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Coal- and gas-fired power plants have a new best friend: data centers

Abbe Ramanan is a project director at Clean Energy Group. In 2020, the Virginia Assembly passed the Virginia Clean Economy Act, a law that required the state’s largest utility, Dominion Energy, to generate all its electricity from renewable resources by 2045. However, Dominion has found a useful loophole to get around the law’s requirements — data centers. Viriginia hosts the largest data center market in the world, and is home to at least 150 hyperscale data centers, with more being proposed. In its recent integrated resource plan, Dominion cited projected energy demand from these data centers as a key reason to delay retiring existing power plants, including the Clover Power Station, a coal-powered peaker plant in Halifax County, a disproportionately low-income region. In addition to delaying peaker retirements, Dominion has proposed building new gas-powered generation, including a 1-GW peaker plant in Chesterfield, a community that already shoulders an undue environmental burden from existing natural gas- and coal-fired generation. Similar stories have played out across the country as data centers become more and more ubiquitous, particularly in the Southeast. Utilities in Virginia, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina have proposed building 20,000 MW of new gas power plants by 2040. Data centers driving the projected load growth are being used to justify this buildout. In Virginia, Georgia and South Carolina, data centers are responsible for at least 65% of projected load growth. Data centers are also delaying the retirement of fossil fuel power plants nationwide, with at least 17 fossil fuel generators originally scheduled for closure now delaying retirement. This new gas buildout, as well as the delayed retirement of fossil fuel generators, overwhelmingly harms Black and brown communities, who face higher energy and environmental burdens. The gas bonanza is especially concerning because the projected demand from data centers could be

Read More »

GM, Redwood Materials sign deal to deploy energy-storage batteries

Dive Brief: General Motors and battery recycler Redwood Materials have signed a non-binding memorandum of understanding to accelerate the deployment of stationary energy storage systems built using both new modules and second-life batteries from the automaker’s electric vehicles, according to a July 16 press release. The plans are part of a new business unit launched by Redwood Materials in June named Redwood Energy that’s focused on assembling and deploying low-cost stationary energy-storage systems to help meet growing power demands of AI data centers and other applications. “Electricity demand is climbing, and it’s only going to accelerate,” Kurt Kelty, VP of batteries, propulsion, and sustainability at GM, said in the release. “To meet that challenge, the U.S. needs energy storage solutions that can be deployed quickly, economically, and made right here at home.” Dive Insight: Redwood Materials plans to establish a domestic supply chain to manufacture batteries to support energy storage applications via its Redwood Energy unit. The company currently repurposes around 20 gigawatt hours of batteries annually, which is the equivalent of 250,000 EVs or roughly 90% of all lithium-ion batteries and battery materials currently recycled in North America, according to its website.    GM is already providing the battery recycling company with used batteries to help power what Redwood calls “the largest second-life battery development in the world and the largest microgrid in North America” at an installation in Sparks, Nevada, per the release. The electricity produced by the microgrid is being used by AI infrastructure company Crusoe. “Electricity demand is accelerating at an unprecedented pace, driven by AI and the rapid electrification of everything from transportation to industry,” said JB Straubel, founder and CEO of Redwood Materials, in the release. “Both GM’s second-life EV batteries and new batteries can be deployed in Redwood’s energy storage systems, delivering fast,

Read More »

Data centers seek flexible power solutions for resilience, sustainability

AI data centers in the United States could consume 33.8 gigawatts of power by 2030, or about 3% of the country’s generating capacity, Schneider Electric said earlier this year. Some AI power demand projections are even more aggressive, like a 2024 RAND Corporation forecast cited by Schneider that sees 130 GW of data center demand in 2030. With data center projects worth at least $64 billion delayed or blocked by local opposition and state policymakers and regulators placing restrictions on development, a backlash appears to be brewing.  Data center opponents cite a litany of concerns, from noise to water pollution, but some of the most frequently cited center on the local impacts of onsite power generation and broader effects on the electric grid. Earlier this month, Elon Musk’s xAI overcame local opposition to secure an air permit for a fleet of gas generators at its AI training center in Memphis, Tenn.  Texas lawmakers recently passed a law requiring new data centers to disconnect from the grid during periods of high power demand. Several states have implemented or are considering special utility tariffs requiring data center companies to cover the costs of grid upgrades they benefit from. North Carolina utility regulators plan a technical conference in October on data centers’ potential impacts on power reliability. Data centers’ appetite for power and the growing recognition that unchecked growth would be a problem for the grid could cause short-term growing pains for the industry, said Kelcy Pegler, CEO of FlexGen, a battery management software company. “From a societal perspective, we are underestimating the impact that data centers will have on the grid,” Pegler said in an interview. “We’re going to have a break-in period where data center ambitions will have trouble coming to fruition.” Earlier this year, FlexGen partnered with electrical contractor Rosendin

Read More »

Saskatchewan, Ontario, Alberta Sign MoU to Facilitate O&G Transportation

Three Canadian provinces are collaborating to facilitate the transportation of oil and gas across the country. Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, Ontario Premier Doug Ford, and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to coordinate the safe transportation and export of Western Canadian oil, natural gas and critical minerals to refineries, seaports and storage facilities across Canada and beyond, according to a statement from the Canadian government. The MoU establishes a collaborative framework to explore multiple pipeline and rail corridors, and expansion of processing hubs for critical minerals. The framework aims to create new and critical avenues to reach domestic and international markets, the statement said. The agreement will help strengthen interprovincial trade by linking Saskatchewan, Ontario, and Alberta through shared infrastructure development and coordinated market strategies, according to the statement. “We are sending a clear signal that Canada’s energy future will be built by Canadians, for Canadians,” Moe said. “This agreement commits our provinces to work together to unlock new markets, shore up our supply chains from mine to port and advocate for the federal reforms our industry needs. By advancing pipelines, rail connections and critical-mineral processing capacity, we are safeguarding thousands of jobs, strengthening our energy security and fostering sustainable growth”. “As the world grapples with President Trump’s unfair tariffs, it is more important than ever to build a resilient and self-reliant economy here at home,” Ford said. “This agreement sends a clear message: Ontario, Alberta and Saskatchewan are ready to get shovels in the ground and move forward on projects that will secure our long-term prosperity”. “We are taking action to grow our economy, build real infrastructure and get major projects moving,” Smith said. “Alberta is proud to lead the way in uniting with provinces that share a vision for responsible development, economic freedom and

Read More »

The Download: saving the US climate programs, and America’s AI protections are under threat

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. How nonprofits and academia are stepping up to salvage US climate programs Nonprofits are trying to preserve a US effort to modernize greenhouse-gas measurements, amid growing fears that the Trump administration’s dismantling of federal programs will obscure the nation’s contributions to climate change. The Data Foundation, a Washington, DC, nonprofit, is fundraising for an initiative that will coordinate efforts among nonprofits, technical experts, and companies to improve the accuracy and accessibility of climate emissions information. It will build on an effort to improve the collection of emissions data that former president Joe Biden launched in 2023—and which President Trump nullified on his first day in office. 
The new greenhouse-gas coalition is one of a growing number of nonprofit and academic groups that have spun up or shifted focus to keep essential climate monitoring and research efforts going amid the Trump administration’s assault on environmental funding, staffing, and regulations. Read the full story. —James Temple
America’s AI watchdog is losing its bite Most Americans encounter the Federal Trade Commission only if they’ve been scammed: It handles identity theft, fraud, and stolen data. During the Biden administration, the agency went after AI companies for scamming customers with deceptive advertising or harming people by selling irresponsible technologies.  With the announcement of President Trump’s AI Action Plan, that era may now be over.The new plan suggests that the Trump administration believes the agency’s previous actions went too far, and that it would be reviewing all FTC actions taken under the Biden administration.The move is the latest in its evolving attack on the agency, which provides a significant route of redress for people harmed by AI in the US. It’s likely to result in faster deployment of AI with fewer checks on accuracy, fairness, or consumer harm. Read the full story. —James O’Donnell Trump’s AI Action Plan is a distraction —Asad Ramzanali is the director of artificial intelligence and technology policy at the Vanderbilt Policy Accelerator.

