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Which LLM should you use? Token Monster automatically combines multiple models and tools for you

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Token Monster, a new AI chatbot platform, has launched its alpha preview, aiming to change how users interact with large language models (LLMs). Developed by Matt Shumer, co-founder and CEO of OthersideAI and its hit AI writing assistant Hyperwrite AI, Token Monster’s key selling point is its ability to route user prompts to the best available LLMs for the task at hand, delivering enhanced outputs by leveraging the strengths of multiple models. There are seven major LLMs presently available through Token Monster. Once a user types something into the prompt entry box, Token Monster uses pre-prompts developed through iteration by Shumer himself to automatically analyze the user’s input, decide which combination of multiple available models and linked tools are best suited to answer it, and then provide a combined response leveraging the strengths of said models. The available LLMs include: Anthropic Claude 3.5 Sonnet Anthropic Claude 3.5 Opus OpenAI GPT-4.1 OpenAI GPT-4o Perplexity AI PPLX (for research) OpenAI o3 (for reasoning) Google Gemini 2.5 Pro Unlike other chatbot platforms, Token Monster automatically identifies which LLM is best for specific tasks — as well as which LLM-connected tools would be helpful such as web search or coding environments — and orchestrates a multi-model workflow. “We’re just building the connectors to everything and then a system that decides what to use when,” said Shumer. For instance, it might use Claude for creativity, o3 for reasoning, and PPLX for research, among others. This approach eliminates the need for users to manually choose the right model for each prompt, simplifying the process for anyone who wants high-quality, tailored results. Feature highlights The alpha preview, which is currently free to sign up for at tokenmonster.ai, allows

Read More »

Clean power deployments neared record in Q1, but development pipeline growth slowed: ACP

Dive Brief: Eight of the top 10 states for utility-scale clean energy deployment in the first quarter of 2025 voted Republican in last year’s Presidential election, the American Clean Power Association said on Thursday. Texas was the runaway leader with more than 1,700 MW of wind, solar and energy storage deployments and a 20% year-over-year increase in total clean energy capacity. Florida, Indiana, Ohio and Wyoming rounded out the top five, ACP said. The 7.4 GW of new clean power capacity in the U.S. was the second-strongest Q1 on record. Energy storage was the fastest-growing segment, with nationwide battery storage capacity increasing 65% year over year. Dive Insight: Total utility-scale clean energy deployments in the first quarter of this year came in 9% shy of the record-setting first quarter of 2024, when developers commissioned 8,089 MW of wind, solar and storage capacity, ACP said.  ACP’s data reflects the increasingly broad geography of utility-scale solar and storage deployments. Indiana quadrupled its energy storage capacity, adding 435 MW, while Illinois, Mississippi, Wisconsin and Ohio all deployed far more solar than California. Total U.S. clean energy capacity sits at about 320.9 GW — of which, 80.7 GW is in Texas, ACP said. The clean power development pipeline expanded as well, growing 12% year over year to reach about 184.4 GW and an estimated $328 billion in completed value. But that marks a slowdown from a year ago, when fully permitted clean power capacity under construction or in advanced development rose 26% from Q1 2023. Developers have canceled more than $14 billion in clean energy projects so far this year amid uncertainty over the future of federal tax credits for clean energy investment, production and manufacturing, according to the consulting group E2. ACP’s latest report hinted at the scale of the potential risk to

Read More »

California’s solar, wind curtailment jumps 29% in 2024: EIA

Solar and wind energy output in California was curtailed by 29% more in 2024 than the year before, with solar accounting for 93% of curtailed energy that year, the Energy Information Administration said in a Wednesday report. “In 2024, [the California Independent System Operator] curtailed 3.4 million megawatthours (MWh) of utility-scale wind and solar output, a 29% increase from the amount of electricity curtailed in 2023,” EIA said.  EIA said that CAISO curtailed the most solar in the spring “when solar output was relatively high and electricity demand was relatively low, because moderate spring temperatures meant less demand for space heating or air conditioning.” Optional Caption Retrieved from Energy Information Administration. Wind and solar capacity in California increased from 9.7 GW in 2014 to 28.2 GW by the end of 2024, EIA said. California curtails solar and wind generation to keep the grid stable and to leave room for natural gas generation, in order to comply with North American Electric Reliability Corp. requirements and “have generation online in time to ramp up in the evening hours,” according to the report. CAISO is responding to increased curtailments by “trading with neighboring balancing authorities to try to sell excess solar and wind power, incorporating battery storage into ancillary services, energy, and capacity markets, and including curtailment reduction in transmission planning,” according to EIA. Later this year, companies in the state are also planning to start using excess renewable energy to “make hydrogen, some of which will be stored and mixed with natural gas for summer generation at the Intermountain Power Project’s new facility scheduled to come online in July,” the report said. One of those companies, SoHyCal, said that once it begins using solar energy for this purpose, it “[expects] to produce a total of three tons per day of green hydrogen powered

Read More »

DOE cancels $3.7B in carbon capture, decarbonization awards

The U.S. Department of Energy on Friday canceled $3.7 billion in awards from its Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations, including $940 million in grants for two carbon capture projects planned by Calpine. The canceled awards were mainly for carbon capture and sequestration and other decarbonization projects, according to DOE. Affected companies include PPL Corp., Ørsted and Exxon Mobil Corp. The Calpine projects are for CCS projects at its 550-MW gas-fired Sutter power plant in Yuba City, California, and its 810-MW Baytown power plant in Baytown, Texas. “After a thorough and individualized financial review of each award, the DOE found that these projects failed to advance the energy needs of the American people, were not economically viable and would not generate a positive return on investment of taxpayer dollars,” DOE said. Sixteen of the 24 terminated awards were signed between President Donald Trump’s election in November and Jan. 20, according to DOE. The DOE assessed the canceled awards under a review process outlined earlier this month. The department said it is reviewing 179 awards that total over $15 billion in financial assistance. “DOE is prioritizing large-scale commercial projects that require more detailed information from the awardees for the initial phase of this review, but this process may extend to other DOE program offices as the reviews progress,” the department said. DOE created the Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations in late 2021 to manage about $27 billion in funding appropriated by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act, according to a mid-November report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office. Below is a list from DOE of the canceled awards announced on Friday. Optional Caption Permission granted by US Department of Energy DOE’s decision to terminate the awards was “shortsighted,” according to Steven Nadel, executive director of the American

Read More »

Congress votes to rescind California vehicle emissions waiver

Dive Brief: The U.S. Senate passed three joint resolutions May 22 nullifying California’s ability to set emissions standards for passenger cars, light duty vehicles and trucks that are stricter than national standards set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Auto and petroleum industry lobbyists targeted California’s Advanced Clean Car II regulations, adopted in 2022, which require all new passenger cars, trucks and SUVs sold in the state to be zero-emission vehicles by the 2035 model year. Federal law set in 1990 allows 17 additional states and the District of Columbia to follow California’s regulations. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, announced the state’s intention to file a lawsuit blocking the congressional resolutions, which await the signature of President Donald Trump to become law. Dive Insight: California’s ability to set its own vehicle emissions standards stem from the 1967 Air Quality Act, passed at a time when smog and poor air quality often permeated the Los Angeles basin. While air quality in California has improved over the years, experts fear a setback from the Senate’s action. “Public health could potentially suffer as a consequence,” said Michael Kleeman, a professor at the University of California, Davis, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. “This is, plain and simple, a vote against clean air to breathe,” said Aaron Kressig, transportation electrification manager at Western Resource Advocates, in an emailed statement. He warned of potential lost days at school or work and premature deaths.    “Over 150 million people in the United States are already exposed to unhealthy levels of air pollution,” Steven Higashide, director of the Clean Transportation Program at the Union of Concerned Scientists, said in an emailed statement. “The standards are based on the best available science, and were finalized with extensive public input.”  Along with public health concerns, the debate around California’s

Read More »

OPEC+ Mulls Even Larger Oil Output Hike as It Seeks Market Share

OPEC+ is considering accelerating its production increases by discussing a potential hike of more than 411,000 barrels a day for July as it seeks to recoup lost market share, according to people familiar with the matter. Eight key members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its partners, led by Saudi Arabia, are due to hold a video conference on Saturday to discuss output policy. Their last two calls resulted in super-sized production increases that drove down prices, and the cartel may go even further this time, the people said. Some delegates among the eight nations said they were unaware of plans for an outsize boost and expected an increase closer to the 411,000-barrel-a-day hikes set for May and June. Yet the group’s deliberations are increasingly confined to a smaller group of its most powerful members, who sometimes only share decisions with their counterparts at short notice. OPEC+ has made a radical policy shift from defending prices to actively seeking to drive them lower. It stunned traders in early April by announcing a supply increase that was three times the volume planned. The move came even as markets faltered amid slowing demand and President Donald Trump’s trade war, briefly dragging crude to a four-year low below $60 a barrel, and was repeated the following month.  Brent futures slipped to trade below $64 a barrel in London on Friday. Kazakhstan’s Deputy Energy Minister Alibek Zhamauov had already alluded to the possibility of an bigger surge in comments to reporters on Thursday. “There will be a hike, but whether it will be 400, 500, 600, we don’t know — that will be announced on Saturday,” he said in Astana, according to the news agency.  Delegates have offered a range of explanations for the pivot by Riyadh. Some assert that OPEC+

