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CenterPoint Energy completes $1.2B sale of Louisiana, Mississippi gas systems

CenterPoint Energy has completed the sale of its natural gas distribution systems in Louisiana and Mississippi to Delta Utilities for $1.2 billion, the companies announced Tuesday. Sale proceeds will “support the efficient funding of what we believe is one of the most tangible long-term growth plans in the industry,” CenterPoint President and CEO Jason Wells said in a statement. “We will continue to optimize the funding of our capital investments to support safety, reliability and resiliency for the benefit of our customers and communities.” CenterPoint now has electric transmission and distribution, power generation and natural gas distribution operations that serve approximately 7 million customers in Indiana, Minnesota, Ohio and Texas. Assets sold to Delta include approximately 12,000 miles of main pipeline serving approximately 380,000 metered customers. “Completing this acquisition furthers our vision to establish modern, multi-state natural gas utilities that build stronger, more resilient communities,” Delta CEO Tim Poché said in a statement. Delta is an affiliate of private equity firm Bernhard Capital Partners. Delta is also in the final stages of acquiring Entergy’s two regulated natural gas local distribution companies in New Orleans and Baton Rouge, with the sale expected to close this summer, the company said. Entergy Louisiana’s gas business serves approximately 95,000 homes and businesses in the Baton Rouge area, and Entergy New Orleans’ gas business serves approximately 109,000 homes and businesses in New Orleans, the utility said in a February announcement of the deal. While private equity firms have been known to squeeze profit from companies before reselling, Poché told the Shreveport-Bossier City Advocate that the gas system acquisition “is not a short-term investment at all.” “We’re very attracted to natural gas, in the resiliency that it has as a very significant transition fuel within our country,” he said. For CenterPoint, the utility said in 2024 that the

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NetBox Labs launches drift detection tool to tame configuration chaos

“We want to make it easier to build and manage complex networks, and some of that is taking away a lot of the busy work. The skill set of the network engineer is going to evolve quite a bit, making it possible for network engineers to worry less about the tactical details and the busy work and more on architecture and orchestration and decision making,” Beevers says. Network operations professionals face significant challenges with configuration drift, says Shamus McGillicuddy, research director for the network management practice at Enterprise Management Associates (EMA), and “many companies try to build automation for config compliance to deal with it.” Still, spotting drift is a difficult challenge, especially for large, multi-vendor networks. “NetBox Labs is offering an enterprise-grade approach to config compliance with its Assurance capability. It discovers actual configs in the field, reports on which production configs are out of compliance with the NetBox model and provides workflows to plan for mitigation of those config drifts,” McGillicuddy says. Assurance could help with enterprise organizations looking to deploy more automation in their environments, he says, because it provides better visibility into network changes. The type of tool could also drive other efficiencies. “First, it eliminates a lot of manual toil for engineers who are tasked with remediating config drift. Second, it potentially replaces some custom automation tooling that can be time-consuming to maintain,” McGillicuddy says. NetBox Assurance is delivered through NetBox Enterprise or NetBox Cloud, with NetBox Cloud being the more popular commercial offering. Assurance is a commercial product that requires either the enterprise or cloud platform to work, and it is not available via NetBox’s open-source version. The enterprise version is an on-premises offering, and the cloud version provides a fully managed solution. NetBox Assurance is available now.

Read More »

Palo Alto VP Jordi Botifoll: ‘You can’t play with cybersecurity’

Palo Alto has boosted this effort in recent years with the integration of precision artificial intelligence that includes machine learning and deep learning techniques, in addition to generative AI tools. “Our strategy is to ensure that the time to detect an attack and the time to resolve it (if it has occurred) are zero; currently, the average we manage, which is a great advantage over our competitors, is 10 seconds to detect the attack and one minute to resolve it,” Botifoll says. A global database to deal with threats For Botifoll, one of the great differentials of Palo Alto is the large amount of data it handles, thanks, he stresses, to the activity it carries out with more than 85,000 clients (including 85 of the Fortune 100 companies) and the work of its emergency unit (Unit 42) “which also responds to calls from organizations that are not our clients but request our services in situations of relevant security breaches.” “Our telemetry is able to analyze and understand polymorphic attacks. This continuous database we have is also very important for our artificial intelligence to be even more effective so that we can prevent an attack before it appears,” he adds. The precision AI with which the firm works, Botifoll says, “allows us to act in real time and with automated processes that reduce errors, because it is a reality that humans make more mistakes than machines. In this era of massive attacks [Palo Alto detects 2.3 million net new attacks a day, up from 1.6 million last year], if an organization doesn’t have automated incident management, it has a problem.” In addition, he says, “cybercriminals are also using AI to generate malicious attacks, so you have to be well prepared.” Although many cybersecurity companies are already adopting a platform strategy, in

Read More »

Hydrogen sector seeks policy certainty as UK government pledges revamped strategy

The UK hydrogen industry is calling on the government to deliver “pragmatism” and policy certainty to help the nascent sector overcome development challenges. It comes as the UK Labour government today pledged to unveil an updated hydrogen strategy later this year. The new hydrogen strategy will build on one introduced under the previous Conservative government in 2021. Addressing the Hydrogen UK annual conference in Birmingham, industry minister Sarah Jones said the updated strategy comes following “a great deal of change” in the industry in recent years. “New evidence has emerged on costs, demand and expected operating patterns, and our understanding has evolved in time, both in terms of how we can best use hydrogen in energy systems, and how we can expect the hydrogen economy to develop over time,” Jones said. Clean power and economic growth The government believes hydrogen will play a central role in two of Labour’s “guiding missions”, Jones said, delivering its clean power by 2030 target and securing economic growth. Jones said the hydrogen strategy will set out the government’s plans to “build on the progress made in recent years and seize the opportunities ahead”. In addition, Jones said the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) will announce the successful projects within the second hydrogen allocation round (HAR2) “very shortly”. © Supplied by VoltalisPicture shows; Industry minister Sarah Jones. Royal Society of Arts. Supplied by Voltalis Date; 29/01/2025 The first allocation round (HAR1) saw 11 green hydrogen projects secure close to £2 billion in UK government funding in 2023 as part of the revenue support scheme. However, the first round fell short of securing its 250 MW capacity target, and there have been lengthy delays in securing final investment decisions from HAR1 developers. While several HAR1 developers have now signed government contracts, Jones said

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Energy profits hit half a trillion as consumer price cap rises

Energy profits have hit half a trillion pounds since the energy crisis despite rising consumer bills, according to an independent analysis of company reports. Researchers at the End Fuel Poverty Coalition counted the profits declared by UK energy producers such as Shell and Equinor, as well as suppliers including British Gas and grid operators such as National Grid. Nearly half of the £500 billion of profits generated by the industry since 2020, or £207bn, were made by companies involved in the gas industry. According to Scottish Renewables chief executive Claire Mack, bill payers are ‘paying the price’ for exposure to global gas markets, with renewable power likely to provide the best value for consumers. © Supplied by Scottish RenewablesScottish Renewables chief executive Claire Mack. The ceiling on energy prices, designed to protect consumers from price spikes, and enforced by energy regulator Ofgem, known as the energy price cap, rose by 6.4% this week. Trade union Unite protested against high energy prices on Tuesday, arguing that nobody should have to choose between ‘heating or eating’. Union members will campaign across 40 locations in the UK, with further protests planned in the coming two weeks. Prime minister Keir Starmer has meanwhile promised that clean power will lower energy bills, something Kemi Badenoch, leader of the Conservatives, wants to abolish – while right-wing party Reform is also trying to leverage high bills in its political campaign. Politicians have begun to engage energy companies as they seek to invest in clean technologies and lower prices. Energy secretary Ed Miliband broached talks with Centrica this month to extend the Rough gas storage facility in the North Sea beyond 2030. A spokesperson for the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) said: “We’re open to discussing proposals, just as long as it provides value for

Read More »

Anthropic flips the script on AI in education: Claude’s Learning Mode makes students do the thinking