On Wednesday, President Trump issued three executive orders, delivered a speech, and released an action plan, all on the topic of continuing American leadership in AI. This flurry of actions made for glitzy press moments, including an hour-long speech from the president and onstage signings. But while the tech industry cheered these announcements (which will swell their coffers), they obscured the fact that the administration is currently decimating the very policies that enabled America to become the world leader in AI in the first place. Read the full story. The deadly saga of the controversial gene therapy Elevidys It has been a grim few months for the Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) community. There had been some excitement when, a couple of years ago, a gene therapy for the disorder was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the first time. That drug, Elevidys, has now been implicated in the deaths of two teenage boys. The drug’s approval was always controversial—there was a lack of evidence that it actually worked, for starters. But the agency that once rubber-stamped the drug has now turned on its manufacturer, Sarepta Therapeutics. In a remarkable chain of events, the FDA asked the company to stop shipping the drug on July 18. Sarepta refused to comply.In the days since, the company has acquiesced. But its reputation has already been hit. And the events have dealt a devastating blow to people desperate for treatments that might help them, their children, or other family members with DMD. Read the full story. —Jessica Hamzelou A version of 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.
The must-reads
I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 Corporate America is paying the price for Trump’s tariffsUS businesses are absorbing the costs—for now. (WSJ $)+ Inflation is likely to hit hard in the fall. (Vox)+ Sweeping tariffs could threaten the US manufacturing rebound. (MIT Technology Review) 2 GPT-5 is reportedly launching next monthAfter some unexpected setbacks. (The Verge) 3 Meta is hosting ads crowdfunding for IDF dronesA watchdog has identified more than 100 ads seeking donations for the army. (The Guardian)4 AI is helping researchers to combat long covid and MEA new platform spots biological markers of the conditions in patients. (FT $)+ Scientists are finding signals of long covid in blood. They could lead to new treatments. (MIT Technology Review)5 Demand is surging for banned chip repair expertise in China While most of Nvidia’s chips aren’t allowed in the country, there’s a booming industry for fixing them once they break. (Reuters)+ Nvidia’s chips are being smuggled in through the black market. (FT $) 6 ChatGPT can offer up instructions for self harm and devil worshipIt guides users through self-mutilation rituals, despite violating its own policies. (The Atlantic $) 7 We have more steel than we can possibly useBut countries are worried about the optics of ceasing production. (NYT $)+ This startup just hit a big milestone for green steel production. (MIT Technology Review)
8 Internet age checks are comingA swath of child protection laws are forcing a profound shift across the web. (Wired $)+ Child online safety laws will actually hurt kids, critics say. (MIT Technology Review) 9 An Italian rocket maker wants to conduct launches in the USAvio SpA is keen to launch flights from Wallops Island in Virginia. (Bloomberg $)+ Rivals are rising to challenge the dominance of SpaceX. (MIT Technology Review) 10 This app allows women to check a potential date’s historyBut men say there’s no recourse to address false posts about them. (WP $)
Quote of the day “If OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini had responded that it was trained to appeal to the left, congressional Republicans would have been outraged and opened an investigation. Instead, they were silent.” —Senator Ed Markey urges the CEOs of major tech companies to fight Donald Trump’s anti-woke AI order, Ars Technica reports. One more thing The great AI consciousness conundrumAI consciousness isn’t just a devilishly tricky intellectual puzzle; it’s a morally weighty problem with potentially dire consequences that philosophers, cognitive scientists, and engineers alike are currently grappling with.Fail to identify a conscious AI, and you might unintentionally subjugate a being whose interests ought to matter. Mistake an unconscious AI for a conscious one, and you risk compromising human safety and happiness for the sake of an unthinking, unfeeling hunk of silicon and code.Over the past few decades, a small research community has doggedly attacked the question of what consciousness is and how it works. The effort has yielded real progress. And now, with the rapid advance of AI technology, these insights could offer our only guide to the untested, morally fraught waters of artificial consciousness. Read the full story. —Grace Huckins 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.) + Crank it up to 11! Spinal Tap is back, baby.+ The tale of New York’s first real architectural firm.+ Crazy Train as played by a class of children on the xylophone is a real delight.+ Here’s how to easily add some cheap and accessible superfoods to zhuzh up your daily diet.

Read More »

Enbridge to Supply Meta with Power from 600-MW Solar Project in Texas

Enbridge Inc. said it has reached a final investment decision on Clear Fork, a 600-megawatt (MW) solar project in Texas, with Meta Platforms, Inc. signing a long-term contract for 100 percent of the renewable output of the project. Clear Fork is planned to be a utility-scale solar facility located near San Antonio. Construction is underway, and the facility is expected to enter service in the summer of 2027, the company said in a news release. Enbridge’s estimated project cost is $900 mllion and the project is expected to be accretive to cash flow and earnings per share starting in 2027, the company said. “Clear Fork demonstrates the growing demand for renewable power across North America from blue-chip companies who are involved in technology and data center operations,” Enbridge Executive Vice President Matthew Akman said. “Enbridge continues to advance its world-class renewables development portfolio using our financial strength, supply chain reach and construction expertise under a low-risk commercial model that delivers strong competitive returns”. “We are thrilled to partner with Enbridge to bring new renewable energy to Texas and help support our operations with 100 percent clean energy,” Meta Head of Global Energy Urvi Parekh said. First Nations Stake Acquisition Earlier in the month, Stonlasec8 Indigenous Alliance Limited, representing 38 Indigenous communities in British Columbia, completed a CAD 715 million ($512.75 million) equity investment to acquire a 12.5 percent ownership interest in Enbridge’s Westcoast natural gas pipeline system, the first to be competed under the program. The acquisition was supported by two separate bond financings by TD Securities Inc., as a bond placement agent, and a syndicate of institutional investors who provided CAD 400 million through a secured bond issuance to facilitate the Indigenous Partnership’s investment, according to a separate statement. The bond financing was backed by a CAD 400 million

Read More »

Coal- and gas-fired power plants have a new best friend: data centers

Abbe Ramanan is a project director at Clean Energy Group. In 2020, the Virginia Assembly passed the Virginia Clean Economy Act, a law that required the state’s largest utility, Dominion Energy, to generate all its electricity from renewable resources by 2045. However, Dominion has found a useful loophole to get around the law’s requirements — data centers. Viriginia hosts the largest data center market in the world, and is home to at least 150 hyperscale data centers, with more being proposed. In its recent integrated resource plan, Dominion cited projected energy demand from these data centers as a key reason to delay retiring existing power plants, including the Clover Power Station, a coal-powered peaker plant in Halifax County, a disproportionately low-income region. In addition to delaying peaker retirements, Dominion has proposed building new gas-powered generation, including a 1-GW peaker plant in Chesterfield, a community that already shoulders an undue environmental burden from existing natural gas- and coal-fired generation. Similar stories have played out across the country as data centers become more and more ubiquitous, particularly in the Southeast. Utilities in Virginia, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina have proposed building 20,000 MW of new gas power plants by 2040. Data centers driving the projected load growth are being used to justify this buildout. In Virginia, Georgia and South Carolina, data centers are responsible for at least 65% of projected load growth. Data centers are also delaying the retirement of fossil fuel power plants nationwide, with at least 17 fossil fuel generators originally scheduled for closure now delaying retirement. This new gas buildout, as well as the delayed retirement of fossil fuel generators, overwhelmingly harms Black and brown communities, who face higher energy and environmental burdens. The gas bonanza is especially concerning because the projected demand from data centers could be

Read More »