Read More »

Which LLM should you use? Token Monster automatically combines multiple models and tools for you

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Token Monster, a new AI chatbot platform, has launched its alpha preview, aiming to change how users interact with large language models (LLMs). Developed by Matt Shumer, co-founder and CEO of OthersideAI and its hit AI writing assistant Hyperwrite AI, Token Monster’s key selling point is its ability to route user prompts to the best available LLMs for the task at hand, delivering enhanced outputs by leveraging the strengths of multiple models. There are seven major LLMs presently available through Token Monster. Once a user types something into the prompt entry box, Token Monster uses pre-prompts developed through iteration by Shumer himself to automatically analyze the user’s input, decide which combination of multiple available models and linked tools are best suited to answer it, and then provide a combined response leveraging the strengths of said models. The available LLMs include: Anthropic Claude 3.5 Sonnet Anthropic Claude 3.5 Opus OpenAI GPT-4.1 OpenAI GPT-4o Perplexity AI PPLX (for research) OpenAI o3 (for reasoning) Google Gemini 2.5 Pro Unlike other chatbot platforms, Token Monster automatically identifies which LLM is best for specific tasks — as well as which LLM-connected tools would be helpful such as web search or coding environments — and orchestrates a multi-model workflow. “We’re just building the connectors to everything and then a system that decides what to use when,” said Shumer. For instance, it might use Claude for creativity, o3 for reasoning, and PPLX for research, among others. This approach eliminates the need for users to manually choose the right model for each prompt, simplifying the process for anyone who wants high-quality, tailored results. Feature highlights The alpha preview, which is currently free to sign up for at tokenmonster.ai, allows

Read More »

Clean power deployments neared record in Q1, but development pipeline growth slowed: ACP

Dive Brief: Eight of the top 10 states for utility-scale clean energy deployment in the first quarter of 2025 voted Republican in last year’s Presidential election, the American Clean Power Association said on Thursday. Texas was the runaway leader with more than 1,700 MW of wind, solar and energy storage deployments and a 20% year-over-year increase in total clean energy capacity. Florida, Indiana, Ohio and Wyoming rounded out the top five, ACP said. The 7.4 GW of new clean power capacity in the U.S. was the second-strongest Q1 on record. Energy storage was the fastest-growing segment, with nationwide battery storage capacity increasing 65% year over year. Dive Insight: Total utility-scale clean energy deployments in the first quarter of this year came in 9% shy of the record-setting first quarter of 2024, when developers commissioned 8,089 MW of wind, solar and storage capacity, ACP said.  ACP’s data reflects the increasingly broad geography of utility-scale solar and storage deployments. Indiana quadrupled its energy storage capacity, adding 435 MW, while Illinois, Mississippi, Wisconsin and Ohio all deployed far more solar than California. Total U.S. clean energy capacity sits at about 320.9 GW — of which, 80.7 GW is in Texas, ACP said. The clean power development pipeline expanded as well, growing 12% year over year to reach about 184.4 GW and an estimated $328 billion in completed value. But that marks a slowdown from a year ago, when fully permitted clean power capacity under construction or in advanced development rose 26% from Q1 2023. Developers have canceled more than $14 billion in clean energy projects so far this year amid uncertainty over the future of federal tax credits for clean energy investment, production and manufacturing, according to the consulting group E2. ACP’s latest report hinted at the scale of the potential risk to

Read More »

California’s solar, wind curtailment jumps 29% in 2024: EIA

Solar and wind energy output in California was curtailed by 29% more in 2024 than the year before, with solar accounting for 93% of curtailed energy that year, the Energy Information Administration said in a Wednesday report. “In 2024, [the California Independent System Operator] curtailed 3.4 million megawatthours (MWh) of utility-scale wind and solar output, a 29% increase from the amount of electricity curtailed in 2023,” EIA said.  EIA said that CAISO curtailed the most solar in the spring “when solar output was relatively high and electricity demand was relatively low, because moderate spring temperatures meant less demand for space heating or air conditioning.” Optional Caption Retrieved from Energy Information Administration. Wind and solar capacity in California increased from 9.7 GW in 2014 to 28.2 GW by the end of 2024, EIA said. California curtails solar and wind generation to keep the grid stable and to leave room for natural gas generation, in order to comply with North American Electric Reliability Corp. requirements and “have generation online in time to ramp up in the evening hours,” according to the report. CAISO is responding to increased curtailments by “trading with neighboring balancing authorities to try to sell excess solar and wind power, incorporating battery storage into ancillary services, energy, and capacity markets, and including curtailment reduction in transmission planning,” according to EIA. Later this year, companies in the state are also planning to start using excess renewable energy to “make hydrogen, some of which will be stored and mixed with natural gas for summer generation at the Intermountain Power Project’s new facility scheduled to come online in July,” the report said. One of those companies, SoHyCal, said that once it begins using solar energy for this purpose, it “[expects] to produce a total of three tons per day of green hydrogen powered

Read More »

DOE cancels $3.7B in carbon capture, decarbonization awards

The U.S. Department of Energy on Friday canceled $3.7 billion in awards from its Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations, including $940 million in grants for two carbon capture projects planned by Calpine. The canceled awards were mainly for carbon capture and sequestration and other decarbonization projects, according to DOE. Affected companies include PPL Corp., Ørsted and Exxon Mobil Corp. The Calpine projects are for CCS projects at its 550-MW gas-fired Sutter power plant in Yuba City, California, and its 810-MW Baytown power plant in Baytown, Texas. “After a thorough and individualized financial review of each award, the DOE found that these projects failed to advance the energy needs of the American people, were not economically viable and would not generate a positive return on investment of taxpayer dollars,” DOE said. Sixteen of the 24 terminated awards were signed between President Donald Trump’s election in November and Jan. 20, according to DOE. The DOE assessed the canceled awards under a review process outlined earlier this month. The department said it is reviewing 179 awards that total over $15 billion in financial assistance. “DOE is prioritizing large-scale commercial projects that require more detailed information from the awardees for the initial phase of this review, but this process may extend to other DOE program offices as the reviews progress,” the department said. DOE created the Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations in late 2021 to manage about $27 billion in funding appropriated by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act, according to a mid-November report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office. Below is a list from DOE of the canceled awards announced on Friday. Optional Caption Permission granted by US Department of Energy DOE’s decision to terminate the awards was “shortsighted,” according to Steven Nadel, executive director of the American

Read More »

Congress votes to rescind California vehicle emissions waiver

Dive Brief: The U.S. Senate passed three joint resolutions May 22 nullifying California’s ability to set emissions standards for passenger cars, light duty vehicles and trucks that are stricter than national standards set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Auto and petroleum industry lobbyists targeted California’s Advanced Clean Car II regulations, adopted in 2022, which require all new passenger cars, trucks and SUVs sold in the state to be zero-emission vehicles by the 2035 model year. Federal law set in 1990 allows 17 additional states and the District of Columbia to follow California’s regulations. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, announced the state’s intention to file a lawsuit blocking the congressional resolutions, which await the signature of President Donald Trump to become law. Dive Insight: California’s ability to set its own vehicle emissions standards stem from the 1967 Air Quality Act, passed at a time when smog and poor air quality often permeated the Los Angeles basin. While air quality in California has improved over the years, experts fear a setback from the Senate’s action. “Public health could potentially suffer as a consequence,” said Michael Kleeman, a professor at the University of California, Davis, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. “This is, plain and simple, a vote against clean air to breathe,” said Aaron Kressig, transportation electrification manager at Western Resource Advocates, in an emailed statement. He warned of potential lost days at school or work and premature deaths.    “Over 150 million people in the United States are already exposed to unhealthy levels of air pollution,” Steven Higashide, director of the Clean Transportation Program at the Union of Concerned Scientists, said in an emailed statement. “The standards are based on the best available science, and were finalized with extensive public input.”  Along with public health concerns, the debate around California’s

Read More »

OPEC+ Mulls Even Larger Oil Output Hike as It Seeks Market Share

OPEC+ is considering accelerating its production increases by discussing a potential hike of more than 411,000 barrels a day for July as it seeks to recoup lost market share, according to people familiar with the matter. Eight key members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its partners, led by Saudi Arabia, are due to hold a video conference on Saturday to discuss output policy. Their last two calls resulted in super-sized production increases that drove down prices, and the cartel may go even further this time, the people said. Some delegates among the eight nations said they were unaware of plans for an outsize boost and expected an increase closer to the 411,000-barrel-a-day hikes set for May and June. Yet the group’s deliberations are increasingly confined to a smaller group of its most powerful members, who sometimes only share decisions with their counterparts at short notice. OPEC+ has made a radical policy shift from defending prices to actively seeking to drive them lower. It stunned traders in early April by announcing a supply increase that was three times the volume planned. The move came even as markets faltered amid slowing demand and President Donald Trump’s trade war, briefly dragging crude to a four-year low below $60 a barrel, and was repeated the following month.  Brent futures slipped to trade below $64 a barrel in London on Friday. Kazakhstan’s Deputy Energy Minister Alibek Zhamauov had already alluded to the possibility of an bigger surge in comments to reporters on Thursday. “There will be a hike, but whether it will be 400, 500, 600, we don’t know — that will be announced on Saturday,” he said in Astana, according to the news agency.  Delegates have offered a range of explanations for the pivot by Riyadh. Some assert that OPEC+

