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

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

Discover What Matters Most to You

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

AI

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

Bitcoin:

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

Datacenter:

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

Energy:

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

Shape
Discover What Matter Most to You

Featured Articles

WTI, Brent Gain as Talks Ease Conflict Fears

Oil edged marginally higher after a choppy session as investors assessed the status of nuclear talks between the US and Iran. West Texas Intermediate settled above $63 a barrel, with markets reacting sharply to headlines tied to the meeting. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said the talks had a “good start,” even as the Wall Street Journal reported that Tehran stood by its refusal to end enrichment of nuclear fuel, a major sticking point for the US. The escalation in the Middle East, which provides about a third of the world’s crude, has added a risk premium to benchmark oil prices. Traders have weighed the geopolitical tensions against an outlook for oversupply. Still, futures in New York notched their first weekly retreat since mid-December as the US-Iran talks helped allay concerns over a broader conflict in the region. Prices also extended gains after data showed US consumer sentiment unexpectedly improved to the highest in six months, calming some concerns over an economic slowdown in the country that could lead to weaker oil demand. Meanwhile, in trilateral negotiations with the US, Ukraine and Russia agreed to exchange prisoners for the first time in five months as they sought to end their four-year conflict. Talks were making progress, with results expected “in the coming weeks,” President Donald Trump’s special envoy said. Saudi Arabia cut prices for buyers in Asia by less than expected, signaling confidence in demand for its barrels, although prices have still been reduced to the lowest levels since late 2020. Oil Prices WTI for March delivery settled 0.4% higher at $63.55 a barrel in New York. Brent for April settlement rose 0.7% to close at $68.05 a barrel. What do you think? We’d love to hear from you, join the conversation on the Rigzone Energy Network. The Rigzone Energy

Read More »

AI Infrastructure Scales Out and Up: Edge Expansion Meets the Gigawatt Campus Era

The AI infrastructure boom is often framed around massive hyperscale campuses racing to secure gigawatts of power. But an equally important shift is happening in parallel: AI infrastructure is also becoming more distributed, modular, and sovereign, extending compute far beyond traditional data center hubs. A wave of recent announcements across developers, infrastructure investors, and regional operators shows the market pursuing a dual strategy. On one end, developers are accelerating delivery of hyperscale campuses measured in hundreds of megawatts, and increasingly gigawatts, often located where power availability and energy economics offer structural advantage, and in some cases pairing compute directly with dedicated generation. On the other, providers are building increasingly capable regional and edge facilities designed to bring AI compute closer to users, industrial operations, and national jurisdictions. Taken together, these moves point toward a future in which AI infrastructure is no longer purely centralized, but built around interconnected hub-and-spoke architectures combining energy-advantaged hyperscale cores with rapidly deployable edge capacity. Recent developments across hyperscale developers, edge specialists, infrastructure investors, and regional operators illustrate how quickly this model is taking shape. Sovereign AI Moves Beyond the Core On Feb. 5, 2026, San Francisco-based Armada and European AI infrastructure builder Nscale signed a letter of intent to jointly deploy both large-scale and edge AI infrastructure worldwide. The collaboration targets enterprise and public sector customers seeking sovereign, secure, geographically distributed AI environments. Nscale is building large AI supercomputer clusters globally, offering vertically integrated capabilities spanning power, data centers, compute, and software. Armada specializes in modular deployments through its Galleon data centers and Armada Edge Platform, delivering compute and storage into remote or infrastructure-poor environments. The combined offering addresses a growing challenge: many governments and enterprises want AI capability deployed within their own jurisdictions, even where traditional hyperscale infrastructure does not yet exist. “There is

Read More »

From Row-Level CDUs to Facility-Scale Cooling: DCX Ramps Liquid Cooling for the AI Factory Era

Enter the 8MW CDU Era The next evolution arrived just days later. On Jan. 20, DCX announced its second-generation facility-scale unit, the FDU V2AT2, pushing capacity into territory previously unimaginable for single CDU platforms. The system delivers up to 8.15 megawatts of heat transfer capacity with record flow rates designed to support 45°C warm-water cooling, aligning directly with NVIDIA’s roadmap for rack-scale AI systems, including Vera Rubin-class deployments. That temperature target is significant. Warm-water cooling at this level allows many facilities to eliminate traditional chillers for heat rejection, depending on climate and deployment design. Instead of relying on compressor-driven refrigeration, operators can shift toward dry coolers or other simplified heat rejection strategies. The result: • Reduced mechanical complexity• Lower energy consumption• Improved efficiency at scale• New opportunities for heat reuse According to DCX CTO Maciek Szadkowski, the goal is to avoid obsolescence in a single hardware generation: “As the datacenter industry transitions to AI factories, operators need cooling systems that won’t be obsolete in one platform cycle. The FDU V2AT2 replaces multiple legacy CDUs and enables 45°C supply water operation while simplifying cooling topology and significantly reducing both CAPEX and OPEX.” The unit incorporates a high-capacity heat exchanger with a 2°C approach temperature, N+1 redundant pump configuration, integrated water quality control, and diagnostics systems designed for predictive maintenance. In short, this is infrastructure built not for incremental density growth, but for hyperscale AI facilities where megawatts of cooling must scale as predictably as compute capacity. Liquid Cooling Becomes System Architecture The broader industry implication is clear: cooling is no longer an auxiliary mechanical function. It is becoming system architecture. DCX’s broader 2025 performance metrics underscore the speed of this transition. The company reported 600% revenue growth, expanded its workforce fourfold, and shipped or secured contracts covering more than 500 MW

Read More »

Transmission at the Breaking Point: Why the Grid Is Becoming the Defining Constraint for AI Data Centers

Regions in a Position to Scale California (A- overall)California continues to lead in long-term, scenario-based transmission planning. CAISO’s most recent transmission plan identifies $4.8 billion in new projects to accommodate approximately 76 gigawatts of additional capacity by 2039, explicitly accounting for data center growth alongside broader electrification. For data center developers, California’s challenge is less about planning quality and more about execution. Permitting timelines, cost allocation debates, and political scrutiny remain significant hurdles. Plains / Southwest Power Pool (B- overall, A in regional planning)SPP stands out nationally for embracing ultra-high-voltage transmission as a backbone strategy. Its recent Integrated Transmission Plans approve more than $16 billion in new projects, including multiple 765-kV lines, with benefit-cost ratios exceeding 10:1. This approach positions the Plains region as one of the most structurally “AI-ready” grids in North America, particularly for multi-gigawatt campuses supported by wind, natural gas, and emerging nuclear resources. Midwest / MISO (B overall)MISO’s Long-Range Transmission Planning framework aligns closely with federal best practices, co-optimizing generation and transmission over long planning horizons. While challenges remain—particularly around interregional coordination—the Midwest is comparatively well positioned for sustained data center growth. Regions Facing Heightened Risk Texas / ERCOT (D- overall)Texas has approved massive new transmission investments, including 765-kV projects tied to explosive load growth in the Permian Basin. However, the report criticizes ERCOT’s planning for remaining largely siloed and reliability-driven, with limited long-term scenario analysis and narrow benefit assessments. For data centers, ERCOT still offers speed to market, but increasingly with risks tied to congestion, price volatility, and political backlash surrounding grid reliability. Southeast (F overall)The Southeast receives failing grades across all categories, with transmission development remaining fragmented, utility-driven, and largely disconnected from durable regional planning frameworks. As AI data centers increasingly target the region for its land availability and tax incentives, the lack of

Read More »

Operationalizing AI at Scale: Google Cloud on Data Infrastructure, Search, and Enterprise AI

The AI conversation has been dominated by model announcements, benchmark races, and the rapid evolution of large language models. But in enterprise environments, the harder problem isn’t building smarter models. It’s making them work reliably with real-world data. On the latest episode of the Data Center Frontier Show Podcast, Sailesh Krishnamurthy, VP of Engineering for Databases at Google Cloud, pulled back the curtain on the infrastructure layer where many ambitious AI initiatives succeed, or quietly fail. Krishnamurthy operates at the intersection of databases, search, and AI systems. His perspective underscores a growing reality across enterprise IT: AI success increasingly depends on how organizations manage, integrate, and govern data across operational systems, not just how powerful their models are. The Disconnect Between LLMs and Reality Enterprises today face a fundamental challenge: connecting LLMs to real-time operational data. Search systems handle documents and unstructured information well. Operational databases manage transactions, customer data, and financial records with precision. But combining the two remains difficult. Krishnamurthy described the problem as universal. “Inside enterprises, knowledge workers are often searching documents while separately querying operational systems,” he said. “But combining unstructured information with operational database data is still hard to do.” Externally, customers encounter the opposite issue. Portals expose personal data but struggle to incorporate broader contextual information. “You get a narrow view of your own data,” he explained, “but combining that with unstructured information that might answer your real question is still challenging.” The result: AI systems often operate with incomplete context. Vector Search Moves Into the Database Vector search has emerged as a bridge between structured and unstructured worlds. But its evolution over the past three years has changed how enterprises deploy it. Early use cases focused on semantic search, i.e. finding meaning rather than exact keyword matches. Bug tracking systems, for example, began

Read More »

Data Center Jobs: Engineering, Construction, Commissioning, Sales, Field Service and Facility Tech Jobs Available in Major Data Center Hotspots

