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ISO New England issues transmission RFP to access new wind resources

The New England grid operator on Monday published a request for proposals to address the region’s longer-term transmission needs, aimed at upgrading the electric system between anticipated wind generation in northern Maine and demand centers to the south. ISO New England said it published the RFP at the direction of the New England States Committee on Electricity. Proposals are due in September, though the schedule is subject to change, the ISO said. After evaluation by the ISO, a preferred solution may be selected by NESCOE as early as September 2026.  Proposals must aim to increase the amount of power that can flow across the Maine–New Hampshire and Surowiec–South transmission interfaces, and develop new infrastructure around Pittsfield, Maine, that could accommodate the interconnection of 1,200 MW of land-based wind generation, the ISO said. “A strong preference will be given to proposals with an in-service date on or before December 31, 2035, or as close as possible,” according to the RFP.  Massachusetts officials celebrated the announcement, noting that the first competitive RFP for longer-term transmission investments has been “a long-time goal of the New England states.”  “This RFP will address long-standing constraints on the New England power system and integrate new, affordable, onshore wind resources in the coming years,” according to a statement from Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey, D. Previously, New England lacked a mechanism to enable the ISO to procure transmission at the states’ request. The RFP process was developed in collaboration between the ISO and regional stakeholders, allowing the states to request that the grid operator pursue transmission investment “that is grounded in the evaluation of broad regional benefits and consumer interests,” according to the Massachusetts statement. “This milestone represents what can happen when we work together — innovative and cost-effective solutions to our region’s most pressing energy challenges,” Healey said. “We are grateful

Read More »

Macquarie Strategists Forecast USA Crude Inventory Rise

In an oil and gas report sent to Rigzone late Monday by the Macquarie team, Macquarie strategists revealed that they are forecasting that U.S. crude inventories will be up 4.2 million barrels for the week ending March 28. “This follows a 3.3 million barrel draw for the week ending March 21 and compares to our initial expectation for a larger crude build this week,” the strategists said in the report. “For this week’s crude balance, from refineries, we model crude runs down meaningfully (-0.4 million barrels per day) following a strong print last week,” they added. “Among net imports, we model a moderate increase, with exports (-1.0 million barrels per day) and imports (-0.7 million barrels per day) much lower on a nominal basis,” they continued. The strategists warned in the report that timing of cargoes remains a source of potential volatility in this week’s crude balance. “From implied domestic supply (prod.+adj.+transfers), we look for a bounce (+0.3 million barrels per day) this week,” they said in the report. “Rounding out the picture, we anticipate another small increase in SPR [Strategic Petroleum Reserve] stocks (+0.3 MM BBL) this week,” they added. The strategists also noted in the report that, “among products”, they “look for draws in gasoline (-0.9 million barrels) and distillate (-4.1 million barrels), with jet stocks effectively flat”. “We model implied demand for these three products at ~14.4 million barrels per day for the week ending March 28,” they said. In its latest weekly petroleum status report at the time of writing, which was released on March 26 and included data for the week ending March 21, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) highlighted that U.S. commercial crude oil inventories, excluding those in the SPR, decreased by 3.3 million barrels from the week ending March 14 to the

Read More »

NEO Energy seeks contractors for Donan, Balloch and Lochranza decommissioning

NEO Energy has released five tenders seeking contractors to help decommission its Donan, Balloch and Lochranza fields, along with the Global Producer III floating production offloading and storage (FPSO) vessel. According to data from the North Sea Transition Authority’s (NSTA’s) Pathfinder database, the decommissioning campaign is expected to start in the second quarter of 2026 at the earliest, when work to disconnect the subsea infrastructure is expected to commence. This will also see the FPSO unmoored and towed to an unspecified location. By 2027, NEO plans to begin recovering the subsea infrastructure, followed by plugging and abandoning a total of 19 wells in 2028.- To help with this, NEO Energy is looking for a contractor to perform P&A activities on the wells. The tender is expected to take place on 31 December 2025 and has a value of over £25 million The company also announced four additional tenders, each with a value of less than £25m, covering recycling the FPSO, flushing, isolating and disconnecting the subsea infrastructure from the FPSO, disconnecting the moorings and towing the FPSO, and bulk seabed clearance. NEO Energy recently announced plans to merge its North Sea operations with Repsol Resources UK’s. The deal will see Repsol retain $1.8 billion (£1.4bn) in decommissioning liabilities related to its legacy assets, which NEO said will enhance the cash flows of the merged business. NEO said it expects to complete the deal during the third quarter of 2025, subject to regulatory approvals. © Supplied by SystemNinian South. CNRL Canadian Natural Resources Ltd (CNRL) has issued two tenders to assist with decommissioning its Ninian field in the Northern North Sea, located east of Shetland. The decommissioning scope consists of three areas, covering the Ninian South Platform, Ninian Central Platform and the Ninian subsea infrastructure, which includes the Strathspey, Lyell, Columba