GM, Redwood Materials sign deal to deploy energy-storage batteries

Dive Brief: General Motors and battery recycler Redwood Materials have signed a non-binding memorandum of understanding to accelerate the deployment of stationary energy storage systems built using both new modules and second-life batteries from the automaker’s electric vehicles, according to a July 16 press release. The plans are part of a new business unit launched by Redwood Materials in June named Redwood Energy that’s focused on assembling and deploying low-cost stationary energy-storage systems to help meet growing power demands of AI data centers and other applications. “Electricity demand is climbing, and it’s only going to accelerate,” Kurt Kelty, VP of batteries, propulsion, and sustainability at GM, said in the release. “To meet that challenge, the U.S. needs energy storage solutions that can be deployed quickly, economically, and made right here at home.” Dive Insight: Redwood Materials plans to establish a domestic supply chain to manufacture batteries to support energy storage applications via its Redwood Energy unit. The company currently repurposes around 20 gigawatt hours of batteries annually, which is the equivalent of 250,000 EVs or roughly 90% of all lithium-ion batteries and battery materials currently recycled in North America, according to its website.    GM is already providing the battery recycling company with used batteries to help power what Redwood calls “the largest second-life battery development in the world and the largest microgrid in North America” at an installation in Sparks, Nevada, per the release. The electricity produced by the microgrid is being used by AI infrastructure company Crusoe. “Electricity demand is accelerating at an unprecedented pace, driven by AI and the rapid electrification of everything from transportation to industry,” said JB Straubel, founder and CEO of Redwood Materials, in the release. “Both GM’s second-life EV batteries and new batteries can be deployed in Redwood’s energy storage systems, delivering fast,

Read More »

Data centers seek flexible power solutions for resilience, sustainability

AI data centers in the United States could consume 33.8 gigawatts of power by 2030, or about 3% of the country’s generating capacity, Schneider Electric said earlier this year. Some AI power demand projections are even more aggressive, like a 2024 RAND Corporation forecast cited by Schneider that sees 130 GW of data center demand in 2030. With data center projects worth at least $64 billion delayed or blocked by local opposition and state policymakers and regulators placing restrictions on development, a backlash appears to be brewing.  Data center opponents cite a litany of concerns, from noise to water pollution, but some of the most frequently cited center on the local impacts of onsite power generation and broader effects on the electric grid. Earlier this month, Elon Musk’s xAI overcame local opposition to secure an air permit for a fleet of gas generators at its AI training center in Memphis, Tenn.  Texas lawmakers recently passed a law requiring new data centers to disconnect from the grid during periods of high power demand. Several states have implemented or are considering special utility tariffs requiring data center companies to cover the costs of grid upgrades they benefit from. North Carolina utility regulators plan a technical conference in October on data centers’ potential impacts on power reliability. Data centers’ appetite for power and the growing recognition that unchecked growth would be a problem for the grid could cause short-term growing pains for the industry, said Kelcy Pegler, CEO of FlexGen, a battery management software company. “From a societal perspective, we are underestimating the impact that data centers will have on the grid,” Pegler said in an interview. “We’re going to have a break-in period where data center ambitions will have trouble coming to fruition.” Earlier this year, FlexGen partnered with electrical contractor Rosendin

Read More »

Saskatchewan, Ontario, Alberta Sign MoU to Facilitate O&G Transportation

Three Canadian provinces are collaborating to facilitate the transportation of oil and gas across the country. Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, Ontario Premier Doug Ford, and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to coordinate the safe transportation and export of Western Canadian oil, natural gas and critical minerals to refineries, seaports and storage facilities across Canada and beyond, according to a statement from the Canadian government. The MoU establishes a collaborative framework to explore multiple pipeline and rail corridors, and expansion of processing hubs for critical minerals. The framework aims to create new and critical avenues to reach domestic and international markets, the statement said. The agreement will help strengthen interprovincial trade by linking Saskatchewan, Ontario, and Alberta through shared infrastructure development and coordinated market strategies, according to the statement. “We are sending a clear signal that Canada’s energy future will be built by Canadians, for Canadians,” Moe said. “This agreement commits our provinces to work together to unlock new markets, shore up our supply chains from mine to port and advocate for the federal reforms our industry needs. By advancing pipelines, rail connections and critical-mineral processing capacity, we are safeguarding thousands of jobs, strengthening our energy security and fostering sustainable growth”. “As the world grapples with President Trump’s unfair tariffs, it is more important than ever to build a resilient and self-reliant economy here at home,” Ford said. “This agreement sends a clear message: Ontario, Alberta and Saskatchewan are ready to get shovels in the ground and move forward on projects that will secure our long-term prosperity”. “We are taking action to grow our economy, build real infrastructure and get major projects moving,” Smith said. “Alberta is proud to lead the way in uniting with provinces that share a vision for responsible development, economic freedom and

Read More »

The Download: saving the US climate programs, and America’s AI protections are under threat

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. How nonprofits and academia are stepping up to salvage US climate programs Nonprofits are trying to preserve a US effort to modernize greenhouse-gas measurements, amid growing fears that the Trump administration’s dismantling of federal programs will obscure the nation’s contributions to climate change. The Data Foundation, a Washington, DC, nonprofit, is fundraising for an initiative that will coordinate efforts among nonprofits, technical experts, and companies to improve the accuracy and accessibility of climate emissions information. It will build on an effort to improve the collection of emissions data that former president Joe Biden launched in 2023—and which President Trump nullified on his first day in office. 
The new greenhouse-gas coalition is one of a growing number of nonprofit and academic groups that have spun up or shifted focus to keep essential climate monitoring and research efforts going amid the Trump administration’s assault on environmental funding, staffing, and regulations. Read the full story. —James Temple
America’s AI watchdog is losing its bite Most Americans encounter the Federal Trade Commission only if they’ve been scammed: It handles identity theft, fraud, and stolen data. During the Biden administration, the agency went after AI companies for scamming customers with deceptive advertising or harming people by selling irresponsible technologies.  With the announcement of President Trump’s AI Action Plan, that era may now be over.The new plan suggests that the Trump administration believes the agency’s previous actions went too far, and that it would be reviewing all FTC actions taken under the Biden administration.The move is the latest in its evolving attack on the agency, which provides a significant route of redress for people harmed by AI in the US. It’s likely to result in faster deployment of AI with fewer checks on accuracy, fairness, or consumer harm. Read the full story. —James O’Donnell Trump’s AI Action Plan is a distraction —Asad Ramzanali is the director of artificial intelligence and technology policy at the Vanderbilt Policy Accelerator.

On Wednesday, President Trump issued three executive orders, delivered a speech, and released an action plan, all on the topic of continuing American leadership in AI. This flurry of actions made for glitzy press moments, including an hour-long speech from the president and onstage signings. But while the tech industry cheered these announcements (which will swell their coffers), they obscured the fact that the administration is currently decimating the very policies that enabled America to become the world leader in AI in the first place. Read the full story. The deadly saga of the controversial gene therapy Elevidys It has been a grim few months for the Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) community. There had been some excitement when, a couple of years ago, a gene therapy for the disorder was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the first time. That drug, Elevidys, has now been implicated in the deaths of two teenage boys. The drug’s approval was always controversial—there was a lack of evidence that it actually worked, for starters. But the agency that once rubber-stamped the drug has now turned on its manufacturer, Sarepta Therapeutics. In a remarkable chain of events, the FDA asked the company to stop shipping the drug on July 18. Sarepta refused to comply.In the days since, the company has acquiesced. But its reputation has already been hit. And the events have dealt a devastating blow to people desperate for treatments that might help them, their children, or other family members with DMD. Read the full story. —Jessica Hamzelou A version of 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.
The must-reads
I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 Corporate America is paying the price for Trump’s tariffsUS businesses are absorbing the costs—for now. (WSJ $)+ Inflation is likely to hit hard in the fall. (Vox)+ Sweeping tariffs could threaten the US manufacturing rebound. (MIT Technology Review) 2 GPT-5 is reportedly launching next monthAfter some unexpected setbacks. (The Verge) 3 Meta is hosting ads crowdfunding for IDF dronesA watchdog has identified more than 100 ads seeking donations for the army. (The Guardian)4 AI is helping researchers to combat long covid and MEA new platform spots biological markers of the conditions in patients. (FT $)+ Scientists are finding signals of long covid in blood. They could lead to new treatments. (MIT Technology Review)5 Demand is surging for banned chip repair expertise in China While most of Nvidia’s chips aren’t allowed in the country, there’s a booming industry for fixing them once they break. (Reuters)+ Nvidia’s chips are being smuggled in through the black market. (FT $) 6 ChatGPT can offer up instructions for self harm and devil worshipIt guides users through self-mutilation rituals, despite violating its own policies. (The Atlantic $) 7 We have more steel than we can possibly useBut countries are worried about the optics of ceasing production. (NYT $)+ This startup just hit a big milestone for green steel production. (MIT Technology Review)
8 Internet age checks are comingA swath of child protection laws are forcing a profound shift across the web. (Wired $)+ Child online safety laws will actually hurt kids, critics say. (MIT Technology Review) 9 An Italian rocket maker wants to conduct launches in the USAvio SpA is keen to launch flights from Wallops Island in Virginia. (Bloomberg $)+ Rivals are rising to challenge the dominance of SpaceX. (MIT Technology Review) 10 This app allows women to check a potential date’s historyBut men say there’s no recourse to address false posts about them. (WP $)
Quote of the day “If OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini had responded that it was trained to appeal to the left, congressional Republicans would have been outraged and opened an investigation. Instead, they were silent.” —Senator Ed Markey urges the CEOs of major tech companies to fight Donald Trump’s anti-woke AI order, Ars Technica reports. One more thing The great AI consciousness conundrumAI consciousness isn’t just a devilishly tricky intellectual puzzle; it’s a morally weighty problem with potentially dire consequences that philosophers, cognitive scientists, and engineers alike are currently grappling with.Fail to identify a conscious AI, and you might unintentionally subjugate a being whose interests ought to matter. Mistake an unconscious AI for a conscious one, and you risk compromising human safety and happiness for the sake of an unthinking, unfeeling hunk of silicon and code.Over the past few decades, a small research community has doggedly attacked the question of what consciousness is and how it works. The effort has yielded real progress. And now, with the rapid advance of AI technology, these insights could offer our only guide to the untested, morally fraught waters of artificial consciousness. Read the full story. —Grace Huckins 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.) + Crank it up to 11! Spinal Tap is back, baby.+ The tale of New York’s first real architectural firm.+ Crazy Train as played by a class of children on the xylophone is a real delight.+ Here’s how to easily add some cheap and accessible superfoods to zhuzh up your daily diet.