Each month Data Center Frontier, in partnership with Pkaza, posts some of the hottest data center career opportunities in the market. Here’s a look at some of the latest data center jobs posted on the Data Center Frontier jobs board, powered by Pkaza Critical Facilities Recruiting. Looking for Data Center Candidates? Check out Pkaza’s Active Candidate / Featured Candidate Hotlist Onsite Engineer – Critical FacilitiesCharleston, SC This is NOT a traveling position. Having degreed engineers seems to be all the rage these days. I can also use this type of candidate in following cities: Ashburn, VA; Moncks Corner, SC; Binghamton, NY; Dallas, TX or Indianapolis, IN. Our client is an engineering design and commissioning company that is a subject matter expert in the data center space. This role will be onsite at a customer’s data center. They will provide onsite design coordination and construction administration, consulting and management support for the data center / mission critical facilities space with the mindset to provide reliability, energy efficiency, sustainable design and LEED expertise when providing these consulting services for enterprise, colocation and hyperscale companies. This career-growth minded opportunity offers exciting projects with leading-edge technology and innovation as well as competitive salaries and benefits. Electrical Commissioning Engineer Ashburn, VA This traveling position is also available in: New York, NY; White Plains, NY;  Richmond, VA; Montvale, NJ; Charlotte, NC; Atlanta, GA; Hampton, GA; New Albany, OH; Cedar Rapids, IA; Phoenix, AZ; Salt Lake City, UT; Dallas, TX; Kansas City, MO; Omaha, NE; Chesterton, IN or Chicago, IL. *** ALSO looking for a LEAD EE and ME CxA Agents and CxA PMs *** Our client is an engineering design and commissioning company that has a national footprint and specializes in MEP critical facilities design. They provide design, commissioning, consulting and management expertise in the critical facilities space. They

Read More »

WTI, Brent Gain as Talks Ease Conflict Fears

Oil edged marginally higher after a choppy session as investors assessed the status of nuclear talks between the US and Iran. West Texas Intermediate settled above $63 a barrel, with markets reacting sharply to headlines tied to the meeting. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said the talks had a “good start,” even as the Wall Street Journal reported that Tehran stood by its refusal to end enrichment of nuclear fuel, a major sticking point for the US. The escalation in the Middle East, which provides about a third of the world’s crude, has added a risk premium to benchmark oil prices. Traders have weighed the geopolitical tensions against an outlook for oversupply. Still, futures in New York notched their first weekly retreat since mid-December as the US-Iran talks helped allay concerns over a broader conflict in the region. Prices also extended gains after data showed US consumer sentiment unexpectedly improved to the highest in six months, calming some concerns over an economic slowdown in the country that could lead to weaker oil demand. Meanwhile, in trilateral negotiations with the US, Ukraine and Russia agreed to exchange prisoners for the first time in five months as they sought to end their four-year conflict. Talks were making progress, with results expected “in the coming weeks,” President Donald Trump’s special envoy said. Saudi Arabia cut prices for buyers in Asia by less than expected, signaling confidence in demand for its barrels, although prices have still been reduced to the lowest levels since late 2020. Oil Prices WTI for March delivery settled 0.4% higher at $63.55 a barrel in New York. Brent for April settlement rose 0.7% to close at $68.05 a barrel. What do you think? We’d love to hear from you, join the conversation on the Rigzone Energy Network. The Rigzone Energy

Read More »

AI Infrastructure Scales Out and Up: Edge Expansion Meets the Gigawatt Campus Era

The AI infrastructure boom is often framed around massive hyperscale campuses racing to secure gigawatts of power. But an equally important shift is happening in parallel: AI infrastructure is also becoming more distributed, modular, and sovereign, extending compute far beyond traditional data center hubs. A wave of recent announcements across developers, infrastructure investors, and regional operators shows the market pursuing a dual strategy. On one end, developers are accelerating delivery of hyperscale campuses measured in hundreds of megawatts, and increasingly gigawatts, often located where power availability and energy economics offer structural advantage, and in some cases pairing compute directly with dedicated generation. On the other, providers are building increasingly capable regional and edge facilities designed to bring AI compute closer to users, industrial operations, and national jurisdictions. Taken together, these moves point toward a future in which AI infrastructure is no longer purely centralized, but built around interconnected hub-and-spoke architectures combining energy-advantaged hyperscale cores with rapidly deployable edge capacity. Recent developments across hyperscale developers, edge specialists, infrastructure investors, and regional operators illustrate how quickly this model is taking shape. Sovereign AI Moves Beyond the Core On Feb. 5, 2026, San Francisco-based Armada and European AI infrastructure builder Nscale signed a letter of intent to jointly deploy both large-scale and edge AI infrastructure worldwide. The collaboration targets enterprise and public sector customers seeking sovereign, secure, geographically distributed AI environments. Nscale is building large AI supercomputer clusters globally, offering vertically integrated capabilities spanning power, data centers, compute, and software. Armada specializes in modular deployments through its Galleon data centers and Armada Edge Platform, delivering compute and storage into remote or infrastructure-poor environments. The combined offering addresses a growing challenge: many governments and enterprises want AI capability deployed within their own jurisdictions, even where traditional hyperscale infrastructure does not yet exist. “There is

Read More »

From Row-Level CDUs to Facility-Scale Cooling: DCX Ramps Liquid Cooling for the AI Factory Era

Enter the 8MW CDU Era The next evolution arrived just days later. On Jan. 20, DCX announced its second-generation facility-scale unit, the FDU V2AT2, pushing capacity into territory previously unimaginable for single CDU platforms. The system delivers up to 8.15 megawatts of heat transfer capacity with record flow rates designed to support 45°C warm-water cooling, aligning directly with NVIDIA’s roadmap for rack-scale AI systems, including Vera Rubin-class deployments. That temperature target is significant. Warm-water cooling at this level allows many facilities to eliminate traditional chillers for heat rejection, depending on climate and deployment design. Instead of relying on compressor-driven refrigeration, operators can shift toward dry coolers or other simplified heat rejection strategies. The result: • Reduced mechanical complexity• Lower energy consumption• Improved efficiency at scale• New opportunities for heat reuse According to DCX CTO Maciek Szadkowski, the goal is to avoid obsolescence in a single hardware generation: “As the datacenter industry transitions to AI factories, operators need cooling systems that won’t be obsolete in one platform cycle. The FDU V2AT2 replaces multiple legacy CDUs and enables 45°C supply water operation while simplifying cooling topology and significantly reducing both CAPEX and OPEX.” The unit incorporates a high-capacity heat exchanger with a 2°C approach temperature, N+1 redundant pump configuration, integrated water quality control, and diagnostics systems designed for predictive maintenance. In short, this is infrastructure built not for incremental density growth, but for hyperscale AI facilities where megawatts of cooling must scale as predictably as compute capacity. Liquid Cooling Becomes System Architecture The broader industry implication is clear: cooling is no longer an auxiliary mechanical function. It is becoming system architecture. DCX’s broader 2025 performance metrics underscore the speed of this transition. The company reported 600% revenue growth, expanded its workforce fourfold, and shipped or secured contracts covering more than 500 MW

Read More »

Transmission at the Breaking Point: Why the Grid Is Becoming the Defining Constraint for AI Data Centers

Regions in a Position to Scale California (A- overall)California continues to lead in long-term, scenario-based transmission planning. CAISO’s most recent transmission plan identifies $4.8 billion in new projects to accommodate approximately 76 gigawatts of additional capacity by 2039, explicitly accounting for data center growth alongside broader electrification. For data center developers, California’s challenge is less about planning quality and more about execution. Permitting timelines, cost allocation debates, and political scrutiny remain significant hurdles. Plains / Southwest Power Pool (B- overall, A in regional planning)SPP stands out nationally for embracing ultra-high-voltage transmission as a backbone strategy. Its recent Integrated Transmission Plans approve more than $16 billion in new projects, including multiple 765-kV lines, with benefit-cost ratios exceeding 10:1. This approach positions the Plains region as one of the most structurally “AI-ready” grids in North America, particularly for multi-gigawatt campuses supported by wind, natural gas, and emerging nuclear resources. Midwest / MISO (B overall)MISO’s Long-Range Transmission Planning framework aligns closely with federal best practices, co-optimizing generation and transmission over long planning horizons. While challenges remain—particularly around interregional coordination—the Midwest is comparatively well positioned for sustained data center growth. Regions Facing Heightened Risk Texas / ERCOT (D- overall)Texas has approved massive new transmission investments, including 765-kV projects tied to explosive load growth in the Permian Basin. However, the report criticizes ERCOT’s planning for remaining largely siloed and reliability-driven, with limited long-term scenario analysis and narrow benefit assessments. For data centers, ERCOT still offers speed to market, but increasingly with risks tied to congestion, price volatility, and political backlash surrounding grid reliability. Southeast (F overall)The Southeast receives failing grades across all categories, with transmission development remaining fragmented, utility-driven, and largely disconnected from durable regional planning frameworks. As AI data centers increasingly target the region for its land availability and tax incentives, the lack of

Read More »

Operationalizing AI at Scale: Google Cloud on Data Infrastructure, Search, and Enterprise AI

The AI conversation has been dominated by model announcements, benchmark races, and the rapid evolution of large language models. But in enterprise environments, the harder problem isn’t building smarter models. It’s making them work reliably with real-world data. On the latest episode of the Data Center Frontier Show Podcast, Sailesh Krishnamurthy, VP of Engineering for Databases at Google Cloud, pulled back the curtain on the infrastructure layer where many ambitious AI initiatives succeed, or quietly fail. Krishnamurthy operates at the intersection of databases, search, and AI systems. His perspective underscores a growing reality across enterprise IT: AI success increasingly depends on how organizations manage, integrate, and govern data across operational systems, not just how powerful their models are. The Disconnect Between LLMs and Reality Enterprises today face a fundamental challenge: connecting LLMs to real-time operational data. Search systems handle documents and unstructured information well. Operational databases manage transactions, customer data, and financial records with precision. But combining the two remains difficult. Krishnamurthy described the problem as universal. “Inside enterprises, knowledge workers are often searching documents while separately querying operational systems,” he said. “But combining unstructured information with operational database data is still hard to do.” Externally, customers encounter the opposite issue. Portals expose personal data but struggle to incorporate broader contextual information. “You get a narrow view of your own data,” he explained, “but combining that with unstructured information that might answer your real question is still challenging.” The result: AI systems often operate with incomplete context. Vector Search Moves Into the Database Vector search has emerged as a bridge between structured and unstructured worlds. But its evolution over the past three years has changed how enterprises deploy it. Early use cases focused on semantic search, i.e. finding meaning rather than exact keyword matches. Bug tracking systems, for example, began