Read More »

Avangrid Launches $41MM Projects to Upgrade Ithaca, NY Grid

Avangrid Inc. has announced five projects with a total investment of $41 million to install additional capacity and improve the reliability of the power grid in Ithaca, New York. The projects are part of a $20 billion investment through 2030 that Avangrid, part of Spain’s power and gas utility Iberdrola SA, announced earlier this year to contribute to United States grid modernization and expansion. Avangrid expects the Ithaca projects to benefit over 42,000 customers of New York State Electric & Gas, an Avangrid unit that operates about 35,000 miles of electric distribution lines and 4,500 miles of electric transmission lines across over 40 percent of upstate New York. “Phase I of Ithaca’s investment will focus on current reliability needs in the region and is on schedule to be completed by the end of 2027”, Avangrid said in an online statement. The bulk of phase 1 investments will go to the purchase of two new transformers for the South Street substation, costing $28.4 million. Transformers at the Coddington station would also be upgraded for $300,000. Transformers step down the voltage to transmission, sub-transmission and distribution voltages to ensure the safe and cost-effective supply of electricity, Avangrid said. In the three other projects, the West Hill, Trumansburg and Cayuga Heights substations will each have a capacity bank for $4.9 million, $4.2 million and $3.3 million respectively. “Capacitors banks help ensure consistent energy into the grid, helping improve the reliability for customers in the area”, Avangrid said. “They do this by stabilizing and maintaining voltage levels, which improves overall efficiency and performance of the power grid”. “Increased capacity will encourage growth in the region and provide more energy to power additional homes and new and growing businesses. In total, these projects will create more than 150 jobs”, it said. “This major investment in Ithaca’s

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JP Morgan Highlights Memorial Day Travel Effect on Global Oil Demand

Global oil demand improved from the previous week, driven by a rebound in U.S. oil consumption, bolstered by robust Memorial Day travel activities. That’s what analysts at J.P. Morgan stated in a research note sent to Rigzone by the JPM Commodities Research team late Thursday, adding that, as of May 28, “the monthly expansion in global oil demand is tracking at approximately 400,000 barrels per day”. The analysts outlined in the note, however, that this expansion remains 250,000 barrels per day below their expectations. “Consistent with our projections, global oil demand increased over the past week, reflecting heightened U.S. demand for gasoline and jet fuel due to Memorial Day weekend travel and the official start of the U.S. summer driving season,” the analysts said in the note. “Concurrently, U.S. distillate demand surged as weekly container arrivals and port activity significantly improved, rising from 75.7 thousand containers to 102.8 thousand containers last week, according to data from the Port of Los Angeles,” the analysts added. In a blog posted on the GasBuddy website on May 27, GasBuddy’s head of petroleum analysis, Patrick De Haan, highlighted that the U.S. average gasoline price “didn’t fall quite as far as anticipated for Memorial Day” but added that “it was still one of the most affordable since 2021 – and, when adjusted for inflation, among the cheapest in nearly a decade”. Oil Inventories The J.P. Morgan analysts went on to highlight in the research note that, in the fourth week of May, “visible OECD commercial oil inventories (including those in the U.S., Europe, and Singapore) rose by two million barrels”. The analysts said this rise was attributed to a four million barrel increase in oil product inventories, which they noted offset the two million barrel drop in crude oil stocks. Month to date, OECD stocks

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Baker Hughes Bags Data Center Gas Turbine Deal

In a release sent to Rigzone on Thursday, Baker Hughes announced an award from Frontier Infrastructure Holdings for 16 NovaLT gas turbines to power its data center projects in Wyoming and Texas. Baker Hughes noted in the release that, as part of the award, it is supplying Frontier its NovaLT gas turbine technology and associated equipment, including gears and Brush Power Generation four-pole generators, to power dedicated energy islands at Frontier’s behind the meter (BTM) power generation sites. The NovaLT gas turbine is a multi-fuel solution that can start-up and run on different fuels, including natural gas, various blends of natural gas and hydrogen, and 100 percent hydrogen, Baker Hughes stated in the release.   “This award underscores our commitment to advancing sustainable energy development through reliable and efficient power solutions that cater to the diverse needs of the industry,” Ganesh Ramaswamy, Executive Vice President of Industrial and Energy Technology at Baker Hughes, said in the release. “Leveraging our comprehensive range of integrated power solutions for Frontier’s U.S. data center projects demonstrates innovative, scalable, and lower-carbon technologies helping to meet the growing demand for power,” Ramaswamy added. In a release posted on its site back in March, Baker Hughes announced a strategic partnership between the company and Frontier “to accelerate the deployment of large-scale carbon capture and storage (CCS) and power solutions in the United States”. Baker Hughes noted in that release that, as part of the agreement, it “will provide innovative technologies and resources in support of the development of large-scale CCS, power generation, and data center projects”. Lorenzo Simonelli, chairman and CEO of Baker Hughes, said in that release, “Baker Hughes is committed to delivering innovative solutions that support increasing energy demand, in part driven by the rapid adoption of AI, while ensuring we continue to enable the decarbonization of the industry”.

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Eni Eyes Biofuel Feedstock Production in Ivory Coast

Eni SpA has signed an agreement with Côte d’Ivoire’s Agriculture Ministry to explore the potential of cultivating biofuel crops in the West African country. The memorandum of understanding “aims to enhance the rubber (hevea) supply chain and to assess the introduction of oilseed crops on marginal and degraded lands, thereby contributing to the country’s sustainable agricultural development without competing with food production and forest ecosystem”, the Italian state-backed energy major said in an online statement. Eni said an existing project in collaboration with the Ivorian Federation of Rubber Producers is already “enabling the valorization of rubber residues – a crop widely cultivated in the country – by transforming them into raw materials for biofuel production, generating economic and social benefits for thousands of farmers”. Last year Eni expanded its hydrocarbon-focused presence in Ivory Coast, where it entered 2015, to also pursue biorefining opportunities through the new company Eni Natural Energies Côte d’Ivoire. The new company is “dedicated to developing sustainable supply chains of agricultural raw materials for the company’s biorefineries”, Eni said. “The initiative is part of Eni’s strategy for sustainable mobility and its broader commitment to supporting fair and inclusive growth in line with the objectives of Côte d’Ivoire’s National Development Plan”. Biorefining Expansion Eni, through subsidiary Enilive, has a biorefining production capacity of 1.65 million metric tons per annum (MMtpa), according to a statement by Eni March 27. Eni aims to raise this to over five MMtpa by 2030. It also aims to enable one MMtpa of sustainable aviation fuel production by next year and potentially double that level by the end of the decade. Last year Eni announced an organization restructuring for Enilive, involving KKR & Co. Inc., to bring in new capital. In the first quarter of 2025 the United States investor completed the purchase of a 25 percent

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Egypt Considers Securing Another LNG Vessel as Import Needs Jump

Egypt is considering adding yet another LNG import vessel, according to people familiar with the plan, as the nation that was exporting gas just a year ago is now rushing to lock in supplies to cover domestic demand. A new vessel would add to the Energos Power ship that arrived in the North African country’s Alexandria port earlier this week and the Hoegh Galleon operating in Ain Sokhna. Two others – Energos Eskimo arriving this summer and another from Turkish company Botas – have also been tied up. Egypt’s oil ministry didn’t immediately reply to a request for comment on the additional vessel.  The country has moved to rapidly lease import terminals, known as floating storage and regasification units, over the past 12 months as overseas purchases surged amid declining local gas output and rising demand. It is in talks with companies including Saudi Aramco, Trafigura Group and Vitol Group for LNG supplies until 2028, putting it on course to be a long-term importer and helping tighten global gas markets. Egypt is also expected to replace the Hoegh Galleon vessel with the Hoegh Gandria in the fourth quarter of 2026.  The FSRUs that have been secured are expected to be installed at or near the existing LNG import facility in Ain Sokhna. Work is also underway for import infrastructure near Alexandria on the Mediterranean Sea, according to the people, who asked not be identified discussing ongoing talks.  Exact timing and locations of the leased FSRUs could be subject to change, as well as details on where a new import vessel could be added, the people said. What do you think? We’d love to hear from you, join the conversation on the Rigzone Energy Network. The Rigzone Energy Network is a new social experience created for you and all energy professionals to Speak

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OMV to Build Major Green Hydrogen Plant in Lower Austria

OMV AG has made a final investment decision to proceed with the construction of an electrolysis facility in Bruck an der Leitha, Lower Austria. The 140-MW electrolyzer – a facility that splits water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen through electricity – is planned to produce up to 23,000 metric tons a year of green hydrogen. Expected to start production 2027, the project will use wind, solar and hydro power. It would be the biggest European electrolytic facility to produce renewable hydrogen, OMV said. Hydrogen produced through electrolysis that runs on renewable power is called green or renewable. On June 30 OMV announced the start of production at its first commercial-scale green hydrogen facility, built with a capacity of 1,500 metric tons per annum at its Schwechat refinery near Vienna. The plant uses a 10-MW PEM (polymer electrolyte membrane) electrolyzer powered by hydro, solar and wind energy. The process avoids up to 15,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions a year, equivalent to the CO2 consumption of 2,000 persons per year based on a European Union average, according to OMV. Output from the newly inaugurated facility will be used to decarbonize the refinery and produce more sustainable fuels and chemicals including sustainable aviation fuel and renewable diesel. Martijn van Koten, OMV executive vice president for fuels and chemicals, said of the incoming project, “With this project, we are re-inventing the production of everyday essential fuels and chemical products – a groundbreaking step that demonstrates how industrial innovation and sustainability can go hand in hand”. “By using green hydrogen in the future, we are making the processes and production of fuels and chemical products more sustainable and are future-proofing our industry. “Our planned 140 MW electrolysis plant in Bruck an der Leitha will meet a significant share of the hydrogen demand at the OMV