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Eni, Saipem Extend Biorefining Collaboration

Eni SpA and Saipem SpA have extended a deal to collaborate on building biorefineries and converting traditional refineries. The agreement, first signed 2023, combines Eni’s technological expertise with Saipem’s expertise in the design and construction of such plants. Italian state-backed integrated energy company Eni holds a 21.19 percent stake in energy engineering company Saipem. “The agreement concerns, in particular, the construction of new biorefineries, the conversion of traditional refineries into biorefineries and, generally, the development of new initiatives by Eni in the field of industrial transformation”, Eni said in an online statement. “Through this agreement, Eni, in line with its goal of decarbonizing processes and products, intends to further develop its biorefining capacity through the development of new initiatives to produce biofuels both for aviation (SAF, Sustainable Aviation Fuel) and for land and sea mobility (HVO, Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil). “At the same time, Saipem further strengthens its distinctive expertise in biorefining and decarbonization”. Under the agreement Eni recently awarded Saipem a contract for engineering, procurement services and the purchase of critical equipment for the upgrade of a biorefinery in Porto Marghera. The project will increase the plant’s capacity from 400,000 metric tons a year to 600,000 metric tons per year. The upgrade will also enable the facility to produce SAF from 2027. In November 2024 Eni also picked Saipem for the conversion of the Livorno refinery into a biorefinery, as part of their biorefining collaboration. In both projects Saipem also carried out preparatory engineering activities such as feasibility studies and front-end engineering design. The two contracts are valued about EUR 320 million ($345.4 million), according to Eni. Eni, through subsidiary Enilive, has a biorefining production capacity of 1.65 million metric tons per annum (MMtpa). Eni aims to raise this to over 5 MMtpa by 2030 as part of its efforts

Read More »

Talent gap complicates cost-conscious cloud planning

The top strategy so far is what one enterprise calls the “Cloud Team.” You assemble all your people with cloud skills, and your own best software architect, and have the team examine current and proposed cloud applications, looking for a high-level approach that meets business goals. In this process, the team tries to avoid implementation specifics, focusing instead on the notion that a hybrid application has an agile cloud side and a governance-and-sovereignty data center side, and what has to be done is push functionality into the right place. The Cloud Team supporters say that an experienced application architect can deal with the cloud in abstract, without detailed knowledge of cloud tools and costs. For example, the architect can assess the value of using an event-driven versus transactional model without fixating on how either could be done. The idea is to first come up with approaches. Then, developers could work with cloud providers to map each approach to an implementation, and assess the costs, benefits, and risks. Ok, I lied about this being the top strategy—sort of, at least. It’s the only strategy that’s making much sense. The enterprises all start their cloud-reassessment journey on a different tack, but they agree it doesn’t work. The knee-jerk approach to cloud costs is to attack the implementation, not the design. What cloud features did you pick? Could you find ones that cost less? Could you perhaps shed all the special features and just host containers or VMs with no web services at all? Enterprises who try this, meaning almost all of them, report that they save less than 15% on cloud costs, a rate of savings that means roughly a five-year payback on the costs of making the application changes…if they can make them at all. Enterprises used to build all of

Read More »