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Anthropic introduced Claude for Education today, a specialized version of its AI assistant designed to develop students’ critical thinking skills rather than simply provide answers to their questions. The new offering includes partnerships with Northeastern University, London School of Economics, and Champlain College, creating a large-scale test of whether AI can enhance rather than shortcut the learning process. ‘Learning Mode’ puts thinking before answers in AI education strategy The centerpiece of Claude for Education is “Learning Mode,” which fundamentally changes how students interact with AI. When students ask questions, Claude responds not with answers but with Socratic questioning: “How would you approach this problem?” or “What evidence supports your conclusion?” This approach directly addresses what many educators consider the central risk of AI in education: that tools like ChatGPT encourage shortcut thinking rather than deeper understanding. By designing an AI that deliberately withholds answers in favor of guided reasoning, Anthropic has created something closer to a digital tutor than an answer engine. The timing is significant. Since ChatGPT’s emergence in 2022, universities have struggled with contradictory approaches to AI — some banning it outright while others tentatively embrace it. Stanford’s HAI AI Index shows over three-quarters of higher education institutions still lack comprehensive AI policies. Universities gain campus-wide AI access with built-in guardrails Northeastern University will implement Claude across 13 global campuses serving 50,000 students and faculty. The university has positioned itself at the forefront of AI-focused education with its Northeastern 2025 academic plan under President Joseph E. Aoun, who literally wrote the book on AI’s impact on education with “Robot-Proof.” What’s notable about these partnerships is their scale. Rather than limiting AI access to specific departments or courses, these universities

Read More »

CenterPoint Energy completes $1.2B sale of Louisiana, Mississippi gas systems

CenterPoint Energy has completed the sale of its natural gas distribution systems in Louisiana and Mississippi to Delta Utilities for $1.2 billion, the companies announced Tuesday. Sale proceeds will “support the efficient funding of what we believe is one of the most tangible long-term growth plans in the industry,” CenterPoint President and CEO Jason Wells said in a statement. “We will continue to optimize the funding of our capital investments to support safety, reliability and resiliency for the benefit of our customers and communities.” CenterPoint now has electric transmission and distribution, power generation and natural gas distribution operations that serve approximately 7 million customers in Indiana, Minnesota, Ohio and Texas. Assets sold to Delta include approximately 12,000 miles of main pipeline serving approximately 380,000 metered customers. “Completing this acquisition furthers our vision to establish modern, multi-state natural gas utilities that build stronger, more resilient communities,” Delta CEO Tim Poché said in a statement. Delta is an affiliate of private equity firm Bernhard Capital Partners. Delta is also in the final stages of acquiring Entergy’s two regulated natural gas local distribution companies in New Orleans and Baton Rouge, with the sale expected to close this summer, the company said. Entergy Louisiana’s gas business serves approximately 95,000 homes and businesses in the Baton Rouge area, and Entergy New Orleans’ gas business serves approximately 109,000 homes and businesses in New Orleans, the utility said in a February announcement of the deal. While private equity firms have been known to squeeze profit from companies before reselling, Poché told the Shreveport-Bossier City Advocate that the gas system acquisition “is not a short-term investment at all.” “We’re very attracted to natural gas, in the resiliency that it has as a very significant transition fuel within our country,” he said. For CenterPoint, the utility said in 2024 that the

Read More »

NetBox Labs launches drift detection tool to tame configuration chaos

“We want to make it easier to build and manage complex networks, and some of that is taking away a lot of the busy work. The skill set of the network engineer is going to evolve quite a bit, making it possible for network engineers to worry less about the tactical details and the busy work and more on architecture and orchestration and decision making,” Beevers says. Network operations professionals face significant challenges with configuration drift, says Shamus McGillicuddy, research director for the network management practice at Enterprise Management Associates (EMA), and “many companies try to build automation for config compliance to deal with it.” Still, spotting drift is a difficult challenge, especially for large, multi-vendor networks. “NetBox Labs is offering an enterprise-grade approach to config compliance with its Assurance capability. It discovers actual configs in the field, reports on which production configs are out of compliance with the NetBox model and provides workflows to plan for mitigation of those config drifts,” McGillicuddy says. Assurance could help with enterprise organizations looking to deploy more automation in their environments, he says, because it provides better visibility into network changes. The type of tool could also drive other efficiencies. “First, it eliminates a lot of manual toil for engineers who are tasked with remediating config drift. Second, it potentially replaces some custom automation tooling that can be time-consuming to maintain,” McGillicuddy says. NetBox Assurance is delivered through NetBox Enterprise or NetBox Cloud, with NetBox Cloud being the more popular commercial offering. Assurance is a commercial product that requires either the enterprise or cloud platform to work, and it is not available via NetBox’s open-source version. The enterprise version is an on-premises offering, and the cloud version provides a fully managed solution. NetBox Assurance is available now.

Read More »

Palo Alto VP Jordi Botifoll: ‘You can’t play with cybersecurity’

Palo Alto has boosted this effort in recent years with the integration of precision artificial intelligence that includes machine learning and deep learning techniques, in addition to generative AI tools. “Our strategy is to ensure that the time to detect an attack and the time to resolve it (if it has occurred) are zero; currently, the average we manage, which is a great advantage over our competitors, is 10 seconds to detect the attack and one minute to resolve it,” Botifoll says. A global database to deal with threats For Botifoll, one of the great differentials of Palo Alto is the large amount of data it handles, thanks, he stresses, to the activity it carries out with more than 85,000 clients (including 85 of the Fortune 100 companies) and the work of its emergency unit (Unit 42) “which also responds to calls from organizations that are not our clients but request our services in situations of relevant security breaches.” “Our telemetry is able to analyze and understand polymorphic attacks. This continuous database we have is also very important for our artificial intelligence to be even more effective so that we can prevent an attack before it appears,” he adds. The precision AI with which the firm works, Botifoll says, “allows us to act in real time and with automated processes that reduce errors, because it is a reality that humans make more mistakes than machines. In this era of massive attacks [Palo Alto detects 2.3 million net new attacks a day, up from 1.6 million last year], if an organization doesn’t have automated incident management, it has a problem.” In addition, he says, “cybercriminals are also using AI to generate malicious attacks, so you have to be well prepared.” Although many cybersecurity companies are already adopting a platform strategy, in

Read More »

Hydrogen sector seeks policy certainty as UK government pledges revamped strategy

The UK hydrogen industry is calling on the government to deliver “pragmatism” and policy certainty to help the nascent sector overcome development challenges. It comes as the UK Labour government today pledged to unveil an updated hydrogen strategy later this year. The new hydrogen strategy will build on one introduced under the previous Conservative government in 2021. Addressing the Hydrogen UK annual conference in Birmingham, industry minister Sarah Jones said the updated strategy comes following “a great deal of change” in the industry in recent years. “New evidence has emerged on costs, demand and expected operating patterns, and our understanding has evolved in time, both in terms of how we can best use hydrogen in energy systems, and how we can expect the hydrogen economy to develop over time,” Jones said. Clean power and economic growth The government believes hydrogen will play a central role in two of Labour’s “guiding missions”, Jones said, delivering its clean power by 2030 target and securing economic growth. Jones said the hydrogen strategy will set out the government’s plans to “build on the progress made in recent years and seize the opportunities ahead”. In addition, Jones said the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) will announce the successful projects within the second hydrogen allocation round (HAR2) “very shortly”. © Supplied by VoltalisPicture shows; Industry minister Sarah Jones. Royal Society of Arts. Supplied by Voltalis Date; 29/01/2025 The first allocation round (HAR1) saw 11 green hydrogen projects secure close to £2 billion in UK government funding in 2023 as part of the revenue support scheme. However, the first round fell short of securing its 250 MW capacity target, and there have been lengthy delays in securing final investment decisions from HAR1 developers. While several HAR1 developers have now signed government contracts, Jones said

Read More »

Energy profits hit half a trillion as consumer price cap rises

Energy profits have hit half a trillion pounds since the energy crisis despite rising consumer bills, according to an independent analysis of company reports. Researchers at the End Fuel Poverty Coalition counted the profits declared by UK energy producers such as Shell and Equinor, as well as suppliers including British Gas and grid operators such as National Grid. Nearly half of the £500 billion of profits generated by the industry since 2020, or £207bn, were made by companies involved in the gas industry. According to Scottish Renewables chief executive Claire Mack, bill payers are ‘paying the price’ for exposure to global gas markets, with renewable power likely to provide the best value for consumers. © Supplied by Scottish RenewablesScottish Renewables chief executive Claire Mack. The ceiling on energy prices, designed to protect consumers from price spikes, and enforced by energy regulator Ofgem, known as the energy price cap, rose by 6.4% this week. Trade union Unite protested against high energy prices on Tuesday, arguing that nobody should have to choose between ‘heating or eating’. Union members will campaign across 40 locations in the UK, with further protests planned in the coming two weeks. Prime minister Keir Starmer has meanwhile promised that clean power will lower energy bills, something Kemi Badenoch, leader of the Conservatives, wants to abolish – while right-wing party Reform is also trying to leverage high bills in its political campaign. Politicians have begun to engage energy companies as they seek to invest in clean technologies and lower prices. Energy secretary Ed Miliband broached talks with Centrica this month to extend the Rough gas storage facility in the North Sea beyond 2030. A spokesperson for the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) said: “We’re open to discussing proposals, just as long as it provides value for

Read More »

