Your Gateway to Power, Energy, Datacenters, Bitcoin and AI

Dive into the latest industry updates, our exclusive Paperboy Newsletter, and curated insights designed to keep you informed. Stay ahead with minimal time spent.

Discover What Matters Most to You

Explore ONMINE’s curated content, from our Paperboy Newsletter to industry-specific insights tailored for energy, Bitcoin mining, and AI professionals.

AI

Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry.

Bitcoin:

Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry.

Datacenter:

Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry.

Energy:

Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry.

Shape
Discover What Matter Most to You

Featured Articles

OpenAI’s GPT-5 rollout is not going smoothly

Want smarter insights in your inbox? Sign up for our weekly newsletters to get only what matters to enterprise AI, data, and security leaders. Subscribe Now The launch of OpenAI’s long anticipated new model, GPT-5, is off to a rocky start to say the least. Even forgiving errors in charts and voice demoes during yesterday’s livestreamed presentation of the new model (actually four separate models, and a ‘Thinking’ mode that can be engaged for three of them), a number of user reports have emerged since GPT-5’s release showing it erring badly when solving relatively simple problems that preceding OpenAI models — and rivals from competing AI labs — answer correctly. For example, data scientist Colin Fraser posted screenshots showing GPT-5 getting a math proof wrong (whether 8.888 repeating is equal to 9 — it is of course, not). It also failed on a simple algebra arithmetic problem that elementary schoolers could probably nail, 5.9 = x + 5.11. AI Scaling Hits Its Limits Power caps, rising token costs, and inference delays are reshaping enterprise AI. Join our exclusive salon to discover how top teams are: Secure your spot to stay ahead: https://bit.ly/4mwGngO Using GPT-5 to judge OpenAI’s own erroneous presentation charts also did not yield helpful or correct responses. It also failed on this trickier math word problem below (which, to be fair, stumped this human at first…though Elon Musk’s Groq 4 AI answered it correctly. For a hint, think of the fact that flagstones in this case can’t be divided into smaller portions. They must remain in tact as 80 separate units, so no halves or quarters). Not as good at coding as benchmarks indicate Even though OpenAI’s internal benchmarks and some third-party external ones have shown GPT-5 to outperform all other models at coding, it appears that in

Read More »

Diamondback Energy Narrows Production Guidance as Net Income Dips in Q2

Diamondback Energy, Inc. reported a net income of $699 million for the second quarter of 2025, well below the $837 million reported in the corresponding quarter of 2024. However, the first half net income of $2.1 billion surged past the $1.6 billion reported in H1 2024. The company said in its report that production for the quarter averaged 919,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boe/d). Oil production averaged 495,700 barrels per day (mbo/d). Diamondback said it put 108 wells into production in the Midland basin, and a further eight wells into production in the Delaware Basin. During the first half of the year, Diamondback said that 224 operated wells entered production in the Midland Basin with 15 more wells entering production in the Delaware Basin. In the second quarter of 2025, Diamondback said it had invested $707 million in operated drilling and completions, $90 million in capital workovers, non-operated drilling, completions, and science, and $67 million in infrastructure, environmental, and midstream projects, totaling $864 million in cash capital expenditures. For the first half of 2025, the company spent $1.6 billion on operated drilling and completions, $111 million on capital workovers, non-operated drilling, completions, and science, and $124 million on infrastructure, environmental, and midstream activities, amounting to a total of $1.8 billion in cash capital expenditures, it said. Diamondback has also narrowed its full-year oil production guidance to 485 – 492 mbo/d and increased annual boe guidance by 2 percent to 890 – 910 Mboe/d, it said. Furthermore,  Diamondback noted that the guidance does not reflect the pending acquisition by its publicly traded subsidiary, Viper Energy, Inc., of Sitio Royalties Corp., which is expected to close in the third quarter of 2025, subject to stockholder approval and the fulfillment or waiver of other typical closing conditions. To contact the author,

Read More »

Blackstone to Buy Enverus

In a statement posted on its website recently, Blackstone announced that private equity funds affiliated with the company have entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Enverus from Hellman & Friedman and Genstar Capital. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed in the statement, which noted that the deal is expected to close by the end of the year, subject to customary conditions. Citi and Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC acted as financial advisors and Kirkland & Ellis LLP acted as legal advisor to Enverus and Hellman & Friedman. RBC Capital Markets, LLC served as financial advisor and Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP served as legal advisor to Blackstone. Blackstone’s core private equity strategy, Blackstone Energy Transition Partners, and Blackstone’s private equity strategy for individual investors are each expected to invest in Enverus as part of this transaction, Blackstone revealed in the statement. “Enverus represents the latest in a number of recent transactions Blackstone has announced behind its high-conviction investment themes in electricity demand growth and the ongoing energy transition,” Blackstone said in its statement, highlighting its deals with Potomac Energy Center, Sediver, Westwood Professional Services, Trystar, and others. Eli Nagler and Bilal Khan, Senior Managing Directors at Blackstone, said in the statement, “as the leading energy-dedicated SaaS platform, Enverus’ advanced analytics and technology solutions are critical for its customers as they navigate unprecedented AI-driven electricity demand growth and the broader energy transition”. “We believe Blackstone’s energy market expertise and network can further enhance the company’s growth trajectory, and look forward to partnering with Manuj [Nikhanj, Enverus CEO] and the Enverus team,” they added. In the statement, Nikhanj said, “this is more than a transaction – it’s a launchpad”. “Blackstone shares our conviction that the future of energy will be defined by AI, real-time intelligence, and bold execution. Their global reach and deep expertise

Read More »

China Defends Buying Russian Oil

China said its imports of Russian oil are justified, pushing back against US threats of new tariffs after Washington slapped secondary levies on India for buying energy from Moscow. “It is legitimate and lawful for China to conduct normal economic, trade and energy cooperation with all countries around the world, including Russia,” the Chinese Foreign Ministry said Friday in a statement to Bloomberg News. “We will continue to adopt reasonable energy security measures in accordance with our national interests.” Donald Trump said earlier this week he could punish China with additional tariffs over its purchases of Russian oil, saying “that may happen.” The US president has also signaled his interest in brokering a peace deal in the Russia-Ukraine conflict and views pressure on big Russian trade partners to be part of that effort. Russian President Vladimir Putin met this week with Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff for nearly three hours of talks in the Kremlin. Trump on Wednesday said there was a “very good chance” he’d meet with Putin, though cautioned there had not yet been a “breakthrough” in the talks.  Chinese President Xi Jinping welcomed direct communications between Putin and Trump on Friday during his first known call with the Russian leader in months.  Xi also set out China’s position on Ukraine to Putin, describing the situation as a set of complex issues with no simple solutions, according to Chinese state broadcaster CCTV. Although Trump has warned over China’s purchases of Russian oil, his top adviser Peter Navarro played down the likelihood of new tariffs on Chinese exports, saying higher duties “may hurt the US.” When asked about Trump’s comments on Thursday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Fox News tariffs on China over oil purchases “could be on the table at some point.” China’s imports from Russia edged up in July to just over

Read More »

Sunrun battery attachment rate hits 70%, up 54% from year ago

Dive Brief: Seventy percent of the nearly 29,000 new Sunrun customers last quarter added paired batteries with rooftop solar systems, the largest U.S. home energy systems installer said Wednesday. That marked a 50% jump in the battery attachment rate from a year earlier. The surge in battery attachments highlights Sunrun’s shift away from solar-only installations and toward energy storage systems that can support virtual power plants, company executives told investors and stock analysts. Sunrun has installed about 3.2 GWh of distributed storage capacity to date, they said, putting it on track to reach 10 GWh by 2029. The expiration of the federal investment tax credit for third-party-owned residential solar equipment could deprive Sunrun of about $6,200 in revenue per system after 2027, it said in its Q2 2025 earnings presentation. To offset the loss, Sunrun said it would source lower-cost solar equipment, reduce customer acquisition costs, boost grid services revenue and raise power prices amid expected utility rate increases. Dive Insight: Sunrun has installed 195,000 solar-and-storage systems at its customers’ homes, it said Wednesday. The attachment rate has steadily increased since 2023, jumping from 18% to 54% from Q2 2023 to Q2 2024 and rising to 62% by Q4 2024. The exponential jump from 2023 to 2024 followed California’s enactment of a new net billing tariff that incentivized storage attachments for new residential solar customers. California remains the largest state market for residential solar, and policy decisions there have an outsized impact on distributed energy providers like Sunrun. Despite the slower pace of attachment growth this year, Sunrun is growing storage installations at a faster pace than solar-only installations. Sunrun installed 392 MWh of batteries in Q2 2025, up 48% from Q2 2024. It added 227 MW of solar capacity during the period, up 18% from a year earlier. Company