Read More »

Enbridge to Supply Meta with Power from 600-MW Solar Project in Texas

Enbridge Inc. said it has reached a final investment decision on Clear Fork, a 600-megawatt (MW) solar project in Texas, with Meta Platforms, Inc. signing a long-term contract for 100 percent of the renewable output of the project. Clear Fork is planned to be a utility-scale solar facility located near San Antonio. Construction is underway, and the facility is expected to enter service in the summer of 2027, the company said in a news release. Enbridge’s estimated project cost is $900 mllion and the project is expected to be accretive to cash flow and earnings per share starting in 2027, the company said. “Clear Fork demonstrates the growing demand for renewable power across North America from blue-chip companies who are involved in technology and data center operations,” Enbridge Executive Vice President Matthew Akman said. “Enbridge continues to advance its world-class renewables development portfolio using our financial strength, supply chain reach and construction expertise under a low-risk commercial model that delivers strong competitive returns”. “We are thrilled to partner with Enbridge to bring new renewable energy to Texas and help support our operations with 100 percent clean energy,” Meta Head of Global Energy Urvi Parekh said. First Nations Stake Acquisition Earlier in the month, Stonlasec8 Indigenous Alliance Limited, representing 38 Indigenous communities in British Columbia, completed a CAD 715 million ($512.75 million) equity investment to acquire a 12.5 percent ownership interest in Enbridge’s Westcoast natural gas pipeline system, the first to be competed under the program. The acquisition was supported by two separate bond financings by TD Securities Inc., as a bond placement agent, and a syndicate of institutional investors who provided CAD 400 million through a secured bond issuance to facilitate the Indigenous Partnership’s investment, according to a separate statement. The bond financing was backed by a CAD 400 million

Read More »

UK Gov Announces ‘Tailored Support for Aberdeen Oil Workers’

The UK Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) has announced “tailored support for Aberdeen oil and gas workers” in a release posted on its website recently. According to the release, “around 200 Aberdeen oil and gas workers are set to benefit from a tailored skills program” launched this week, which the release said “will support them to take advantage of the high-quality job opportunities in Scotland’s growing clean energy sector”.    DESNZ noted in the release that the Oil and Gas Transition Training Fund, which it said is backed by GBP 900,000 ($1.2 million) of UK government funding, “will help build the pipeline of skilled workers needed to make Britain a clean energy superpower as part of the government’s Plan for Change”.  The program is open to current and former oil and gas workers who live in or are employed in Aberdeen or Aberdeenshire and are interested in moving into roles within clean energy, the release stated, adding that successful applicants will receive careers advice and funding towards training courses. DESNZ highlighted in the release that the program will be delivered in partnership between the UK government, the Scottish government, and Skills Development Scotland, which describes itself as Scotland’s national skills body. “Aberdeen has been the energy capital of Britain for decades and while oil and gas will be with us for decades to come, we are determined to make sure that workers are supported to access the thousands of jobs in industries such as offshore wind and carbon capture,” Minister for Energy Michael Shanks said in the release. “This funding will help deliver a fair and prosperous transition in the North Sea, unlocking the full potential of renewable energy and reaping the economic benefits from the skills and experiences of Aberdeen’s workforce,” he added. Secretary of State for Scotland

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Eni, Sonatrach to Bolster Energy Cooperation

Italy’s Eni SpA and Algeria’s Sonatrach SpA have signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to strengthen collaboration in hydrocarbons and renewable energy. “Eni and Sonatrach undertake to consolidate cooperation for the enhancement of Algerian energy resources through new contracts aimed at encouraging an increase in gas production, and the extension of gas supply contracts for export to Italy”, Eni said in a statement online. “In addition, the two companies will strengthen collaboration in the field of renewable energy and energy transition, namely through the definition of new initiatives”. The MoU was signed during the Italy-Algeria intergovernmental summit in the presence of Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. “This protocol follows the recent signing between Eni and Sonatrach of the agreement of the Zemoul El Kbar area and the allocation of the Reggane II area, which together with the initiatives covered by the protocol will contribute to increasing gas production up to 5.5 billion cubic meters per year by 2028, with total investments of more than $8 billion”, Eni said. “With an equity production of about 137,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in 2024, Eni stands as the most important international company operating in the country [Algeria]”, it added. Sonatrach said in a press release July 21 that under the 2024 bidding round, Reggane II in the province of Adrar has been awarded to Sonatrach, Eni and Thailand’s PTT Exploration and Production Public Co. Ltd. Sonatrach announced four other awards. Ahara in the province of Illizi was signed with QatarEnergy and TotalEnergies SE. Guern El Guessa II in the provinces of Bechar, Beni Abbes, El Bayadh and Timimoun was signed with China Petroleum and Chemical Corp. Toual II in the provinces of Ouargla and Illizi was signed with Austria’s Zangas Hoch- und Tiefbau GmbH and Switzerland’s

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Naftogaz Seals $225MM Loans to Buy Gas for Winter

Naftogaz Group has secured loans totaling UAH 9.4 billion ($225.09 million) from local banks to procure winter gas for Ukraine. JSC CB PrivatBank and PJSC JSB Ukrgasbank have each committed UAH 4.7 billion, according to online statements by state-owned integrated energy company Naftogaz. The funds will be used to stock underground storage facilities for the 2025-26 heating season, it said. “Naftogaz is diversifying its sources and routes of gas supply”, Naftogaz said. “This enhances Ukraine’s energy security and resilience amid the ongoing full-scale war”. Chief executive Sergii Koretskyi said, “At the same time, we continue to work with international financial institutions and partner countries”. Last April the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) said it had agreed to lend EUR 270 million ($317.28 million) to Naftogaz, complemented by a EUR 139 million grant from the Norwegian government. These will be used to buy nearly one billion cubic meters (35.31 billion cubic feet) of gas, Naftogaz said separately at the time. “Naftogaz has been the recipient of two previous EBRD loans for a total of EUR 500 million, backed by EUR 275 million in guarantees from the United States, Norway, Germany, France, Canada and The Netherlands, and complemented by earlier grant finance from Norway of EUR 187 million for emergency gas purchases”, the EBRD said April 25. “The latest agreement lifts EBRD finance for Naftogaz to EUR 770 million since 2022. “Norway’s latest grant finance brings its total wartime energy sector-focused support for Ukraine through the EBRD to EUR 460 million”. On July 11 the EBRD announced EUR 400 million in new funding for Ukraine that included a EUR 160-million loan to Naftogaz company Ukrnafta for the installation of 250 megawatts of small-scale gas-fired distributed power generation capacity across Ukraine. “At the Ukraine Recovery Conference in Rome on 10-11 July, the