Anthropic flips the script on AI in education: Claude’s Learning Mode makes students do the thinking

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Anthropic introduced Claude for Education today, a specialized version of its AI assistant designed to develop students’ critical thinking skills rather than simply provide answers to their questions. The new offering includes partnerships with Northeastern University, London School of Economics, and Champlain College, creating a large-scale test of whether AI can enhance rather than shortcut the learning process. ‘Learning Mode’ puts thinking before answers in AI education strategy The centerpiece of Claude for Education is “Learning Mode,” which fundamentally changes how students interact with AI. When students ask questions, Claude responds not with answers but with Socratic questioning: “How would you approach this problem?” or “What evidence supports your conclusion?” This approach directly addresses what many educators consider the central risk of AI in education: that tools like ChatGPT encourage shortcut thinking rather than deeper understanding. By designing an AI that deliberately withholds answers in favor of guided reasoning, Anthropic has created something closer to a digital tutor than an answer engine. The timing is significant. Since ChatGPT’s emergence in 2022, universities have struggled with contradictory approaches to AI — some banning it outright while others tentatively embrace it. Stanford’s HAI AI Index shows over three-quarters of higher education institutions still lack comprehensive AI policies. Universities gain campus-wide AI access with built-in guardrails Northeastern University will implement Claude across 13 global campuses serving 50,000 students and faculty. The university has positioned itself at the forefront of AI-focused education with its Northeastern 2025 academic plan under President Joseph E. Aoun, who literally wrote the book on AI’s impact on education with “Robot-Proof.” What’s notable about these partnerships is their scale. Rather than limiting AI access to specific departments or courses, these universities

Read More »

Bipartisan Group of Senators Readies New Sanctions on Russia

A group of 50 Republican and Democratic senators introduced a sanctions package to hit Russia and countries that buy its oil if President Vladimir Putin refuses to engage in good-faith ceasefire negotiations with Ukraine or breaches an eventual agreement. The punishments would include a 500% tariff on imports from countries that buy Russian oil, petroleum products, natural gas or uranium, according to a draft of the bill seen by Bloomberg News. Other sanctions would also prohibit US citizens from buying Russian sovereign debt, according to the draft. The congressional effort, if it passes, would give President Donald Trump additional leverage in his quest for a ceasefire. Over the weekend, he told NBC News that he was “pissed off” at Putin and threatened secondary tariffs on buyers of Russian oil if the Russian leader refused a ceasefire with Ukraine.  “We hope for peace but it has to be fair to Ukraine,” Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticut Democrat and one of the bill’s sponsors, said in an interview. “The reason there’s no ceasefire is Putin is playing for time and hoping he can make gains on the battlefield while diverting President Trump and the American people.” The outlines of the sanctions were announced in a press release from Blumenthal and Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican. They said 50 Senators had signed on to the bill and companion legislation was being introduced in the House of Representatives by a bipartisan group of four lawmakers. The package would also include a range of other restrictions such as prohibiting US financial institutions from investing in entities linked to the Russian government and sanctioning any country that has bought uranium sourced from Russia, according to the bill. The proposal would go beyond the sweeping sanctions imposed on Russia over the last several years. It would likely

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Crown Estate opens £15m offshore wind port fund

The Crown Estate has opened applications for £15 million of funding aimed at accelerating the development of the UK’s offshore wind port infrastructure. The money is the latest round of support being offered through the body’s £50m supply chain accelerator fund. This follows an initial £5m funding round that opened December 2024 and focused on projects in the Celtic Sea. The second round is targeting UK ports and port-related infrastructure to support the construction, assembly, manufacturing, operations and maintenance, and wet storage of fixed and floating offshore wind, as well as supply chain opportunities that support deployment. Businesses can apply for up to £1.5m of funding per eligible project, with the Crown Estate providing 50% matched funding for early-stage development expenditure. In addition, there is an option for the group to participate in the capital investment phase. Applicants have until the end of June to make their submission, with successful projects to be announced by the end of the year. The Crown Estate head of investment Ben Brinded said: “The ambition behind our supply chain accelerator is to accelerate and de-risk the offshore wind supply chain in support of the UK’s clean energy transition, boosting economic growth through new jobs and skills opportunity around the country. “Following the success of the initial funding round and the recent modernising of our investment powers through the Crown Estate Act 2025, we’ve expanded the ambition and scope for the second round of the accelerator to include fixed and floating supply chain opportunities, together with ports and their associated facilities.” The supply chain accelerator aims to support existing early-stage projects to scale up into attractive capital investment opportunities, helping to drive demand for new jobs and skills. The previous £5m round saw funding awarded to 13 businesses focused on developing floating wind supply chain

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Excelerate to Acquire NFE’s Jamaican Business for $1.055B

Excelerate Energy, Inc. has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire New Fortress Energy Inc.’s (NFE) business in Jamaica for $1.055 billion in cash. Under the terms of the agreement, Excelerate will acquire the assets and operations of the Montego Bay LNG Terminal, the Old Harbour LNG Terminal, and the Clarendon combined heat and power (CHP) co-generation plant, Excelerate said in a news release, adding that it expects to assume all material contracts that are currently in place. The acquisition adds downstream and “last-mile” infrastructure to complement and diversify Excelerate’s existing portfolio, the company said. The acquisition adds the country’s only liquefied natural gas (LNG) platform and the Jamaica Power System, including one of the country’s largest gas-fired power plants. The assets include Jamaica’s only two LNG terminals, serving power plants and industrial customers, as well as Jamaica’s only combined heat and power co-generation plant, according to the release. Excelerate said it intends to fund the cash purchase price of $1.055 billion using a combination of permanent financing and cash-on-hand. The company has backstopped the financing with an $850 million fully committed bridge facility. The transaction is expected to close as early as the second quarter of 2025, subject to regulatory approvals and the satisfaction of other customary closing conditions, according to the release. In the long term, Excelerate said it plans to use its own Venture Global LNG supply “which is well-matched with customer offtake commitments, minimizing commodity risk”. The company has a 20-year Venture Global LNG supply agreement for 0.7 million metric tons per annum. Excelerate said the acquisition offers opportunities to expand in Jamaica, leveraging existing infrastructure, including LNG bunkering, an expansion of the Clarendon CHP plant, and the ability to grow LNG fuel supply for Jamaica’s industrial base, benefitting from the anticipated continued shift away from

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Petronas Confirms Fire at Main PGB Pipeline

In a statement posted on its website on Tuesday, Petronas confirmed that a fire had occurred at the main Petronas Gas Berhad (PGB) pipeline near Putra Heights, Subang Jaya, Selangor, on April 1. “The affected pipeline has been isolated, and all relevant stakeholders have been informed,” Petronas said in its statement. “Petronas is working closely with all relevant parties to ensure the safety of the surrounding community, environment, and security of gas supply to the nation, which remain our utmost priority,” it added. In the statement, Petronas noted that its surrounding three retail stations – PS Putra Heights, PS KM2 LDP, and PS Putra Bestari – were not affected but added that they had been temporarily closed as a precautionary measure. In another statement posted on its site later that same day, Petronas said its public listed subsidiary Petronas Gas Berhad will be working closely with government authorities and agencies to assess the full impact of the incident. “At the same time, the Petronas Group is proactively taking all necessary measures to preserve the security of gas supply,” the company added. “To this end, the team is hard at work to mitigate disruptions, implement contingency plans, and restore operations as safely and efficiently as possible in coordination with relevant authorities and agencies,” it continued. “As earlier cited by the Prime Minister during his visit to the location of the incident, we will be actively coordinating with the relevant ministries as well as State and Federal agencies to ensure adequate relief efforts and assistance are extended and meaningful support is deployed during this very difficult time,” it went on to state. “We are committed to work as closely as possible with these ministries and agencies so that timely and meaningful support can be effectively deployed during what must be a very

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Petronas Issues $5 Billion Bonds

Malaysia’s national oil and gas company said it had achieved the biggest oil and gas debt instrument sale in Asia since 2020 with the issuance of $5 billion senior notes. Petroliam Nasional Bhd. (Petronas) had made a $6 billion senior bond offering 2020. “Additionally, this is the largest international bond market transaction out of Asia since 2021”, it said of the new offering, which marks its return to the international dollar bond market since a $3 billion issuance April 2021. The new issuance consists of $1.6 billion senior notes maturing in 5.75 years, another 10-year tranche worth $1.8 billion and a third tranche of $1.6 billion due in 30 years. “The 5.75-year senior notes were priced at 90 basis points (bps) over the 5-year US Treasury yield for a coupon of 4.950 percent, the 10-year senior notes were priced at 100 bps over the 10-year US Treasury yield for a coupon of 5.340 percent, and the 30-year senior notes were priced at 115 bps over the 30-year US Treasury yield for a coupon of 5.848 percent”, Petronas said in an online statement. Proceeds will go to “general corporate purposes”, the company said. The peak orderbook exceeded $17 billion, an oversubscription of about 3.4 times. The statement said that “overwhelming investor interest enabled PETRONAS to tighten pricing by 30-35bps from initial pricing guidance to final pricing guidance and upsizing from US$3bn to final size of US$5bn”. “The bonds were distributed to top-tier international investors across the globe”, Petronas said. JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley served as joint global coordinators. HSBC, Maybank and MUFG acted as joint bookrunners for the drawdown offering. JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, HSBC, Maybank and MUFG were joint arrangers and dealers for Petronas’ GMTN update. Petronas ended 2024 with MYR 20.06 billion ($4.5 billion) in borrowings, part of

