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Lithuanian Lita(LTL)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Lithuanian Lita = 2.2886 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Nigerian Naira(NGN)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Nigerian Naira = 0.0173 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Czech Republic Koruna(CZK)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Czech Republic Koruna = 0.2689 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar



  • Czech Republic Koruna

tri

Bolivian Boliviano(BOB)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Bolivian Boliviano = 0.98 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Japanese Yen(JPY)/Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)

1 Japanese Yen = 0.0633 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar




tri

Skype Gets Tripped Up By Stray Characters






tri

Windows 2000/XP/2003 win32k.sys SfnINSTRING Denial Of Service

win32k.sys in Microsoft Windows 2000 / XP / 2003 suffers from a local kernel denial of service vulnerability related to SfnINSTRING.




tri

LPRng use_syslog Remote Format String Vulnerability

This Metasploit module exploits a format string vulnerability in the LPRng print server. This vulnerability was discovered by Chris Evans. There was a publicly circulating worm targeting this vulnerability, which prompted RedHat to pull their 7.0 release. They consequently re-released it as "7.0-respin".




tri

To Kill A Centrifuge

Whitepaper called To Kill a Centrifuge - A Technical Analysis of What Stuxnet's Creators Tried to Achieve.





tri

DMCA Strikes Again - First Amendment Does Not Apply




tri

Unpublished Iraq War Logs Trigger Internal WikiLeaks Revolt




tri

Expect $1.6 Trillion in Clean Energy Investments Through 2020, Says IEA

Investments in new clean-energy capacity will total $1.61 trillion through 2020 even as the expansion of renewables is expected to slow, the International Energy Agency said.




tri

Electrifying Keyna: How One African Country is Approaching Renewable Energy Development

Kenya’s renewable energy ambitions have attracted growing attention in recent months. There has been a strong uptick in interest in the country’s wind energy potential in particular. Last year, Kenya’s Ministry of Energy and Petroleum said in an investment prospectus for 2013-2016 that it plans to boost wind power generation by 630 MW as part of its target to increase electricity levels by 5,000 MW by 2016. In March, the Kenyan government also signed a financing document for the largest private investment in Kenya.




tri

Germany’s Clean Electricity Costs Decline for First Time

German electricity consumers will for the first time see a drop in the fee added to their bills to fund renewables, a boost for Chancellor Angela Merkel, who has pledged to curb the cost for voters.




tri

Halifax Water Generates Power from a 32-kW In-pipe Small Hydroelectric System

Halifax Regional Municipality of Nova Scotia, Canada, is the first Canadian city to use an in-pipe hydroelectric generation system within a pressurized water distribution pipeline, according to Halifax Water. On Nov. 13, a 32-kW generating system within a drinking water distribution control chamber for Halifax Water began providing power.




tri

Reflections from Breakthrough Marine Energy Trials

The lush hills of Strangford Lough are truly a place of magic scenery. Portaferry, a small fishing village, is located one hour’s drive from Belfast in Northern Ireland, and is today perhaps most famous for being close to the location where blockbuster Games of Thrones is filmed. In this idyllic fishing village, struggling with a high unemployment rate and a diminishing population, something new and prosperous is growing. Looking out over the calm waters of Strangford Lough, one could hardly believe that under the ocean surface — that electricity can be produced.




tri

Former FERC Chief Jon Wellinghoff Speaks Out on Grid Security and Distributed Generation

In a previous article, I had a conversation with former-CIA chief Jim Woolsey to discuss one of America’s greatest national security vulnerabilities, its power grid. The issues that Woolsey has been concerned with for over a decade has been the ease in which a terrorist group or other actor (think North Korea for example) could attack the grid and plunge the country into darkness for months, if not years. And if that seems far-fetched, just recall how a tree limb fell in Ohio in 2003 and blacked out the entire Northeast and part of Canada for several days.




tri

What Business Are Electric Utilities In?