Read More »

Solutions to the energy talent gap are hiding in plain sight

Janell Hills-Thomas is senior director for equitable workforce strategies at the Interstate Renewable Energy Council and Courtney Haynes is chief engagement officer at Opportunity@Work. Amid political turbulence and an uncertain policy future, the clean and renewable energy sector continues to grow, spurred on by public demand for low-cost and reliable technologies to power their homes and vehicles. That would be good news — except that businesses across the industry face ongoing challenges finding enough qualified workers. Despite the industry’s growth, businesses often struggle to find trained professionals across roles ranging from installers and electricians to positions in engineering, project management and operations. While the career opportunities are plentiful, many potential candidates remain unaware of the high-quality jobs and routes to advancement in the clean energy industries. In the solar industry, for example, an overwhelming majority of employers say they face shortages of qualified workers to meet the demand for new installations. “It really does keep me up sometimes,” said one participant in the National Solar Jobs Census survey. “How are we going to build all these projects? Because there’s just not enough people.” In the energy efficiency sector, which employs 2.3 million people, most employers also report difficulty meeting their hiring needs. These challenges have taken on new urgency as we seek to ramp up deployment of clean energy solutions at an unprecedented scale. To find a path forward, we’ve engaged in discussions with hundreds of employers and educators through forums like the National Clean Energy Workforce Alliance. As a result of these convenings, here are a few key strategies we’ve identified to help employers fill job openings with qualified talent. Form strategic partnerships with educators Businesses can form partnerships with community colleges, other training providers and community-based organizations in the regions where they seek to hire. Developing long-term alliances

Read More »

OpenAI’s GPT-5 rollout is not going smoothly

Want smarter insights in your inbox? Sign up for our weekly newsletters to get only what matters to enterprise AI, data, and security leaders. Subscribe Now The launch of OpenAI’s long anticipated new model, GPT-5, is off to a rocky start to say the least. Even forgiving errors in charts and voice demoes during yesterday’s livestreamed presentation of the new model (actually four separate models, and a ‘Thinking’ mode that can be engaged for three of them), a number of user reports have emerged since GPT-5’s release showing it erring badly when solving relatively simple problems that preceding OpenAI models — and rivals from competing AI labs — answer correctly. For example, data scientist Colin Fraser posted screenshots showing GPT-5 getting a math proof wrong (whether 8.888 repeating is equal to 9 — it is of course, not). It also failed on a simple algebra arithmetic problem that elementary schoolers could probably nail, 5.9 = x + 5.11. AI Scaling Hits Its Limits Power caps, rising token costs, and inference delays are reshaping enterprise AI. Join our exclusive salon to discover how top teams are: Secure your spot to stay ahead: https://bit.ly/4mwGngO Using GPT-5 to judge OpenAI’s own erroneous presentation charts also did not yield helpful or correct responses. It also failed on this trickier math word problem below (which, to be fair, stumped this human at first…though Elon Musk’s Groq 4 AI answered it correctly. For a hint, think of the fact that flagstones in this case can’t be divided into smaller portions. They must remain in tact as 80 separate units, so no halves or quarters). Not as good at coding as benchmarks indicate Even though OpenAI’s internal benchmarks and some third-party external ones have shown GPT-5 to outperform all other models at coding, it appears that in

Read More »

Diamondback Energy Narrows Production Guidance as Net Income Dips in Q2

Diamondback Energy, Inc. reported a net income of $699 million for the second quarter of 2025, well below the $837 million reported in the corresponding quarter of 2024. However, the first half net income of $2.1 billion surged past the $1.6 billion reported in H1 2024. The company said in its report that production for the quarter averaged 919,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boe/d). Oil production averaged 495,700 barrels per day (mbo/d). Diamondback said it put 108 wells into production in the Midland basin, and a further eight wells into production in the Delaware Basin. During the first half of the year, Diamondback said that 224 operated wells entered production in the Midland Basin with 15 more wells entering production in the Delaware Basin. In the second quarter of 2025, Diamondback said it had invested $707 million in operated drilling and completions, $90 million in capital workovers, non-operated drilling, completions, and science, and $67 million in infrastructure, environmental, and midstream projects, totaling $864 million in cash capital expenditures. For the first half of 2025, the company spent $1.6 billion on operated drilling and completions, $111 million on capital workovers, non-operated drilling, completions, and science, and $124 million on infrastructure, environmental, and midstream activities, amounting to a total of $1.8 billion in cash capital expenditures, it said. Diamondback has also narrowed its full-year oil production guidance to 485 – 492 mbo/d and increased annual boe guidance by 2 percent to 890 – 910 Mboe/d, it said. Furthermore,  Diamondback noted that the guidance does not reflect the pending acquisition by its publicly traded subsidiary, Viper Energy, Inc., of Sitio Royalties Corp., which is expected to close in the third quarter of 2025, subject to stockholder approval and the fulfillment or waiver of other typical closing conditions. To contact the author,

Read More »

Blackstone to Buy Enverus

In a statement posted on its website recently, Blackstone announced that private equity funds affiliated with the company have entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Enverus from Hellman & Friedman and Genstar Capital. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed in the statement, which noted that the deal is expected to close by the end of the year, subject to customary conditions. Citi and Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC acted as financial advisors and Kirkland & Ellis LLP acted as legal advisor to Enverus and Hellman & Friedman. RBC Capital Markets, LLC served as financial advisor and Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP served as legal advisor to Blackstone. Blackstone’s core private equity strategy, Blackstone Energy Transition Partners, and Blackstone’s private equity strategy for individual investors are each expected to invest in Enverus as part of this transaction, Blackstone revealed in the statement. “Enverus represents the latest in a number of recent transactions Blackstone has announced behind its high-conviction investment themes in electricity demand growth and the ongoing energy transition,” Blackstone said in its statement, highlighting its deals with Potomac Energy Center, Sediver, Westwood Professional Services, Trystar, and others. Eli Nagler and Bilal Khan, Senior Managing Directors at Blackstone, said in the statement, “as the leading energy-dedicated SaaS platform, Enverus’ advanced analytics and technology solutions are critical for its customers as they navigate unprecedented AI-driven electricity demand growth and the broader energy transition”. “We believe Blackstone’s energy market expertise and network can further enhance the company’s growth trajectory, and look forward to partnering with Manuj [Nikhanj, Enverus CEO] and the Enverus team,” they added. In the statement, Nikhanj said, “this is more than a transaction – it’s a launchpad”. “Blackstone shares our conviction that the future of energy will be defined by AI, real-time intelligence, and bold execution. Their global reach and deep expertise

Read More »

China Defends Buying Russian Oil

China said its imports of Russian oil are justified, pushing back against US threats of new tariffs after Washington slapped secondary levies on India for buying energy from Moscow. “It is legitimate and lawful for China to conduct normal economic, trade and energy cooperation with all countries around the world, including Russia,” the Chinese Foreign Ministry said Friday in a statement to Bloomberg News. “We will continue to adopt reasonable energy security measures in accordance with our national interests.” Donald Trump said earlier this week he could punish China with additional tariffs over its purchases of Russian oil, saying “that may happen.” The US president has also signaled his interest in brokering a peace deal in the Russia-Ukraine conflict and views pressure on big Russian trade partners to be part of that effort. Russian President Vladimir Putin met this week with Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff for nearly three hours of talks in the Kremlin. Trump on Wednesday said there was a “very good chance” he’d meet with Putin, though cautioned there had not yet been a “breakthrough” in the talks.  Chinese President Xi Jinping welcomed direct communications between Putin and Trump on Friday during his first known call with the Russian leader in months.  Xi also set out China’s position on Ukraine to Putin, describing the situation as a set of complex issues with no simple solutions, according to Chinese state broadcaster CCTV. Although Trump has warned over China’s purchases of Russian oil, his top adviser Peter Navarro played down the likelihood of new tariffs on Chinese exports, saying higher duties “may hurt the US.” When asked about Trump’s comments on Thursday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Fox News tariffs on China over oil purchases “could be on the table at some point.” China’s imports from Russia edged up in July to just over

Read More »