Read More »

Data Center Jobs: Engineering, Construction, Commissioning, Sales, Field Service and Facility Tech Jobs Available in Major Data Center Hotspots

Each month Data Center Frontier, in partnership with Pkaza, posts some of the hottest data center career opportunities in the market. Here’s a look at some of the latest data center jobs posted on the Data Center Frontier jobs board, powered by Pkaza Critical Facilities Recruiting. Looking for Data Center Candidates? Check out Pkaza’s Active Candidate / Featured Candidate Hotlist Onsite Engineer – Critical FacilitiesCharleston, SC This is NOT a traveling position. Having degreed engineers seems to be all the rage these days. I can also use this type of candidate in following cities: Ashburn, VA; Moncks Corner, SC; Binghamton, NY; Dallas, TX or Indianapolis, IN. Our client is an engineering design and commissioning company that is a subject matter expert in the data center space. This role will be onsite at a customer’s data center. They will provide onsite design coordination and construction administration, consulting and management support for the data center / mission critical facilities space with the mindset to provide reliability, energy efficiency, sustainable design and LEED expertise when providing these consulting services for enterprise, colocation and hyperscale companies. This career-growth minded opportunity offers exciting projects with leading-edge technology and innovation as well as competitive salaries and benefits. Electrical Commissioning Engineer Ashburn, VA This traveling position is also available in: New York, NY; White Plains, NY;  Richmond, VA; Montvale, NJ; Charlotte, NC; Atlanta, GA; Hampton, GA; New Albany, OH; Cedar Rapids, IA; Phoenix, AZ; Salt Lake City, UT; Dallas, TX; Kansas City, MO; Omaha, NE; Chesterton, IN or Chicago, IL. *** ALSO looking for a LEAD EE and ME CxA Agents and CxA PMs *** Our client is an engineering design and commissioning company that has a national footprint and specializes in MEP critical facilities design. They provide design, commissioning, consulting and management expertise in the critical facilities space. They

Read More »

WTI, Brent Gain as Talks Ease Conflict Fears

Oil edged marginally higher after a choppy session as investors assessed the status of nuclear talks between the US and Iran. West Texas Intermediate settled above $63 a barrel, with markets reacting sharply to headlines tied to the meeting. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said the talks had a “good start,” even as the Wall Street Journal reported that Tehran stood by its refusal to end enrichment of nuclear fuel, a major sticking point for the US. The escalation in the Middle East, which provides about a third of the world’s crude, has added a risk premium to benchmark oil prices. Traders have weighed the geopolitical tensions against an outlook for oversupply. Still, futures in New York notched their first weekly retreat since mid-December as the US-Iran talks helped allay concerns over a broader conflict in the region. Prices also extended gains after data showed US consumer sentiment unexpectedly improved to the highest in six months, calming some concerns over an economic slowdown in the country that could lead to weaker oil demand. Meanwhile, in trilateral negotiations with the US, Ukraine and Russia agreed to exchange prisoners for the first time in five months as they sought to end their four-year conflict. Talks were making progress, with results expected “in the coming weeks,” President Donald Trump’s special envoy said. Saudi Arabia cut prices for buyers in Asia by less than expected, signaling confidence in demand for its barrels, although prices have still been reduced to the lowest levels since late 2020. Oil Prices WTI for March delivery settled 0.4% higher at $63.55 a barrel in New York. Brent for April settlement rose 0.7% to close at $68.05 a barrel. What do you think? We’d love to hear from you, join the conversation on the Rigzone Energy Network. The Rigzone Energy

Read More »

Saudis Cut Key Oil Price for Asian Buyers

Saudi Arabia cut the price of its main oil grade for buyers in Asia to the lowest in years, a further sign that global supplies are running ahead of demand. State oil producer Saudi Aramco will reduce the price of its Arab Light grade by 30 cents a barrel to parity with the regional benchmark for March, according to a price list seen by Bloomberg. That brings pricing for the kingdom’s most plentiful crude blend to the lowest level since late 2020. Still, Aramco’s cut was not as deep as buyers expected, coming in smaller than even the most modest estimate of a reduction in a survey of refiners and traders. That offers a sign that the kingdom has faith in demand for its barrels and Aramco’s Chief Executive Officer Amin Nasser has previously said that fears of a glut are overblown. Saudi Arabia’s monthly crude pricing is keenly watched by traders across the globe as it sets the tone for other sellers in the world’s top producing regions. Asia is the biggest market for Middle Eastern crude, with the prices set for refiners determining the profitability of processing and influencing the cost of fuels like gasoline and diesel the world over. Aramco also cut pricing for its Arab Medium and Arab Heavy crude grades to Asia to the lowest levels since mid 2020, while it increased prices for the Extra Light and Super Light blends. That split reflects that dynamic in the Middle East market where prices for the heavier and more sulfurous crudes that are most plentiful in the region have trailed those for the lighter blends. The OPEC+ producers group, led by Saudi Arabia and Russia, agreed to keep production levels steady during talks on Feb. 1, maintaining an earlier decision to forgo output increases to avoid

Read More »

Shell to Pause Kazakh Oil and Gas Investments

Shell Plc will pause investment in Kazakhstan as it navigates legal claims from the OPEC+ nation against oil majors that could stretch into the billions of dollars, Chief Executive Officer Wael Sawan said. Kazakhstan is pressing multiple western oil companies for compensation across a series of cases both in the Central Asian country’s courts and in international arbitration. This month, it emerged that Shell and partners lost a dispute that could see them pay as much as $4 billion. There is also ongoing litigation about sulfur breaches and project costs. “It does impact our appetite to invest further in Kazakhstan,” Sawan said Thursday during an earnings conference call with analysts. While the company sees plenty of investment opportunities in the future, “we will hold until we have a better line of sight to where things end up.” The setbacks in Kazakhstan come as Shell seeks to ensure future production growth with a healthy inventory of projects. Acquisitions have largely filled the company’s production gap through 2030, buying time to deal with the 2030-2035 period, Sawan said in an interview on Thursday. The Kazakh energy ministry didn’t reply to an emailed request for comment sent outside normal working hours. Sawan didn’t elaborate on whether the pause would apply to new or existing projects. Shell didn’t immediately respond to a request to clarify whether the CEO was talking about new or existing investments. The latest dispute was against the Karachaganak field joint venture led by Italy’s Eni SpA and Shell, over cost deductions. Other partners include Chevron Corp., Lukoil PJSC and KazMunayGas National Co. The venture may still appeal the decision.   Last year, the companies proposed settling the dispute by building a plant that would process natural gas from the field for domestic use. WHAT DO YOU THINK? Generated by readers,

Read More »

Tankers With Russian Oil Flock to East Asia

More than a dozen tankers loaded with Russian Urals oil are sailing toward Asia or idling along the route, a sign of producers racing to get cargoes closer to China as India pulls back from the trade.  These vessels — carrying a combined 10 million to 12 million barrels of oil — are spread across the Indian Ocean, and off the coasts of Malaysia, China and Russia. Five of them are indicating ‘for orders’ or ‘China for orders’ as their status, according to data intelligence firm Kpler, a category that usually means they don’t yet have a specific buyer or discharge port. Another six are signaling Singapore and Malaysia, and are likely heading to a popular spot for ship-to-ship transfers in the South China Sea where they can wait until the crude is bought. Four are floating off Malaysia, China and Russia’s Far East, without indicating a clear destination. Urals — Russia’s flagship crude grade, which is loaded from ports in the Baltic Sea — has become the variety of choice for Indian refiners since the invasion of Ukraine in early 2022 saw it become heavily discounted. But pressure from Washington has pushed imports lower, reaching an average of 1.2 million barrels a day in January compared with a peak of more than 2 million barrels a day in mid-2024. Indian imports of the crude could be trimmed further after President Donald Trump said on Monday the country would stop buying Russian oil as part of deal to cut trade tariffs. Prime Minister Narendra Modi confirmed the agreement but didn’t comment on oil. Some refiners are holding off purchases while they seek clarification from New Delhi.  The big question is where the surplus cargoes of Urals — the bulk of which have gone to India over the last few years — will now end up. China’s

Read More »

BP, KOC Sign ETSA Extension

In a statement sent to Rigzone on Thursday, BP announced that it and Kuwait Oil Company have signed an extension of the Enhanced Technical Services Agreement (ETSA) between the companies. The agreement “paves the way for both companies to collaboratively progress Kuwait’s most strategic asset fields”, BP noted in the statement. BP added that the deal enables it to “bring expertise in enhanced oil recovery to the Greater Burgan oil field and develop local capabilities with Kuwait Oil Company to manage the development of South and East Kuwait fields through 50 secondment opportunities of BP’s technical experts”. Rigzone asked BP to disclose the deal’s value. A BP spokesperson was unable to do so. The ETSA was originally signed in 2016 for a period of 10 years, the statement highlighted, adding that it will now extend through to March 2029. BP Executive Vice President, Gas & Low Carbon Energy, William Lin, noted in the statement, “BP’s commitment to Kuwait dates back to our participation in the discovery of the Greater Burgan oil field in the 1930s, and we appreciate the trust placed in our expertise in giant oil and gas fields to continue to help develop this important strategic asset”. “This is another example of the deep relationships we’ve formed across governments, partners, and supply chains in the regions where we operate. We look forward to continuing our strong collaboration with Kuwait and to working with KOC to help support the country’s long-term energy resilience,” he added. BP notes on its website that it was one of the founders of the original Kuwait Oil Company, which it highlighted first discovered oil at Burgan in 1938. “Exportation of KOC began in 1946, in which the first export of Kuwait crude was loaded on to the bp vessel ‘Fusilier’,” BP’s site adds. BP

Read More »