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PetroChina Annual Profit Up 2 Percent on Higher Production

PetroChina Co. Ltd. has reported CNY 164.68 billion ($22.69 billion) in net profit for 2024, up 2 percent from 2023 as increased output offset lower prices. The publicly listed arm of China National Petroleum Corp. produced 243.7 million metric tons of oil equivalent last year, up 2.2 percent year-on-year. Domestic petroleum and natural gas production totaled 217 million metric tons, up 2.5 percent against 2023. Chinese oil production rose 0.4 percent to 105.2 million metric tons. Marketable gas production grew 4.6 percent to 140.36 billion cubic meters (4.96 trillion cubic feet), PetroChina said in a report on its website. It saw a 2.5 percent fall in average realized oil price. Meanwhile PetroChina grew its installed wind and solar generation capacity by 4.95 million kilowatts and produced 4.72 billion kilowatt hours of power. “Additionally, newly-signed geothermal heating contracts area reached 75.12 million square meters [808.58 million square feet]”, PetroChina said. Its upstream oil and gas and new energies business generated CNY 159.75 billion in operating profit. Downstream, PetroChina processed 190 million metric tons of crude and produced 120 million metric tons of refined products. “The commodity volume of chemical products amounted to 38.98 million tons, an increase of 13.6 percent year-on-year, and the output of new materials surged by 49.3 percent year-on-year to 2.05 million tons”, the report said. “By vigorously reducing the production of fuels and increasing chemicals and specialty products, the Company continuously increased the output of high value-added products while actively moving to mid-to-high-end of the ‘Refining, Chemicals, Bio-manufacturing, Fine Chemicals, New Materials’ industrial chain”, it said. “Key transformation and upgrading projects, including Jilin Petrochemical and Guangxi Petrochemical, progressed steadily, while the high-end polyolefin project of Blue Ocean New Materials was officially launched. “The Company expanded sales of specialty refined products, securing the largest market share in China

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National Grid, Con Edison urge FERC to adopt gas pipeline reliability requirements

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission should adopt reliability-related requirements for gas pipeline operators to ensure fuel supplies during cold weather, according to National Grid USA and affiliated utilities Consolidated Edison Co. of New York and Orange and Rockland Utilities. In the wake of power outages in the Southeast and the near collapse of New York City’s gas system during Winter Storm Elliott in December 2022, voluntary efforts to bolster gas pipeline reliability are inadequate, the utilities said in two separate filings on Friday at FERC. The filings were in response to a gas-electric coordination meeting held in November by the Federal-State Current Issues Collaborative between FERC and the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners. National Grid called for FERC to use its authority under the Natural Gas Act to require pipeline reliability reporting, coupled with enforcement mechanisms, and pipeline tariff reforms. “Such data reporting would enable the commission to gain a clearer picture into pipeline reliability and identify any problematic trends in the quality of pipeline service,” National Grid said. “At that point, the commission could consider using its ratemaking, audit, and civil penalty authority preemptively to address such identified concerns before they result in service curtailments.” On pipeline tariff reforms, FERC should develop tougher provisions for force majeure events — an unforeseen occurence that prevents a contract from being fulfilled — reservation charge crediting, operational flow orders, scheduling and confirmation enhancements, improved real-time coordination, and limits on changes to nomination rankings, National Grid said. FERC should support efforts in New England and New York to create financial incentives for gas-fired generators to enter into winter contracts for imported liquefied natural gas supplies, or other long-term firm contracts with suppliers and pipelines, National Grid said. Con Edison and O&R said they were encouraged by recent efforts such as North American Energy Standard

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US BOEM Seeks Feedback on Potential Wind Leasing Offshore Guam

The United States Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) on Monday issued a Call for Information and Nominations to help it decide on potential leasing areas for wind energy development offshore Guam. The call concerns a contiguous area around the island that comprises about 2.1 million acres. The area’s water depths range from 350 meters (1,148.29 feet) to 2,200 meters (7,217.85 feet), according to a statement on BOEM’s website. Closing April 7, the comment period seeks “relevant information on site conditions, marine resources, and ocean uses near or within the call area”, the BOEM said. “Concurrently, wind energy companies can nominate specific areas they would like to see offered for leasing. “During the call comment period, BOEM will engage with Indigenous Peoples, stakeholder organizations, ocean users, federal agencies, the government of Guam, and other parties to identify conflicts early in the process as BOEM seeks to identify areas where offshore wind development would have the least impact”. The next step would be the identification of specific WEAs, or wind energy areas, in the larger call area. BOEM would then conduct environmental reviews of the WEAs in consultation with different stakeholders. “After completing its environmental reviews and consultations, BOEM may propose one or more competitive lease sales for areas within the WEAs”, the Department of the Interior (DOI) sub-agency said. BOEM Director Elizabeth Klein said, “Responsible offshore wind development off Guam’s coast offers a vital opportunity to expand clean energy, cut carbon emissions, and reduce energy costs for Guam residents”. Late last year the DOI announced the approval of the 2.4-gigawatt (GW) SouthCoast Wind Project, raising the total capacity of federally approved offshore wind power projects to over 19 GW. The project owned by a joint venture between EDP Renewables and ENGIE received a positive Record of Decision, the DOI said in

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Biden Bars Offshore Oil Drilling in USA Atlantic and Pacific

President Joe Biden is indefinitely blocking offshore oil and gas development in more than 625 million acres of US coastal waters, warning that drilling there is simply “not worth the risks” and “unnecessary” to meet the nation’s energy needs.  Biden’s move is enshrined in a pair of presidential memoranda being issued Monday, burnishing his legacy on conservation and fighting climate change just two weeks before President-elect Donald Trump takes office. Yet unlike other actions Biden has taken to constrain fossil fuel development, this one could be harder for Trump to unwind, since it’s rooted in a 72-year-old provision of federal law that empowers presidents to withdraw US waters from oil and gas leasing without explicitly authorizing revocations.  Biden is ruling out future oil and gas leasing along the US East and West Coasts, the eastern Gulf of Mexico and a sliver of the Northern Bering Sea, an area teeming with seabirds, marine mammals, fish and other wildlife that indigenous people have depended on for millennia. The action doesn’t affect energy development under existing offshore leases, and it won’t prevent the sale of more drilling rights in Alaska’s gas-rich Cook Inlet or the central and western Gulf of Mexico, which together provide about 14% of US oil and gas production.  The president cast the move as achieving a careful balance between conservation and energy security. “It is clear to me that the relatively minimal fossil fuel potential in the areas I am withdrawing do not justify the environmental, public health and economic risks that would come from new leasing and drilling,” Biden said. “We do not need to choose between protecting the environment and growing our economy, or between keeping our ocean healthy, our coastlines resilient and the food they produce secure — and keeping energy prices low.” Some of the areas Biden is protecting

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Biden Admin Finalizes Hydrogen Tax Credit Favoring Cleaner Production

The Biden administration has finalized rules for a tax incentive promoting hydrogen production using renewable power, with lower credits for processes using abated natural gas. The Clean Hydrogen Production Credit is based on carbon intensity, which must not exceed four kilograms of carbon dioxide equivalent per kilogram of hydrogen produced. Qualified facilities are those whose start of construction falls before 2033. These facilities can claim credits for 10 years of production starting on the date of service placement, according to the draft text on the Federal Register’s portal. The final text is scheduled for publication Friday. Established by the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, the four-tier scheme gives producers that meet wage and apprenticeship requirements a credit of up to $3 per kilogram of “qualified clean hydrogen”, to be adjusted for inflation. Hydrogen whose production process makes higher lifecycle emissions gets less. The scheme will use the Energy Department’s Greenhouse Gases, Regulated Emissions and Energy Use in Transportation (GREET) model in tiering production processes for credit computation. “In the coming weeks, the Department of Energy will release an updated version of the 45VH2-GREET model that producers will use to calculate the section 45V tax credit”, the Treasury Department said in a statement announcing the finalization of rules, a process that it said had considered roughly 30,000 public comments. However, producers may use the GREET model that was the most recent when their facility began construction. “This is in consideration of comments that the prospect of potential changes to the model over time reduces investment certainty”, explained the statement on the Treasury’s website. “Calculation of the lifecycle GHG analysis for the tax credit requires consideration of direct and significant indirect emissions”, the statement said. For electrolytic hydrogen, electrolyzers covered by the scheme include not only those using renewables-derived electricity (green hydrogen) but