Sunrun battery attachment rate hits 70%, up 54% from year ago

Dive Brief: Seventy percent of the nearly 29,000 new Sunrun customers last quarter added paired batteries with rooftop solar systems, the largest U.S. home energy systems installer said Wednesday. That marked a 50% jump in the battery attachment rate from a year earlier. The surge in battery attachments highlights Sunrun’s shift away from solar-only installations and toward energy storage systems that can support virtual power plants, company executives told investors and stock analysts. Sunrun has installed about 3.2 GWh of distributed storage capacity to date, they said, putting it on track to reach 10 GWh by 2029. The expiration of the federal investment tax credit for third-party-owned residential solar equipment could deprive Sunrun of about $6,200 in revenue per system after 2027, it said in its Q2 2025 earnings presentation. To offset the loss, Sunrun said it would source lower-cost solar equipment, reduce customer acquisition costs, boost grid services revenue and raise power prices amid expected utility rate increases. Dive Insight: Sunrun has installed 195,000 solar-and-storage systems at its customers’ homes, it said Wednesday. The attachment rate has steadily increased since 2023, jumping from 18% to 54% from Q2 2023 to Q2 2024 and rising to 62% by Q4 2024. The exponential jump from 2023 to 2024 followed California’s enactment of a new net billing tariff that incentivized storage attachments for new residential solar customers. California remains the largest state market for residential solar, and policy decisions there have an outsized impact on distributed energy providers like Sunrun. Despite the slower pace of attachment growth this year, Sunrun is growing storage installations at a faster pace than solar-only installations. Sunrun installed 392 MWh of batteries in Q2 2025, up 48% from Q2 2024. It added 227 MW of solar capacity during the period, up 18% from a year earlier. Company

Read More »

Solutions to the energy talent gap are hiding in plain sight

Janell Hills-Thomas is senior director for equitable workforce strategies at the Interstate Renewable Energy Council and Courtney Haynes is chief engagement officer at Opportunity@Work. Amid political turbulence and an uncertain policy future, the clean and renewable energy sector continues to grow, spurred on by public demand for low-cost and reliable technologies to power their homes and vehicles. That would be good news — except that businesses across the industry face ongoing challenges finding enough qualified workers. Despite the industry’s growth, businesses often struggle to find trained professionals across roles ranging from installers and electricians to positions in engineering, project management and operations. While the career opportunities are plentiful, many potential candidates remain unaware of the high-quality jobs and routes to advancement in the clean energy industries. In the solar industry, for example, an overwhelming majority of employers say they face shortages of qualified workers to meet the demand for new installations. “It really does keep me up sometimes,” said one participant in the National Solar Jobs Census survey. “How are we going to build all these projects? Because there’s just not enough people.” In the energy efficiency sector, which employs 2.3 million people, most employers also report difficulty meeting their hiring needs. These challenges have taken on new urgency as we seek to ramp up deployment of clean energy solutions at an unprecedented scale. To find a path forward, we’ve engaged in discussions with hundreds of employers and educators through forums like the National Clean Energy Workforce Alliance. As a result of these convenings, here are a few key strategies we’ve identified to help employers fill job openings with qualified talent. Form strategic partnerships with educators Businesses can form partnerships with community colleges, other training providers and community-based organizations in the regions where they seek to hire. Developing long-term alliances

Read More »

China Defends Buying Russian Oil

China said its imports of Russian oil are justified, pushing back against US threats of new tariffs after Washington slapped secondary levies on India for buying energy from Moscow. “It is legitimate and lawful for China to conduct normal economic, trade and energy cooperation with all countries around the world, including Russia,” the Chinese Foreign Ministry said Friday in a statement to Bloomberg News. “We will continue to adopt reasonable energy security measures in accordance with our national interests.” Donald Trump said earlier this week he could punish China with additional tariffs over its purchases of Russian oil, saying “that may happen.” The US president has also signaled his interest in brokering a peace deal in the Russia-Ukraine conflict and views pressure on big Russian trade partners to be part of that effort. Russian President Vladimir Putin met this week with Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff for nearly three hours of talks in the Kremlin. Trump on Wednesday said there was a “very good chance” he’d meet with Putin, though cautioned there had not yet been a “breakthrough” in the talks.  Chinese President Xi Jinping welcomed direct communications between Putin and Trump on Friday during his first known call with the Russian leader in months.  Xi also set out China’s position on Ukraine to Putin, describing the situation as a set of complex issues with no simple solutions, according to Chinese state broadcaster CCTV. Although Trump has warned over China’s purchases of Russian oil, his top adviser Peter Navarro played down the likelihood of new tariffs on Chinese exports, saying higher duties “may hurt the US.” When asked about Trump’s comments on Thursday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Fox News tariffs on China over oil purchases “could be on the table at some point.” China’s imports from Russia edged up in July to just over

Read More »

Solutions to the energy talent gap are hiding in plain sight

Janell Hills-Thomas is senior director for equitable workforce strategies at the Interstate Renewable Energy Council and Courtney Haynes is chief engagement officer at Opportunity@Work. Amid political turbulence and an uncertain policy future, the clean and renewable energy sector continues to grow, spurred on by public demand for low-cost and reliable technologies to power their homes and vehicles. That would be good news — except that businesses across the industry face ongoing challenges finding enough qualified workers. Despite the industry’s growth, businesses often struggle to find trained professionals across roles ranging from installers and electricians to positions in engineering, project management and operations. While the career opportunities are plentiful, many potential candidates remain unaware of the high-quality jobs and routes to advancement in the clean energy industries. In the solar industry, for example, an overwhelming majority of employers say they face shortages of qualified workers to meet the demand for new installations. “It really does keep me up sometimes,” said one participant in the National Solar Jobs Census survey. “How are we going to build all these projects? Because there’s just not enough people.” In the energy efficiency sector, which employs 2.3 million people, most employers also report difficulty meeting their hiring needs. These challenges have taken on new urgency as we seek to ramp up deployment of clean energy solutions at an unprecedented scale. To find a path forward, we’ve engaged in discussions with hundreds of employers and educators through forums like the National Clean Energy Workforce Alliance. As a result of these convenings, here are a few key strategies we’ve identified to help employers fill job openings with qualified talent. Form strategic partnerships with educators Businesses can form partnerships with community colleges, other training providers and community-based organizations in the regions where they seek to hire. Developing long-term alliances

Read More »

Sunrun battery attachment rate hits 70%, up 54% from year ago

Dive Brief: Seventy percent of the nearly 29,000 new Sunrun customers last quarter added paired batteries with rooftop solar systems, the largest U.S. home energy systems installer said Wednesday. That marked a 50% jump in the battery attachment rate from a year earlier. The surge in battery attachments highlights Sunrun’s shift away from solar-only installations and toward energy storage systems that can support virtual power plants, company executives told investors and stock analysts. Sunrun has installed about 3.2 GWh of distributed storage capacity to date, they said, putting it on track to reach 10 GWh by 2029. The expiration of the federal investment tax credit for third-party-owned residential solar equipment could deprive Sunrun of about $6,200 in revenue per system after 2027, it said in its Q2 2025 earnings presentation. To offset the loss, Sunrun said it would source lower-cost solar equipment, reduce customer acquisition costs, boost grid services revenue and raise power prices amid expected utility rate increases. Dive Insight: Sunrun has installed 195,000 solar-and-storage systems at its customers’ homes, it said Wednesday. The attachment rate has steadily increased since 2023, jumping from 18% to 54% from Q2 2023 to Q2 2024 and rising to 62% by Q4 2024. The exponential jump from 2023 to 2024 followed California’s enactment of a new net billing tariff that incentivized storage attachments for new residential solar customers. California remains the largest state market for residential solar, and policy decisions there have an outsized impact on distributed energy providers like Sunrun. Despite the slower pace of attachment growth this year, Sunrun is growing storage installations at a faster pace than solar-only installations. Sunrun installed 392 MWh of batteries in Q2 2025, up 48% from Q2 2024. It added 227 MW of solar capacity during the period, up 18% from a year earlier. Company

Read More »