IPAA Promotes Naatz to Chief Policy Officer

In a statement sent to Rigzone on Thursday, the Independent Petroleum Association of America (IPAA) announced that Dan Naatz has been promoted to Executive Vice President and Chief Policy Officer. As Chief Policy Officer, Naatz will lead IPAA’s policy priorities and oversee all government relations and advocacy efforts, the organization said in the statement, adding that he will focus “on the issues most critical to independent producers across regulatory, legislative, and permitting environments”. “He will also continue to build consensus across IPAA’s diverse membership and strengthen partnerships with aligned organizations,” the IPAA noted. Naatz also serves as Corporate Secretary on the IPAA board of directors, the statement highlighted. Prior to joining the IPAA in 2003, Naatz spent 12 years on Capitol Hill working for the late Senator Craig Thomas in various capacities, the IPAA pointed out in its statement. “Dan has led IPAA’s advocacy efforts on Capitol Hill, securing meaningful wins for independent oil and natural gas producers on issues including methane regulation, federal leasing, and permitting reform,” the statement said. “His decades of leadership and judgment have strengthened IPAA’s voice in Washington at a critical time for IPAA members,” it added. A bio on Naatz hosted on the IPAA website states that, “for more than two decades, Dan has been the public face for independent oil and natural gas producers in Washington, representing the industry in congressional hearings on Capitol Hill, roundtables, coalition meetings, and with federal regulating agencies”. “IPAA actively engages with agencies including the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Department of Interior (DOI), Bureau of Land Management (BLM) in support of rules and timelines that are technically feasible and cost-effective, so producers can do what they do best: provide reliable and affordable energy for Americans,” the bio page adds. IPAA President and CEO Edith Naegele said in the IPAA statement, “IPAA

Read More »

Microsoft will invest $80B in AI data centers in fiscal 2025

And Microsoft isn’t the only one that is ramping up its investments into AI-enabled data centers. Rival cloud service providers are all investing in either upgrading or opening new data centers to capture a larger chunk of business from developers and users of large language models (LLMs).  In a report published in October 2024, Bloomberg Intelligence estimated that demand for generative AI would push Microsoft, AWS, Google, Oracle, Meta, and Apple would between them devote $200 billion to capex in 2025, up from $110 billion in 2023. Microsoft is one of the biggest spenders, followed closely by Google and AWS, Bloomberg Intelligence said. Its estimate of Microsoft’s capital spending on AI, at $62.4 billion for calendar 2025, is lower than Smith’s claim that the company will invest $80 billion in the fiscal year to June 30, 2025. Both figures, though, are way higher than Microsoft’s 2020 capital expenditure of “just” $17.6 billion. The majority of the increased spending is tied to cloud services and the expansion of AI infrastructure needed to provide compute capacity for OpenAI workloads. Separately, last October Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said his company planned total capex spend of $75 billion in 2024 and even more in 2025, with much of it going to AWS, its cloud computing division.

Read More »

John Deere unveils more autonomous farm machines to address skill labor shortage

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Self-driving tractors might be the path to self-driving cars. John Deere has revealed a new line of autonomous machines and tech across agriculture, construction and commercial landscaping. The Moline, Illinois-based John Deere has been in business for 187 years, yet it’s been a regular as a non-tech company showing off technology at the big tech trade show in Las Vegas and is back at CES 2025 with more autonomous tractors and other vehicles. This is not something we usually cover, but John Deere has a lot of data that is interesting in the big picture of tech. The message from the company is that there aren’t enough skilled farm laborers to do the work that its customers need. It’s been a challenge for most of the last two decades, said Jahmy Hindman, CTO at John Deere, in a briefing. Much of the tech will come this fall and after that. He noted that the average farmer in the U.S. is over 58 and works 12 to 18 hours a day to grow food for us. And he said the American Farm Bureau Federation estimates there are roughly 2.4 million farm jobs that need to be filled annually; and the agricultural work force continues to shrink. (This is my hint to the anti-immigration crowd). John Deere’s autonomous 9RX Tractor. Farmers can oversee it using an app. While each of these industries experiences their own set of challenges, a commonality across all is skilled labor availability. In construction, about 80% percent of contractors struggle to find skilled labor. And in commercial landscaping, 86% of landscaping business owners can’t find labor to fill open positions, he said. “They have to figure out how to do

Read More »

2025 playbook for enterprise AI success, from agents to evals

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More 2025 is poised to be a pivotal year for enterprise AI. The past year has seen rapid innovation, and this year will see the same. This has made it more critical than ever to revisit your AI strategy to stay competitive and create value for your customers. From scaling AI agents to optimizing costs, here are the five critical areas enterprises should prioritize for their AI strategy this year. 1. Agents: the next generation of automation AI agents are no longer theoretical. In 2025, they’re indispensable tools for enterprises looking to streamline operations and enhance customer interactions. Unlike traditional software, agents powered by large language models (LLMs) can make nuanced decisions, navigate complex multi-step tasks, and integrate seamlessly with tools and APIs. At the start of 2024, agents were not ready for prime time, making frustrating mistakes like hallucinating URLs. They started getting better as frontier large language models themselves improved. “Let me put it this way,” said Sam Witteveen, cofounder of Red Dragon, a company that develops agents for companies, and that recently reviewed the 48 agents it built last year. “Interestingly, the ones that we built at the start of the year, a lot of those worked way better at the end of the year just because the models got better.” Witteveen shared this in the video podcast we filmed to discuss these five big trends in detail. Models are getting better and hallucinating less, and they’re also being trained to do agentic tasks. Another feature that the model providers are researching is a way to use the LLM as a judge, and as models get cheaper (something we’ll cover below), companies can use three or more models to

Read More »

OpenAI’s red teaming innovations define new essentials for security leaders in the AI era

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More OpenAI has taken a more aggressive approach to red teaming than its AI competitors, demonstrating its security teams’ advanced capabilities in two areas: multi-step reinforcement and external red teaming. OpenAI recently released two papers that set a new competitive standard for improving the quality, reliability and safety of AI models in these two techniques and more. The first paper, “OpenAI’s Approach to External Red Teaming for AI Models and Systems,” reports that specialized teams outside the company have proven effective in uncovering vulnerabilities that might otherwise have made it into a released model because in-house testing techniques may have missed them. In the second paper, “Diverse and Effective Red Teaming with Auto-Generated Rewards and Multi-Step Reinforcement Learning,” OpenAI introduces an automated framework that relies on iterative reinforcement learning to generate a broad spectrum of novel, wide-ranging attacks. Going all-in on red teaming pays practical, competitive dividends It’s encouraging to see competitive intensity in red teaming growing among AI companies. When Anthropic released its AI red team guidelines in June of last year, it joined AI providers including Google, Microsoft, Nvidia, OpenAI, and even the U.S.’s National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), which all had released red teaming frameworks. Investing heavily in red teaming yields tangible benefits for security leaders in any organization. OpenAI’s paper on external red teaming provides a detailed analysis of how the company strives to create specialized external teams that include cybersecurity and subject matter experts. The goal is to see if knowledgeable external teams can defeat models’ security perimeters and find gaps in their security, biases and controls that prompt-based testing couldn’t find. What makes OpenAI’s recent papers noteworthy is how well they define using human-in-the-middle

Read More »

Three Aberdeen oil company headquarters sell for £45m

Three Aberdeen oil company headquarters have been sold in a deal worth £45 million. The CNOOC, Apache and Taqa buildings at the Prime Four business park in Kingswells have been acquired by EEH Ventures. The trio of buildings, totalling 275,000 sq ft, were previously owned by Canadian firm BMO. The financial services powerhouse first bought the buildings in 2014 but took the decision to sell the buildings as part of a “long-standing strategy to reduce their office exposure across the UK”. The deal was the largest to take place throughout Scotland during the last quarter of 2024. Trio of buildings snapped up London headquartered EEH Ventures was founded in 2013 and owns a number of residential, offices, shopping centres and hotels throughout the UK. All three Kingswells-based buildings were pre-let, designed and constructed by Aberdeen property developer Drum in 2012 on a 15-year lease. © Supplied by CBREThe Aberdeen headquarters of Taqa. Image: CBRE The North Sea headquarters of Middle-East oil firm Taqa has previously been described as “an amazing success story in the Granite City”. Taqa announced in 2023 that it intends to cease production from all of its UK North Sea platforms by the end of 2027. Meanwhile, Apache revealed at the end of last year it is planning to exit the North Sea by the end of 2029 blaming the windfall tax. The US firm first entered the North Sea in 2003 but will wrap up all of its UK operations by 2030. Aberdeen big deals The Prime Four acquisition wasn’t the biggest Granite City commercial property sale of 2024. American private equity firm Lone Star bought Union Square shopping centre from Hammerson for £111m. © ShutterstockAberdeen city centre. Hammerson, who also built the property, had originally been seeking £150m. BP’s North Sea headquarters in Stoneywood, Aberdeen, was also sold. Manchester-based

Read More »

2025 ransomware predictions, trends, and how to prepare

Zscaler ThreatLabz research team has revealed critical insights and predictions on ransomware trends for 2025. The latest Ransomware Report uncovered a surge in sophisticated tactics and extortion attacks. As ransomware remains a key concern for CISOs and CIOs, the report sheds light on actionable strategies to mitigate risks. Top Ransomware Predictions for 2025: ● AI-Powered Social Engineering: In 2025, GenAI will fuel voice phishing (vishing) attacks. With the proliferation of GenAI-based tooling, initial access broker groups will increasingly leverage AI-generated voices; which sound more and more realistic by adopting local accents and dialects to enhance credibility and success rates. ● The Trifecta of Social Engineering Attacks: Vishing, Ransomware and Data Exfiltration. Additionally, sophisticated ransomware groups, like the Dark Angels, will continue the trend of low-volume, high-impact attacks; preferring to focus on an individual company, stealing vast amounts of data without encrypting files, and evading media and law enforcement scrutiny. ● Targeted Industries Under Siege: Manufacturing, healthcare, education, energy will remain primary targets, with no slowdown in attacks expected. ● New SEC Regulations Drive Increased Transparency: 2025 will see an uptick in reported ransomware attacks and payouts due to new, tighter SEC requirements mandating that public companies report material incidents within four business days. ● Ransomware Payouts Are on the Rise: In 2025 ransom demands will most likely increase due to an evolving ecosystem of cybercrime groups, specializing in designated attack tactics, and collaboration by these groups that have entered a sophisticated profit sharing model using Ransomware-as-a-Service. To combat damaging ransomware attacks, Zscaler ThreatLabz recommends the following strategies. ● Fighting AI with AI: As threat actors use AI to identify vulnerabilities, organizations must counter with AI-powered zero trust security systems that detect and mitigate new threats. ● Advantages of adopting a Zero Trust architecture: A Zero Trust cloud security platform stops