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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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How Snowflake’s open-source text-to-SQL and Arctic inference models solve enterprise AI’s two biggest deployment headaches

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Snowflake has thousands of enterprise customers that use the company’s data and AI technologies. Though many issues with generative AI are solved there is still lots of room for improvement. Two such issues are text-to-SQL query and AI inference. SQL is the query language used for databases and it has been around in various forms for over 50 years. Existing large language models (LLMs) have text-to-SQL capabilities that can help users to write SQL queries. Vendors including Google have introduced advanced natural language SQL capabilities. Inference is also a mature capability with common technologies including Nvidia’s TensorRT being widely deployed. While enterprises have widely deployed both technologies, they still face unresolved issues that demand solutions. Existing text-to-SQL capabilities in LLMs can generate plausible-looking queries, however they often break when executed against real enterprise databases. When it comes to inference, speed and cost efficiency are always areas where every enterprise is looking to do better. That’s where a pair of new open-source efforts from Snowflake are aiming to make a difference: Arctic-Text2SQL-R1 and Arctic Inference. Snowflake’s approach to AI research is all about the enterprise Snowflake AI Research is tackling the issues of text-to-SQL and inference optimization by fundamentally rethinking the optimization targets. Instead of chasing academic benchmarks, the team focused on what actually matters in enterprise deployment. One issue is making sure the system can adapt to real traffic patterns without forcing costly trade-offs. The other issue is understanding if the generated SQL actually execute correctly against real databases? The result is two breakthrough technologies that address persistent enterprise pain points rather than incremental research advances. “We want to deliver practical, real-world AI research that solves critical enterprise challenges,” Dwarak Rajagopal,

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Encharge AI unveils EN100 AI accelerator chip with analog memory

EnCharge AI, an AI chip startup that raised $144 million to date, announced the EnCharge EN100, an AI accelerator built on precise and scalable analog in-memory computing.

Designed to bring advanced AI capabilities to laptops, workstations, and edge devices, EN100leverages transformational efficiency to deliver 200-plus TOPS (a measure of AI performance) of total compute power within the power constraints of edge and client platforms such as laptops.

The company spun out of Princeton University on the bet that its analog memory chips will speed up AI processing and cut costs too.

“EN100 represents a fundamental shift in AI computing architecture, rooted in hardware and software innovations that have been de-risked through fundamental research spanning multiple generations of silicon development,” said Naveen Verma, CEO at EnCharge AI, in a statement. “These innovations are now being made available as products for the industry to use, as scalable, programmable AI inference solutions that break through the energy efficient limits of today’s digital solutions. This means advanced, secure, and personalized AI can run locally, without relying on cloud infrastructure. We hope this will radically expand what you can do with AI.”

Previously, models driving the next generation of AI economy—multimodal and reasoning systems—required massive data center processing power. Cloud dependency’s cost, latency, and security drawbacks made countless AI applications impossible.

EN100 shatters these limitations. By fundamentally reshaping where AI inference happens, developers can now deploy sophisticated, secure, personalized applications locally.

This breakthrough enables organizations to rapidly integrate advanced capabilities into existing products—democratizing powerful AI technologies and bringing high-performance inference directly to end-users, the company said.

EN100, the first of the EnCharge EN series of chips, features an optimized architecture that efficiently processes AI tasks while minimizing energy. Available in two form factors – M.2 for laptops and PCIe for workstations – EN100 is engineered to transform on-device capabilities:

● M.2 for Laptops: Delivering up to 200+ TOPS of AI compute power in an 8.25W power envelope, EN100 M.2 enables sophisticated AI applications on laptops without compromising battery life or portability.

● PCIe for Workstations: Featuring four NPUs reaching approximately 1 PetaOPS, the EN100 PCIe card delivers GPU-level compute capacity at a fraction of the cost and power consumption, making it ideal for professional AI applications utilizing complex models and large datasets.

EnCharge AI’s comprehensive software suite delivers full platform support across the evolving model landscape with maximum efficiency. This purpose-built ecosystem combines specialized optimization tools, high-performance compilation, and extensive development resources—all supporting popular frameworks like PyTorch and TensorFlow.

Compared to competing solutions, EN100 demonstrates up to ~20x better performance per watt across various AI workloads. With up to 128GB of high-density LPDDR memory and bandwidth reaching 272 GB/s, EN100 efficiently handles sophisticated AI tasks, such as generative language models and real-time computer vision, that typically require specialized data center hardware. The programmability of EN100 ensures optimized performance of AI models today and the ability to adapt for the AI models of tomorrow.

“The real magic of EN100 is that it makes transformative efficiency for AI inference easily accessible to our partners, which can be used to help them achieve their ambitious AI roadmaps,” says Ram Rangarajan, Senior Vice President of Product and Strategy at EnCharge AI. “For client platforms, EN100 can bring sophisticated AI capabilities on device, enabling a new generation of intelligent applications that are not only faster and more responsive but also more secure and personalized.”

Early adoption partners have already begun working closely with EnCharge to map out how EN100 will deliver transformative AI experiences, such as always-on multimodal AI agents and enhanced gaming applications that render realistic environments in real-time.

While the first round of EN100’’s Early Access Program is currently full, interested developers and OEMs can sign up to learn more about the upcoming Round 2 Early Access Program, which provides a unique opportunity to gain a competitive advantage by being among the first to leverage EN100’s capabilities for commercial applications at www.encharge.ai/en100.

Competition

EnCharge doesn’t directly compete with many of the big players, as we have a slightly different focus and strategy. Our approach prioritizes the rapidly growing AI PC and edge device market, where our energy efficiency advantage is most compelling, rather than competing directly in data center markets.

That said, EnCharge does have a few differentiators that make it uniquely competitive within the chip landscape. For one, EnCharge’s chip has dramatically higher energy efficiency (approximately 20 times greater) than the leading players. The chip can run the most advanced AI models using about as much energy as a light bulb, making it an extremely competitive offering for any use case that can’t be confined to a data center.

Secondly, EnCharge’s analog in-memory computing approach makes its chips far more compute dense than conventional digital architectures, with roughly 30 TOPS/mm2 versus 3. This allows customers to pack significantly more AI processing power into the same physical space, something that’s particularly valuable for laptops, smartphones, and other portable devices where space is at a premium. OEMs can integrate powerful AI capabilities without compromising on device size, weight, or form factor, enabling them to create sleeker, more compact products while still delivering advanced AI features.

Origins

Encharge AI has raised $144 million.

In March 2024, EnCharge partnered with Princeton University to secure an $18.6 million grant from DARPA Optimum Processing Technology Inside Memory Arrays (OPTIMA) program Optima is a $78 million effort to develop fast, power-efficient, and scalable compute-in-memory accelerators that can unlock new possibilities for commercial and defense-relevant AI workloads not achievable with current technology.

EnCharge’s inspiration came from addressing a critical challenge in AI: the inability of traditional computing architectures to meet the needs of AI. The company was founded to solve the problem that, as AI models grow exponentially in size and complexity, traditional chip architectures (like GPUs) struggle to keep pace, leading to both memory and processing bottlenecks, as well as associated skyrocketing energy demands. (For example, training a single large language model can consume as much electricity as 130 U.S. households use in a year.)

The specific technical inspiration originated from the work of EnCharge ‘s founder, Naveen Verma, and his research at Princeton University in next generation computing architectures. He and his collaborators spent over seven years exploring a variety of innovative computing architectures, leading to a breakthrough in analog in-memory computing.

This approach aimed to significantly enhance energy efficiency for AI workloads while mitigating the noise and other challenges that had hindered past analog computing efforts. This technical achievement, proven and de-risked over multiple generations of silicon, was the basis for founding EnCharge AI to commercialize analog in-memory computing solutions for AI inference.

Encharge AI launched in 2022, led by a team with semiconductor and AI system experience. The team spun out of Princeton University, with a focus on a robust and scalable analog in-memory AI inference chip and accompanying software.

The company was able to overcome previous hurdles to analog and in-memory chip architectures by leveraging precise metal-wire switch capacitors instead of noise-prone transistors. The result is a full-stack architecture that is up to 20 times more energy efficient than currently available or soon-to-be-available leading digital AI chip solutions.

With this tech, EnCharge is fundamentally changing how and where AI computation happens. Their technology dramatically reduces the energy requirements for AI computation, bringing advanced AI workloads out of the data center and onto laptops, workstations, and edge devices. By moving AI inference closer to where data is generated and used, EnCharge enables a new generation of AI-enabled devices and applications that were previously impossible due to energy, weight, or size constraints while improving security, latency, and cost.

Why it matters

Encharge AI is striving to get rid of memory bottlenecks in AI computing.