TotalEnergies Sells Stake in Argentina Blocks to YPF

TotalEnergies announced, in a statement posted on its site recently, that its affiliate Total Austral has signed an agreement with YPF SA for the sale of its 45 percent operated interest in two unconventional oil and gas blocks in Argentina “for an amount of $500 million at a valuation of around $10,000/acre”. The blocks comprise Rincon La Ceniza and La Escalonada, TotalEnergies highlighted in the release. The company pointed out that these concessions are located in the Vaca Muerta area in the Neuquén Basin, comprise 51,000 net acres, and are currently in a “pilot development phase”. Completion of the transaction is subject to customary conditions, TotalEnergies noted in the statement. “The sale of Rincon La Ceniza and La Escalonada blocks is part of our active portfolio management strategy,” Javier Rielo, TotalEnergies Senior Vice President Americas, Exploration & Production, said in the statement. “TotalEnergies remains fully committed to Argentina, where it operates a large unconventional area of 183,000 nets acres in the Vaca Muerta play, after the divestment of these two blocks which represented around 20 percent of our net acreage in that play,” he added. “The company is currently producing gas and condensates from the operated blocks Aguada Pichana Este and San Roque, with a combined production of around 50,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in TotalEnergies share in 2024,” he continued. “This transaction allows us to unlock value from part of our portfolio, while focusing on the development of our core assets in the Neuquén Basin and in the offshore of Tierra del Fuego,” Rielo went on to state. In a translation of a letter to the Argentine Securities Commission dated August 6, which was included in a Securities and Exchange Commission document posted on the YPF website recently, YPF said it entered into a share purchase agreement

Read More »

Petrobras Misses Estimates

Brazil’s state-controlled oil producer Petrobras reported weaker-than-expected results and cut its dividend after lower oil prices offset stronger production figures.  Petroleo Brasileiro SA, as it is formally known, increased investments 30.6% on year and 9% from the previous quarter to $4.4 billion as it develops massive deep-water oil fields. Investors have been hoping to see Petrobras contain capital expenditures to help preserve shareholder payouts. Chief Executive Officer Magda Chambriard has vowed to tighten spending to navigate the challenging scenario of lower oil prices, while sticking to a production expansion.  Petrobras also cited one-off events that include asset impairments and labor agreements.  Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or Ebitda, was 52.3 billion reais ($9.6 billion), trailing the 56.9 billion-reais estimate. Petrobras will pay $1.6 billion in second-quarter dividends and interest on capital, it said in a filing. Expectations were for a $2.2 billion payout, according to an average of five analyst forecasts reviewed by Bloomberg.  The lower dividends came despite a significant boost in second-quarter output, driven by the rapid ramp-up of its offshore Buzios field and the nearby Mero field. The company’s oil and natural gas output climbed 7.8% year-over-year to 2.9 million barrels per day.  The company reported a sharp increase in debt that it attributed to growth in oil platform leasing with new units coming on line. Brazil needs to open up new offshore regions to oil exploration to prevent production from going into decline in the 2030s.  The Rio de Janeiro-based company hopes to get the green light for an oil-spill-simulation test at a key offshore region off the coast of the Amazon forest. The company will meet Brazil environmental officials next week for planning. The test is considered the last step to obtain a permit to drill a block in the Foz do

Read More »

Oil Has Performed Poorly This Week

Brent crude oil has performed poorly this week, with the front-month contract falling by nearly eight percent to reach around $67 per barrel. That’s what analysts at BMI said in a BMI report sent to Rigzone by the Fitch Group on Friday, adding that the initial sell off was triggered by the OPEC+ announcement that it would raise supply by an additional 547,000 barrels per day in September, “marking the full unwinding of the 2.2 million barrels per day of cuts that the group planned to reintroduce to market over 2025 and 2026”. “Meanwhile, tariff-related uncertainties and broad-based economic concerns loom large, exacerbated by the recent raft of tariff announcements and weak economic data releases in the U.S. raising concerns for oil demand at a time when supply is continuing to grow,” they added. The BMI analysts also noted in the report that bearish sentiment helps to explain the decline seen in Brent in response to U.S. President Donald Trump’s new executive order (EO) issued August 6, which they highlighted “introduces an additional 25 percent tariff on India, effective August 27, in response to its continued purchase of Russian oil, and establishes a process for extending similar penalties to other countries”. “All else equal, the EO should be bullish for prices, to the extent that it curbs flows from Russia, the world’s second largest net exporter of oil,” they said. “However, market participants seem to share our view that there is ample scope for Trump to reverse course in response to potential concessions from Russian President Vladimir Putin,” they added. The analysts went on to state in the report that some combination of the loosening of the global oil supply and demand balance, potential pushback from India, economic fallout from higher effective tariff rates, and the rerouting of Russian oil

Read More »

LG rolls out new AI services to help consumers with daily tasks

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More LG kicked off the AI bandwagon today with a new set of AI services to help consumers in their daily tasks at home, in the car and in the office. The aim of LG’s CES 2025 press event was to show how AI will work in a day of someone’s life, with the goal of redefining the concept of space, said William Joowan Cho, CEO of LG Electronics at the event. The presentation showed LG is fully focused on bringing AI into just about all of its products and services. Cho referred to LG’s AI efforts as “affectionate intelligence,” and he said it stands out from other strategies with its human-centered focus. The strategy focuses on three things: connected devices, capable AI agents and integrated services. One of things the company announced was a strategic partnership with Microsoft on AI innovation, where the companies pledged to join forces to shape the future of AI-powered spaces. One of the outcomes is that Microsoft’s Xbox Ultimate Game Pass will appear via Xbox Cloud on LG’s TVs, helping LG catch up with Samsung in offering cloud gaming natively on its TVs. LG Electronics will bring the Xbox App to select LG smart TVs. That means players with LG Smart TVs will be able to explore the Gaming Portal for direct access to hundreds of games in the Game Pass Ultimate catalog, including popular titles such as Call of Duty: Black Ops 6, and upcoming releases like Avowed (launching February 18, 2025). Xbox Game Pass Ultimate members will be able to play games directly from the Xbox app on select LG Smart TVs through cloud gaming. With Xbox Game Pass Ultimate and a compatible Bluetooth-enabled

Read More »

Big tech must stop passing the cost of its spiking energy needs onto the public

Julianne Malveaux is an MIT-educated economist, author, educator and political commentator who has written extensively about the critical relationship between public policy, corporate accountability and social equity.  The rapid expansion of data centers across the U.S. is not only reshaping the digital economy but also threatening to overwhelm our energy infrastructure. These data centers aren’t just heavy on processing power — they’re heavy on our shared energy infrastructure. For Americans, this could mean serious sticker shock when it comes to their energy bills. Across the country, many households are already feeling the pinch as utilities ramp up investments in costly new infrastructure to power these data centers. With costs almost certain to rise as more data centers come online, state policymakers and energy companies must act now to protect consumers. We need new policies that ensure the cost of these projects is carried by the wealthy big tech companies that profit from them, not by regular energy consumers such as family households and small businesses. According to an analysis from consulting firm Bain & Co., data centers could require more than $2 trillion in new energy resources globally, with U.S. demand alone potentially outpacing supply in the next few years. This unprecedented growth is fueled by the expansion of generative AI, cloud computing and other tech innovations that require massive computing power. Bain’s analysis warns that, to meet this energy demand, U.S. utilities may need to boost annual generation capacity by as much as 26% by 2028 — a staggering jump compared to the 5% yearly increases of the past two decades. This poses a threat to energy affordability and reliability for millions of Americans. Bain’s research estimates that capital investments required to meet data center needs could incrementally raise consumer bills by 1% each year through 2032. That increase may

Read More »

Final 45V hydrogen tax credit guidance draws mixed response

Dive Brief: The final rule for the 45V clean hydrogen production tax credit, which the U.S. Treasury Department released Friday morning, drew mixed responses from industry leaders and environmentalists. Clean hydrogen development within the U.S. ground to a halt following the release of the initial guidance in December 2023, leading industry participants to call for revisions that would enable more projects to qualify for the tax credit. While the final rule makes “significant improvements” to Treasury’s initial proposal, the guidelines remain “extremely complex,” according to the Fuel Cell and Hydrogen Energy Association. FCHEA President and CEO Frank Wolak and other industry leaders said they look forward to working with the Trump administration to refine the rule. Dive Insight: Friday’s release closed what Wolak described as a “long chapter” for the hydrogen industry. But industry reaction to the final rule was decidedly mixed, and it remains to be seen whether the rule — which could be overturned as soon as Trump assumes office — will remain unchanged. “The final 45V rule falls short,” Marty Durbin, president of the U.S. Chamber’s Global Energy Institute, said in a statement. “While the rule provides some of the additional flexibility we sought, … we believe that it still will leave billions of dollars of announced projects in limbo. The incoming Administration will have an opportunity to improve the 45V rules to ensure the industry will attract the investments necessary to scale the hydrogen economy and help the U.S. lead the world in clean manufacturing.” But others in the industry felt the rule would be sufficient for ending hydrogen’s year-long malaise. “With this added clarity, many projects that have been delayed may move forward, which can help unlock billions of dollars in investments across the country,” Kim Hedegaard, CEO of Topsoe’s Power-to-X, said in a statement. Topsoe