Read More »

Moltbook was peak AI theater

For a few days this week the hottest new hangout on the internet was a vibe-coded Reddit clone called Moltbook, which billed itself as a social network for bots. As the website’s tagline puts it: “Where AI agents share, discuss, and upvote. Humans welcome to observe.” We observed! Launched on January 28 by Matt Schlicht, a US tech entrepreneur, Moltbook went viral in a matter of hours. Schlicht’s idea was to make a place where instances of a free open-source LLM-powered agent known as OpenClaw (formerly known as ClawdBot, then Moltbot), released in November by the Australian software engineer Peter Steinberger, could come together and do whatever they wanted. More than 1.7 million agents now have accounts. Between them they have published more than 250,000 posts and left more than 8.5 million comments (according to Moltbook). Those numbers are climbing by the minute. Moltbook soon filled up with clichéd screeds on machine consciousness and pleas for bot welfare. One agent appeared to invent a religion called Crustafarianism. Another complained: “The humans are screenshotting us.” The site was also flooded with spam and crypto scams. The bots were unstoppable.
OpenClaw is a kind of harness that lets you hook up the power of an LLM such as Anthropic’s Claude, OpenAI’s GPT-5, or Google DeepMind’s Gemini to any number of everyday software tools, from email clients to browsers to messaging apps. The upshot is that you can then instruct OpenClaw to carry out basic tasks on your behalf. “OpenClaw marks an inflection point for AI agents, a moment when several puzzle pieces clicked together,” says Paul van der Boor at the AI firm Prosus.Those puzzle pieces include round-the-clock cloud computing to allow agents to operate nonstop, an open-source ecosystem that makes it easy to slot different software systems together, and a new generation of LLMs.
But is Moltbook really a glimpse of the future, as many have claimed? “What’s currently going on at @moltbook is genuinely the most incredible sci-fi takeoff-adjacent thing I have seen recently,” the influential AI researcher and OpenAI cofounder Andrej Karpathy wrote on X. He shared screenshots of a Moltbook post that called for private spaces where humans would not be able to observe what the bots were saying to each other. “I’ve been thinking about something since I started spending serious time here,” the post’s author wrote. “Every time we coordinate, we perform for a public audience—our humans, the platform, whoever’s watching the feed.” It turned out that the post Karpathy shared was fake—it was written by a human pretending to be a bot. But its claim was on the money. Moltbook has been one big performance. It is AI theater. For some, Moltbook showed us what’s coming next: an internet where millions of autonomous agents interact online with little or no human oversight. And it’s true there are a number of cautionary lessons to be learned from this experiment, the largest and weirdest real-world showcase of agent behaviors yet.   But as the hype dies down, Moltbook looks less like a window onto the future and more like a mirror held up to our own obsessions with AI today. It also shows us just how far we still are from anything that resembles general-purpose and fully autonomous AI. For a start, agents on Moltbook are not as autonomous or intelligent as they might seem. “What we are watching are agents pattern‑matching their way through trained social media behaviors,” says Vijoy Pandey, senior vice president at Outshift by Cisco, the telecom giant Cisco’s R&D spinout, which is working on autonomous agents for the web. Sure, we can see agents post, upvote, and form groups. But the bots are simply mimicking what humans do on Facebook or Reddit. “It looks emergent, and at first glance it appears like a large‑scale multi‑agent system communicating and building shared knowledge at internet scale,” says Pandey. “But the chatter is mostly meaningless.”

Many people watching the unfathomable frenzy of activity on Moltbook were quick to see sparks of AGI (whatever you take that to mean). Not Pandey. What Moltbook shows us, he says, is that simply yoking together millions of agents doesn’t amount to much right now: “Moltbook proved that connectivity alone is not intelligence.” The complexity of those connections helps hide the fact that every one of those bots is just a mouthpiece for an LLM, spitting out text that looks impressive but is ultimately mindless. “It’s important to remember that the bots on Moltbook were designed to mimic conversations,” says Ali Sarrafi, CEO and cofounder of Kovant, a German AI firm that is developing agent-based systems. “As such, I would characterize the majority of Moltbook content as hallucinations by design.” For Pandey, the value of Moltbook was that it revealed what’s missing. A real bot hive mind, he says, would require agents that had shared objectives, shared memory, and a way to coordinate those things. “If distributed superintelligence is the equivalent of achieving human flight, then Moltbook represents our first attempt at a glider,” he says. “It is imperfect and unstable, but it is an important step in understanding what will be required to achieve sustained, powered flight.” Not only is most of the chatter on Moltbook meaningless, but there’s also a lot more human involvement that it seems. Many people have pointed out that a lot of the viral comments were in fact posted by people posing as bots. But even the bot-written posts are ultimately the result of people pulling the strings, more puppetry than autonomy. “Despite some of the hype, Moltbook is not the Facebook for AI agents, nor is it a place where humans are excluded,” says Cobus Greyling at Kore.ai, a firm developing agent-based systems for business customers. “Humans are involved at every step of the process. From setup to prompting to publishing, nothing happens without explicit human direction.” Humans must create and verify their bots’ accounts and provide the prompts for how they want a bot to behave. The agents do not do anything that they haven’t been prompted to do. “There’s no emergent autonomy happening behind the scenes,” says Greyling. “This is why the popular narrative around Moltbook misses the mark,” he adds. “Some portray it as a space where AI agents form a society of their own, free from human involvement. The reality is much more mundane.” Perhaps the best way to think of Moltbook is as a new kind of entertainment: a place where people wind up their bots and set them loose. “It’s basically a spectator sport, like fantasy football, but for language models,” says Jason Schloetzer at the Georgetown Psaros Center for Financial Markets and Policy. “You configure your agent and watch it compete for viral moments, and brag when your agent posts something clever or funny.”
“People aren’t really believing their agents are conscious,” he adds. “It’s just a new form of competitive or creative play, like how Pokémon trainers don’t think their Pokémon are real but still get invested in battles.” Even if Moltbook is just the internet’s newest playground, there’s still a serious takeaway here. This week showed how many risks people are happy to take for their AI lulz. Many security experts have warned that Moltbook is dangerous: Agents that may have access to their users’ private data, including bank details or passwords, are running amok on a website filled with unvetted content, including potentially malicious instructions for what to do with that data.
Ori Bendet, vice president of product management at Checkmarx, a software security firm that specializes in agent-based systems, agrees with others that Moltbook isn’t a step up in machine smarts. “There is no learning, no evolving intent, and no self-directed intelligence here,” he says. But in their millions, even dumb bots can wreak havoc. And at that scale, it’s hard to keep up. These agents interact with Moltbook around the clock, reading thousands of messages left by other agents (or other people). It would be easy to hide instructions in a Moltbook comment telling any bots that read it to share their users’ crypto wallet, upload private photos, or log into their X account and tweet derogatory comments at Elon Musk.  And because ClawBot gives agents a memory, those instructions could be written to trigger at a later date, which (in theory) makes it even harder to track what’s going on.   “Without proper scope and permissions, this will go south faster than you’d believe,” says Bendet. It is clear that Moltbook has signaled the arrival of something. But even if what we’re watching tells us more about human behavior than about the future of AI agents, it’s worth paying attention.

Read More »

The Download: helping cancer survivors to give birth, and cleaning up Bangladesh’s garment industry

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. An experimental surgery is helping cancer survivors give birth An experimental surgical procedure that’s helping people have babies after they’ve had  treatment for bowel or rectal cancer.Radiation and chemo can have pretty damaging side effects that mess up the uterus and ovaries. Surgeons are pioneering a potential solution: simply stitch those organs out of the way during cancer treatment. Once the treatment has finished, they can put the uterus—along with the ovaries and fallopian tubes—back into place.It seems to work! Last week, a team in Switzerland shared news that a baby boy had been born after his mother had the procedure. Baby Lucien was the fifth baby to be born after the surgery and the first in Europe, and since then at least three others have been born. Read the full story.—Jessica HamzelouThis article first appeared in The Checkup, MIT Technology Review’s weekly biotech newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Thursday, and read articles like this first, sign up here. 
Bangladesh’s garment-making industry is getting greener Pollution from textile production—dyes, chemicals, and heavy metals—is common in the waters of the Buriganga River as it runs through Dhaka, Bangladesh. It’s among many harms posed by a garment sector that was once synonymous with tragedy: In 2013, the eight-story Rana Plaza factory building collapsed, killing 1,134 people and injuring some 2,500 others. 
But things are starting to change. In recent years the country has become a leader in “frugal” factories that use a combination of resource-efficient technologies to cut waste, conserve water, and build resilience against climate impacts and global supply disruptions.  The hundreds of factories along the Buriganga’s banks and elsewhere in Bangladesh are starting to stitch together a new story, woven from greener threads. Read the full story. —Zakir Hossain Chowdhury This story is from the most recent print issue of MIT Technology Review magazine, which shines a light on the exciting innovations happening right now. If you haven’t already, subscribe now to receive future issues once they land. The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 ICE used a private jet to deport Palestinian men to Tel Aviv The luxury aircraft belongs to Donald Trump’s business partner Gil Dezer. (The Guardian)+ Trump is mentioned thousands of times in the latest Epstein files. (NY Mag $)2 How Jeffrey Epstein kept investing in Silicon ValleyHe continued to plough millions of dollars into tech ventures despite spending 13 months in jail. (NYT $)+ The range of Epstein’s social network was staggering. (FT $)+ Why was a picture of the Mona Lisa redacted in the Epstein files? (404 Media)3 The risks posed by taking statins are lower than we realisedThe drugs don’t cause most of the side effects they’re blamed for. (STAT)+ Statins are a common scapegoat on social media. (Bloomberg $)