As AI models have grown exponentially in size and complexity, their chip and associated energy demands have skyrocketed. Today, the vast majority of AI inference computation is accomplished with massive clusters of energy-intensive chips warehoused in cloud data centers. This creates cost, latency, and security barriers for applying AI to use cases that require on-device computation.

Only with transformative increases in compute efficiency will AI be able to break out of the data center and address on-device AI use-cases that are size, weight, and power constrained or have latency or privacy requirements that benefit from keeping data local. Lowering the cost and accessibility barriers of advanced AI can have dramatic downstream effects on a broad range of industries, from consumer electronics to aerospace and defense.

The reliance on data centers also present supply chain bottleneck risks. The AI-driven surge in demand for high-end graphics processing units (GPUs) alone could increase total demand for certain upstream components by 30% or more by 2026. However, a demand increase of about 20% or more has a high likelihood of upsetting the equilibrium and causing a chip shortage. The company is already seeing this in the massive costs for the latest GPUs and years-long wait lists as a small number of dominant AI companies buy up all available stock.

The environmental and energy demands of these data centers are also unsustainable with current technology. The energy use of a single Google search has increased over 20x from 0.3 watt-hours to 7.9 watt-hours with the addition of AI to power search. In aggregate, the International Energy Agency (IEA) projects that data centers’ electricity consumption in 2026 will be double that of 2022 — 1K terawatts, roughly equivalent to Japan’s current total consumption.

Investors include Tiger Global Management, Samsung Ventures, IQT, RTX Ventures, VentureTech Alliance, Anzu Partners, VentureTech Alliance, AlleyCorp and ACVC Partners. The company has 66 people.

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DeepSeek R1-0528 arrives in powerful open source challenge to OpenAI o3 and Google Gemini 2.5 Pro

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More The whale has returned. After rocking the global AI and business community early this year with the January 20 initial release of its hit open source reasoning AI model R1, the Chinese startup DeepSeek — a spinoff of formerly only locally well-known Hong Kong quantitative analysis firm High-Flyer Capital Management — has released DeepSeek-R1-0528, a significant update that brings DeepSeek’s free and open model near parity in reasoning capabilities with proprietary paid models such as OpenAI’s o3 and Google Gemini 2.5 Pro This update is designed to deliver stronger performance on complex reasoning tasks in math, science, business and programming, along with enhanced features for developers and researchers. Like its predecessor, DeepSeek-R1-0528 is available under the permissive and open MIT License, supporting commercial use and allowing developers to customize the model to their needs. Open-source model weights are available via the AI code sharing community Hugging Face, and detailed documentation is provided for those deploying locally or integrating via the DeepSeek API. Existing users of the DeepSeek API will automatically have their model inferences updated to R1-0528 at no additional cost. The current cost for DeepSeek’s API is For those looking to run the model locally, DeepSeek has published detailed instructions on its GitHub repository. The company also encourages the community to provide feedback and questions through their service email. Individual users can try it for free through DeepSeek’s website here, though you’ll need to provide a phone number or Google Account access to sign in. Enhanced reasoning and benchmark performance At the core of the update are significant improvements in the model’s ability to handle challenging reasoning tasks. DeepSeek explains in its new model card on HuggingFace that these enhancements

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What will power AI’s growth?

It’s been a little over a week since we published Power Hungry, a package that takes a hard look at the expected energy demands of AI. Last week in this newsletter, I broke down the centerpiece of that package, an analysis I did with my colleague James O’Donnell. (In case you’re still looking for an intro, you can check out this Roundtable discussion with James and our editor in chief Mat Honan, or this short segment I did on Science Friday.) But this week, I want to talk about another story that I also wrote for that package, which focused on nuclear energy. I thought this was an important addition to the mix of stories we put together, because I’ve seen a lot of promises about nuclear power as a saving grace in the face of AI’s energy demand. My reporting on the industry over the past few years has left me a little skeptical.  As I discovered while I continued that line of reporting, building new nuclear plants isn’t so simple or so fast. And as my colleague David Rotman lays out in his story for the package, the AI boom could wind up relying on another energy source: fossil fuels. So what’s going to power AI? Let’s get into it.  When we started talking about this big project on AI and energy demand, we had a lot of conversations about what to include. And from the beginning, the climate team was really focused on examining what, exactly, was going to be providing the electricity needed to run data centers powering AI models. As we wrote in the main story: 
“A data center humming away isn’t necessarily a bad thing. If all data centers were hooked up to solar panels and ran only when the sun was shining, the world would be talking a lot less about AI’s energy consumption.”  But a lot of AI data centers need to be available constantly. Those that are used to train models can arguably be more responsive to the changing availability of renewables, since that work can happen in bursts, any time. Once a model is being pinged with questions from the public, though, there needs to be computing power ready to run all the time. Google, for example, would likely not be too keen on having people be able to use its new AI Mode only during daylight hours.
Solar and wind power, then, would seem not to be a great fit for a lot of AI electricity demand, unless they’re paired with energy storage—and that increases costs. Nuclear power plants, on the other hand, tend to run constantly, outputting a steady source of power for the grid.  As you might imagine, though, it can take a long time to get a nuclear power plant up and running.  Large tech companies can help support plans to reopen shuttered plants or existing plants’ efforts to extend their operating lifetimes. There are also some existing plants that can make small upgrades to improve their output. I just saw this news story from the Tri-City Herald about plans to upgrade the Columbia Generating Station in eastern Washington—with tweaks over the next few years, it could produce an additional 162 megawatts of power, over 10% of the plant’s current capacity.  But all that isn’t going to be nearly enough to meet the demand that big tech companies are claiming will materialize in the future. (For more on the numbers here and why new tech isn’t going to come online fast enough, check out my full story.)  Instead, natural gas has become the default to meet soaring demand from data centers, as David lays out in his story. And since the lifetime of plants built today is about 30 years, those new plants could be running past 2050, the date the world needs to bring greenhouse-gas emissions to net zero to meet the goals set out in the Paris climate agreement.  One of the bits I found most interesting in David’s story is that there’s potential for a different future here: Big tech companies, with their power and influence, could actually use this moment to push for improvements. If they reduced their usage during peak hours, even for less than 1% of the year, it could greatly reduce the amount of new energy infrastructure required. Or they could, at the very least, push power plant owners and operators to install carbon capture technology, or ensure that methane doesn’t leak from the supply chain. AI’s energy demand is a big deal, but for climate change, how we choose to meet it is potentially an even bigger one. 

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This giant microwave may change the future of war

Imagine: China deploys hundreds of thousands of autonomous drones in the air, on the sea, and under the water—all armed with explosive warheads or small missiles. These machines descend in a swarm toward military installations on Taiwan and nearby US bases, and over the course of a few hours, a single robotic blitzkrieg overwhelms the US Pacific force before it can even begin to fight back.  Maybe it sounds like a new Michael Bay movie, but it’s the scenario that keeps the chief technology officer of the US Army up at night. “I’m hesitant to say it out loud so I don’t manifest it,” says Alex Miller, a longtime Army intelligence officer who became the CTO to the Army’s chief of staff in 2023. Even if World War III doesn’t break out in the South China Sea, every US military installation around the world is vulnerable to the same tactics—as are the militaries of every other country around the world. The proliferation of cheap drones means just about any group with the wherewithal to assemble and launch a swarm could wreak havoc, no expensive jets or massive missile installations required. 
While the US has precision missiles that can shoot these drones down, they don’t always succeed: A drone attack killed three US soldiers and injured dozens more at a base in the Jordanian desert last year. And each American missile costs orders of magnitude more than its targets, which limits their supply; countering thousand-dollar drones with missiles that cost hundreds of thousands, or even millions, of dollars per shot can only work for so long, even with a defense budget that could reach a trillion dollars next year. The US armed forces are now hunting for a solution—and they want it fast. Every branch of the service and a host of defense tech startups are testing out new weapons that promise to disable drones en masse. There are drones that slam into other drones like battering rams; drones that shoot out nets to ensnare quadcopter propellers; precision-guided Gatling guns that simply shoot drones out of the sky; electronic approaches, like GPS jammers and direct hacking tools; and lasers that melt holes clear through a target’s side.
Then there are the microwaves: high-powered electronic devices that push out kilowatts of power to zap the circuits of a drone as if it were the tinfoil you forgot to take off your leftovers when you heated them up.  That’s where Epirus comes in.  When I went to visit the HQ of this 185-person startup in Torrance, California, earlier this year, I got a behind-the-scenes look at its massive microwave, called Leonidas, which the US Army is already betting on as a cutting-edge anti-drone weapon. The Army awarded Epirus a $66 million contract in early 2023, topped that up with another $17 million last fall, and is currently deploying a handful of the systems for testing with US troops in the Middle East and the Pacific. (The Army won’t get into specifics on the location of the weapons in the Middle East but published a report of a live-fire test in the Philippines in early May.)  Up close, the Leonidas that Epirus built for the Army looks like a two-foot-thick slab of metal the size of a garage door stuck on a swivel mount. Pop the back cover, and you can see that the slab is filled with dozens of individual microwave amplifier units in a grid. Each is about the size of a safe-deposit box and built around a chip made of gallium nitride, a semiconductor that can survive much higher voltages and temperatures than the typical silicon.  Leonidas sits on top of a trailer that a standard-issue Army truck can tow, and when it is powered on, the company’s software tells the grid of amps and antennas to shape the electromagnetic waves they’re blasting out with a phased array, precisely overlapping the microwave signals to mold the energy into a focused beam. Instead of needing to physically point a gun or parabolic dish at each of a thousand incoming drones, the Leonidas can flick between them at the speed of software. The Leonidas contains dozens of microwave amplifier units and can pivot to direct waves at incoming swarms of drones. Of course, this isn’t magic—there are practical limits on how much damage one array can do, and at what range—but the total effect could be described as an electromagnetic pulse emitter, a death ray for electronics, or a force field that could set up a protective barrier around military installations and drop drones the way a bug zapper fizzles a mob of mosquitoes. I walked through the nonclassified sections of the Leonidas factory floor, where a cluster of engineers working on weaponeering—the military term for figuring out exactly how much of a weapon, be it high explosive or microwave beam, is necessary to achieve a desired effect—ran tests in a warren of smaller anechoic rooms. Inside, they shot individual microwave units at a broad range of commercial and military drones, cycling through waveforms and power levels to try to find the signal that could fry each one with maximum efficiency.  On a live video feed from inside one of these foam-padded rooms, I watched a quadcopter drone spin its propellers and then, once the microwave emitter turned on, instantly stop short—first the propeller on the front left and then the rest. A drone hit with a Leonidas beam doesn’t explode—it just falls. Compared with the blast of a missile or the sizzle of a laser, it doesn’t look like much. But it could force enemies to come up with costlier ways of attacking that reduce the advantage of the drone swarm, and it could get around the inherent limitations of purely electronic or strictly physical defense systems. It could save lives. Epirus CEO Andy Lowery, a tall guy with sparkplug energy and a rapid-fire southern Illinois twang, doesn’t shy away from talking big about his product. As he told me during my visit, Leonidas is intended to lead a last stand, like the Spartan from whom the microwave takes its name—in this case, against hordes of unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs. While the actual range of the Leonidas system is kept secret, Lowery says the Army is looking for a solution that can reliably stop drones within a few kilometers. He told me, “They would like our system to be the owner of that final layer—to get any squeakers, any leakers, anything like that.”