Cisco takes inspiration from Iron Man for its AI-driven platform engineer

“We deliberately named it after Iron Man’s AI assistant because we wanted that level of capability – an intelligent system that understands context, can access different tools and knowledge bases, and most importantly, works alongside engineers rather than just responding to commands,” Kalpage said. Platform engineering has hit a crisis point of complexity. The modern tech stack of Kubernetes, microservices, and cloud-native tools has created three critical pain points, Kalpage said, including:  The bottleneck problem: Engineers spend up to 70% of their time on repetitive tasks rather than innovation. JARVIS automates these workflows, turning day-long processes into minute-long ones.  The expertise gap: No human can master every component in today’s cloud stack. JARVIS bridges this gap by encoding platform knowledge and providing contextual assistance when engineers need it.  The integration nightmare: Most enterprises have dozens of disjointed tools. JARVIS creates a unified interface across these systems, orchestrating complex workflows that would normally require manual coordination across multiple platforms.  Technically, JARVIS operates as a distributed brain with four interfaces, including a Backstage portal, Webex, JIRA, and CLI, meeting engineers in their existing workflows, Kalpage said. “Under the hood, it uses a LangGraph architecture with supervised, specialized, and reflection agents working together in feedback loops.”  “It connects to knowledge bases, executes tool calls to various systems, and even generates Kubernetes configurations using hybrid ML approaches,” Kalpage said. The JARVIS architecture aligns with Cisco Outshift’s Internet of Agents and recently announced AGNTCY (pronounced “agency”) initiative. Outshift describes the Internet of Agents as standards-based, shared infrastructure components that enable quantum-safe, agent-to-agent communications. When AI agents begin to proliferate, a new, open structure will be needed so they can securely communicate and collaborate together to solve complex problems, Cisco stated.  The “Internet of Agents” is an open-sourced, three-layer architecture that would enable quantum-safe, agent-to-agent communication

Read More »

ISO New England issues transmission RFP to access new wind resources

The New England grid operator on Monday published a request for proposals to address the region’s longer-term transmission needs, aimed at upgrading the electric system between anticipated wind generation in northern Maine and demand centers to the south. ISO New England said it published the RFP at the direction of the New England States Committee on Electricity. Proposals are due in September, though the schedule is subject to change, the ISO said. After evaluation by the ISO, a preferred solution may be selected by NESCOE as early as September 2026.  Proposals must aim to increase the amount of power that can flow across the Maine–New Hampshire and Surowiec–South transmission interfaces, and develop new infrastructure around Pittsfield, Maine, that could accommodate the interconnection of 1,200 MW of land-based wind generation, the ISO said. “A strong preference will be given to proposals with an in-service date on or before December 31, 2035, or as close as possible,” according to the RFP.  Massachusetts officials celebrated the announcement, noting that the first competitive RFP for longer-term transmission investments has been “a long-time goal of the New England states.”  “This RFP will address long-standing constraints on the New England power system and integrate new, affordable, onshore wind resources in the coming years,” according to a statement from Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey, D. Previously, New England lacked a mechanism to enable the ISO to procure transmission at the states’ request. The RFP process was developed in collaboration between the ISO and regional stakeholders, allowing the states to request that the grid operator pursue transmission investment “that is grounded in the evaluation of broad regional benefits and consumer interests,” according to the Massachusetts statement. “This milestone represents what can happen when we work together — innovative and cost-effective solutions to our region’s most pressing energy challenges,” Healey said. “We are grateful

Read More »

Macquarie Strategists Forecast USA Crude Inventory Rise

In an oil and gas report sent to Rigzone late Monday by the Macquarie team, Macquarie strategists revealed that they are forecasting that U.S. crude inventories will be up 4.2 million barrels for the week ending March 28. “This follows a 3.3 million barrel draw for the week ending March 21 and compares to our initial expectation for a larger crude build this week,” the strategists said in the report. “For this week’s crude balance, from refineries, we model crude runs down meaningfully (-0.4 million barrels per day) following a strong print last week,” they added. “Among net imports, we model a moderate increase, with exports (-1.0 million barrels per day) and imports (-0.7 million barrels per day) much lower on a nominal basis,” they continued. The strategists warned in the report that timing of cargoes remains a source of potential volatility in this week’s crude balance. “From implied domestic supply (prod.+adj.+transfers), we look for a bounce (+0.3 million barrels per day) this week,” they said in the report. “Rounding out the picture, we anticipate another small increase in SPR [Strategic Petroleum Reserve] stocks (+0.3 MM BBL) this week,” they added. The strategists also noted in the report that, “among products”, they “look for draws in gasoline (-0.9 million barrels) and distillate (-4.1 million barrels), with jet stocks effectively flat”. “We model implied demand for these three products at ~14.4 million barrels per day for the week ending March 28,” they said. In its latest weekly petroleum status report at the time of writing, which was released on March 26 and included data for the week ending March 21, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) highlighted that U.S. commercial crude oil inventories, excluding those in the SPR, decreased by 3.3 million barrels from the week ending March 14 to the

Read More »