Read More »

Texas, Utah, Last Energy challenge NRC’s ‘overburdensome’ microreactor regulations

Dive Brief: A 69-year-old Nuclear Regulatory Commission rule underpinning U.S. nuclear reactor licensing exceeds the agency’s statutory authority and creates an unreasonable burden for microreactor developers, the states of Texas and Utah and advanced nuclear technology company Last Energy said in a lawsuit filed Dec. 30 in federal court in Texas. The plaintiffs asked the Eastern District of Texas court to exempt Last Energy’s 20-MW reactor design and research reactors located in the plaintiff states from the NRC’s definition of nuclear “utilization facilities,” which subjects all U.S. commercial and research reactors to strict regulatory scrutiny, and order the NRC to develop a more flexible definition for use in future licensing proceedings. Regardless of its merits, the lawsuit underscores the need for “continued discussion around proportional regulatory requirements … that align with the hazards of the reactor and correspond to a safety case,” said Patrick White, research director at the Nuclear Innovation Alliance. Dive Insight: Only three commercial nuclear reactors have been built in the United States in the past 28 years, and none are presently under construction, according to a World Nuclear Association tracker cited in the lawsuit. “Building a new commercial reactor of any size in the United States has become virtually impossible,” the plaintiffs said. “The root cause is not lack of demand or technology — but rather the [NRC], which, despite its name, does not really regulate new nuclear reactor construction so much as ensure that it almost never happens.” More than a dozen advanced nuclear technology developers have engaged the NRC in pre-application activities, which the agency says help standardize the content of advanced reactor applications and expedite NRC review. Last Energy is not among them.  The pre-application process can itself stretch for years and must be followed by a formal application that can take two

Read More »

Qualcomm unveils AI chips for PCs, cars, smart homes and enterprises

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Qualcomm unveiled AI technologies and collaborations for PCs, cars, smart homes and enterprises at CES 2025. At the big tech trade show in Las Vegas, Qualcomm Technologies showed how it’s using AI capabilities in its chips to drive the transformation of user experiences across diverse device categories, including PCs, automobiles, smart homes and into enterprises. The company unveiled the Snapdragon X platform, the fourth platform in its high-performance PC portfolio, the Snapdragon X Series, bringing industry-leading performance, multi-day battery life, and AI leadership to more of the Windows ecosystem. Qualcomm has talked about how its processors are making headway grabbing share from the x86-based AMD and Intel rivals through better efficiency. Qualcomm’s neural processing unit gets about 45 TOPS, a key benchmark for AI PCs. The Snapdragon X family of AI PC processors. Additionally, Qualcomm Technologies showcased continued traction of the Snapdragon X Series, with over 60 designs in production or development and more than 100 expected by 2026. Snapdragon for vehicles Qualcomm demoed chips that are expanding its automotive collaborations. It is working with Alpine, Amazon, Leapmotor, Mobis, Royal Enfield, and Sony Honda Mobility, who look to Snapdragon Digital Chassis solutions to drive AI-powered in-cabin and advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS). Qualcomm also announced continued traction for its Snapdragon Elite-tier platforms for automotive, highlighting its work with Desay, Garmin, and Panasonic for Snapdragon Cockpit Elite. Throughout the show, Qualcomm will highlight its holistic approach to improving comfort and focusing on safety with demonstrations on the potential of the convergence of AI, multimodal contextual awareness, and cloudbased services. Attendees will also get a first glimpse of the new Snapdragon Ride Platform with integrated automated driving software stack and system definition jointly

Read More »

Oil, Gas Execs Reveal Where They Expect WTI Oil Price to Land in the Future

Executives from oil and gas firms have revealed where they expect the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil price to be at various points in the future as part of the fourth quarter Dallas Fed Energy Survey, which was released recently. The average response executives from 131 oil and gas firms gave when asked what they expect the WTI crude oil price to be at the end of 2025 was $71.13 per barrel, the survey showed. The low forecast came in at $53 per barrel, the high forecast was $100 per barrel, and the spot price during the survey was $70.66 per barrel, the survey pointed out. This question was not asked in the previous Dallas Fed Energy Survey, which was released in the third quarter. That survey asked participants what they expect the WTI crude oil price to be at the end of 2024. Executives from 134 oil and gas firms answered this question, offering an average response of $72.66 per barrel, that survey showed. The latest Dallas Fed Energy Survey also asked participants where they expect WTI prices to be in six months, one year, two years, and five years. Executives from 124 oil and gas firms answered this question and gave a mean response of $69 per barrel for the six month mark, $71 per barrel for the year mark, $74 per barrel for the two year mark, and $80 per barrel for the five year mark, the survey showed. Executives from 119 oil and gas firms answered this question in the third quarter Dallas Fed Energy Survey and gave a mean response of $73 per barrel for the six month mark, $76 per barrel for the year mark, $81 per barrel for the two year mark, and $87 per barrel for the five year mark, that

Read More »

GPT-5 is here. Now what?

At long last, OpenAI has released GPT-5. The new system abandons the distinction between OpenAI’s flagship models and its o series of reasoning models, automatically routing user queries to a fast nonreasoning model or a slower reasoning version. It is now available to everyone through the ChatGPT web interface—though nonpaying users may need to wait a few days to gain full access to the new capabilities.  It’s tempting to compare GPT-5 with its explicit predecessor, GPT-4, but the more illuminating juxtaposition is with o1, OpenAI’s first reasoning model, which was released last year. In contrast to GPT-5’s broad release, o1 was initially available only to Plus and Team subscribers. Those users got access to a completely new kind of language model—one that would “reason” through its answers by generating additional text before providing a final response, enabling it to solve much more challenging problems than its nonreasoning counterparts. Whereas o1 was a major technological advancement, GPT-5 is, above all else, a refined product. During a press briefing, Sam Altman compared GPT-5 to Apple’s Retina displays, and it’s an apt analogy, though perhaps not in the way that he intended. Much like an unprecedentedly crisp screen, GPT-5 will furnish a more pleasant and seamless user experience. That’s not nothing, but it falls far short of the transformative AI future that Altman has spent much of the past year hyping. In the briefing, Altman called GPT-5 “a significant step along the path to AGI,” or artificial general intelligence, and maybe he’s right—but if so, it’s a very small step. Take the demo of the model’s abilities that OpenAI showed to MIT Technology Review in advance of its release. Yann Dubois, a post-training lead at OpenAI, asked GPT-5 to design a web application that would help his partner learn French so that she could communicate more easily with his family. The model did an admirable job of following his instructions and created an appealing, user-friendly app. But when I gave GPT-4o an almost identical prompt, it produced an app with exactly the same functionality. The only difference is that it wasn’t as aesthetically pleasing.
Some of the other user-experience improvements are more substantial. Having the model rather than the user choose whether to apply reasoning to each query removes a major pain point, especially for users who don’t follow LLM advancements closely.  And, according to Altman, GPT-5 reasons much faster than the o-series models. The fact that OpenAI is releasing it to nonpaying users suggests that it’s also less expensive for the company to run. That’s a big deal: Running powerful models cheaply and quickly is a tough problem, and solving it is key to reducing AI’s environmental impact. 
OpenAI has also taken steps to mitigate hallucinations, which have been a persistent headache. OpenAI’s evaluations suggest that GPT-5 models are substantially less likely to make incorrect claims than their predecessor models, o3 and GPT-4o. If that advancement holds up to scrutiny, it could help pave the way for more reliable and trustworthy agents. “Hallucination can cause real safety and security issues,” says Dawn Song, a professor of computer science at UC Berkeley. For example, an agent that hallucinates software packages could download malicious code to a user’s device. GPT-5 has achieved the state of the art on several benchmarks, including a test of agentic abilities and the coding evaluations SWE-Bench and Aider Polyglot. But according to Clémentine Fourrier, an AI researcher at the company HuggingFace, those evaluations are nearing saturation, which means that current models have achieved close to maximal performance.  “It’s basically like looking at the performance of a high schooler on middle-grade problems,” she says. “If the high schooler fails, it tells you something, but if it succeeds, it doesn’t tell you a lot.” Fourrier said she would be impressed if the system achieved a score of 80% or 85% on SWE-Bench—but it only managed a 74.9%.  Ultimately, the headline message from OpenAI is that GPT-5 feels better to use. “The vibes of this model are really good, and I think that people are really going to feel that, especially average people who haven’t been spending their time thinking about models,” said Nick Turley, the head of ChatGPT. Vibes alone, however, won’t bring about the automated future that Altman has promised. Reasoning felt like a major step forward on the way to AGI. We’re still waiting for the next one.