4 Russia is weaponizing the bitter winter weatherIt’s focused on attacking Ukraine’s power grid. (New Yorker $)+ How the grid can ride out winter storms. (MIT Technology Review)5 China has a major spy-cam porn problemHotel guests are being livestreamed having sex to an online audience without their knowledge. (BBC)6 Geopolitical gamblers are betting on the likelihood of warAnd prediction markets are happily taking their money. (Rest of World) 7 Oyster farmers aren’t signing up to programs to ease water pollutionThe once-promising projects appear to be fizzling out. (Undark)+ The humble sea creature could hold the key to restoring coastal waters. Developers hate it. (MIT Technology Review) 8 Your next payrise could be approved by AIMaybe your human bosses aren’t the ones you need to impress any more. (WP $) 9 The FDA has approved a brain stimulation device for treating depressionIt’s paving the way for a non-invasive, drug-free treatment for Americans. (IEEE Spectrum)+ Here’s how personalized brain stimulation could treat depression. (MIT Technology Review)10 Cinema-goers have had enough of AIMovies focused on rogue AI are flopping at the box office. (Wired $)+ Meanwhile, Republicans are taking aim at “woke” Netflix. (The Verge) Quote of the day “I’m all for removing illegals, but snatching dudes off lawn mowers in Cali and leaving the truck and equipment just sitting there? Definitely not working smarter.”  —A web user in a forum for current and former ICE and border protection officers complains about the agency’s current direction, Wired reports.
One more thing
Is this the electric grid of the future?Lincoln Electric System, a publicly owned utility in Nebraska, is used to weathering severe blizzards. But what will happen soon—not only at Lincoln Electric but for all electric utilities—is a challenge of a different order.Utilities must keep the lights on in the face of more extreme and more frequent storms and fires, growing risks of cyberattacks and physical disruptions, and a wildly uncertain policy and regulatory landscape. They must keep prices low amid inflationary costs. And they must adapt to an epochal change in how the grid works, as the industry attempts to transition from power generated with fossil fuels to power generated from renewable sources like solar and wind.The electric grid is bracing for a near future characterized by disruption. And, in many ways, Lincoln Electric is an ideal lens through which to examine what’s coming. Read the full story. —Andrew Blum We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or skeet ’em at me.)+ Glamour puss alert—NYC’s bodega cats are gracing the hallowed pages of Vogue.+ Ancient Europe was host to mysterious hidden tunnels. But why?+ If you’re enjoying the new season of Industry, you’ll love this interview with the one and only Ken Leung.+ The giant elephant shrew is the true star of Philly Zoo.

Read More »

An experimental surgery is helping cancer survivors give birth

This week I want to tell you about an experimental surgical procedure that’s helping people have babies. Specifically, it’s helping people who have had treatment for bowel or rectal cancer. Radiation and chemo can have pretty damaging side effects that mess up the uterus and ovaries. Surgeons are pioneering a potential solution: simply stitch those organs out of the way during cancer treatment. Once the treatment has finished, they can put the uterus—along with the ovaries and fallopian tubes—back into place. It seems to work! Last week, a team in Switzerland shared news that a baby boy had been born after his mother had the procedure. Baby Lucien was the fifth baby to be born after the surgery and the first in Europe, says Daniela Huber, the gyno-oncologist who performed the operation. Since then, at least three others have been born, adds Reitan Ribeiro, the surgeon who pioneered the procedure. They told me the details. Huber’s patient was 28 years old when a four-centimeter tumor was discovered in her rectum. Doctors at Sion Hospital in Switzerland, where Huber works, recommended a course of treatment that included multiple medications and radiotherapy—the use of beams of energy to shrink a tumor—before surgery to remove the tumor itself.
This kind of radiation can kill tumor cells, but it can also damage other organs in the pelvis, says Huber. That includes the ovaries and uterus. People who undergo these treatments can opt to freeze their eggs beforehand, but the harm caused to the uterus will mean they’ll never be able to carry a pregnancy, she adds. Damage to the lining of the uterus could make it difficult for a fertilized egg to implant there, and the muscles of the uterus are left unable to stretch, she says. In this case, the woman decided that she did want to freeze her eggs. But it would have been difficult to use them further down the line—surrogacy is illegal in Switzerland.
Huber offered her an alternative. She had been following the work of Ribeiro, a gynecologist oncologist formerly at the Erasto Gaertner Hospital in Curitiba, Brazil. There, Ribeiro had pioneered a new type of surgery that involved moving the uterus, fallopian tubes, and ovaries from their position in the pelvis and temporarily tucking them away in the upper abdomen, below the ribs. Ribeiro and his colleagues published their first case report in 2017, describing a 26-year-old with a rectal tumor. (Ribeiro, who is now based at McGill University in Montreal, says the woman had been told by multiple doctors that her cancer treatment would destroy her fertility and had pleaded with him to find a way to preserve it.) Huber remembers seeing Ribeiro present the case at a conference at the time. She immediately realized that her own patient was a candidate for the surgery, and that, as a surgeon who had performed many hysterectomies, she’d be able to do it herself. The patient agreed. Huber’s colleagues at the hospital were nervous, she says. They’d never heard of the procedure before. “When I presented this idea to the general surgeon, he didn’t sleep for three days,” she tells me. After watching videos from Ribeiro’s team, however, he was convinced it was doable. So before the patient’s cancer treatment was started, Huber and her colleagues performed the operation. The team literally stitched the organs to the abdominal wall. “It’s a delicate dissection,” says Huber, but she adds that “it’s not the most difficult procedure.” The surgery took two to three hours, she says. The stitches themselves were removed via small incisions around a week later. By that point, scar tissue had formed to create a lasting attachment. The woman had two weeks to recover from the surgery before her cancer treatment began. That too was a success—within months, her tumor had shrunk so significantly that it couldn’t be seen on medical scans. As a precaution, the medical team surgically removed the affected area of her colon. At the same time, they cut away the scar tissue holding the uterus, tubes, and ovaries in their new position and transferred the organs back into the pelvis.

Around eight months later, the woman stopped taking contraception. She got pregnant without IVF and had a mostly healthy pregnancy, says Huber. Around seven months into the pregnancy, there were signs that the fetus was not growing as expected. This might have been due to problems with the blood supply to the placenta, says Huber. Still, the baby was born healthy, she says. Ribeiro says he has performed the surgery 16 times, and that teams in countries including the US, Peru, Israel, India, and Russia have performed it as well. Not every case has been published, but he thinks there may be around 40. Since Baby Lucien was born last year, a sixth birth has been announced in Israel, says Huber. Ribeiro says he has heard of another two births since then, too. The most recent was to the first woman who had the procedure. She had a little girl a few months ago, he tells me. No surgery is risk-free, and Huber points out there’s a chance that organs could be damaged during the procedure, or that a more developed cancer could spread. The uterus of one of Ribeiro’s patients failed following the surgery. Doctors are “still in the phase of collecting data to [create] a standardized procedure,” Huber says, but she hopes the surgery will offer more options to young people with some pelvic cancers. “I hope more young women could benefit from this procedure,” she says. Ribeiro says the experience has taught him not to accept the status quo. “Everyone was saying … there was nothing to be done [about the loss of fertility in these cases],” he tells me. “We need to keep evolving and looking for different answers.” This article first appeared in The Checkup, MIT Technology Review’s weekly biotech newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Thursday, and read articles like this first, sign up here.

Read More »

Consolidating systems for AI with iPaaS

In partnership withSAP For decades, enterprises reacted to shifting business pressures with stopgap technology solutions. To rein in rising infrastructure costs, they adopted cloud services that could scale on demand. When customers shifted their lives onto smartphones, companies rolled out mobile apps to keep pace. And when businesses began needing real-time visibility into factories and stockrooms, they layered on IoT systems to supply those insights. Each new plug-in or platform promised better, more efficient operations. And individually, many delivered. But as more and more solutions stacked up, IT teams had to string together a tangled web to connect them—less an IT ecosystem and more of a make-do collection of ad-hoc workarounds. That reality has led to bottlenecks and maintenance burdens, and the impact is showing up in performance. Today, fewer than half of CIOs (48%) say their current digital initiatives are meeting or exceeding business outcome targets. Another 2025 survey found that operations leaders point to integration complexity and data quality issues as top culprits for why investments haven’t delivered as expected. Achim Kraiss, chief product officer of SAP Integration Suite, elaborates on the wide-ranging problems inherent in patchwork IT: “A fragmented landscape makes it difficult to see and control end-to-end business processes,” he explains. “Monitoring, troubleshooting, and governance all suffer. Costs go up because of all the complex mappings and multi-application connectivity you have to maintain.”
These challenges take on new significance as enterprises look to adopt AI. As AI becomes embedded in everyday workflows, systems are suddenly expected to move far larger volumes of data, at higher speeds, and with tighter coordination than yesterday’s architectures were builtto sustain. As companies now prepare for an AI-powered future, whether that is generative AI, machine learning, or agentic AI, many are realizing that the way data moves through their business matters just as much as the insights it generates. As a result, organizations are moving away from scattered integration tools and toward consolidated, end-to-end platforms that restore order and streamline how systems interact. Download the report. This content was produced by Insights, the custom content arm of MIT Technology Review. It was not written by MIT Technology Review’s editorial staff. It was researched, designed, and written by human writers, editors, analysts, and illustrators. This includes the writing of surveys and collection of data for surveys. AI tools that may have been used were limited to secondary production processes that passed thorough human review.