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Xthings unveils Ulticam home security cameras powered by edge AI

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Xthings announced that its Ulticam security camera brand has a new model out today: the Ulticam IQ Floodlight, an edge AI-powered home security camera. The company also plans to showcase two additional cameras, Ulticam IQ, an outdoor spotlight camera, and Ulticam Dot, a portable, wireless security camera. All three cameras offer free cloud storage (seven days rolling) and subscription-free edge AI-powered person detection and alerts. The AI at the edge means that it doesn’t have to go out to an internet-connected data center to tap AI computing to figure out what is in front of the camera. Rather, the processing for the AI is built into the camera itself, and that sets a new standard for value and performance in home security cameras. It can identify people, faces and vehicles. CES 2025 attendees can experience Ulticam’s entire lineup at Pepcom’s Digital Experience event on January 6, 2025, and at the Venetian Expo, Halls A-D, booth #51732, from January 7 to January 10, 2025. These new security cameras will be available for purchase online in the U.S. in Q1 and Q2 2025 at U-tec.com, Amazon, and Best Buy. The Ulticam IQ Series: smart edge AI-powered home security cameras Ulticam IQ home security camera. The Ulticam IQ Series, which includes IQ and IQ Floodlight, takes home security to the next level with the most advanced AI-powered recognition. Among the very first consumer cameras to use edge AI, the IQ Series can quickly and accurately identify people, faces and vehicles, without uploading video for server-side processing, which improves speed, accuracy, security and privacy. Additionally, the Ulticam IQ Series is designed to improve over time with over-the-air updates that enable new AI features. Both cameras

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Intel unveils new Core Ultra processors with 2X to 3X performance on AI apps

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Intel unveiled new Intel Core Ultra 9 processors today at CES 2025 with as much as two or three times the edge performance on AI apps as before. The chips under the Intel Core Ultra 9 and Core i9 labels were previously codenamed Arrow Lake H, Meteor Lake H, Arrow Lake S and Raptor Lake S Refresh. Intel said it is pushing the boundaries of AI performance and power efficiency for businesses and consumers, ushering in the next era of AI computing. In other performance metrics, Intel said the Core Ultra 9 processors are up to 5.8 times faster in media performance, 3.4 times faster in video analytics end-to-end workloads with media and AI, and 8.2 times better in terms of performance per watt than prior chips. Intel hopes to kick off the year better than in 2024. CEO Pat Gelsinger resigned last month without a permanent successor after a variety of struggles, including mass layoffs, manufacturing delays and poor execution on chips including gaming bugs in chips launched during the summer. Intel Core Ultra Series 2 Michael Masci, vice president of product management at the Edge Computing Group at Intel, said in a briefing that AI, once the domain of research labs, is integrating into every aspect of our lives, including AI PCs where the AI processing is done in the computer itself, not the cloud. AI is also being processed in data centers in big enterprises, from retail stores to hospital rooms. “As CES kicks off, it’s clear we are witnessing a transformative moment,” he said. “Artificial intelligence is moving at an unprecedented pace.” The new processors include the Intel Core 9 Ultra 200 H/U/S models, with up to

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Gladia launches Solaria as AI-based multi-lingual speech recognition model for speech-to-text transcription

Gladia, an AI transcription and audio intelligence provider, launched Solaria, a next-gen automatic speech recognition (ASR) model designed to redefine real-time communications for call centers and other voice-first platforms.

Solaria now empowers businesses to enhance and expand their customer service operations with AI-powered voice technology that delivers unmatched language coverage—supporting 40+ languages previously inaccessible with other solutions—without compromising quality or speed.

While outsourcing has long been a cost reduction strategy in the call center industry, businesses now face a new, critical challenge: providing seamless, multilingual support at scale. With 49% of global executives reporting financial losses due to language barriers, the demand for scalable, high-quality multilingual solutions has never been greater.

“We’ve seen in the market a huge surge in voice AI. It’s like voice is part of our life again, and we are introducing a new product called Solaria, which is a model that is real time with advanced capabilities,” said Jean-Louis Queguiner, CEO of Gladia, in an interview with GamesBeat. “And it’s going to be the fastest on the market, and the most accurate in the market, covering 100 languages.”

The product also has features like real time sentiment analysis and real time translation, he said. It handles speech to text translation and transcription. This is important to do in real time for voice agents or call centers, where someone may have to answer a question that comes in with a different language.

Solaria: An enterprise-ready model for global customer experience

Solaria is a speech-to-text (STT) engine built for global scalability. Solaria was designed to meet the demands of today’s contact centers, where both AI automation and human agents need high-accuracy, low-latency, and real-time multilingual support to succeed.

The model achieves industry-leading results in speech recognition, delivering both accuracy and fast processing speed. Recent benchmarks show Solaria has reached an unmatched 94% Word Accuracy Rate (WAR) average in English, Spanish, French and other common languages, while maintaining an ultra-low latency of 270 millisecond, making the conversation feel natural and responsive.

While real-time speech-to-text is often measured by speed alone, accuracy and language coverage are equally crucial for businesses providing seamless services across regions.

Unlike other speech-to-text models that prioritize speed over usability, Solaria balances industry-leading accuracy and speed with unmatched language coverage—100 languages in total, with exclusive support for 42 languages not matched by competitors. For high-population markets and key outsourcing hubs like Bangladesh, India, and The Philippines, native-level accuracy in regional languages is now offered through Solaria.

With native-level transcription, real-time code-switching, and translation across all supported languages, businesses can expand into global markets without constraints.

Designed for enterprise-scale voice automation, Solaria delivers:

Best-in-class accuracy in high-population languages such as Tagalog, Bengali, Punjabi, Tamil, Urdu, Persian, and Marathi.

Ability to adapt the model to industry-specific terminology (like medical or financial jargon) and have it extract critical data, like names, addresses, and numericals.

Adaptive speech processing, ensuring high accuracy in noisy call center environments.

Enterprise-grade data security, in full compliance with GDRP, HIPPA, and SOC 2.

With the addition of Solaria to its product portfolio, Gladia allows businesses to enhance customer service by improving AI-powered voice agents, making IVRs and virtual assistants more reliable across multiple languages, while also optimizing human-assisted workflows with real-time transcriptions and translations to help agents provide more effective assistance.

“Speech is the most natural way to connect with the world—for the first time, automated speech recognition is closing the divide, enabling humans and AI to truly speak the same language,” said Jean-Louis Quéguiner, CEO of Gladia, in a statement. “With Solaria, we have made a breakthrough in AI-powered voice technology that unlocks new opportunities for businesses, driving efficiency and delivering more seamless, impactful customer experiences across diverse languages and markets. Solaria is built for next-generation voice platforms ready to lead this transformation on a global scale.”

Serving more than 700 enterprise customers worldwide, including Attention, Circleback, Method Financial, and VEED.IO, Gladia delivers enterprise-grade service and scalability, backed by dedicated support and infrastructure in the U.S. and Europe, guaranteeing reliable performance for mission-critical applications. Companies looking to scale globally, optimize operational costs, and enhance customer experiences can start building with Gladia’s API today.

As part of the Solaria launch, Gladia has partnered with LiveKit, a leading open-source developer framework for real-time AI voice agents, to power real-time, multilingual translation within AI-driven applications. This gives developers global language capabilities out of the box through seamless integration with Gladia’s API.

Following its $16 million Series A round in 2024 and today’s rollout of Solaria, Gladia has taken another critical step toward establishing itself as a leading end-to-end API audio infrastructure provider—combining speech recognition, generative AI, and voice generation capabilities to help enterprise users and developers tap into the full potential of real-time audio data.

Paris-based Gladia was founded in 2022 by Jean-Louis Queguiner (ex-OVHCloud) and Jonathan Soto (ex-MIT/Sigfox). Gladia’s product has been adopted by over 150,000 users and 700 enterprise clients—including industry leaders like Attention, Circleback, Method Financial, and VEED.IO.

There is a 300 millisecond delay between the moment you start speaking and the moment you receive the first event of voice being activated. It takes 100 milliseconds to do the transcription and so you have near instant results.