NEO Energy seeks contractors for Donan, Balloch and Lochranza decommissioning

NEO Energy has released five tenders seeking contractors to help decommission its Donan, Balloch and Lochranza fields, along with the Global Producer III floating production offloading and storage (FPSO) vessel. According to data from the North Sea Transition Authority’s (NSTA’s) Pathfinder database, the decommissioning campaign is expected to start in the second quarter of 2026 at the earliest, when work to disconnect the subsea infrastructure is expected to commence. This will also see the FPSO unmoored and towed to an unspecified location. By 2027, NEO plans to begin recovering the subsea infrastructure, followed by plugging and abandoning a total of 19 wells in 2028.- To help with this, NEO Energy is looking for a contractor to perform P&A activities on the wells. The tender is expected to take place on 31 December 2025 and has a value of over £25 million The company also announced four additional tenders, each with a value of less than £25m, covering recycling the FPSO, flushing, isolating and disconnecting the subsea infrastructure from the FPSO, disconnecting the moorings and towing the FPSO, and bulk seabed clearance. NEO Energy recently announced plans to merge its North Sea operations with Repsol Resources UK’s. The deal will see Repsol retain $1.8 billion (£1.4bn) in decommissioning liabilities related to its legacy assets, which NEO said will enhance the cash flows of the merged business. NEO said it expects to complete the deal during the third quarter of 2025, subject to regulatory approvals. © Supplied by SystemNinian South. CNRL Canadian Natural Resources Ltd (CNRL) has issued two tenders to assist with decommissioning its Ninian field in the Northern North Sea, located east of Shetland. The decommissioning scope consists of three areas, covering the Ninian South Platform, Ninian Central Platform and the Ninian subsea infrastructure, which includes the Strathspey, Lyell, Columba

Read More »

Eni, Saipem Extend Biorefining Collaboration

Eni SpA and Saipem SpA have extended a deal to collaborate on building biorefineries and converting traditional refineries. The agreement, first signed 2023, combines Eni’s technological expertise with Saipem’s expertise in the design and construction of such plants. Italian state-backed integrated energy company Eni holds a 21.19 percent stake in energy engineering company Saipem. “The agreement concerns, in particular, the construction of new biorefineries, the conversion of traditional refineries into biorefineries and, generally, the development of new initiatives by Eni in the field of industrial transformation”, Eni said in an online statement. “Through this agreement, Eni, in line with its goal of decarbonizing processes and products, intends to further develop its biorefining capacity through the development of new initiatives to produce biofuels both for aviation (SAF, Sustainable Aviation Fuel) and for land and sea mobility (HVO, Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil). “At the same time, Saipem further strengthens its distinctive expertise in biorefining and decarbonization”. Under the agreement Eni recently awarded Saipem a contract for engineering, procurement services and the purchase of critical equipment for the upgrade of a biorefinery in Porto Marghera. The project will increase the plant’s capacity from 400,000 metric tons a year to 600,000 metric tons per year. The upgrade will also enable the facility to produce SAF from 2027. In November 2024 Eni also picked Saipem for the conversion of the Livorno refinery into a biorefinery, as part of their biorefining collaboration. In both projects Saipem also carried out preparatory engineering activities such as feasibility studies and front-end engineering design. The two contracts are valued about EUR 320 million ($345.4 million), according to Eni. Eni, through subsidiary Enilive, has a biorefining production capacity of 1.65 million metric tons per annum (MMtpa). Eni aims to raise this to over 5 MMtpa by 2030 as part of its efforts

Read More »

Talent gap complicates cost-conscious cloud planning

The top strategy so far is what one enterprise calls the “Cloud Team.” You assemble all your people with cloud skills, and your own best software architect, and have the team examine current and proposed cloud applications, looking for a high-level approach that meets business goals. In this process, the team tries to avoid implementation specifics, focusing instead on the notion that a hybrid application has an agile cloud side and a governance-and-sovereignty data center side, and what has to be done is push functionality into the right place. The Cloud Team supporters say that an experienced application architect can deal with the cloud in abstract, without detailed knowledge of cloud tools and costs. For example, the architect can assess the value of using an event-driven versus transactional model without fixating on how either could be done. The idea is to first come up with approaches. Then, developers could work with cloud providers to map each approach to an implementation, and assess the costs, benefits, and risks. Ok, I lied about this being the top strategy—sort of, at least. It’s the only strategy that’s making much sense. The enterprises all start their cloud-reassessment journey on a different tack, but they agree it doesn’t work. The knee-jerk approach to cloud costs is to attack the implementation, not the design. What cloud features did you pick? Could you find ones that cost less? Could you perhaps shed all the special features and just host containers or VMs with no web services at all? Enterprises who try this, meaning almost all of them, report that they save less than 15% on cloud costs, a rate of savings that means roughly a five-year payback on the costs of making the application changes…if they can make them at all. Enterprises used to build all of