Now that they’ve told the world they “invented a force field,” Lowery added, the focus is on manufacturing at scale—before the drone swarms really start to descend or a nation with a major military decides to launch a new war. Before, in other words, Miller’s nightmare scenario becomes reality.  Why zap? Miller remembers well when the danger of small weaponized drones first appeared on his radar. Reports of Islamic State fighters strapping grenades to the bottom of commercial DJI Phantom quadcopters first emerged in late 2016 during the Battle of Mosul. “I went, ‘Oh, this is going to be bad,’ because basically it’s an airborne IED at that point,” he says. He’s tracked the danger as it’s built steadily since then, with advances in machine vision, AI coordination software, and suicide drone tactics only accelerating.  Then the war in Ukraine showed the world that cheap technology has fundamentally changed how warfare happens. We have watched in high-definition video how a cheap, off-the-shelf drone modified to carry a small bomb can be piloted directly into a faraway truck, tank, or group of troops to devastating effect. And larger suicide drones, also known as “loitering munitions,” can be produced for just tens of thousands of dollars and launched in massive salvos to hit soft targets or overwhelm more advanced military defenses through sheer numbers.  As a result, Miller, along with large swaths of the Pentagon and DC policy circles, believes that the current US arsenal for defending against these weapons is just too expensive and the tools in too short supply to truly match the threat. Just look at Yemen, a poor country where the Houthi military group has been under constant attack for the past decade. Armed with this new low-tech arsenal, in the past 18 months the rebel group has been able to bomb cargo ships and effectively disrupt global shipping in the Red Sea—part of an effort to apply pressure on Israel to stop its war in Gaza. The Houthis have also used missiles, suicide drones, and even drone boats to launch powerful attacks on US Navy ships sent to stop them. The most successful defense tech firm selling anti-drone weapons to the US military right now is Anduril, the company started by Palmer Luckey, the inventor of the Oculus VR headset, and a crew of cofounders from Oculus and defense data giant Palantir. In just the past few months, the Marines have chosen Anduril for counter-drone contracts that could be worth nearly $850 million over the next decade, and the company has been working with Special Operations Command since 2022 on a counter-drone contract that could be worth nearly a billion dollars over a similar time frame. It’s unclear from the contracts what, exactly, Anduril is selling to each organization, but its weapons include electronic warfare jammers, jet-powered drone bombs, and propeller-driven Anvil drones designed to simply smash into enemy drones. In this arsenal, the cheapest way to stop a swarm of drones is electronic warfare: jamming the GPS or radio signals used to pilot the machines. But the intense drone battles in Ukraine have advanced the art of jamming and counter-jamming close to the point of stalemate. As a result, a new state of the art is emerging: unjammable drones that operate autonomously by using onboard processors to navigate via internal maps and computer vision, or even drones connected with 20-kilometer-long filaments of fiber-optic cable for tethered control.
But unjammable doesn’t mean unzappable. Instead of using the scrambling method of a jammer, which employs an antenna to block the drone’s connection to a pilot or remote guidance system, the Leonidas microwave beam hits a drone body broadside. The energy finds its way into something electrical, whether the central flight controller or a tiny wire controlling a flap on a wing, to short-circuit whatever’s available. (The company also says that this targeted hit of energy allows birds and other wildlife to continue to move safely.) Tyler Miller, a senior systems engineer on Epirus’s weaponeering team, told me that they never know exactly which part of the target drone is going to go down first, but they’ve reliably seen the microwave signal get in somewhere to overload a circuit. “Based on the geometry and the way the wires are laid out,” he said, one of those wires is going to be the best path in. “Sometimes if we rotate the drone 90 degrees, you have a different motor go down first,” he added.
The team has even tried wrapping target drones in copper tape, which would theoretically provide shielding, only to find that the microwave still finds a way in through moving propeller shafts or antennas that need to remain exposed for the drone to fly.  Leonidas also has an edge when it comes to downing a mass of drones at once. Physically hitting a drone out of the sky or lighting it up with a laser can be effective in situations where electronic warfare fails, but anti-drone drones can only take out one at a time, and lasers need to precisely aim and shoot. Epirus’s microwaves can damage everything in a roughly 60-degree arc from the Leonidas emitter simultaneously and keep on zapping and zapping; directed energy systems like this one never run out of ammo. As for cost, each Army Leonidas unit currently runs in the “low eight figures,” Lowery told me. Defense contract pricing can be opaque, but Epirus delivered four units for its $66 million initial contract, giving a back-of-napkin price around $16.5 million each. For comparison, Stinger missiles from Raytheon, which soldiers shoot at enemy aircraft or drones from a shoulder-mounted launcher, cost hundreds of thousands of dollars a pop, meaning the Leonidas could start costing less (and keep shooting) after it downs the first wave of a swarm. Raytheon’s radar, reversed Epirus is part of a new wave of venture-capital-backed defense companies trying to change the way weapons are created—and the way the Pentagon buys them. The largest defense companies, firms like Raytheon, Boeing, Northrop Grumman, and Lockheed Martin, typically develop new weapons in response to research grants and cost-plus contracts, in which the US Department of Defense guarantees a certain profit margin to firms building products that match their laundry list of technical specifications. These programs have kept the military supplied with cutting-edge weapons for decades, but the results may be exquisite pieces of military machinery delivered years late and billions of dollars over budget. Rather than building to minutely detailed specs, the new crop of military contractors aim to produce products on a quick time frame to solve a problem and then fine-tune them as they pitch to the military. The model, pioneered by Palantir and SpaceX, has since propelled companies like Anduril, Shield AI, and dozens of other smaller startups into the business of war as venture capital piles tens of billions of dollars into defense. Like Anduril, Epirus has direct Palantir roots; it was cofounded by Joe Lonsdale, who also cofounded Palantir, and John Tenet, Lonsdale’s colleague at the time at his venture fund, 8VC. (Tenet, the son of former CIA director George Tenet, may have inspired the company’s name—the elder Tenet’s parents were born in the Epirus region in the northwest of Greece. But the company more often says it’s a reference to the pseudo-mythological Epirus Bow from the 2011 fantasy action movie Immortals, which never runs out of arrows.) 
While Epirus is doing business in the new mode, its roots are in the old—specifically in Raytheon, a pioneer in the field of microwave technology. Cofounded by MIT professor Vannevar Bush in 1922, it manufactured vacuum tubes, like those found in old radios. But the company became synonymous with electronic defense during World War II, when Bush spun up a lab to develop early microwave radar technology invented by the British into a workable product, and Raytheon then began mass-producing microwave tubes—known as magnetrons—for the US war effort. By the end of the war in 1945, Raytheon was making 80% of the magnetrons powering Allied radar across the world. From padded foam chambers at the Epirus HQ, Leonidas devices can be safely tested on drones. Large tubes remained the best way to emit high-power microwaves for more than half a century, handily outperforming silicon-based solid-state amplifiers. They’re still around—the microwave on your kitchen counter runs on a vacuum tube magnetron. But tubes have downsides: They’re hot, they’re big, and they require upkeep. (In fact, the other microwave drone zapper currently in the Pentagon pipeline, the Tactical High-power Operational Responder, or THOR, still relies on a physical vacuum tube. It’s reported to be effective at downing drones in tests but takes up a whole shipping container and needs a dish antenna to zap its targets.) By the 2000s, new methods of building solid-state amplifiers out of materials like gallium nitride started to mature and were able to handle more power than silicon without melting or shorting out. The US Navy spent hundreds of millions of dollars on cutting-edge microwave contracts, one for a project at Raytheon called Next Generation Jammer—geared specifically toward designing a new way to make high-powered microwaves that work at extremely long distances. Lowery, the Epirus CEO, began his career working on nuclear reactors on Navy aircraft carriers before he became the chief engineer for Next Generation Jammer at Raytheon in 2010. There, he and his team worked on a system that relied on many of the same fundamentals that now power the Leonidas—using the same type of amplifier material and antenna setup to fry the electronics of a small target at much closer range rather than disrupting the radar of a target hundreds of miles away. 
The similarity is not a coincidence: Two engineers from Next Generation Jammer helped launch Epirus in 2018. Lowery—who by then was working at the augmented-reality startup RealWear, which makes industrial smart glasses—joined Epirus in 2021 to run product development and was asked to take the top spot as CEO in 2023, as Leonidas became a fully formed machine. Much of the founding team has since departed for other projects, but Raytheon still runs through the company’s collective CV: ex-Raytheon radar engineer Matt Markel started in January as the new CTO, and Epirus’s chief engineer for defense, its VP of engineering, its VP of operations, and a number of employees all have Raytheon roots as well. Markel tells me that the Epirus way of working wouldn’t have flown at one of the big defense contractors: “They never would have tried spinning off the technology into a new application without a contract lined up.” The Epirus engineers saw the use case, raised money to start building Leonidas, and already had prototypes in the works before any military branch started awarding money to work on the project. Waiting for the starting gun On the wall of Lowery’s office are two mementos from testing days at an Army proving ground: a trophy wing from a larger drone, signed by the whole testing team, and a framed photo documenting the Leonidas’s carnage—a stack of dozens of inoperative drones piled up in a heap.  Despite what seems to have been an impressive test show, it’s still impossible from the outside to determine whether Epirus’s tech is ready to fully deliver if the swarms descend.  The Army would not comment specifically on the efficacy of any new weapons in testing or early deployment, including the Leonidas system. A spokesperson for the Army’s Rapid Capabilities and Critical Technologies Office, or RCCTO, which is the subsection responsible for contracting with Epirus to date, would only say in a statement that it is “committed to developing and fielding innovative Directed Energy solutions to address evolving threats.”  But various high-ranking officers appear to be giving Epirus a public vote of confidence. The three-star general who runs RCCTO and oversaw the Leonidas testing last summer told Breaking Defense that “the system actually worked very well,” even if there was work to be done on “how the weapon system fits into the larger kill chain.” And when former secretary of the Army Christine Wormuth, then the service’s highest-ranking civilian, gave a parting interview this past January, she mentioned Epirus in all but name, citing “one company” that is “using high-powered microwaves to basically be able to kill swarms of drones.” She called that kind of capability “critical for the Army.”  The Army isn’t the only branch interested in the microwave weapon. On Epirus’s factory floor when I visited, alongside the big beige Leonidases commissioned by the Army, engineers were building a smaller expeditionary version for the Marines, painted green, which it delivered in late April. Videos show that when it put some of its microwave emitters on a dock and tested them out for the Navy last summer, the microwaves left their targets dead in the water—successfully frying the circuits of outboard motors like the ones propelling Houthi drone boats.  Epirus is also currently working on an even smaller version of the Leonidas that can mount on top of the Army’s Stryker combat vehicles, and it’s testing out attaching a single microwave unit to a small airborne drone, which could work as a highly focused zapper to disable cars, data centers, or single enemy drones.  Epirus’s microwave technology is also being tested in devices smaller than the traditional Leonidas. While neither the Army nor the Navy has yet to announce a contract to start buying Epirus’s systems at scale, the company and its investors are actively preparing for the big orders to start rolling in. It raised $250 million in a funding round in early March to get ready to make as many Leonidases as possible in the coming years, adding to the more than $300 million it’s raised since opening its doors in 2018. “If you invent a force field that works,” Lowery boasts, “you really get a lot of attention.” The task for Epirus now, assuming that its main customers pull the trigger and start buying more Leonidases, is ramping up production while advancing the tech in its systems. Then there are the more prosaic problems of staffing, assembly, and testing at scale. For future generations, Lowery told me, the goal is refining the antenna design and integrating higher-powered microwave amplifiers to push the output into the tens of kilowatts, allowing for increased range and efficacy.  While this could be made harder by Trump’s global trade war, Lowery says he’s not worried about their supply chain; while China produces 98% of the world’s gallium, according to the US Geological Survey, and has choked off exports to the US, Epirus’s chip supplier uses recycled gallium from Japan.  The other outside challenge may be that Epirus isn’t the only company building a drone zapper. One of China’s state-owned defense companies has been working on its own anti-drone high-powered microwave weapon called the Hurricane, which it displayed at a major military show in late 2024.  It may be a sign that anti-electronics force fields will become common among the world’s militaries—and if so, the future of war is unlikely to go back to the status quo ante, and it might zag in a different direction yet again. But military planners believe it’s crucial for the US not to be left behind. So if it works as promised, Epirus could very well change the way that war will play out in the coming decade.  While Miller, the Army CTO, can’t speak directly to Epirus or any specific system, he will say that he believes anti-drone measures are going to have to become ubiquitous for US soldiers. “Counter-UAS [Unmanned Aircraft System] unfortunately is going to be like counter-IED,” he says. “It’s going to be every soldier’s job to think about UAS threats the same way it was to think about IEDs.”  And, he adds, it’s his job and his colleagues’ to make sure that tech so effective it works like “almost magic” is in the hands of the average rifleman. To that end, Lowery told me, Epirus is designing the Leonidas control system to work simply for troops, allowing them to identify a cluster of targets and start zapping with just a click of a button—but only extensive use in the field can prove that out. Epirus CEO Andy Lowery sees the Leonidas as providing a last line of defense against UAVs. In the not-too-distant future, Lowery says, this could mean setting up along the US-Mexico border. But the grandest vision for Epirus’s tech that he says he’s heard is for a city-scale Leonidas along the lines of a ballistic missile defense radar system called PAVE PAWS, which takes up an entire 105-foot-tall building and can detect distant nuclear missile launches. The US set up four in the 1980s, and Taiwan currently has one up on a mountain south of Taipei. Fill a similar-size building full of microwave emitters, and the beam could reach out “10 or 15 miles,” Lowery told me, with one sitting sentinel over Taipei in the north and another over Kaohsiung in the south of Taiwan. Riffing in Greek mythological mode, Lowery said of drones, “I call all these mischief makers. Whether they’re doing drugs or guns across the border or they’re flying over Langley [or] they’re spying on F-35s, they’re all like Icarus. You remember Icarus, with his wax wings? Flying all around—‘Nobody’s going to touch me, nobody’s going to ever hurt me.’” “We built one hell of a wax-wing melter.”  Sam Dean is a reporter focusing on business, tech, and defense. He is writing a book about the recent history of Silicon Valley returning to work with the Pentagon for Viking Press and covering the defense tech industry for a number of publications. Previously, he was a business reporter at the Los Angeles Times.