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Al-Sada Reappointed as Rosneft Chair

Mohammed Bin Saleh Al-Sada has been re-elected chair of the board of directors of Russia’s state-owned PJSC Rosneft Oil Co. Ten other members of the board were elected at a shareholders’ meeting, Rosneft said in a media release. Al-Sada was elected Rosneft chairman for the first time in June 2023. He has accumulated over 40 years of experience in the energy industry. Presently, Al-Sada serves as the chairman of the board of trustees at Doha University for Science and Technology, in Qatar, Rosneft said. Rosneft added that Al-Sada also serves as a member of the board of trustees of the Abdullah Bin Hamad Al-Attiyah International Foundation for Energy and Sustainable Development, an advisory board member for the GCC Supreme Council. HE is also the vice chairman of the board of directors for Nesma Infrastructure & Technology. Between 2007 and 2011, he served as Qatari Minister of State for Energy and Industry Affairs. From 2011 to 2018, he was Qatar’s Minister of Energy and Industry and Chairman of the Board of Qatar Petroleum, now known as QatarEnergy, Rosneft noted. Board members also elected the chairmen of the three permanent committees of the board. The board of directors of Rosneft includes Andrey I. Akimov, chairman of the management board of Gazprombank; Pedro A. Aquino Jr. (independent), chief executive officer of Oil & Petroleum Holdings International Resources Ltd.; Faizal Alsuwaidi and Hamad Rashid Al-Mohannadi, representatives of Qatar Investment Authority; Viktor G. Martynov (independent), rector of Gubkin Russian State University of Oil and Gas (National Research University); Alexander D. Nekipelov (independent), director of Moscow School of Economics at the Lomonosov Moscow State University; Alexander V. Novak, Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister;  Maxim S. Oreshkin, Deputy Head of the Administration of the President of the Russian Federation; Govind Kottis Satish (independent),  managing director of Value Prolific Consulting Services

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Saipem, Subsea7 Agree Merger

Saipem SpA signed a binding merger deal to acquire Subsea7 SA and thereafter rebrand into Saipem7, the companies said Thursday, after an initial agreement last February. Subsea7 shareholders would receive 6.688 Saipem shares for each Subsea7 unit. The combined company’s share capital would be equally divided between the shareholders of Italian state-backed Saipem and Luxembourg-registered Subsea7 assuming all the latter’s shareholders participate in the transaction, a joint statement said. As the biggest shareholders of Saipem, Eni SpA and CDP Equity SpA would respectively own about 10.6 percent and 6.4 percent of Saipem7. Siem Industries SA, Subsea7’s top shareholder, would own around 11.8 percent. The parties expect to complete the merger in the latter half of 2026 subject to regulatory approvals, yes votes by the shareholders of both Saipem and Subsea7 and other customary conditions. Eni, CDP Equity and Siem Industries signed an agreement to vote for the combination. As part of the tripartite agreement, Eni and CDP Equity are entitled to assign Saipem7’s chief executive, who is planned to be Alessandro Puliti, Saipem’s chief executive and general manager. Siem Industries has been given the right to designate Saipem7’s chair, who is expected to be Subsea7 chair Kristian Siem. These designations would still be subject to approval by the combined company’s board, according to the statement. The resulting entity would inherit projects in over 60 countries and operate “a full spectrum of offshore and onshore services, from drilling, engineering and construction to life-of-field services and decommissioning, with an increased ability to optimize project scheduling for clients in oil, gas, carbon capture and renewable energy”, the statement said. Saipem7 would have more than 60 construction vessels able to perform “shallow-water to ultra-deepwater operations, utilising a full portfolio of heavy lift, high-end J-lay, S-lay and reel-lay rigid pipeline solutions, flexible pipe and umbilical

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Oil Rallies on Trade Talk Momentum

Oil gained as technical support turbocharged a rally sparked by progress in international trade talks, undercutting a US move to restore Chevron Corp.’s ability to pump oil in Venezuela. West Texas Intermediate climbed 1.2% to settle above $66 a barrel, following four sessions of declines. The European Union and the US are progressing toward a deal that would set a 15% tariff for most imports, similar to the one President Donald Trump struck with Japan. That would be a smaller rate than investors feared, with the US president earlier threatening a 30% levy on most goods if an agreement wasn’t reached by Aug. 1. The US benchmark also pushed through its 50-day moving average, triggering a spate of technical buying just ahead of the market’s close. The technical boost erased an earlier slide spurred by the Trump administration’s decision to let Chevron resume pumping oil in Venezuela, raising the prospect of increased supplies flooding into a market already facing the threat of oversupply. US imports of Venezuelan crude have ground to a halt, down from 300,000 barrels a day in January, according to Matt Smith, Americas lead oil analyst at market intelligence firm Kpler. Still, energy products from the Latin American country have already accounted for 15% of waterborne deliveries to the US Gulf Coast this year, he added. “The revocation of Chevron’s license has been to the benefit of China, given barrels have been redirected there,” Smith said. “Perhaps the realization of this, along with the supply issues on the US Gulf Coast, has been a driver behind the reversal of the decision.” Oil prices have been in a holding pattern this month, with tightness in global diesel markets offset by expectations of a deluge of crude supply from OPEC+ as the group raises production quotas. While diesel inventories

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

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

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US BOEM Seeks Feedback on Potential Wind Leasing Offshore Guam

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

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Biden Bars Offshore Oil Drilling in USA Atlantic and Pacific

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

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Biden Admin Finalizes Hydrogen Tax Credit Favoring Cleaner Production

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

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Xthings unveils Ulticam home security cameras powered by edge AI

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

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

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

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What role should oil and gas companies play in climate tech?

This week, I have a new story out about Quaise, a geothermal startup that’s trying to commercialize new drilling technology. Using a device called a gyrotron, the company wants to drill deeper, cheaper, in an effort to unlock geothermal power anywhere on the planet. (For all the details, check it out here.)  For the story, I visited Quaise’s headquarters in Houston. I also took a trip across town to Nabors Industries, Quaise’s investor and tech partner and one of the biggest drilling companies in the world.  Standing on top of a drilling rig in the backyard of Nabors’s headquarters, I couldn’t stop thinking about the role oil and gas companies are playing in the energy transition. This industry has resources and energy expertise—but also a vested interest in fossil fuels. Can it really be part of addressing climate change? The relationship between Quaise and Nabors is one that we see increasingly often in climate tech—a startup partnering up with an established company in a similar field. (Another one that comes to mind is in the cement industry, where Sublime Systems has seen a lot of support from legacy players including Holcim, one of the biggest cement companies in the world.) 
Quaise got an early investment from Nabors in 2021, to the tune of $12 million. Now the company also serves as a technical partner for the startup.  “We are agnostic to what hole we’re drilling,” says Cameron Maresh, a project engineer on the energy transition team at Nabors Industries. The company is working on other investments and projects in the geothermal industry, Maresh says, and the work with Quaise is the culmination of a yearslong collaboration: “We’re just truly excited to see what Quaise can do.”
From the outside, this sort of partnership makes a lot of sense for Quaise. It gets resources and expertise. Meanwhile, Nabors is getting involved with an innovative company that could represent a new direction for geothermal. And maybe more to the point, if fossil fuels are to be phased out, this deal gives the company a stake in next-generation energy production. There is so much potential for oil and gas companies to play a productive role in addressing climate change. One report from the International Energy Agency examined the role these legacy players could take:  “Energy transitions can happen without the engagement of the oil and gas industry, but the journey to net zero will be more costly and difficult to navigate if they are not on board,” the authors wrote.  In the agency’s blueprint for what a net-zero emissions energy system could look like in 2050, about 30% of energy could come from sources where the oil and gas industry’s knowledge and resources are useful. That includes hydrogen, liquid biofuels, biomethane, carbon capture, and geothermal.  But so far, the industry has hardly lived up to its potential as a positive force for the climate. Also in that report, the IEA pointed out that oil and gas producers made up only about 1% of global investment in climate tech in 2022. Investment has ticked up a bit since then, but still, it’s tough to argue that the industry is committed.  And now that climate tech is falling out of fashion with the government in the US, I’d venture to guess that we’re going to see oil and gas companies increasingly pulling back on their investments and promises.  BP recently backtracked on previous commitments to cut oil and gas production and invest in clean energy. And last year the company announced that it had written off $1.1 billion in offshore wind investments in 2023 and wanted to sell other wind assets. Shell closed down all its hydrogen fueling stations for vehicles in California last year. (This might not be all that big a loss, since EVs are beating hydrogen by a huge margin in the US, but it’s still worth noting.)  So oil and gas companies are investing what amounts to pennies and often backtrack when the political winds change direction. And, let’s not forget, fossil-fuel companies have a long history of behaving badly.  In perhaps the most notorious example, scientists at Exxon modeled climate change in the 1970s, and their forecasts turned out to be quite accurate. Rather than publish that research, the company downplayed how climate change might affect the planet. (For what it’s worth, company representatives have argued that this was less of a coverup and more of an internal discussion that wasn’t fit to be shared outside the company.) 