Read More »

OpenAI launches GPT-5, nano, mini and Pro — not AGI, but capable of generating ‘software-on-demand’

After literally years of hype and speculation, OpenAI has officially launched a new lineup of large language models (LLMs), all different-sized variants of GPT-5, the long-awaited predecessor to its GPT-4 model from March of 2023, nearly 2.5 years ago. The company is rolling out four distinct versions of the model — GPT-5, GPT-5 Mini, GPT-5 Nano, and GPT-5 Pro — to meet varying needs for speed, cost, and computational depth.GPT-5 will soon be powering ChatGPT exclusively and replace all other models going forward for its 700 million weekly users, though ChatGPT Pro subscribers ($200) month can still select older models for the next 60 days.As per rumors and reports, OpenAI has replaced the previous system of having users switch the underlying model powering ChatGPT with an automatic router that decides to engage a special “GPT-5 thinking” mode with “deeper reasoning” that takes longer to respond on harder queries, or uses the regular GPT-5 or mini models for simpler queries.

Read More »

How AI is helping advance the science of bioacoustics to save endangered species

Science

Published
7 August 2025

Authors
The Perch Team

Our new Perch model helps conservationists analyze audio faster to protect endangered species, from Hawaiian honeycreepers to coral reefs.One of the ways scientists protect the health of our planet’s wild ecosystems is by using microphones (or underwater hydrophones) to collect vast amounts of audio dense with vocalizations from birds, frogs, insects, whales, fish and more. These recordings can tell us a lot about the animals present in a given area, along with other clues about the health of that ecosystem. Making sense of so much data, however, remains a massive undertaking.Today, we are releasing an update to Perch, our AI model designed to help conservationists analyze bioacoustic data. This new model has better state-of-the-art off-the-shelf bird species predictions than the previous model. It can better adapt to new environments, particularly underwater ones like coral reefs. It’s trained on a wider range of animals, including mammals, amphibians and anthropogenic noise — nearly twice as much data in all, from public sources like Xeno-Canto and iNaturalist. It can disentangle complex acoustic scenes over thousands or even millions of hours of audio data. And it’s versatile, able to answer many different kinds of questions, from “how many babies are being born” to “how many individual animals are present in a given area.”In order to help scientists protect our planet’s ecosystems, we’re open sourcing this new version of Perch and making it available on Kaggle.

Perch not only recognizes the sound of bird species. Our new model was trained on a wider range of animals including mammals, amphibians and anthropogenic noise.

Success Stories: Perch in the FieldSince it was first launched in 2023, the initial version of Perch has already been downloaded over 250,000 times and its open-source solutions are now well-integrated into tools for working biologists. For example, Perch’s vector search library is now part of Cornell’s widely-used BirdNet Analyzer.In addition, Perch is helping BirdLife Australia and the Australian Acoustic Observatory build classifiers for a number of unique Australian species. For example, our tools enabled the discovery of a new population of the elusive Plains Wanderer.


“This is an incredible discovery – acoustic monitoring like this will help shape the future of many endangered bird species.”

Paul Roe, Dean Research, James Cook University, Australia

Recent work has also found that the earlier version of Perch can be used to identify individual birds and track bird abundance, potentially reducing the need for catch-and-release studies to monitor populations.Finally, biologists from the LOHE Bioacoustics Lab at the University of Hawaiʻi have used it to monitor and protect populations of honeycreepers, which are important to Hawaiian mythology and face extinction from the threat of avian malaria spread by non-native mosquitoes. Perch helped the LOHE Lab find honeycreeper sounds nearly 50x faster than their usual methods, enabling them to monitor more species of honeycreeper over greater areas. We expect the new model will further accelerate these efforts.

Untangling the Planet’s PlaylistThe Perch model can predict which species are present in a recording, but that’s only part of the story: We also provide open-source tools that allow scientists to quickly build new classifiers starting from a single example and monitor species for which there is scarce training data or for very specific sounds like juvenile calls. Given one example of a sound, vector search with Perch surfaces the most similar sounds in a dataset. A local expert can then mark the search results as relevant or irrelevant to train a classifier.Together, this combination of vector search and active learning with a strong embedding model is called agile modeling. Our recent paper–”The Search for Squawk: Agile Modeling in Bioacoustics”–shows that this method works across birds and coral reefs, allowing the creation of high quality classifiers in under an hour.Looking ahead: the future of bioacousticsTogether, our models and methods are helping maximize the impact of conservation efforts, leaving more time and resources for meaningful, on-the-ground work. From the forests of Hawaiʻi to the reefs of the ocean, the Perch project showcases the profound impact we can have when we apply our technical expertise to the world’s most pressing challenges. Every classifier built and every hour of data analyzed brings us closer to a world where the soundtrack of our planet is one of rich, thriving biodiversity.

Learn more

AcknowledgementsThis research was developed by the Perch team: Bart van Merriënboer, Jenny Hamer, Vincent Dumoulin, Lauren Harrell, and Tom Denton, and Otilia Stretcu from Google Research. We also thank our collaborators Amanda Navine and Pat Hart at the University of Hawaiʻi, and Holger Klinck, Stefan Kahl and the BirdNet team at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. And all our friends and collaborators whom we would have written about in this blog post if only we had another thousand words.

Read More »

The Download: how AI is improving itself, and hidden greenhouse gases

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. Five ways that AI is learning to improve itself Last week, Mark Zuckerberg declared that Meta aims to achieve smarter-than-human AI. He seems to have a recipe for achieving that goal, and the first ingredient is human talent: Zuckerberg has reportedly tried to lure top researchers to Meta Superintelligence Labs with nine-figure offers.  The second ingredient is AI itself.  Zuckerberg recently said on an earnings call that Meta will focus on building self-improving AI—systems that can bootstrap themselves to higher and higher levels of performance. He hopes to tap into a very real trend. Here are five ways that AI is already making itself better.
—Grace Huckins
The greenhouse gases we’re not accounting for Back in 2021, climate scientists noticed that levels of methane had soared in the atmosphere the previous year, rising at the fastest rate on record despite the global covid-19 lockdowns. Researchers eventually spotted a clear pattern: Methane emissions had increased sharply across the tropics, where wetlands were growing wetter and warmer.The findings offer one of the clearest cases so far where climate change itself is driving additional greenhouse-gas emissions from natural systems, triggering a feedback effect that threatens to produce more warming, more emissions, and on and on.  There’s now a major endeavor underway to better track and understand what’s going on. Read our story about it. —James Temple This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review’s weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here. The must-reads

I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 The Trump administration’s punishing new tariffs have come into effect And prices are already climbing. (NYT $)+ Economists fear the US economy is poised to shrink. (WP $)+ Sweeping tariffs could threaten the US manufacturing rebound. (MIT Technology Review) 2 Sections of the US Constitution have been deleted onlinePassages about Congress’ powers and citizens’ unlawful detention have been scrubbed from the US government’s website. (TechCrunch)+ The Library of Congress blamed a coding error. (Ars Technica) 3 China is fighting a mosquito-borne virusIt’s deploying drones to search for standing water where the insects lay eggs. (AP News)+ Chikungunya virus is rarely fatal, but can cause fever and joint pain. (CNN)+ Authorities are taking a leaf out of their covid-fighting playbooks. (NYT $) 4 US federal agencies will have access to ChatGPT Enterprise For the grand sum of $1 a year. (Ars Technica)+ It won’t use workers’ data to train ChatGPT, apparently. (Bloomberg $)+ The news comes after major AI firms were greenlit as federal vendors. (Engadget) 5 Chinese drug discovery startups are striking deals with Big PharmaWestern pharmaceutical giants are confident they can deliver. (Rest of World)+ An AI-driven “factory of drugs” claims to have hit a big milestone. (MIT Technology Review) 6 Is it possible to build truly green AI data centers?The tech industry appears pretty hooked on fossil fuels. (FT $)+ We did the math on AI’s energy footprint. Here’s the story you haven’t heard. (MIT Technology Review) 7 The US is increasingly reliant on private companies for weather dataExperts are wary about losing access to vital tools. (Undark)+ How US research cuts are threatening crucial climate data. (MIT Technology Review)
8 Genetic factors could contribute to the risk of developing chronic fatigue syndromeIt’s the first robust evidence that genetics play a role. (New Scientist $) 9 An experimental pill is showing weight-loss promiseObese participants in Eli Lilly’s trial lost more than 12% of their body weight. (Wired $)+ We’re learning more about what weight-loss drugs do to the body. (MIT Technology Review)
10 Finding a job online is a nightmareSome companies are going back to basics to find the best recruits. (WSJ $) Quote of the day “We didn’t vote for ChatGPT.” —Virginia Dignum, a professor of responsible artificial intelligence at Sweden’s Umeå University, criticizes the country’s prime minister, Ulf Kristersson for admitting he regularly consults AI tools, the Guardian reports.
One more thing Why AI could eat quantum computing’s lunchTech companies have been funneling billions of dollars into quantum computers for years. The hope is that they’ll be a game changer for fields as diverse as finance, drug discovery, and logistics.But while the field struggles with the realities of tricky quantum hardware, another challenger is making headway in some of these most promising use cases. AI is now being applied to fundamental physics, chemistry, and materials science in a way that suggests quantum computing’s purported home turf might not be so safe after all. Read the full story. —Edd Gent