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DanaBot takedown shows how agentic AI cut months of SOC analysis to weeks

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More The recent takedown of DanaBot, a Russian malware platform responsible for infecting over 300,000 systems and causing more than $50 million in damage, highlights how agentic AI is redefining cybersecurity operations. According to a recent Lumen Technologies post, DanaBot actively maintained an average of 150 active C2 servers per day, with roughly 1,000 daily victims across more than 40 countries.   Last week, the U.S. Department of Justice unsealed a federal indictment in Los Angeles against 16 defendants of DanaBot, a Russia-based malware-as-a-service (MaaS) operation responsible for orchestrating massive fraud schemes, enabling ransomware attacks and inflicting tens of millions of dollars in financial losses to victims.   DanaBot first emerged in 2018 as a banking trojan but quickly evolved into a versatile cybercrime toolkit capable of executing ransomware, espionage and distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) campaigns. The toolkit’s ability to deliver precise attacks on critical infrastructure has made it a favorite of state-sponsored Russian adversaries with ongoing cyber operations targeting Ukrainian electricity, power and water utilities. DanaBot sub-botnets have been directly linked to Russian intelligence activities, illustrating the merging boundaries between financially motivated cybercrime and state-sponsored espionage. DanaBot’s operators, SCULLY SPIDER, faced minimal domestic pressure from Russian authorities, reinforcing suspicions that the Kremlin either tolerated or leveraged their activities as a cyber proxy. As illustrated in the figure below, DanaBot’s operational infrastructure involved complex and dynamically shifting layers of bots, proxies, loaders and C2 servers, making traditional manual analysis impractical. Overview of DanaBot pipeline and management infrastructure. Source: Team Cymru and Lumen Technologies DanaBot shows why agentic AI is the new front line against automated threats Agentic AI played a central role in dismantling DanaBot, orchestrating predictive threat modeling, real-time telemetry correlation, infrastructure analysis and autonomous