While fossil fuels are still part of our near-term future, oil and gas companies, and particularly producers, would need to make drastic changes to align with climate goals—changes that wouldn’t be in their financial interest. Few seem inclined to really take the turn needed.  As the IEA report puts it:  “In practice, no one committed to change should wait for someone else to move first.” This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review’s weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here.

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White House plan signals “open-weight first” era—and enterprises need new guardrails

Want smarter insights in your inbox? Sign up for our weekly newsletters to get only what matters to enterprise AI, data, and security leaders. Subscribe Now U.S. President Donald Trump signed the AI Action Plan, which outlines a path for the U.S. to lead in the AI race. For enterprises already in the throes of deploying AI systems, the rules represent a clear indication of how this administration intends to treat AI going forward and could signal how providers will approach AI development.  Much like the AI executive order signed by Joe Biden in 2023, Trump’s order primarily concerns government offices, directing how they can contract with AI models and application providers, as it is not a legislative act.   The AI plan may not directly affect enterprises immediately, but analysts noted that anytime the government takes a position on AI, the ecosystem changes.  “This plan will likely shape the ecosystem we all operate in — one that rewards those who can move fast, stay aligned and deliver real-world outcomes,” Matt Wood, commercial technology and innovation officer at PwC, told VentureBeat in an email. “For enterprises, the signal is clear: the pace of AI adoption is accelerating, and the cost of lagging is going up. Even if the plan centers on federal agencies, the ripple effects — in procurement, infrastructure, and norms — will reach much further. We’ll likely see new government-backed testbeds, procurement programs, and funding streams emerge — and enterprises that can partner, pilot, or productize in this environment will be well-positioned.” The AI Impact Series Returns to San Francisco – August 5 The next phase of AI is here – are you ready? Join leaders from Block, GSK, and SAP for an exclusive look at how autonomous agents are reshaping enterprise workflows – from real-time decision-making to end-to-end

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SecurityPal combines AI and experts in Nepal to speed enterprise security questionnaires by 87X or more

When a tech vendor wants to sell into a large enterprise — or when that enterprise wants to buy software from a tech vendor or AI model provider — each side may be required by the other to prove they will handle shared data responsibly in the form of mandatory surveys and questionnaires. Regulations such as GDPR, the soon-to-be effected EU AI Act and a patchwork of U.S. state laws make those proofs more complex each year. As a consequence, a tech vendor trying to sell to a large enterprise will usually be asked to complete security questionnaires that can stall deals for weeks and cost six figures in staff time.San-Francisco-based SecurityPal was founded in March 2020 by CEO Pukar Hamal to handle all that paperwork largely automatically on behalf of the vendor, using the vendor’s unique product information and internal data.

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Qwen3-Coder-480B-A35B-Instruct launches and it ‘might be the best coding model yet’

Want smarter insights in your inbox? Sign up for our weekly newsletters to get only what matters to enterprise AI, data, and security leaders. Subscribe Now Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba’s “Qwen Team” has done it again. Mere days after releasing for free and with open source licensing what is now the top performing non-reasoning large language model (LLM) in the world — full stop, even compared to proprietary AI models from well-funded U.S. labs such as Google and OpenAI — in the form of the lengthily named Qwen3-235B-A22B-2507, this group of AI researchers has come out with yet another blockbuster model. That is Qwen3-Coder-480B-A35B-Instruct, a new open-source LLM focused on assisting with software development. It is designed to handle complex, multi-step coding workflows and can create full-fledged, functional applications in seconds or minutes. The model is positioned to compete with proprietary offerings like Claude Sonnet-4 in agentic coding tasks and sets new benchmark scores among open models. It is available on Hugging Face, GitHub, Qwen Chat, via Alibaba’s Qwen API, and a growing list of third-party vibe coding and AI tool platforms. Open sourcing licensing means low cost and high optionality for enterprises But unlike Claude and other proprietary models, Qwen3-Coder, which we’ll call it for short, is available now under an open source Apache 2.0 license, meaning it’s free for any enterprise to take without charge, download, modify, deploy and use in their commercial applications for employees or end customers without paying Alibaba or anyone else a dime. It’s also so highly performant on third-party benchmarks and anecdotal usage among AI power users for “vibe coding” — coding using natural language and without formal development processes and steps — that at least one, LLM researcher Sebastian Raschka, wrote on X that: “This might be the best coding model yet.

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Google DeepMind’s new AI can help historians understand ancient Latin inscriptions

Google DeepMind has unveiled new artificial-intelligence software that could help historians recover the meaning and context behind ancient Latin engravings.  Aeneas can analyze words written in long-weathered stone to say when and where they were originally inscribed. It follows Google’s previous archaeological tool Ithaca, which also used deep learning to reconstruct and contextualize ancient text, in its case Greek. But while Ithaca and Aeneas use some similar systems, Aeneas also promises to give researchers jumping-off points for further analysis. To do this, Aeneas takes in partial transcriptions of an inscription alongside a scanned image of it. Using these, it gives possible dates and places of origins for the engraving, along with potential fill-ins for any missing text. For example, a slab damaged at the start and continuing with … us populusque Romanus would likely prompt Aeneas to guess that Senat comes before us to create the phrase Senatus populusque Romanus, “The Senate and the people of Rome.”  This is similar to how Ithaca works. But Aeneas also cross-references the text with a stored database of almost 150,000 inscriptions, which originated everywhere from modern-day Britain to modern-day Iraq, to give possible parallels—other catalogued Latin engravings that feature similar words, phrases, and analogies. 
This database, alongside a few thousand images of inscriptions, makes up the training set for Aeneas’s deep neural network. While it may seem like a good number of samples, it pales in comparison to the billions of documents used to train general-purpose large language models like Google’s Gemini. There simply aren’t enough high-quality scans of inscriptions to train a language model to learn this kind of task. That’s why specialized solutions like Aeneas are needed.  The Aeneas team believes it could help researchers “connect the past,” said Yannis Assael, a researcher at Google DeepMind who worked on the project. Rather than seeking to automate epigraphy—the research field dealing with deciphering and understanding inscriptions—he and his colleagues are interested in “crafting a tool that will integrate with the workflow of a historian,” Assael said in a press briefing. 
Their goal is to give researchers trying to analyze a specific inscription many hypotheses to work from, saving them the effort of sifting through records by hand. To validate the system, the team presented 23 historians with inscriptions that had been previously dated and tested their workflows both with and without Aeneas. The findings, which were published today in Nature, showed that Aeneas helped spur research ideas among the historians for 90% of inscriptions and that it led to more accurate determinations of where and when the inscriptions originated. In addition to this study, the researchers tested Aeneas on the Monumentum Ancyranum, a famous inscription carved into the walls of a temple in Ankara, Turkey. Here, Aeneas managed to give estimates and parallels that reflected existing historical analysis of the work, and in its attention to detail, the paper claims, it closely matched how a trained historian would approach the problem. “That was jaw-dropping,” Thea Sommerschield, an epigrapher at the University of Nottingham who also worked on Aeneas, said in the press briefing.  However, much remains to be seen about Aeneas’s capabilities in the real world. It doesn’t guess the meaning of texts, so it can’t interpret newly found engravings on its own, and it’s not clear yet how useful it will be to historians’ workflows in the long term, according to Kathleen Coleman, a professor of classics at Harvard. The Monumentum Ancyranum is considered to be one of the best-known and most well-studied inscriptions in epigraphy, raising the question of how Aeneas will fare on more obscure samples.  Google DeepMind has now made Aeneas open-source, and the interface for the system is freely available for teachers, students, museum workers, and academics. The group is working with schools in Belgium to integrate Aeneas into their secondary history education.  “To have Aeneas at your side while you’re in the museum or at the archaeological site where a new inscription has just been found—that is our sort of dream scenario,” Sommerschield said.