Read More »

Cisco takes inspiration from Iron Man for its AI-driven platform engineer

“We deliberately named it after Iron Man’s AI assistant because we wanted that level of capability – an intelligent system that understands context, can access different tools and knowledge bases, and most importantly, works alongside engineers rather than just responding to commands,” Kalpage said. Platform engineering has hit a crisis point of complexity. The modern tech stack of Kubernetes, microservices, and cloud-native tools has created three critical pain points, Kalpage said, including:  The bottleneck problem: Engineers spend up to 70% of their time on repetitive tasks rather than innovation. JARVIS automates these workflows, turning day-long processes into minute-long ones.  The expertise gap: No human can master every component in today’s cloud stack. JARVIS bridges this gap by encoding platform knowledge and providing contextual assistance when engineers need it.  The integration nightmare: Most enterprises have dozens of disjointed tools. JARVIS creates a unified interface across these systems, orchestrating complex workflows that would normally require manual coordination across multiple platforms.  Technically, JARVIS operates as a distributed brain with four interfaces, including a Backstage portal, Webex, JIRA, and CLI, meeting engineers in their existing workflows, Kalpage said. “Under the hood, it uses a LangGraph architecture with supervised, specialized, and reflection agents working together in feedback loops.”  “It connects to knowledge bases, executes tool calls to various systems, and even generates Kubernetes configurations using hybrid ML approaches,” Kalpage said. The JARVIS architecture aligns with Cisco Outshift’s Internet of Agents and recently announced AGNTCY (pronounced “agency”) initiative. Outshift describes the Internet of Agents as standards-based, shared infrastructure components that enable quantum-safe, agent-to-agent communications. When AI agents begin to proliferate, a new, open structure will be needed so they can securely communicate and collaborate together to solve complex problems, Cisco stated.  The “Internet of Agents” is an open-sourced, three-layer architecture that would enable quantum-safe, agent-to-agent communication

Read More »

Prairie Closes $603MM DJ Basin Acquisition from Bayswater

Prairie Operating Co. said it has closed its $602.75 million acquisition of certain Denver-Julesburg Basin (DJ Basin) assets from Bayswater Exploration and Production and its affiliated entities, which strengthens its position “as a leading operator” in the basin. The acquisition boosts Prairie’s production by approximately 25,700 net barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd), consisting of 69 percent liquids, the company said in a news release. It also adds 24,000 net acres to the company’s approximately 600 highly economic drilling locations and roughly 10 years of drilling inventory. The assets contribute 77.9 million barrels of oil equivalent (MMboe) in proved reserves with an estimated PV-10 value of $1.1 billion, Prairie said. With the expansion, Prairie said it anticipates a substantial uplift in its 2025 production, revenue, and adjusted EBITDA. Prairie said the transaction was funded through a combination of proceeds from a new issuance of series F convertible preferred stock to a single institutional investor, a common stock public offering, a draw on the company’s newly expanded $1 billion credit facility, and a direct issuance of common stock to Bayswater. Following the closing, Prairie has approximately 35.4 million shares of common stock outstanding. “This acquisition is a pivotal moment for Prairie, significantly expanding our operational footprint in the DJ Basin,” Prairie Chairman and CEO Edward Kovalik said. “By integrating these high-quality assets, we are materially enhancing our production profile, strengthening our financial position, and creating meaningful value for our shareholders. Prairie remains singularly focused on executing our strategic vision to become a premier high-growth, low-cost oil producer”. Prairie President Gary Hanna said, “The addition of the Bayswater Assets further establishes Prairie as a leading operator in the DJ Basin. These assets are a strong complement to our existing portfolio, and we remain focused on maximizing operational efficiencies, optimizing production, and

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Ukraine Receives Critical Energy Equipment from Norway