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Which LLM should you use? Token Monster automatically combines multiple models and tools for you

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Token Monster, a new AI chatbot platform, has launched its alpha preview, aiming to change how users interact with large language models (LLMs). Developed by Matt Shumer, co-founder and CEO of OthersideAI and its hit AI writing assistant Hyperwrite AI, Token Monster’s key selling point is its ability to route user prompts to the best available LLMs for the task at hand, delivering enhanced outputs by leveraging the strengths of multiple models. There are seven major LLMs presently available through Token Monster. Once a user types something into the prompt entry box, Token Monster uses pre-prompts developed through iteration by Shumer himself to automatically analyze the user’s input, decide which combination of multiple available models and linked tools are best suited to answer it, and then provide a combined response leveraging the strengths of said models. The available LLMs include: Anthropic Claude 3.5 Sonnet Anthropic Claude 3.5 Opus OpenAI GPT-4.1 OpenAI GPT-4o Perplexity AI PPLX (for research) OpenAI o3 (for reasoning) Google Gemini 2.5 Pro Unlike other chatbot platforms, Token Monster automatically identifies which LLM is best for specific tasks — as well as which LLM-connected tools would be helpful such as web search or coding environments — and orchestrates a multi-model workflow. “We’re just building the connectors to everything and then a system that decides what to use when,” said Shumer. For instance, it might use Claude for creativity, o3 for reasoning, and PPLX for research, among others. This approach eliminates the need for users to manually choose the right model for each prompt, simplifying the process for anyone who wants high-quality, tailored results. Feature highlights The alpha preview, which is currently free to sign up for at tokenmonster.ai, allows

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Clean power deployments neared record in Q1, but development pipeline growth slowed: ACP

Dive Brief: Eight of the top 10 states for utility-scale clean energy deployment in the first quarter of 2025 voted Republican in last year’s Presidential election, the American Clean Power Association said on Thursday. Texas was the runaway leader with more than 1,700 MW of wind, solar and energy storage deployments and a 20% year-over-year increase in total clean energy capacity. Florida, Indiana, Ohio and Wyoming rounded out the top five, ACP said. The 7.4 GW of new clean power capacity in the U.S. was the second-strongest Q1 on record. Energy storage was the fastest-growing segment, with nationwide battery storage capacity increasing 65% year over year. Dive Insight: Total utility-scale clean energy deployments in the first quarter of this year came in 9% shy of the record-setting first quarter of 2024, when developers commissioned 8,089 MW of wind, solar and storage capacity, ACP said.  ACP’s data reflects the increasingly broad geography of utility-scale solar and storage deployments. Indiana quadrupled its energy storage capacity, adding 435 MW, while Illinois, Mississippi, Wisconsin and Ohio all deployed far more solar than California. Total U.S. clean energy capacity sits at about 320.9 GW — of which, 80.7 GW is in Texas, ACP said. The clean power development pipeline expanded as well, growing 12% year over year to reach about 184.4 GW and an estimated $328 billion in completed value. But that marks a slowdown from a year ago, when fully permitted clean power capacity under construction or in advanced development rose 26% from Q1 2023. Developers have canceled more than $14 billion in clean energy projects so far this year amid uncertainty over the future of federal tax credits for clean energy investment, production and manufacturing, according to the consulting group E2. ACP’s latest report hinted at the scale of the potential risk to

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California’s solar, wind curtailment jumps 29% in 2024: EIA

Solar and wind energy output in California was curtailed by 29% more in 2024 than the year before, with solar accounting for 93% of curtailed energy that year, the Energy Information Administration said in a Wednesday report. “In 2024, [the California Independent System Operator] curtailed 3.4 million megawatthours (MWh) of utility-scale wind and solar output, a 29% increase from the amount of electricity curtailed in 2023,” EIA said.  EIA said that CAISO curtailed the most solar in the spring “when solar output was relatively high and electricity demand was relatively low, because moderate spring temperatures meant less demand for space heating or air conditioning.” Optional Caption Retrieved from Energy Information Administration. Wind and solar capacity in California increased from 9.7 GW in 2014 to 28.2 GW by the end of 2024, EIA said. California curtails solar and wind generation to keep the grid stable and to leave room for natural gas generation, in order to comply with North American Electric Reliability Corp. requirements and “have generation online in time to ramp up in the evening hours,” according to the report. CAISO is responding to increased curtailments by “trading with neighboring balancing authorities to try to sell excess solar and wind power, incorporating battery storage into ancillary services, energy, and capacity markets, and including curtailment reduction in transmission planning,” according to EIA. Later this year, companies in the state are also planning to start using excess renewable energy to “make hydrogen, some of which will be stored and mixed with natural gas for summer generation at the Intermountain Power Project’s new facility scheduled to come online in July,” the report said. One of those companies, SoHyCal, said that once it begins using solar energy for this purpose, it “[expects] to produce a total of three tons per day of green hydrogen powered

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DOE cancels $3.7B in carbon capture, decarbonization awards

The U.S. Department of Energy on Friday canceled $3.7 billion in awards from its Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations, including $940 million in grants for two carbon capture projects planned by Calpine. The canceled awards were mainly for carbon capture and sequestration and other decarbonization projects, according to DOE. Affected companies include PPL Corp., Ørsted and Exxon Mobil Corp. The Calpine projects are for CCS projects at its 550-MW gas-fired Sutter power plant in Yuba City, California, and its 810-MW Baytown power plant in Baytown, Texas. “After a thorough and individualized financial review of each award, the DOE found that these projects failed to advance the energy needs of the American people, were not economically viable and would not generate a positive return on investment of taxpayer dollars,” DOE said. Sixteen of the 24 terminated awards were signed between President Donald Trump’s election in November and Jan. 20, according to DOE. The DOE assessed the canceled awards under a review process outlined earlier this month. The department said it is reviewing 179 awards that total over $15 billion in financial assistance. “DOE is prioritizing large-scale commercial projects that require more detailed information from the awardees for the initial phase of this review, but this process may extend to other DOE program offices as the reviews progress,” the department said. DOE created the Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations in late 2021 to manage about $27 billion in funding appropriated by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act, according to a mid-November report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office. Below is a list from DOE of the canceled awards announced on Friday. Optional Caption Permission granted by US Department of Energy DOE’s decision to terminate the awards was “shortsighted,” according to Steven Nadel, executive director of the American

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Congress votes to rescind California vehicle emissions waiver

Dive Brief: The U.S. Senate passed three joint resolutions May 22 nullifying California’s ability to set emissions standards for passenger cars, light duty vehicles and trucks that are stricter than national standards set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Auto and petroleum industry lobbyists targeted California’s Advanced Clean Car II regulations, adopted in 2022, which require all new passenger cars, trucks and SUVs sold in the state to be zero-emission vehicles by the 2035 model year. Federal law set in 1990 allows 17 additional states and the District of Columbia to follow California’s regulations. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, announced the state’s intention to file a lawsuit blocking the congressional resolutions, which await the signature of President Donald Trump to become law. Dive Insight: California’s ability to set its own vehicle emissions standards stem from the 1967 Air Quality Act, passed at a time when smog and poor air quality often permeated the Los Angeles basin. While air quality in California has improved over the years, experts fear a setback from the Senate’s action. “Public health could potentially suffer as a consequence,” said Michael Kleeman, a professor at the University of California, Davis, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. “This is, plain and simple, a vote against clean air to breathe,” said Aaron Kressig, transportation electrification manager at Western Resource Advocates, in an emailed statement. He warned of potential lost days at school or work and premature deaths.    “Over 150 million people in the United States are already exposed to unhealthy levels of air pollution,” Steven Higashide, director of the Clean Transportation Program at the Union of Concerned Scientists, said in an emailed statement. “The standards are based on the best available science, and were finalized with extensive public input.”  Along with public health concerns, the debate around California’s

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OPEC+ Mulls Even Larger Oil Output Hike as It Seeks Market Share

OPEC+ is considering accelerating its production increases by discussing a potential hike of more than 411,000 barrels a day for July as it seeks to recoup lost market share, according to people familiar with the matter. Eight key members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its partners, led by Saudi Arabia, are due to hold a video conference on Saturday to discuss output policy. Their last two calls resulted in super-sized production increases that drove down prices, and the cartel may go even further this time, the people said. Some delegates among the eight nations said they were unaware of plans for an outsize boost and expected an increase closer to the 411,000-barrel-a-day hikes set for May and June. Yet the group’s deliberations are increasingly confined to a smaller group of its most powerful members, who sometimes only share decisions with their counterparts at short notice. OPEC+ has made a radical policy shift from defending prices to actively seeking to drive them lower. It stunned traders in early April by announcing a supply increase that was three times the volume planned. The move came even as markets faltered amid slowing demand and President Donald Trump’s trade war, briefly dragging crude to a four-year low below $60 a barrel, and was repeated the following month.  Brent futures slipped to trade below $64 a barrel in London on Friday. Kazakhstan’s Deputy Energy Minister Alibek Zhamauov had already alluded to the possibility of an bigger surge in comments to reporters on Thursday. “There will be a hike, but whether it will be 400, 500, 600, we don’t know — that will be announced on Saturday,” he said in Astana, according to the news agency.  Delegates have offered a range of explanations for the pivot by Riyadh. Some assert that OPEC+

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