To improve the accuracy further, Queguiner said the company needs to train on more data. And it needs to work with the data augmentations to make the data more robust. The company has enterprise pricing in price but has not disclosed it yet. He said it will be among the most affordable solutions in the market.

The company has nearly 40 employees.

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How 3D printing could make better cooling systems

A new 3D-printed design could make an integral part of cooling systems like air conditioners or refrigerators smaller and more efficient, according to new research.   Heat exchangers are devices that whisk away heat, and they’re everywhere—used in data centers, ships, factories, and buildings. The aim is to pass as much heat as possible from one side of the device to the other. Most use one of a few standard designs that have historically been easiest and cheapest to make.  “Heat exchangers are at the center of the industrial economy. They’re an essential part of every machine and every system that moves energy,” says William King, a professor at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and one of the authors of the new study. Existing designs tend to favor straight lines, right angles, and round tubes, he adds.   King and his colleagues used 3D printing to design a heat exchanger that includes features to optimize heat movement, like wavy walls and pyramid-shaped bumps, which wouldn’t be possible to make using traditional manufacturing techniques.  
The team had set out to design a system based on a common refrigerant called R-134a, which is commonly used in devices like air conditioners and refrigerators. When cold water lowers the temperature of the refrigerant, it changes from a gas to a liquid on its path through the device. That liquid refrigerant can then go on to other parts of the cooling system, where it’s used to lower the temperature of anything from a room to a rack of servers.  The best way to cool the refrigerant tends to involve building very thin walls between the two sides of the device and maximizing the amount of contact that the water and the refrigerant make with those walls. (Think about how much colder you’d get wearing a thin T-shirt and pants and lying down on ice than simply touching it with your gloved hands.)
To design the best possible heat exchanger, researchers used simulations and developed machine-learning models to help predict the performance of different designs under different conditions. After 36,000 simulations, the researchers landed on the one they decided to develop. Among the key components: small fins that jut out on the side of the device that touches the water, increasing the surface area to maximize heat transfer. The team also designed wavy passageways for the water to pass through—once again helping to maximize surface area. Simulations helped the researchers figure out exactly how curvy the passages should be and where precisely to place the fins. On the side of the devices where the refrigerant passes through, the design includes small pyramid-shaped bumps along the walls. These not only maximize the area for cooling but also help mix the refrigerant as it passes through and prevent liquid from coating the wall (which would slow down the heat transfer). After settling on a design, the researchers used a 3D-printing technique called direct metal laser sintering, in which lasers melt and fuse together a metal powder (in this case, an aluminum alloy), layer by layer. In testing, the researchers found that the heat exchanger created with this technique was able to cool down the refrigerant more efficiently than other designs. The new device was able to achieve a power density of over six megawatts per meter cubed—outperforming one common traditional design, the shell-tube configuration, by between 30% and 50% with the same pumping power. The device’s power density was similar to that of brazed plate heat exchangers, another common design in industry.   Overall, this device doesn’t dramatically outperform the state-of-the-art technology, but the technique of using modeling and 3D printing to produce new heat exchanger designs is promising, says Dennis Nasuta, director of research and development at Optimized Thermal Systems, a consulting firm that works with companies in the HVAC industry on design and research. “It’s worth exploring, and I don’t think that we know yet where we can push it,” Nasuta says. One challenge is that today, additive manufacturing techniques such as laser sintering are slow and expensive compared with traditional manufacturing; they wouldn’t be economical or feasible to rely on for all our consumer cooling devices, he says. For now, this type of approach could be most useful in niche applications like aerospace and high-end automotives, which could more likely bear the cost, he adds.  This particular study was funded by the US Office of Naval Research. Next-generation ships have more electronics aboard than ever, and there’s a growing need for compact and efficient systems to deal with all that extra heat, says Nenad Miljkovic, one of the authors of the study. 

Energy demand for cooling buildings alone is set to double between now and 2050, and new designs could help efficiently meet the massive demand forecast for the coming decades. But challenges including manufacturing costs would need to be overcome to help innovations like the one designed by King and his team make a dent in real devices. Another barrier to adopting these new techniques, Nasuta says, is that current standards don’t demand more efficiency. Other technologies already exist that could help make our devices more efficient, but they’re not used for the same reason.  It will take time for new manufacturing techniques, including 3D printing, to trickle into our devices, Natsua adds: “This isn’t going to be in your AC next year.”

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I asked an AI swarm to fill out a March Madness bracket — here’s what happened

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Imagine if a large team of 200 people could hold a thoughtful real-time conversation in which they efficiently brainstorm ideas, share knowledge, debate alternatives and quickly converge on AI-optimized solutions. Is this possible — and if so, would it amplify their collective intelligence? There is a new generative AI technology, conversational swarm intelligence (or simply hyperchat), that enables teams of potentially any size to engage in real-time conversations and quickly converge on AI-optimized solutions. To put this to the test, I asked the research team at Unanimous AI to bring together 50 random sports fans and task that large group with quickly creating a March Madness bracket through real-time conversational deliberation. Before I tell you how the experiment is going, I need to explain why we can’t just bring 50 people into a Zoom meeting and have them quickly create a bracket together. Research shows that the ideal size for a productive real-time conversation is only 4 to 7 people. In small groups, each individual gets a good amount of airtime to express their views and has low wait time to respond to others. But as group size grows, airtime drops, wait-time rises — and by a dozen people it devolves into a series of monologues. Above 20 people, it’s chaos.  So how can 50 people hold a conversation, or 250, or even 2,500?  Hyperchat works by breaking any large group into a set of parallel subgroups. It then adds an AI agent into each subgroup called a “conversational surrogate” tasked with distilling the human insights within its local group and quickly sharing those insights as natural dialog with other groups. These surrogate agents enable all the subgroups to overlap, weaving

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Emergence AI’s new system automatically creates AI agents rapidly in realtime based on the work at hand

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Another day, another announcement about AI agents. Hailed by various market research reports as the big tech trend in 2025 — especially in the enterprise — it seems we can’t go more than 12 hours or so without the debut of another way to make, orchestrate (link together), or otherwise optimize purpose-built AI tools and workflows designed to handle routine white collar work. Yet Emergence AI, a startup founded by former IBM Research veterans and which late last year debuted its own, cross-platform AI agent orchestration framework, is out with something novel from all the rest: an AI agent creation platform that lets the human user specify what work they are trying to accomplish via text prompts, and then turns it over to AI models to create the agents they believe are necessary to accomplish said work. This new system is literally a no code, natural language, AI-powered multi-agent builder, and it works in real time. Emergence AI describes it as a milestone in recursive intelligence, aims to simplify and accelerate complex data workflows for enterprise users. “Recursive intelligence paves the path for agents to create agents,” said Satya Nitta, co-founder and CEO of Emergence AI. “Our systems allow creativity and intelligence to scale fluidly, without human bottlenecks, but always within human-defined boundaries.” Image of Dr. Satya Nitta, Co-founder and CEO of Emergence AI, during his keynote at the AI Engineer World’s Fair 2024, where he unveiled Emergence’s Orchestrator meta-agent and introduced the open-source web agent, Agent-E. (photo courtesy AI Engineer World’s Fair) The platform is designed to evaluate incoming tasks, check its existing agent registry, and, if necessary, autonomously generate new agents tailored to fulfill specific enterprise needs. It can

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The Download: brain-computer interfaces, and teaching an AI model to give therapy

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. Brain-computer interfaces face a critical test Brain computer interfaces (BCIs) are electrodes put in paralyzed people’s brains so they can use imagined movements to send commands from their neurons through a wire, or via radio, to a computer. In this way, they can control a computer cursor or, in few cases, produce speech.   Recently, this field has taken some strides toward real practical applications. About 25 clinical trials of BCI implants are currently underway. And this year MIT Technology Review readers have selected these brain-computer interfaces as their addition to our annual list of 10 Breakthrough Technologies. Read the full story.
—Antonio Regalado
How do you teach an AI model to give therapy? —James O’DonnellOn March 27, the results of the first clinical trial for a generative AI therapy bot were published, and they showed that people in the trial who had depression or anxiety or were at risk for eating disorders benefited from chatting with a bot.I was surprised by those results. There are lots of reasons to be skeptical that an AI model trained to provide therapy is the solution for millions of people experiencing a mental health crisis. But their findings suggest that the right selection of training data is vital. Read the full story. This story originally appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter on AI. To get stories like this in your inbox first, 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 Tech companies are warning their immigrant workers not to leave the USEmployees on high-skilled visas could be denied entry back into the States. (WP $)+ Officials are considering collecting citizenship applicants’ social media data. (Associated Press)2 OpenAI has closed one of the largest private funding rounds in historyIt plans to put the $40 billion cash injection towards building AGI. (The Guardian)+ The deal values OpenAI at a whopping $300 billion. (CNBC)+ The company also teased its first open-weight model in years. (Insider $) 3 SpaceX has launched a mission that’s never been attempted beforeIt’s taking private customers on an orbit between Earth’s North and South poles. (CNN)+ Crypto billionaire Chun Wang is footing the bill for the mission. (Reuters)+ Europe is finally getting serious about commercial rockets. (MIT Technology Review)