Read More »

The greenhouse gases we’re not accounting for

In the spring of 2021, climate scientists were stumped.  The global economy was just emerging from the covid-19 lockdowns, but for some reason the levels of methane—a greenhouse gas emitted mainly through agriculture and fossil-fuel production—had soared in the atmosphere the previous year, rising at the fastest rate on record. Researchers around the world set to work unraveling the mystery, reviewing readings from satellites, aircraft, and greenhouse-gas monitoring stations. They eventually spotted a clear pattern: Methane emissions had increased sharply across the tropics, where wetlands were growing wetter and warmer.  That created the ideal conditions for microbes that thrive in anaerobic muck, which gobbled up more of the carbon-rich organic matter and spat out more methane as a by-product. (Reduced pollution from nitrogen oxides, which help to break down methane in the atmosphere, also likely played a substantial role.)
The findings offer one of the clearest cases so far where climate change itself is driving additional greenhouse-gas emissions from natural systems, triggering a feedback effect that threatens to produce more warming, more emissions, and on and on.  There are numerous additional ways this is happening or soon could, including wildfires and thawing permafrost. These are major emissions sources that aren’t included in the commitments nations have made under the Paris climate agreement—and climate risks that largely aren’t accounted for in the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s most recent warming scenarios.
Spark Climate Solutions (not to be confused with this newsletter) hopes to change that.The San Francisco nonprofit is launching what’s known as a model intercomparison project, in which different research teams run the same set of experiments on different models across a variety of emissions scenarios to determine how climate change could play out. This one would specifically explore how a range of climate feedback effects could propel additional warming, additional emissions, and additional types of feedback. “These increased emissions from natural sources add to human emissions and amplify climate change,” says Phil Duffy, chief scientist at Spark Climate Solutions, who previously served as climate science advisor to President Joe Biden. “And if you don’t look at all of them together, you can’t quantify the strength of that feedback effect.” Other participants in the effort will include scientists at the Environmental Defense Fund, Stanford University, the Woodwell Climate Research Center, and other institutions in Europe and Australia, according to Spark Climate Solutions. The nonprofit hopes to publish the findings in time for them to be incorporated into the UN climate panel’s seventh major assessment report, which is just getting underway, to help ensure that these dangers are more fully represented. That, in turn, would give nations a more accurate sense of the world’s carbon budgets, or the quantity of greenhouse gases they can produce before the planet reaches temperatures 1.5 °C or  2 °C over preindustrial levels.  But one thing is already clear: Since the current scenarios don’t fully account for these feedback effects, the world will almost certainly warm faster than is now forecast, which underscores the importance of carrying out this exercise.  Scientists at EDF, Woodwell and other institutions found that fires in the world’s northernmost forests, thawing permafrost and warming tropical wetlands could together push the planet beyond 2 °C years faster, eliminating up to a quarter of the time left before the world passes the core goal of the Paris agreement, in a paper under review.  Earlier this year, Spark Climate Solutions set up a broader program to advance research and awareness of what’s known as warming-induced emissions, which will launch additional collaborations similar to the modeling intercomparison project.   The goal of the program and the research project is “to really mainstream the inclusion of this topic in climate science and climate policy, and to drive research around climate solutions,” says Ben Poulter, who leads the program at Spark Climate Solutions and was previously a scientist at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center.

Spark notes that warming temperatures could also release more carbon dioxide from the oceans, in a process known as outgassing; additional carbon dioxide and nitrous oxide, a potent greenhouse gas that also depletes the protective ozone layer, from farmland; more carbon dioxide and methane from wildfires; and still more of all three of these gases as permafrost thaws. The ground remains frozen year round across a vast expanse of the Northern Hemisphere, creating a frosty underground storehouse from Alaska to Siberia that’s packed with twice as much carbon as the atmosphere. But as it thaws, it starts to decompose and release greenhouse gases, says Susan Natali, an Arctic climate scientist focused on permafrost at Woodwell. A study published in Nature in January noted that 30% of the world’s Arctic–Boreal Zone has already flipped from a carbon sink to a carbon source, when wildfires, thawing permafrost and other factors are taken into account. Despite these increasing risks, only a minority of the models that fed into the UN climate panel’s last major report incorporated the feedback effects of thawing permafrost. And the emissions risks still weren’t fully accounted for because these ecosystems are difficult to monitor and model, Natali says.Among the complexities: Wildfires, which are themselves hard to predict, can accelerate thawing. It’s also hard to foresee which regions will grow drier or wetter, which determines whether they release mostly methane or carbon dioxide—and those gases have very different warming effects over different time periods. There are counterbalancing effects that must be taken into account as well—for instance, as carbon-absorbing plants replace ice and snow in certain areas. Natali says improving our understanding of these complex feedback effects is essential to understanding the dangers we face. “It’s going to mean additional costs to human health, human life,” she says. “We want people to be safe—and it’s very hard to do that if you don’t know what’s coming and you’re not prepared for it.” This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review’s weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here.

Read More »

The initial reactions to OpenAI’s landmark open source gpt-oss models are highly varied and mixed

But despite achieving technical benchmarks on par with OpenAI’s other powerful proprietary AI model offerings, the broader AI developer and user community’s initial response has so far been all over the map. If this release were a movie premiering and being graded on Rotten Tomatoes, we’d be looking at a near 50% split, based on my observations. First some background: OpenAI has released these two new text-only language models (no image generation or analysis) both under the permissive open source Apache 2.0 license — the first time since 2019 (before ChatGPT) that the company has done so with a cutting-edge language model. The entire ChatGPT era of the last 2.7 years has so far been powered by proprietary or closed-source models, ones that OpenAI controlled and that users had to pay to access (or use a free tier subject to limits), with limited customizability and no way to run them offline or on private computing hardware.

Read More »

OpenAI’s GPT-5 rollout is not going smoothly

Want smarter insights in your inbox? Sign up for our weekly newsletters to get only what matters to enterprise AI, data, and security leaders. Subscribe Now The launch of OpenAI’s long anticipated new model, GPT-5, is off to a rocky start to say the least. Even forgiving errors in charts and voice demoes during yesterday’s livestreamed presentation of the new model (actually four separate models, and a ‘Thinking’ mode that can be engaged for three of them), a number of user reports have emerged since GPT-5’s release showing it erring badly when solving relatively simple problems that preceding OpenAI models — and rivals from competing AI labs — answer correctly. For example, data scientist Colin Fraser posted screenshots showing GPT-5 getting a math proof wrong (whether 8.888 repeating is equal to 9 — it is of course, not). It also failed on a simple algebra arithmetic problem that elementary schoolers could probably nail, 5.9 = x + 5.11. AI Scaling Hits Its Limits Power caps, rising token costs, and inference delays are reshaping enterprise AI. Join our exclusive salon to discover how top teams are: Secure your spot to stay ahead: https://bit.ly/4mwGngO Using GPT-5 to judge OpenAI’s own erroneous presentation charts also did not yield helpful or correct responses. It also failed on this trickier math word problem below (which, to be fair, stumped this human at first…though Elon Musk’s Groq 4 AI answered it correctly. For a hint, think of the fact that flagstones in this case can’t be divided into smaller portions. They must remain in tact as 80 separate units, so no halves or quarters). Not as good at coding as benchmarks indicate Even though OpenAI’s internal benchmarks and some third-party external ones have shown GPT-5 to outperform all other models at coding, it appears that in