Norway has delivered critical energy equipment for Ukraine via the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) to help ensure uninterrupted energy supply amid the war. As part of the aid, state-owned oil and gas company Naftogaz Group received gas-fired generator sets with a combined capacity of 150 megawatts. These will provide backup power and heating for critical infrastructure and residential areas, Naftogaz said in an online statement. “This support would strengthen the energy security of two major Ukrainian cities and provide electricity and heat to over 500,000 residents of the Dnipropetrovsk region during the next heating season”, Naftogaz said. Its subsidiary JSC Ukrgasvydobuvannya also received equipment to enhance natural gas production. Meanwhile state-owned electricity transmission system operator NPC Ukrenergo received two 330-kilovolt autotransformers with a capacity of 200 megavolt-amperes. “This support from Norway is a vital lifeline, enabling us to strengthen our energy infrastructure and build resilience against future disruptions”, said Ukrainian Energy Minister German Galushchenko. Naftogaz said, “Norway and UNDP are working closely to restore Ukraine’s power system, combining Norway’s financial support with UNDP’s operational expertise”. Support under the collaboration includes the provision of generators and solar power plants, as well as power and heat for schools, hospitals and other critical facilities, according to Naftogaz. “The initiative has already benefited millions of Ukrainians by strengthening essential services like healthcare and education, modernizing the energy sector, and enabling businesses to operate with fewer interruptions”, the UNDP said separately. It said reconstruction for Ukraine’s energy sector needed an estimated $67.78 billion as of December 2024. “The regions with the largest estimated needs are Zaporizhzhia, Kharkiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Donetsk, Odesa, and Sumy oblast”, the UNDP said. “The attacks on the energy system have caused civilian suffering and general economic attrition. Immediate power outages have affected around 1.5 million people, disrupting heating, water supply and sanitation, public

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ECITB commits to £2m investment in Aberdeen, Humber, Teesside and more

The Engineering Construction Industry Training Board (ECITB) has announced a further £2 million investment in ‘skills hubs’ across the UK over the next two years. It is directing funds towards “industrial cluster hot spots” such as the north-east of Scotland, Teesside and the Humber, Scotland, South Wales and the Solent. This follows on from a previous £1m investment through the trade body’s Regional Skills Hub Funding initiative to increase training provider capacity and grow new entrant numbers into the engineering and construction industry (ECI) as it contends with skills shortages. ECITB’s cash has already been directed to the Humber region, Teesside, the north-east of Scotland and the wider UK, the organisation explained, as it plans to announce further projects to receive backing “shortly”. Andrew Hockey, CEO of ECITB, commented: “This extra investment will help further address skills shortages by enhancing training and assessment infrastructure and capabilities at both colleges and independent training providers located in Britain’s industrial heartlands that will directly increase the flow of trained workers into the industry.” This comes soon after an ECITB report, which found the oil and gas workforce is older than other sectors, and it is unlikely that young people will fill the gap left by retirees. © Supplied by ECITB/ Dave DodgeECITB CEO Andrew Hockey meeting Work Ready learners at SETA in Southampton. Photo by Dave Dodge. The ECITB recently worked with industry partners as part of the Net Zero Teesside cluster project, which received £478,000 funding last month. The funding will contribute to an immersive pipefitting, welding, mechanical and project-based training rig and includes enhanced pipefitting facilities. The joint venture between BP and Equinor recently faced criticism from MPs who claimed government investment of £21.7bn in “unproven technologies” was “risky”. One of the first businesses to secure funds from the initial £1m

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BP Advances Gas Development in Trinidad and Tobago

BP Trinidad and Tobago (bpTT) is moving forward with the Ginger gas development project. Ginger is located approximately 50 miles off Trinidad’s southeast coast in water depths of less than 300 feet. Drilling at the first well started in January and is expected to resume in the fourth quarter, the company said in a news release. Ginger will become bpTT’s fourth subsea project and will include four subsea wells and subsea trees tied back to bpTT’s existing Mahogany B platform. First gas from the project is expected in 2027 and will make up one of the company’s 10 major projects expected to start up between 2025 and 2027. At peak, the development is expected to have the capacity to produce an average gas production of 62,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd), according to the release. The Ginger development and bpTT’s Cypre gas project, scheduled to start up this year, are part of bpTT’s strategy of maximizing production from existing acreage, developing capital-efficient projects that tie into existing infrastructure, it said. The project meets the company’s “expected returns from upstream projects” and is fully accommodated within its capital expenditure plans, it said. Further, bpTT reported exploration success at its Frangipani well. Drilling at the well identified multiple stacked gas reservoirs within the same geological structure. Options are currently being evaluated to move the discovery forward, the company stated. Frangipani is located east of the existing Mahogany field, approximately 50 miles off the southeast coast. The company has a 100 percent working interest in both Ginger and Frangipani. bpTT president David Campbell said, “I am very proud to announce these two milestones. With Frangipani, our objective was to prove that our continued progress in exploration and appraisal activity could unlock new fields and investment opportunities for the region. And the