4 Some DOGE workers are returning to their old jobsThey’re quietly heading back to their roles at X and SpaceX. (The Information $)+ Top staff were placed on leave after denying DOGE access to their systems. (Wired $)+ Can AI help DOGE slash government budgets? It’s complex. (MIT Technology Review) 5 Amazon is going all-in on AI agentsIts new AI model Nova Act is designed to complete tasks such as online shopping. (The Verge)+ Why handing over total control to AI agents would be a huge mistake. (MIT Technology Review) 6 DeepMind is making it harder for its researchers to publish studies It’s reluctant to share innovations that rivals could capitalize on. (FT $) 7 Meet the protestors staking out Tesla dealershipsProfessors and attorneys have taken to the streets to fight back. (New Yorker $)+ Far-right extremists are turning up to defend the company. (Wired $) 8 TikTok’s hottest topic? Tariffs Content creators are eager to explain what tariffs are to confused audiences. (WSJ $)+ Donald Trump is threatening to instigate a new range of tariffs this week. (NY Mag $)+ How Trump’s tariffs could drive up the cost of batteries, EVs, and more. (MIT Technology Review) 9 Not everyone can look as cool as Nvidia’s Jensen HuangHis image has been co-opted to promote knockoff leather jackets. (404 Media) 10 Microsoft has killed off its Blue Screen of DeathGoodnight, sweet prince. (Vice)
Quote of the day “I think that it is one of the most beautiful spaces on the internet for someone to figure out who they are.”
—Amanda Brennan, an internet librarian who worked at Tumblr for seven years, is not surprised by the influx of younger users flocking to her former workplace, Insider reports. The big story The quest to protect farmworkers from extreme heat October 2024On July 21, 2024, temperatures soared in many parts of the world, breaking the record for the hottest day ever recorded on the planet.The following day—July 22—the record was broken again.But even as the heat index rises each summer, the people working outdoors to pick fruits, vegetables, and flowers have to keep laboring.The consequences can be severe, leading to illnesses such as heat exhaustion, heatstroke and even acute kidney injury.Now, researchers are developing an innovative sensor that tracks multiple vital signs with a goal of anticipating when a worker is at risk of developing heat illness and issuing an alert. If widely adopted and consistently used, it could represent a way to make workers safer on farms even without significant heat protections. Read the full story. —Kalena Thomhave
We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or skeet ’em at me.) + Mescal! Dickinson! Quinn! Keoghan! I’m very excited for the forthcoming Beatles biopics, even if we have to wait three years.+ How to cook a delicious-looking basque cheesecake.+ TikTokers have taken to rubbing banana peel on their faces: but does it actually do anything?+ Spring has barely sprung, but fashion is already looking towards fall.

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Brain-computer interfaces face a critical test

Tech companies are always trying out new ways for people to interact with computers—consider efforts like Google Glass, the Apple Watch, and Amazon’s Alexa. You’ve probably used at least one. But the most radical option has been tried by fewer than 100 people on Earth—those who have lived for months or years with implanted brain-computer interfaces, or BCIs. Implanted BCIs are electrodes put in paralyzed people’s brains so they can use imagined movements to send commands from their neurons through a wire, or via radio, to a computer. In this way, they can control a computer cursor or, in few cases, produce speech.   Recently, this field has taken some strides toward real practical applications. About 25 clinical trials of BCI implants are currently underway. And this year MIT Technology Review readers have selected these brain-computer interfaces as their addition to our annual list of 10 Breakthrough Technologies, published in January.
BCIs won by a landslide to become the “11th Breakthrough,” as we call it. It beat out three runners-up: continuous glucose monitors, hyperrealistic deepfakes, and methane-detecting satellites. The impression of progress comes thanks to a small group of companies that are actively recruiting volunteers to try BCIs in clinical trials. They are: Neuralink, backed by the world’s richest person, Elon Musk; New York–based Synchron; and China’s Neuracle Neuroscience. 
Each is trialing interfaces with the eventual goal of getting the field’s first implanted BCI approved for sale.  “I call it the translation era,” says Michelle Patrick-Krueger, a research scientist who carried out a detailed survey of BCI trials with neuroengineer Jose Luis Contreras-Vidal at the University of Houston. “In the past couple of years there has been considerable private investment. That creates excitement and allows companies to accelerate.” That’s a big change, since for years BCIs have been more like a neuroscience parlor trick, generating lots of headlines but little actual help to patients.  Patrick-Krueger says the first time a person controlled a computer cursor from a brain implant was in 1998. That was followed by a slow drip-drip of tests in which university researchers would find a single volunteer, install an implant, and carry out studies for months or years. Over 26 years, Patrick-Krueger says, she was able to document a grand total of 71 patients who’ve ever controlled a computer directly with their neurons.  That means you are more likely to be friends with a Mega Millions jackpot winner than know someone with a BCI. These studies did prove that people could use their neurons to play Pong, move a robot arm, and even speak through a computer. But such demonstrations are of no practical help to people with paralysis severe enough to benefit from a brain-controlled computer, because these implants are not yet widely available.  “One thing is to have them work, and another is how to actually deploy them,” says Contreras-Vidal. “Also, behind any great news are probably technical issues that need to be addressed.” These include how long an implant will last and how much control it offers patients.

Larger trials from three companies are now trying to resolve these questions and set the groundwork for a real product. One company, Synchron, uses a stent with electrodes on it that’s inserted into a brain vessel via a vein in the neck. Synchron has implanted its “stentrode” in 10 volunteers, six in the US and four in Australia—the most simultaneous volunteers reported by any BCI group.  The stentrode collects limited brain signals, so it gives users only a basic on/off type of control signal, or what Synchron calls a “switch.” That isn’t going to let a paralyzed person use Photoshop. But it’s enough to toggle through software menus or select among prewritten messages. Tom Oxley, Synchron’s CEO, says the advantage of the stentrode is that it is “as simple as possible.” That, he believes, will make his brain-computer interface “scalable” to more people, especially since installing it doesn’t involve brain surgery.  Synchron might be ahead, but it’s still in an exploratory phase. A “pivotal” study, the kind used to persuade regulators to allow sales of a specific version of the device, has yet to be scheduled. So there’s no timeline for a product.   Neuralink, meanwhile, has disclosed that three volunteers have received its implant, the N1, which consists of multiple fine electrode threads inserted directly into the brain through a hole drilled in the skull.  More electrodes mean more neural activity is captured. Neuralink’s first volunteer, Noland Arbaugh, has shown off how he can guide a cursor around a screen in two dimensions and click, letting him play video games like Civilization or online chess. Finally, Neuracle says it is running two trials in China and one in the US. Its implant consists of a patch of electrodes placed on top of the brain. In a report, the company said a paralyzed volunteer is using the system to stimulate electrodes in his arm, causing his hand to close in a grasp. 
But details remain sparse. A Neuracle executive would only say that “several” people had received its implant. Because Neuracle’s patient count isn’t public, it wasn’t included in Patrick-Krueger’s tally. In fact, there’s no information at all in the medical literature on about a quarter of brain-implant volunteers so far, so she counted them using press releases or by e-mailing research teams.
Her BCI survey yielded other insights. According to her data, implants have lasted as long as 15 years, more than half of patients are in the US, and roughly 75% of BCI recipients have been male.  The data can’t answer the big question, though. And that is whether implanted BCIs will progress from breakthrough demonstrations into breakout products, the kind that help many people. “In the next five to 10 years, it’s either going to translate into a product or it’ll still stay in research,” Patrick-Krueger says. “I do feel very confident there will be a breakout.”