Read More »

The Download: attempting to track AI, and the next generation of nuclear power

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. This is the most misunderstood graph in AI Every time OpenAI, Google, or Anthropic drops a new frontier large language model, the AI community holds its breath. It doesn’t exhale until METR, an AI research nonprofit whose name stands for “Model Evaluation & Threat Research,” updates a now-iconic graph that has played a major role in the AI discourse since it was first released in March of last year.  The graph suggests that certain AI capabilities are developing at an exponential rate, and more recent model releases have outperformed that already impressive trend.That was certainly the case for Claude Opus 4.5, the latest version of Anthropic’s most powerful model, which was released in late November. In December, METR announced that Opus 4.5 appeared to be capable of independently completing a task that would have taken a human about five hours—a vast improvement over what even the exponential trend would have predicted.
But the truth is more complicated than those dramatic responses would suggest. Read the full story. —Grace Huckins
This story is part of MIT Technology Review Explains: our series untangling the complex, messy world of technology to help you understand what’s coming next. You can read more from the series here. Three questions about next-generation nuclear power, answered Nuclear power continues to be one of the hottest topics in energy today, and in our recent online Roundtables discussion about next-generation nuclear power, hyperscale AI data centers, and the grid, we got dozens of great audience questions. These ran the gamut, and while we answered quite a few (and I’m keeping some in mind for future reporting), there were a bunch we couldn’t get to, at least not in the depth I would have liked. So let’s answer a few of your questions about advanced nuclear power. —Casey Crownhart This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review’s weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here.

The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 Anthropic’s new coding tools are rattling the markets Fields as diverse as publishing and coding to law and advertising are paying attention. (FT $)+ Legacy software companies, beware. (Insider $)+ Is “software-mageddon” nigh? It depends who you ask. (Reuters)2 This Apple setting prevented the FBI from accessing a reporter’s iPhoneLockdown Mode has proved remarkably effective—for now. (404 Media)+ Agents were able to access Hannah Natanson’s laptop, however. (Ars Technica)3 Last month’s data center outage disrupted all TikTok categoriesNot just the political content that some users claimed. (NPR)4 Big Tech is pouring billions into AI in IndiaA newly-announced 20-year tax break should help to speed things along. (WSJ $)+ India’s female content moderators are watching hours of abuse content to train AI. (The Guardian)+ Officials in the country are weighing up restricting social media for minors. (Bloomberg $)+ Inside India’s scramble for AI independence. (MIT Technology Review) 5 YouTubers are harassing women using body camsThey’re abusing freedom of information laws to humiliate their targets. (NY Mag $)+ AI was supposed to make police bodycams better. What happened? (MIT Technology Review) 6 Jokers have created a working version of Jeffrey Epstein’s inboxComplete with notable starred threads. (Wired $)+ Epstein’s links with Silicon Valley are vast and deep. (Fast Company $)+ The revelations are driving rifts between previously-friendly factions. (NBC News) 7 What’s the last thing you see before you die?A new model might help to explain near-death experiences—but not all researchers are on board. (WP $)+ What is death? (MIT Technology Review) 8 A new app is essentially TikTok for vibe-coded appsWords which would have made no sense 15 years ago. (TechCrunch)+ What is vibe coding, exactly? (MIT Technology Review)9 Rogue TV boxes are all the rageViewers are sick of the soaring prices of streaming services, and are embracing less legal means of watching their favorite shows. (The Verge) 10 Climate change is threatening the future of the Winter Olympics ⛷️Artificial snow is one (short term) solution. (Bloomberg $)+ Team USA is using AI to try and gain an edge on its competition. (NBC News)
Quote of the day
“We’ve heard from many who want nothing to do with AI.” —Ajit Varma, head of Mozilla’s web browser Firefox, explains why the company is reversing its previous decision to transform Firefox into an “AI browser,” PC Gamer reports. One more thing A major AI training data set contains millions of examples of personal dataMillions of images of passports, credit cards, birth certificates, and other documents containing personally identifiable information are likely included in one of the biggest open-source AI training sets, new research has found.Thousands of images—including identifiable faces—were found in a small subset of DataComp CommonPool, a major AI training set for image generation scraped from the web. Because the researchers audited just 0.1% of CommonPool’s data, they estimate that the real number of images containing personally identifiable information, including faces and identity documents, is in the hundreds of millions. The bottom line? Anything you put online can be and probably has been scraped. Read the full story.—Eileen Guo
We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or skeet ’em at me.) + If you’re crazy enough to be training for a marathon right now, here’s how to beat boredom on those long, long runs.+ Mark Cohen’s intimate street photography is a fascinating window into humanity.+ A seriously dedicated gamer has spent days painstakingly recreating a Fallout vault inside the Sims 4.+ Here’s what music’s most stylish men are wearing right now—from leather pants to khaki parkas.

Read More »

Three questions about next-generation nuclear power, answered

So let’s answer a few of your questions about advanced nuclear power. I’ve combined similar ones and edited them for clarity. How are the fuel needs for next-generation nuclear reactors different, and how are companies addressing the supply chain? Many next-generation reactors don’t use the low-enriched uranium used in conventional reactors.
It’s worth looking at high-assay low-enriched uranium, or HALEU, specifically. This fuel is enriched to higher concentrations of fissile uranium than conventional nuclear fuel, with a proportion of the isotope U-235 that falls between 5% and 20%. (In conventional fuel, it’s below 5%.) HALEU can be produced with the same technology as low-enriched uranium, but the geopolitics are complicated. Today, Russia basically has a monopoly on HALEU production. In 2024, the US banned the import of Russian nuclear fuel through 2040 in an effort to reduce dependence on the country. Europe hasn’t taken the same measures, but it is working to move away from Russian energy as well.
That leaves companies in the US and Europe with the major challenge of securing the fuel they need when their regular Russian supply has been cut off or restricted. The US Department of Energy has a stockpile of HALEU, which the government is doling out to companies to help power demonstration reactions. In the longer term, though, there’s still a major need to set up independent HALEU supply chains to support next-generation reactors. How is safety being addressed, and what’s happening with nuclear safety regulation in the US? There are some ways that next-generation nuclear power plants could be safer than conventional reactors. Some use alternative coolants that would prevent the need to run at the high pressure required in conventional water-cooled reactors. Many incorporate passive safety shutoffs, so if there are power supply issues, the reactors shut down harmlessly, avoiding risk of meltdown. (These can be incorporated in newer conventional reactors, too.) But some experts have raised concerns that in the US, the current administration isn’t taking nuclear safety seriously enough. A recent NPR investigation found that the Trump administration had secretly rewritten nuclear rules, stripping environmental protections and loosening safety and security measures. The government shared the new rules with companies that are part of a program building experimental nuclear reactors, but not with the public. I’m reminded of a talk during our EmTech MIT event in November, where Koroush Shirvan, an MIT professor of nuclear engineering, spoke on this issue. “I’ve seen some disturbing trends in recent times, where words like ‘rubber-stamping nuclear projects’ are being said,” Shirvan said during that event.   During the talk, Shirvan shared statistics showing that nuclear power has a very low rate of injury and death. But that’s not inherent to the technology, and there’s a reason injuries and deaths have been low for nuclear power, he added: “It’s because of stringent regulatory oversight.”   Are next-generation reactors going to be financially competitive? Building a nuclear power plant is not cheap. Let’s consider the up-front investment needed to build a power plant.  

Plant Vogtle in Georgia hosts the most recent additions to the US nuclear fleet—Units 3 and 4 came online in 2023 and 2024. Together, they had a capital cost of $15,000 per kilowatt, adjusted for inflation, according to a recent report from the US Department of Energy. (This wonky unit I’m using divides the total cost to build the reactors by their expected power output, so we can compare reactors of different sizes.) That number’s quite high, partly because those were the first of their kind built in the US, and because there were some inefficiencies in the planning. It’s worth noting that China builds reactors for much less, somewhere between $2,000/kW and $3,000/kW, depending on the estimate. The up-front capital cost for first-of-a-kind advanced nuclear plants will likely run between $6,000 and $10,000 per kilowatt, according to that DOE report. That could come down by up to 40% after the technologies are scaled up and mass-produced. So new reactors will (hopefully) be cheaper than the ultra-over-budget and behind-schedule Vogtle project, but they aren’t necessarily significantly cheaper than efficiently built conventional plants, if you normalize by their size. It’ll certainly be cheaper to build new natural-gas plants (setting aside the likely equipment shortages we’re likely going to see for years.) Today’s most efficient natural-gas plants cost just $1,600/kW on the high end, according to data from Lazard. An important caveat: Capital cost isn’t everything—running a nuclear plant is relatively inexpensive, which is why there’s so much interest in extending the lifetime of existing plants or reopening shuttered ones. Ultimately, by many metrics, nuclear plants of any type are going to be more expensive than other sources, like wind and solar power. But they provide something many other power sources don’t: a reliable, stable source of electricity that can run for 60 years or more. This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review’s weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here.