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USA DOI Generates $39MM from 1Q 2025 Oil, Gas Lease Sales

In a statement posted on its site recently, the U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) announced that it generated over $39 million in total receipts from oil and gas lease sales held in the first quarter of 2025. The Bureau of Land Management leased 34 parcels totaling 25,038 acres for $39,007,609 in total receipts for its first quarter of fiscal year 2025 oil and gas lease sales, the DOI noted in the statement. The organization highlighted that the Bureau of Land Management held oil and gas lease sales in Montana, North Dakota, New Mexico, Wyoming, and Nevada.  In a statement posted on its site on January 22, the Bureau of Land Management announced that its Montana-Dakotas State Office held a competitive oil and gas lease sale, “offering 13 parcels covering 1,324 acres in Montana and North Dakota”. “In total, 255 bids were received, with 13 parcels covering 1,324 acres leased, roughly 100 percent of the total acreage available. A total of $11,314,786 in high bids were received,” the Bureau said in that statement. A statement posted on the Bureau of Land Management’s site on February 21 announced that the Bureau’s New Mexico State Office leased seven parcels totaling 1,317.29 acres for $20,671,801 in total receipts for its quarterly oil and gas lease sale.  In another statement posted on its site on March 4, the Bureau said its Wyoming State Office leased four parcels totaling 2,443.11acres for $6,725,713 in total receipts for its quarterly oil and gas lease sale, and in a statement posted on its site on March 18, the Bureau said its Nevada State Office leased 10 parcels totaling 19,954 acres for $295,309 in total receipts for its quarterly oil and gas lease sale. “This quarter’s lease sales demonstrate Interior’s unwavering commitment to fostering American energy dominance, and we are grateful to those who

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Shell Completes Takeover of Pavilion Energy, Sale of Singapore Energy Park

Shell PLC said Tuesday it had completed separate transactions to take over Singapore-based liquefied natural gas (LNG) trader Pavilion Energy Pte. Ltd. and divest its Energy and Chemicals Park in the Southeast Asian city-state. The British integrated energy company acquired all shares of Pavilion Energy from Carne Investments Pte. Ltd., an indirect subsidiary of Singaporean state-owned investor Temasek. “The acquisition includes Pavilion Energy’s portfolio of LNG offtake and supply contracts, regasification capacity, and LNG bunkering business, strengthening Shell’s position in the LNG market”, Shell said in an online statement. Pavilion has a “long-term” contracted supply of about 6.5 million metric tons per annum (MMtpa) and regasification capacity of around 2 MMtpa at National Grid Group’s Isle Grain LNG terminal in England, as well as regasification access in Singapore and Spain, Shell noted. Additionally Pavilion holds a time charter for 3 M-type, electronically controlled gas injection LNG vessels and 2 TFDE (tri-fuel diesel electric) vessels. Pavilion also has an LNG bunkering business, whose first vessel was deployed early 2024, Shell said. Shell’s purchase excluded Pavilion’s pipeline gas business in Singapore, which has been transferred to Temasek’s Gas Supply Pte. Ltd. The transaction also excluded Pavilion’s 20 percent stake in Tanzania’s Blocks 1 and 4. “The acquisition will be absorbed within Shell’s cash capital expenditure guidance”, Shell said. In Singapore, Shell, via its 2016 acquisition of BG Group PLC, already holds the first license to import LNG into the country and supplies nearly a quarter of national natural gas needs, according to the company. Shell aims to raise its LNG sales by 4-5 percent through 2030. Last year it sold 65.8 million metric tons of LNG, while it recorded 29.1 million metric tons of liquefaction volumes. ‘‘We want to become the world’s leading integrated gas and LNG business and the most customer-focused

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West of Orkney developers helped support 24 charities last year