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CenterPoint Energy completes $1.2B sale of Louisiana, Mississippi gas systems

CenterPoint Energy has completed the sale of its natural gas distribution systems in Louisiana and Mississippi to Delta Utilities for $1.2 billion, the companies announced Tuesday. Sale proceeds will “support the efficient funding of what we believe is one of the most tangible long-term growth plans in the industry,” CenterPoint President and CEO Jason Wells said in a statement. “We will continue to optimize the funding of our capital investments to support safety, reliability and resiliency for the benefit of our customers and communities.” CenterPoint now has electric transmission and distribution, power generation and natural gas distribution operations that serve approximately 7 million customers in Indiana, Minnesota, Ohio and Texas. Assets sold to Delta include approximately 12,000 miles of main pipeline serving approximately 380,000 metered customers. “Completing this acquisition furthers our vision to establish modern, multi-state natural gas utilities that build stronger, more resilient communities,” Delta CEO Tim Poché said in a statement. Delta is an affiliate of private equity firm Bernhard Capital Partners. Delta is also in the final stages of acquiring Entergy’s two regulated natural gas local distribution companies in New Orleans and Baton Rouge, with the sale expected to close this summer, the company said. Entergy Louisiana’s gas business serves approximately 95,000 homes and businesses in the Baton Rouge area, and Entergy New Orleans’ gas business serves approximately 109,000 homes and businesses in New Orleans, the utility said in a February announcement of the deal. While private equity firms have been known to squeeze profit from companies before reselling, Poché told the Shreveport-Bossier City Advocate that the gas system acquisition “is not a short-term investment at all.” “We’re very attracted to natural gas, in the resiliency that it has as a very significant transition fuel within our country,” he said. For CenterPoint, the utility said in 2024 that the

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NetBox Labs launches drift detection tool to tame configuration chaos

“We want to make it easier to build and manage complex networks, and some of that is taking away a lot of the busy work. The skill set of the network engineer is going to evolve quite a bit, making it possible for network engineers to worry less about the tactical details and the busy work and more on architecture and orchestration and decision making,” Beevers says. Network operations professionals face significant challenges with configuration drift, says Shamus McGillicuddy, research director for the network management practice at Enterprise Management Associates (EMA), and “many companies try to build automation for config compliance to deal with it.” Still, spotting drift is a difficult challenge, especially for large, multi-vendor networks. “NetBox Labs is offering an enterprise-grade approach to config compliance with its Assurance capability. It discovers actual configs in the field, reports on which production configs are out of compliance with the NetBox model and provides workflows to plan for mitigation of those config drifts,” McGillicuddy says. Assurance could help with enterprise organizations looking to deploy more automation in their environments, he says, because it provides better visibility into network changes. The type of tool could also drive other efficiencies. “First, it eliminates a lot of manual toil for engineers who are tasked with remediating config drift. Second, it potentially replaces some custom automation tooling that can be time-consuming to maintain,” McGillicuddy says. NetBox Assurance is delivered through NetBox Enterprise or NetBox Cloud, with NetBox Cloud being the more popular commercial offering. Assurance is a commercial product that requires either the enterprise or cloud platform to work, and it is not available via NetBox’s open-source version. The enterprise version is an on-premises offering, and the cloud version provides a fully managed solution. NetBox Assurance is available now.

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Palo Alto VP Jordi Botifoll: ‘You can’t play with cybersecurity’

Palo Alto has boosted this effort in recent years with the integration of precision artificial intelligence that includes machine learning and deep learning techniques, in addition to generative AI tools. “Our strategy is to ensure that the time to detect an attack and the time to resolve it (if it has occurred) are zero; currently, the average we manage, which is a great advantage over our competitors, is 10 seconds to detect the attack and one minute to resolve it,” Botifoll says. A global database to deal with threats For Botifoll, one of the great differentials of Palo Alto is the large amount of data it handles, thanks, he stresses, to the activity it carries out with more than 85,000 clients (including 85 of the Fortune 100 companies) and the work of its emergency unit (Unit 42) “which also responds to calls from organizations that are not our clients but request our services in situations of relevant security breaches.” “Our telemetry is able to analyze and understand polymorphic attacks. This continuous database we have is also very important for our artificial intelligence to be even more effective so that we can prevent an attack before it appears,” he adds. The precision AI with which the firm works, Botifoll says, “allows us to act in real time and with automated processes that reduce errors, because it is a reality that humans make more mistakes than machines. In this era of massive attacks [Palo Alto detects 2.3 million net new attacks a day, up from 1.6 million last year], if an organization doesn’t have automated incident management, it has a problem.” In addition, he says, “cybercriminals are also using AI to generate malicious attacks, so you have to be well prepared.” Although many cybersecurity companies are already adopting a platform strategy, in

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Hydrogen sector seeks policy certainty as UK government pledges revamped strategy

The UK hydrogen industry is calling on the government to deliver “pragmatism” and policy certainty to help the nascent sector overcome development challenges. It comes as the UK Labour government today pledged to unveil an updated hydrogen strategy later this year. The new hydrogen strategy will build on one introduced under the previous Conservative government in 2021. Addressing the Hydrogen UK annual conference in Birmingham, industry minister Sarah Jones said the updated strategy comes following “a great deal of change” in the industry in recent years. “New evidence has emerged on costs, demand and expected operating patterns, and our understanding has evolved in time, both in terms of how we can best use hydrogen in energy systems, and how we can expect the hydrogen economy to develop over time,” Jones said. Clean power and economic growth The government believes hydrogen will play a central role in two of Labour’s “guiding missions”, Jones said, delivering its clean power by 2030 target and securing economic growth. Jones said the hydrogen strategy will set out the government’s plans to “build on the progress made in recent years and seize the opportunities ahead”. In addition, Jones said the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) will announce the successful projects within the second hydrogen allocation round (HAR2) “very shortly”. © Supplied by VoltalisPicture shows; Industry minister Sarah Jones. Royal Society of Arts. Supplied by Voltalis Date; 29/01/2025 The first allocation round (HAR1) saw 11 green hydrogen projects secure close to £2 billion in UK government funding in 2023 as part of the revenue support scheme. However, the first round fell short of securing its 250 MW capacity target, and there have been lengthy delays in securing final investment decisions from HAR1 developers. While several HAR1 developers have now signed government contracts, Jones said

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Energy profits hit half a trillion as consumer price cap rises

Energy profits have hit half a trillion pounds since the energy crisis despite rising consumer bills, according to an independent analysis of company reports. Researchers at the End Fuel Poverty Coalition counted the profits declared by UK energy producers such as Shell and Equinor, as well as suppliers including British Gas and grid operators such as National Grid. Nearly half of the £500 billion of profits generated by the industry since 2020, or £207bn, were made by companies involved in the gas industry. According to Scottish Renewables chief executive Claire Mack, bill payers are ‘paying the price’ for exposure to global gas markets, with renewable power likely to provide the best value for consumers. © Supplied by Scottish RenewablesScottish Renewables chief executive Claire Mack. The ceiling on energy prices, designed to protect consumers from price spikes, and enforced by energy regulator Ofgem, known as the energy price cap, rose by 6.4% this week. Trade union Unite protested against high energy prices on Tuesday, arguing that nobody should have to choose between ‘heating or eating’. Union members will campaign across 40 locations in the UK, with further protests planned in the coming two weeks. Prime minister Keir Starmer has meanwhile promised that clean power will lower energy bills, something Kemi Badenoch, leader of the Conservatives, wants to abolish – while right-wing party Reform is also trying to leverage high bills in its political campaign. Politicians have begun to engage energy companies as they seek to invest in clean technologies and lower prices. Energy secretary Ed Miliband broached talks with Centrica this month to extend the Rough gas storage facility in the North Sea beyond 2030. A spokesperson for the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) said: “We’re open to discussing proposals, just as long as it provides value for

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Anthropic flips the script on AI in education: Claude’s Learning Mode makes students do the thinking

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Anthropic introduced Claude for Education today, a specialized version of its AI assistant designed to develop students’ critical thinking skills rather than simply provide answers to their questions. The new offering includes partnerships with Northeastern University, London School of Economics, and Champlain College, creating a large-scale test of whether AI can enhance rather than shortcut the learning process. ‘Learning Mode’ puts thinking before answers in AI education strategy The centerpiece of Claude for Education is “Learning Mode,” which fundamentally changes how students interact with AI. When students ask questions, Claude responds not with answers but with Socratic questioning: “How would you approach this problem?” or “What evidence supports your conclusion?” This approach directly addresses what many educators consider the central risk of AI in education: that tools like ChatGPT encourage shortcut thinking rather than deeper understanding. By designing an AI that deliberately withholds answers in favor of guided reasoning, Anthropic has created something closer to a digital tutor than an answer engine. The timing is significant. Since ChatGPT’s emergence in 2022, universities have struggled with contradictory approaches to AI — some banning it outright while others tentatively embrace it. Stanford’s HAI AI Index shows over three-quarters of higher education institutions still lack comprehensive AI policies. Universities gain campus-wide AI access with built-in guardrails Northeastern University will implement Claude across 13 global campuses serving 50,000 students and faculty. The university has positioned itself at the forefront of AI-focused education with its Northeastern 2025 academic plan under President Joseph E. Aoun, who literally wrote the book on AI’s impact on education with “Robot-Proof.” What’s notable about these partnerships is their scale. Rather than limiting AI access to specific departments or courses, these universities

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