Read More »

WTI, Brent Gain as Talks Ease Conflict Fears

Oil edged marginally higher after a choppy session as investors assessed the status of nuclear talks between the US and Iran. West Texas Intermediate settled above $63 a barrel, with markets reacting sharply to headlines tied to the meeting. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said the talks had a “good start,” even as the Wall Street Journal reported that Tehran stood by its refusal to end enrichment of nuclear fuel, a major sticking point for the US. The escalation in the Middle East, which provides about a third of the world’s crude, has added a risk premium to benchmark oil prices. Traders have weighed the geopolitical tensions against an outlook for oversupply. Still, futures in New York notched their first weekly retreat since mid-December as the US-Iran talks helped allay concerns over a broader conflict in the region. Prices also extended gains after data showed US consumer sentiment unexpectedly improved to the highest in six months, calming some concerns over an economic slowdown in the country that could lead to weaker oil demand. Meanwhile, in trilateral negotiations with the US, Ukraine and Russia agreed to exchange prisoners for the first time in five months as they sought to end their four-year conflict. Talks were making progress, with results expected “in the coming weeks,” President Donald Trump’s special envoy said. Saudi Arabia cut prices for buyers in Asia by less than expected, signaling confidence in demand for its barrels, although prices have still been reduced to the lowest levels since late 2020. Oil Prices WTI for March delivery settled 0.4% higher at $63.55 a barrel in New York. Brent for April settlement rose 0.7% to close at $68.05 a barrel. What do you think? We’d love to hear from you, join the conversation on the Rigzone Energy Network. The Rigzone Energy

Read More »

AI Infrastructure Scales Out and Up: Edge Expansion Meets the Gigawatt Campus Era

The AI infrastructure boom is often framed around massive hyperscale campuses racing to secure gigawatts of power. But an equally important shift is happening in parallel: AI infrastructure is also becoming more distributed, modular, and sovereign, extending compute far beyond traditional data center hubs. A wave of recent announcements across developers, infrastructure investors, and regional operators shows the market pursuing a dual strategy. On one end, developers are accelerating delivery of hyperscale campuses measured in hundreds of megawatts, and increasingly gigawatts, often located where power availability and energy economics offer structural advantage, and in some cases pairing compute directly with dedicated generation. On the other, providers are building increasingly capable regional and edge facilities designed to bring AI compute closer to users, industrial operations, and national jurisdictions. Taken together, these moves point toward a future in which AI infrastructure is no longer purely centralized, but built around interconnected hub-and-spoke architectures combining energy-advantaged hyperscale cores with rapidly deployable edge capacity. Recent developments across hyperscale developers, edge specialists, infrastructure investors, and regional operators illustrate how quickly this model is taking shape. Sovereign AI Moves Beyond the Core On Feb. 5, 2026, San Francisco-based Armada and European AI infrastructure builder Nscale signed a letter of intent to jointly deploy both large-scale and edge AI infrastructure worldwide. The collaboration targets enterprise and public sector customers seeking sovereign, secure, geographically distributed AI environments. Nscale is building large AI supercomputer clusters globally, offering vertically integrated capabilities spanning power, data centers, compute, and software. Armada specializes in modular deployments through its Galleon data centers and Armada Edge Platform, delivering compute and storage into remote or infrastructure-poor environments. The combined offering addresses a growing challenge: many governments and enterprises want AI capability deployed within their own jurisdictions, even where traditional hyperscale infrastructure does not yet exist. “There is

Read More »

From Row-Level CDUs to Facility-Scale Cooling: DCX Ramps Liquid Cooling for the AI Factory Era

Enter the 8MW CDU Era The next evolution arrived just days later. On Jan. 20, DCX announced its second-generation facility-scale unit, the FDU V2AT2, pushing capacity into territory previously unimaginable for single CDU platforms. The system delivers up to 8.15 megawatts of heat transfer capacity with record flow rates designed to support 45°C warm-water cooling, aligning directly with NVIDIA’s roadmap for rack-scale AI systems, including Vera Rubin-class deployments. That temperature target is significant. Warm-water cooling at this level allows many facilities to eliminate traditional chillers for heat rejection, depending on climate and deployment design. Instead of relying on compressor-driven refrigeration, operators can shift toward dry coolers or other simplified heat rejection strategies. The result: • Reduced mechanical complexity• Lower energy consumption• Improved efficiency at scale• New opportunities for heat reuse According to DCX CTO Maciek Szadkowski, the goal is to avoid obsolescence in a single hardware generation: “As the datacenter industry transitions to AI factories, operators need cooling systems that won’t be obsolete in one platform cycle. The FDU V2AT2 replaces multiple legacy CDUs and enables 45°C supply water operation while simplifying cooling topology and significantly reducing both CAPEX and OPEX.” The unit incorporates a high-capacity heat exchanger with a 2°C approach temperature, N+1 redundant pump configuration, integrated water quality control, and diagnostics systems designed for predictive maintenance. In short, this is infrastructure built not for incremental density growth, but for hyperscale AI facilities where megawatts of cooling must scale as predictably as compute capacity. Liquid Cooling Becomes System Architecture The broader industry implication is clear: cooling is no longer an auxiliary mechanical function. It is becoming system architecture. DCX’s broader 2025 performance metrics underscore the speed of this transition. The company reported 600% revenue growth, expanded its workforce fourfold, and shipped or secured contracts covering more than 500 MW

Read More »

Transmission at the Breaking Point: Why the Grid Is Becoming the Defining Constraint for AI Data Centers

Regions in a Position to Scale California (A- overall)California continues to lead in long-term, scenario-based transmission planning. CAISO’s most recent transmission plan identifies $4.8 billion in new projects to accommodate approximately 76 gigawatts of additional capacity by 2039, explicitly accounting for data center growth alongside broader electrification. For data center developers, California’s challenge is less about planning quality and more about execution. Permitting timelines, cost allocation debates, and political scrutiny remain significant hurdles. Plains / Southwest Power Pool (B- overall, A in regional planning)SPP stands out nationally for embracing ultra-high-voltage transmission as a backbone strategy. Its recent Integrated Transmission Plans approve more than $16 billion in new projects, including multiple 765-kV lines, with benefit-cost ratios exceeding 10:1. This approach positions the Plains region as one of the most structurally “AI-ready” grids in North America, particularly for multi-gigawatt campuses supported by wind, natural gas, and emerging nuclear resources. Midwest / MISO (B overall)MISO’s Long-Range Transmission Planning framework aligns closely with federal best practices, co-optimizing generation and transmission over long planning horizons. While challenges remain—particularly around interregional coordination—the Midwest is comparatively well positioned for sustained data center growth. Regions Facing Heightened Risk Texas / ERCOT (D- overall)Texas has approved massive new transmission investments, including 765-kV projects tied to explosive load growth in the Permian Basin. However, the report criticizes ERCOT’s planning for remaining largely siloed and reliability-driven, with limited long-term scenario analysis and narrow benefit assessments. For data centers, ERCOT still offers speed to market, but increasingly with risks tied to congestion, price volatility, and political backlash surrounding grid reliability. Southeast (F overall)The Southeast receives failing grades across all categories, with transmission development remaining fragmented, utility-driven, and largely disconnected from durable regional planning frameworks. As AI data centers increasingly target the region for its land availability and tax incentives, the lack of

Read More »

Operationalizing AI at Scale: Google Cloud on Data Infrastructure, Search, and Enterprise AI

The AI conversation has been dominated by model announcements, benchmark races, and the rapid evolution of large language models. But in enterprise environments, the harder problem isn’t building smarter models. It’s making them work reliably with real-world data. On the latest episode of the Data Center Frontier Show Podcast, Sailesh Krishnamurthy, VP of Engineering for Databases at Google Cloud, pulled back the curtain on the infrastructure layer where many ambitious AI initiatives succeed, or quietly fail. Krishnamurthy operates at the intersection of databases, search, and AI systems. His perspective underscores a growing reality across enterprise IT: AI success increasingly depends on how organizations manage, integrate, and govern data across operational systems, not just how powerful their models are. The Disconnect Between LLMs and Reality Enterprises today face a fundamental challenge: connecting LLMs to real-time operational data. Search systems handle documents and unstructured information well. Operational databases manage transactions, customer data, and financial records with precision. But combining the two remains difficult. Krishnamurthy described the problem as universal. “Inside enterprises, knowledge workers are often searching documents while separately querying operational systems,” he said. “But combining unstructured information with operational database data is still hard to do.” Externally, customers encounter the opposite issue. Portals expose personal data but struggle to incorporate broader contextual information. “You get a narrow view of your own data,” he explained, “but combining that with unstructured information that might answer your real question is still challenging.” The result: AI systems often operate with incomplete context. Vector Search Moves Into the Database Vector search has emerged as a bridge between structured and unstructured worlds. But its evolution over the past three years has changed how enterprises deploy it. Early use cases focused on semantic search, i.e. finding meaning rather than exact keyword matches. Bug tracking systems, for example, began

Read More »

Data Center Jobs: Engineering, Construction, Commissioning, Sales, Field Service and Facility Tech Jobs Available in Major Data Center Hotspots

Each month Data Center Frontier, in partnership with Pkaza, posts some of the hottest data center career opportunities in the market. Here’s a look at some of the latest data center jobs posted on the Data Center Frontier jobs board, powered by Pkaza Critical Facilities Recruiting. Looking for Data Center Candidates? Check out Pkaza’s Active Candidate / Featured Candidate Hotlist Onsite Engineer – Critical FacilitiesCharleston, SC This is NOT a traveling position. Having degreed engineers seems to be all the rage these days. I can also use this type of candidate in following cities: Ashburn, VA; Moncks Corner, SC; Binghamton, NY; Dallas, TX or Indianapolis, IN. Our client is an engineering design and commissioning company that is a subject matter expert in the data center space. This role will be onsite at a customer’s data center. They will provide onsite design coordination and construction administration, consulting and management support for the data center / mission critical facilities space with the mindset to provide reliability, energy efficiency, sustainable design and LEED expertise when providing these consulting services for enterprise, colocation and hyperscale companies. This career-growth minded opportunity offers exciting projects with leading-edge technology and innovation as well as competitive salaries and benefits. Electrical Commissioning Engineer Ashburn, VA This traveling position is also available in: New York, NY; White Plains, NY;  Richmond, VA; Montvale, NJ; Charlotte, NC; Atlanta, GA; Hampton, GA; New Albany, OH; Cedar Rapids, IA; Phoenix, AZ; Salt Lake City, UT; Dallas, TX; Kansas City, MO; Omaha, NE; Chesterton, IN or Chicago, IL. *** ALSO looking for a LEAD EE and ME CxA Agents and CxA PMs *** Our client is an engineering design and commissioning company that has a national footprint and specializes in MEP critical facilities design. They provide design, commissioning, consulting and management expertise in the critical facilities space. They

Read More »

Stay Ahead with the Paperboy Newsletter

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

Smarter with ONMINE

Streamline Your Growth with ONMINE