Many businesses can now perform the traditional functions of an electric utility — provide affordable, reliable, resilient power to homes and businesses. The barriers to entry in the business have fallen. For instance, a home with rooftop solar panels, batteries, and gas-based generators may choose to be grid-independent. Even when homes decide to remain grid-tied, utilities face falling demand and revenue, and the possibility of future grid-defection. Further, competing electricity solutions can emerge quickly, and not one-home-at-a-time — microgrids can offer community, village, or campus-level solutions.




tri

Investors Spent a Record $2 Trillion on Renewables, Report Says

Investors have spent more than $2 trillion on clean-energy plants in the past decade and last year added more renewable capacity than ever before.




tri

US Climate Commitment Should Spur Other Countries to Act

The proposed U.S. commitment to tackling climate change in support of a new international climate agreement is a serious and achievable plan that demonstrates the United States is ready to take significant action. Coming today, eight months before the UNFCCC Conference of the Parties in Paris this December, known as COP 21, the U.S. submission adds momentum toglobal climate negotiations and should help spur other countries to act.




tri

Experts Agree: We Can Preserve Electric Reliability and Protect Public Health Under Clean Power Plan

Last June, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed the first ever national carbon pollution standards for existing power plants. Fossil fuel-fired power plants account for almost 40% of U.S. carbon dioxide emissions, making them the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in the nation and one of the single largest categories of greenhouse gas sources in the world.




tri

US Power Grid’s $2 Trillion Upgrade Needs European Efficiency

A $2 trillion push in the U.S. to blend renewable energy into the power supply and fortify transmission lines against extreme weather means that Americans must act more like Europeans to keep their power costs down.




tri

Summers’ Law Strikes Again

Lawrence Summers famously wrote, “there are idiots, look around” in an attack on the theory that markets are rational. What some have called “Summers’ Law” certainly applies to the markets’ response to the slide in the price of oil as it relates to stocks of renewable energy companies.




tri

The New Normal? Renewables, Efficiency, And “Too Much Electricity”

Just over a decade ago, the state of California faced serious concerns about whether its utilities could generate and/or buy enough power to assure that the world’s seventh-largest economy could keep the lights on. The infamous California energy crisis, which affected several other western states as well, was a complex tangle of poorly structured deregulation, significant market manipulation (remember Enron?), and other causes. Along with rolling blackouts, California endured an official state of emergency that lasted 34 months, led to the recall and replacement of Gov. Gray Davis, and cost the state and its ratepayers billions of dollars — a cautionary tale for all states of electricity supply unable to meet demand.




tri

Managing the Risks of Renewable Energy Projects in Developing Countries

Driven by rapid expansion in developing countries, renewables are becoming a significant source of the world’s power.  According to the United Nations Environmental Programme’s (UNEP) 9th “Global Trends in Renewable Energy Investment 2015,” investment in developing countries was up 36 percent in 2014, totaling $131.3 billion.




tri

Where Coal Was King, Pope's Climate Warning Faces a Tricky Sell

In West Virginia, where workers have harvested coal seams for centuries, Pope Francis’ new warning about the risks of fossil fuels will find skepticism even among the faithful.




tri

The Way Humans Get Electricity Is About to Change Forever

Trillions of dollars will be invested in renewable energy over the next 25 years, driving some of the most profound changes yet in how humans get their electricity. That's according to a new forecast by Bloomberg New Energy Finance that plots out global power markets to 2040. 




tri

World Bank makes US$390 million loan Pakistan's Tarbela hydroelectric plant extension

The World Bank has approved US$390 million in additional financing to be used by Pakistan's Water and Power Development Authority for extensions of its Tarbela hydroelectric plant.




tri

Renewable Energy Mid-Year Report: 10% US Energy Consumption, 14% Net Electrical Generation

According to the most recent issue of the "Monthly Energy Review" by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), with data through June 30, 2013, renewable energy sources (i.e., biofuels, biomass, hydropower, geothermal, solar, and wind) provided 9.81 percent of U.S. energy consumption and 11.82 percent of domestic energy production for the first half of 2013.




tri

More Countries around the Globe Recognizing the Values of Geothermal Power

Walk into any panel discussion at a geothermal power event and you will often hear about barriers hindering geothermal development. In spite of the obstacles, the geothermal industry has grown and adapted to adversity, and it is unfortunate when more attention is not given to geothermal power’s technological accomplishments and the long-term potential. Today, 73 countries across the globe are actively engaged with the geothermal energy sector, showing that more governments, utilities, and industry stakeholders are recognizing the long-term value geothermal power can bring to their power systems.