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Former Anthropic exec raises $15M to insure AI agents and help startups deploy safely

A new startup founded by a former Anthropic executive has raised $15 million to solve one of the most pressing challenges facing enterprises today: how to deploy artificial intelligence systems without risking catastrophic failures that could damage their businesses.The Artificial Intelligence Underwriting Company (AIUC), which launches publicly today, combines insurance coverage with rigorous safety standards and independent audits to give companies confidence in deploying AI agents — autonomous software systems that can perform complex tasks like customer service, coding, and data analysis.The seed funding round was led by Nat Friedman, former GitHub CEO, through his firm NFDG, with participation from Emergence Capital, Terrain, and several notable angel investors including Ben Mann, co-founder of Anthropic, and former chief information security officers at Google Cloud and MongoDB.“Enterprises are walking a tightrope,” said Rune Kvist, AIUC’s co-founder and CEO, in an interview. “On the one hand, you can stay on the sidelines and watch your competitors make you irrelevant, or you can lean in and risk making headlines for having your chatbot spew Nazi propaganda, or hallucinating your refund policy, or discriminating against the people you’re trying to recruit.”

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Coal- and gas-fired power plants have a new best friend: data centers

Abbe Ramanan is a project director at Clean Energy Group. In 2020, the Virginia Assembly passed the Virginia Clean Economy Act, a law that required the state’s largest utility, Dominion Energy, to generate all its electricity from renewable resources by 2045. However, Dominion has found a useful loophole to get around the law’s requirements — data centers. Viriginia hosts the largest data center market in the world, and is home to at least 150 hyperscale data centers, with more being proposed. In its recent integrated resource plan, Dominion cited projected energy demand from these data centers as a key reason to delay retiring existing power plants, including the Clover Power Station, a coal-powered peaker plant in Halifax County, a disproportionately low-income region. In addition to delaying peaker retirements, Dominion has proposed building new gas-powered generation, including a 1-GW peaker plant in Chesterfield, a community that already shoulders an undue environmental burden from existing natural gas- and coal-fired generation. Similar stories have played out across the country as data centers become more and more ubiquitous, particularly in the Southeast. Utilities in Virginia, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina have proposed building 20,000 MW of new gas power plants by 2040. Data centers driving the projected load growth are being used to justify this buildout. In Virginia, Georgia and South Carolina, data centers are responsible for at least 65% of projected load growth. Data centers are also delaying the retirement of fossil fuel power plants nationwide, with at least 17 fossil fuel generators originally scheduled for closure now delaying retirement. This new gas buildout, as well as the delayed retirement of fossil fuel generators, overwhelmingly harms Black and brown communities, who face higher energy and environmental burdens. The gas bonanza is especially concerning because the projected demand from data centers could be

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GM, Redwood Materials sign deal to deploy energy-storage batteries

Dive Brief: General Motors and battery recycler Redwood Materials have signed a non-binding memorandum of understanding to accelerate the deployment of stationary energy storage systems built using both new modules and second-life batteries from the automaker’s electric vehicles, according to a July 16 press release. The plans are part of a new business unit launched by Redwood Materials in June named Redwood Energy that’s focused on assembling and deploying low-cost stationary energy-storage systems to help meet growing power demands of AI data centers and other applications. “Electricity demand is climbing, and it’s only going to accelerate,” Kurt Kelty, VP of batteries, propulsion, and sustainability at GM, said in the release. “To meet that challenge, the U.S. needs energy storage solutions that can be deployed quickly, economically, and made right here at home.” Dive Insight: Redwood Materials plans to establish a domestic supply chain to manufacture batteries to support energy storage applications via its Redwood Energy unit. The company currently repurposes around 20 gigawatt hours of batteries annually, which is the equivalent of 250,000 EVs or roughly 90% of all lithium-ion batteries and battery materials currently recycled in North America, according to its website.    GM is already providing the battery recycling company with used batteries to help power what Redwood calls “the largest second-life battery development in the world and the largest microgrid in North America” at an installation in Sparks, Nevada, per the release. The electricity produced by the microgrid is being used by AI infrastructure company Crusoe. “Electricity demand is accelerating at an unprecedented pace, driven by AI and the rapid electrification of everything from transportation to industry,” said JB Straubel, founder and CEO of Redwood Materials, in the release. “Both GM’s second-life EV batteries and new batteries can be deployed in Redwood’s energy storage systems, delivering fast,

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Data centers seek flexible power solutions for resilience, sustainability

AI data centers in the United States could consume 33.8 gigawatts of power by 2030, or about 3% of the country’s generating capacity, Schneider Electric said earlier this year. Some AI power demand projections are even more aggressive, like a 2024 RAND Corporation forecast cited by Schneider that sees 130 GW of data center demand in 2030. With data center projects worth at least $64 billion delayed or blocked by local opposition and state policymakers and regulators placing restrictions on development, a backlash appears to be brewing.  Data center opponents cite a litany of concerns, from noise to water pollution, but some of the most frequently cited center on the local impacts of onsite power generation and broader effects on the electric grid. Earlier this month, Elon Musk’s xAI overcame local opposition to secure an air permit for a fleet of gas generators at its AI training center in Memphis, Tenn.  Texas lawmakers recently passed a law requiring new data centers to disconnect from the grid during periods of high power demand. Several states have implemented or are considering special utility tariffs requiring data center companies to cover the costs of grid upgrades they benefit from. North Carolina utility regulators plan a technical conference in October on data centers’ potential impacts on power reliability. Data centers’ appetite for power and the growing recognition that unchecked growth would be a problem for the grid could cause short-term growing pains for the industry, said Kelcy Pegler, CEO of FlexGen, a battery management software company. “From a societal perspective, we are underestimating the impact that data centers will have on the grid,” Pegler said in an interview. “We’re going to have a break-in period where data center ambitions will have trouble coming to fruition.” Earlier this year, FlexGen partnered with electrical contractor Rosendin

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Saskatchewan, Ontario, Alberta Sign MoU to Facilitate O&G Transportation

Three Canadian provinces are collaborating to facilitate the transportation of oil and gas across the country. Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, Ontario Premier Doug Ford, and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to coordinate the safe transportation and export of Western Canadian oil, natural gas and critical minerals to refineries, seaports and storage facilities across Canada and beyond, according to a statement from the Canadian government. The MoU establishes a collaborative framework to explore multiple pipeline and rail corridors, and expansion of processing hubs for critical minerals. The framework aims to create new and critical avenues to reach domestic and international markets, the statement said. The agreement will help strengthen interprovincial trade by linking Saskatchewan, Ontario, and Alberta through shared infrastructure development and coordinated market strategies, according to the statement. “We are sending a clear signal that Canada’s energy future will be built by Canadians, for Canadians,” Moe said. “This agreement commits our provinces to work together to unlock new markets, shore up our supply chains from mine to port and advocate for the federal reforms our industry needs. By advancing pipelines, rail connections and critical-mineral processing capacity, we are safeguarding thousands of jobs, strengthening our energy security and fostering sustainable growth”. “As the world grapples with President Trump’s unfair tariffs, it is more important than ever to build a resilient and self-reliant economy here at home,” Ford said. “This agreement sends a clear message: Ontario, Alberta and Saskatchewan are ready to get shovels in the ground and move forward on projects that will secure our long-term prosperity”. “We are taking action to grow our economy, build real infrastructure and get major projects moving,” Smith said. “Alberta is proud to lead the way in uniting with provinces that share a vision for responsible development, economic freedom and