Read More »

Diamondback Energy Narrows Production Guidance as Net Income Dips in Q2

Diamondback Energy, Inc. reported a net income of $699 million for the second quarter of 2025, well below the $837 million reported in the corresponding quarter of 2024. However, the first half net income of $2.1 billion surged past the $1.6 billion reported in H1 2024. The company said in its report that production for the quarter averaged 919,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boe/d). Oil production averaged 495,700 barrels per day (mbo/d). Diamondback said it put 108 wells into production in the Midland basin, and a further eight wells into production in the Delaware Basin. During the first half of the year, Diamondback said that 224 operated wells entered production in the Midland Basin with 15 more wells entering production in the Delaware Basin. In the second quarter of 2025, Diamondback said it had invested $707 million in operated drilling and completions, $90 million in capital workovers, non-operated drilling, completions, and science, and $67 million in infrastructure, environmental, and midstream projects, totaling $864 million in cash capital expenditures. For the first half of 2025, the company spent $1.6 billion on operated drilling and completions, $111 million on capital workovers, non-operated drilling, completions, and science, and $124 million on infrastructure, environmental, and midstream activities, amounting to a total of $1.8 billion in cash capital expenditures, it said. Diamondback has also narrowed its full-year oil production guidance to 485 – 492 mbo/d and increased annual boe guidance by 2 percent to 890 – 910 Mboe/d, it said. Furthermore,  Diamondback noted that the guidance does not reflect the pending acquisition by its publicly traded subsidiary, Viper Energy, Inc., of Sitio Royalties Corp., which is expected to close in the third quarter of 2025, subject to stockholder approval and the fulfillment or waiver of other typical closing conditions. To contact the author,

Read More »

Blackstone to Buy Enverus

In a statement posted on its website recently, Blackstone announced that private equity funds affiliated with the company have entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Enverus from Hellman & Friedman and Genstar Capital. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed in the statement, which noted that the deal is expected to close by the end of the year, subject to customary conditions. Citi and Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC acted as financial advisors and Kirkland & Ellis LLP acted as legal advisor to Enverus and Hellman & Friedman. RBC Capital Markets, LLC served as financial advisor and Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP served as legal advisor to Blackstone. Blackstone’s core private equity strategy, Blackstone Energy Transition Partners, and Blackstone’s private equity strategy for individual investors are each expected to invest in Enverus as part of this transaction, Blackstone revealed in the statement. “Enverus represents the latest in a number of recent transactions Blackstone has announced behind its high-conviction investment themes in electricity demand growth and the ongoing energy transition,” Blackstone said in its statement, highlighting its deals with Potomac Energy Center, Sediver, Westwood Professional Services, Trystar, and others. Eli Nagler and Bilal Khan, Senior Managing Directors at Blackstone, said in the statement, “as the leading energy-dedicated SaaS platform, Enverus’ advanced analytics and technology solutions are critical for its customers as they navigate unprecedented AI-driven electricity demand growth and the broader energy transition”. “We believe Blackstone’s energy market expertise and network can further enhance the company’s growth trajectory, and look forward to partnering with Manuj [Nikhanj, Enverus CEO] and the Enverus team,” they added. In the statement, Nikhanj said, “this is more than a transaction – it’s a launchpad”. “Blackstone shares our conviction that the future of energy will be defined by AI, real-time intelligence, and bold execution. Their global reach and deep expertise

Read More »

China Defends Buying Russian Oil

China said its imports of Russian oil are justified, pushing back against US threats of new tariffs after Washington slapped secondary levies on India for buying energy from Moscow. “It is legitimate and lawful for China to conduct normal economic, trade and energy cooperation with all countries around the world, including Russia,” the Chinese Foreign Ministry said Friday in a statement to Bloomberg News. “We will continue to adopt reasonable energy security measures in accordance with our national interests.” Donald Trump said earlier this week he could punish China with additional tariffs over its purchases of Russian oil, saying “that may happen.” The US president has also signaled his interest in brokering a peace deal in the Russia-Ukraine conflict and views pressure on big Russian trade partners to be part of that effort. Russian President Vladimir Putin met this week with Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff for nearly three hours of talks in the Kremlin. Trump on Wednesday said there was a “very good chance” he’d meet with Putin, though cautioned there had not yet been a “breakthrough” in the talks.  Chinese President Xi Jinping welcomed direct communications between Putin and Trump on Friday during his first known call with the Russian leader in months.  Xi also set out China’s position on Ukraine to Putin, describing the situation as a set of complex issues with no simple solutions, according to Chinese state broadcaster CCTV. Although Trump has warned over China’s purchases of Russian oil, his top adviser Peter Navarro played down the likelihood of new tariffs on Chinese exports, saying higher duties “may hurt the US.” When asked about Trump’s comments on Thursday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Fox News tariffs on China over oil purchases “could be on the table at some point.” China’s imports from Russia edged up in July to just over

Read More »

Sunrun battery attachment rate hits 70%, up 54% from year ago

Dive Brief: Seventy percent of the nearly 29,000 new Sunrun customers last quarter added paired batteries with rooftop solar systems, the largest U.S. home energy systems installer said Wednesday. That marked a 50% jump in the battery attachment rate from a year earlier. The surge in battery attachments highlights Sunrun’s shift away from solar-only installations and toward energy storage systems that can support virtual power plants, company executives told investors and stock analysts. Sunrun has installed about 3.2 GWh of distributed storage capacity to date, they said, putting it on track to reach 10 GWh by 2029. The expiration of the federal investment tax credit for third-party-owned residential solar equipment could deprive Sunrun of about $6,200 in revenue per system after 2027, it said in its Q2 2025 earnings presentation. To offset the loss, Sunrun said it would source lower-cost solar equipment, reduce customer acquisition costs, boost grid services revenue and raise power prices amid expected utility rate increases. Dive Insight: Sunrun has installed 195,000 solar-and-storage systems at its customers’ homes, it said Wednesday. The attachment rate has steadily increased since 2023, jumping from 18% to 54% from Q2 2023 to Q2 2024 and rising to 62% by Q4 2024. The exponential jump from 2023 to 2024 followed California’s enactment of a new net billing tariff that incentivized storage attachments for new residential solar customers. California remains the largest state market for residential solar, and policy decisions there have an outsized impact on distributed energy providers like Sunrun. Despite the slower pace of attachment growth this year, Sunrun is growing storage installations at a faster pace than solar-only installations. Sunrun installed 392 MWh of batteries in Q2 2025, up 48% from Q2 2024. It added 227 MW of solar capacity during the period, up 18% from a year earlier. Company

Read More »

Solutions to the energy talent gap are hiding in plain sight

Janell Hills-Thomas is senior director for equitable workforce strategies at the Interstate Renewable Energy Council and Courtney Haynes is chief engagement officer at Opportunity@Work. Amid political turbulence and an uncertain policy future, the clean and renewable energy sector continues to grow, spurred on by public demand for low-cost and reliable technologies to power their homes and vehicles. That would be good news — except that businesses across the industry face ongoing challenges finding enough qualified workers. Despite the industry’s growth, businesses often struggle to find trained professionals across roles ranging from installers and electricians to positions in engineering, project management and operations. While the career opportunities are plentiful, many potential candidates remain unaware of the high-quality jobs and routes to advancement in the clean energy industries. In the solar industry, for example, an overwhelming majority of employers say they face shortages of qualified workers to meet the demand for new installations. “It really does keep me up sometimes,” said one participant in the National Solar Jobs Census survey. “How are we going to build all these projects? Because there’s just not enough people.” In the energy efficiency sector, which employs 2.3 million people, most employers also report difficulty meeting their hiring needs. These challenges have taken on new urgency as we seek to ramp up deployment of clean energy solutions at an unprecedented scale. To find a path forward, we’ve engaged in discussions with hundreds of employers and educators through forums like the National Clean Energy Workforce Alliance. As a result of these convenings, here are a few key strategies we’ve identified to help employers fill job openings with qualified talent. Form strategic partnerships with educators Businesses can form partnerships with community colleges, other training providers and community-based organizations in the regions where they seek to hire. Developing long-term alliances

Read More »

Stay Ahead with the Paperboy Newsletter

Your weekly dose of insights into AI, Bitcoin mining, Datacenters and Energy indusrty news. Spend 3-5 minutes and catch-up on 1 week of news.

Smarter with ONMINE

Streamline Your Growth with ONMINE