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The Download: saving the US climate programs, and America’s AI protections are under threat

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. How nonprofits and academia are stepping up to salvage US climate programs Nonprofits are trying to preserve a US effort to modernize greenhouse-gas measurements, amid growing fears that the Trump administration’s dismantling of federal programs will obscure the nation’s contributions to climate change. The Data Foundation, a Washington, DC, nonprofit, is fundraising for an initiative that will coordinate efforts among nonprofits, technical experts, and companies to improve the accuracy and accessibility of climate emissions information. It will build on an effort to improve the collection of emissions data that former president Joe Biden launched in 2023—and which President Trump nullified on his first day in office. 
The new greenhouse-gas coalition is one of a growing number of nonprofit and academic groups that have spun up or shifted focus to keep essential climate monitoring and research efforts going amid the Trump administration’s assault on environmental funding, staffing, and regulations. Read the full story. —James Temple
America’s AI watchdog is losing its bite Most Americans encounter the Federal Trade Commission only if they’ve been scammed: It handles identity theft, fraud, and stolen data. During the Biden administration, the agency went after AI companies for scamming customers with deceptive advertising or harming people by selling irresponsible technologies.  With the announcement of President Trump’s AI Action Plan, that era may now be over.The new plan suggests that the Trump administration believes the agency’s previous actions went too far, and that it would be reviewing all FTC actions taken under the Biden administration.The move is the latest in its evolving attack on the agency, which provides a significant route of redress for people harmed by AI in the US. It’s likely to result in faster deployment of AI with fewer checks on accuracy, fairness, or consumer harm. Read the full story. —James O’Donnell Trump’s AI Action Plan is a distraction —Asad Ramzanali is the director of artificial intelligence and technology policy at the Vanderbilt Policy Accelerator.

On Wednesday, President Trump issued three executive orders, delivered a speech, and released an action plan, all on the topic of continuing American leadership in AI. This flurry of actions made for glitzy press moments, including an hour-long speech from the president and onstage signings. But while the tech industry cheered these announcements (which will swell their coffers), they obscured the fact that the administration is currently decimating the very policies that enabled America to become the world leader in AI in the first place. Read the full story. The deadly saga of the controversial gene therapy Elevidys It has been a grim few months for the Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) community. There had been some excitement when, a couple of years ago, a gene therapy for the disorder was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the first time. That drug, Elevidys, has now been implicated in the deaths of two teenage boys. The drug’s approval was always controversial—there was a lack of evidence that it actually worked, for starters. But the agency that once rubber-stamped the drug has now turned on its manufacturer, Sarepta Therapeutics. In a remarkable chain of events, the FDA asked the company to stop shipping the drug on July 18. Sarepta refused to comply.In the days since, the company has acquiesced. But its reputation has already been hit. And the events have dealt a devastating blow to people desperate for treatments that might help them, their children, or other family members with DMD. Read the full story. —Jessica Hamzelou A version of 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.
The must-reads
I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 Corporate America is paying the price for Trump’s tariffsUS businesses are absorbing the costs—for now. (WSJ $)+ Inflation is likely to hit hard in the fall. (Vox)+ Sweeping tariffs could threaten the US manufacturing rebound. (MIT Technology Review) 2 GPT-5 is reportedly launching next monthAfter some unexpected setbacks. (The Verge) 3 Meta is hosting ads crowdfunding for IDF dronesA watchdog has identified more than 100 ads seeking donations for the army. (The Guardian)4 AI is helping researchers to combat long covid and MEA new platform spots biological markers of the conditions in patients. (FT $)+ Scientists are finding signals of long covid in blood. They could lead to new treatments. (MIT Technology Review)5 Demand is surging for banned chip repair expertise in China While most of Nvidia’s chips aren’t allowed in the country, there’s a booming industry for fixing them once they break. (Reuters)+ Nvidia’s chips are being smuggled in through the black market. (FT $) 6 ChatGPT can offer up instructions for self harm and devil worshipIt guides users through self-mutilation rituals, despite violating its own policies. (The Atlantic $) 7 We have more steel than we can possibly useBut countries are worried about the optics of ceasing production. (NYT $)+ This startup just hit a big milestone for green steel production. (MIT Technology Review)
8 Internet age checks are comingA swath of child protection laws are forcing a profound shift across the web. (Wired $)+ Child online safety laws will actually hurt kids, critics say. (MIT Technology Review) 9 An Italian rocket maker wants to conduct launches in the USAvio SpA is keen to launch flights from Wallops Island in Virginia. (Bloomberg $)+ Rivals are rising to challenge the dominance of SpaceX. (MIT Technology Review) 10 This app allows women to check a potential date’s historyBut men say there’s no recourse to address false posts about them. (WP $)
Quote of the day “If OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini had responded that it was trained to appeal to the left, congressional Republicans would have been outraged and opened an investigation. Instead, they were silent.” —Senator Ed Markey urges the CEOs of major tech companies to fight Donald Trump’s anti-woke AI order, Ars Technica reports. One more thing The great AI consciousness conundrumAI consciousness isn’t just a devilishly tricky intellectual puzzle; it’s a morally weighty problem with potentially dire consequences that philosophers, cognitive scientists, and engineers alike are currently grappling with.Fail to identify a conscious AI, and you might unintentionally subjugate a being whose interests ought to matter. Mistake an unconscious AI for a conscious one, and you risk compromising human safety and happiness for the sake of an unthinking, unfeeling hunk of silicon and code.Over the past few decades, a small research community has doggedly attacked the question of what consciousness is and how it works. The effort has yielded real progress. And now, with the rapid advance of AI technology, these insights could offer our only guide to the untested, morally fraught waters of artificial consciousness. Read the full story. —Grace Huckins 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.) + Crank it up to 11! Spinal Tap is back, baby.+ The tale of New York’s first real architectural firm.+ Crazy Train as played by a class of children on the xylophone is a real delight.+ Here’s how to easily add some cheap and accessible superfoods to zhuzh up your daily diet.

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Enbridge to Supply Meta with Power from 600-MW Solar Project in Texas

Enbridge Inc. said it has reached a final investment decision on Clear Fork, a 600-megawatt (MW) solar project in Texas, with Meta Platforms, Inc. signing a long-term contract for 100 percent of the renewable output of the project. Clear Fork is planned to be a utility-scale solar facility located near San Antonio. Construction is underway, and the facility is expected to enter service in the summer of 2027, the company said in a news release. Enbridge’s estimated project cost is $900 mllion and the project is expected to be accretive to cash flow and earnings per share starting in 2027, the company said. “Clear Fork demonstrates the growing demand for renewable power across North America from blue-chip companies who are involved in technology and data center operations,” Enbridge Executive Vice President Matthew Akman said. “Enbridge continues to advance its world-class renewables development portfolio using our financial strength, supply chain reach and construction expertise under a low-risk commercial model that delivers strong competitive returns”. “We are thrilled to partner with Enbridge to bring new renewable energy to Texas and help support our operations with 100 percent clean energy,” Meta Head of Global Energy Urvi Parekh said. First Nations Stake Acquisition Earlier in the month, Stonlasec8 Indigenous Alliance Limited, representing 38 Indigenous communities in British Columbia, completed a CAD 715 million ($512.75 million) equity investment to acquire a 12.5 percent ownership interest in Enbridge’s Westcoast natural gas pipeline system, the first to be competed under the program. The acquisition was supported by two separate bond financings by TD Securities Inc., as a bond placement agent, and a syndicate of institutional investors who provided CAD 400 million through a secured bond issuance to facilitate the Indigenous Partnership’s investment, according to a separate statement. The bond financing was backed by a CAD 400 million

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