The developers of the 2GW West of Orkney wind farm paid out a total of £18,000 to 24 organisations from its small donations fund in 2024. The money went to projects across Caithness, Sutherland and Orkney, including a mental health initiative in Thurso and a scheme by Dunnet Community Forest to improve the quality of meadows through the use of traditional scythes. Established in 2022, the fund offers up to £1,000 per project towards programmes in the far north. In addition to the small donations fund, the West of Orkney developers intend to follow other wind farms by establishing a community benefit fund once the project is operational. West of Orkney wind farm project director Stuart McAuley said: “Our donations programme is just one small way in which we can support some of the many valuable initiatives in Caithness, Sutherland and Orkney. “In every case we have been immensely impressed by the passion and professionalism each organisation brings, whether their focus is on sport, the arts, social care, education or the environment, and we hope the funds we provide help them achieve their goals.” In addition to the local donations scheme, the wind farm developers have helped fund a £1 million research and development programme led by EMEC in Orkney and a £1.2m education initiative led by UHI. It also provided £50,000 to support the FutureSkills apprenticeship programme in Caithness, with funds going to employment and training costs to help tackle skill shortages in the North of Scotland. The West of Orkney wind farm is being developed by Corio Generation, TotalEnergies and Renewable Infrastructure Development Group (RIDG). The project is among the leaders of the ScotWind cohort, having been the first to submit its offshore consent documents in late 2023. In addition, the project’s onshore plans were approved by the

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Biden bans US offshore oil and gas drilling ahead of Trump’s return

US President Joe Biden has announced a ban on offshore oil and gas drilling across vast swathes of the country’s coastal waters. The decision comes just weeks before his successor Donald Trump, who has vowed to increase US fossil fuel production, takes office. The drilling ban will affect 625 million acres of federal waters across America’s eastern and western coasts, the eastern Gulf of Mexico and Alaska’s Northern Bering Sea. The decision does not affect the western Gulf of Mexico, where much of American offshore oil and gas production occurs and is set to continue. In a statement, President Biden said he is taking action to protect the regions “from oil and natural gas drilling and the harm it can cause”. “My decision reflects what coastal communities, businesses, and beachgoers have known for a long time: that drilling off these coasts could cause irreversible damage to places we hold dear and is unnecessary to meet our nation’s energy needs,” Biden said. “It is not worth the risks. “As the climate crisis continues to threaten communities across the country and we are transitioning to a clean energy economy, now is the time to protect these coasts for our children and grandchildren.” Offshore drilling ban The White House said Biden used his authority under the 1953 Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, which allows presidents to withdraw areas from mineral leasing and drilling. However, the law does not give a president the right to unilaterally reverse a drilling ban without congressional approval. This means that Trump, who pledged to “unleash” US fossil fuel production during his re-election campaign, could find it difficult to overturn the ban after taking office. Sunset shot of the Shell Olympus platform in the foreground and the Shell Mars platform in the background in the Gulf of Mexico Trump

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The Download: our 10 Breakthrough Technologies for 2025

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. Introducing: MIT Technology Review’s 10 Breakthrough Technologies for 2025 Each year, we spend months researching and discussing which technologies will make the cut for our 10 Breakthrough Technologies list. We try to highlight a mix of items that reflect innovations happening in various fields. We look at consumer technologies, large industrial­-scale projects, biomedical advances, changes in computing, climate solutions, the latest in AI, and more.We’ve been publishing this list every year since 2001 and, frankly, have a great track record of flagging things that are poised to hit a tipping point. It’s hard to think of another industry that has as much of a hype machine behind it as tech does, so the real secret of the TR10 is really what we choose to leave off the list.Check out the full list of our 10 Breakthrough Technologies for 2025, which is front and center in our latest print issue. It’s all about the exciting innovations happening in the world right now, and includes some fascinating stories, such as: + How digital twins of human organs are set to transform medical treatment and shake up how we trial new drugs.+ What will it take for us to fully trust robots? The answer is a complicated one.+ Wind is an underutilized resource that has the potential to steer the notoriously dirty shipping industry toward a greener future. Read the full story.+ After decades of frustration, machine-learning tools are helping ecologists to unlock a treasure trove of acoustic bird data—and to shed much-needed light on their migration habits. Read the full story. 
+ How poop could help feed the planet—yes, really. Read the full story.
Roundtables: Unveiling the 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2025 Last week, Amy Nordrum, our executive editor, joined our news editor Charlotte Jee to unveil our 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2025 in an exclusive Roundtable discussion. Subscribers can watch their conversation back here. And, if you’re interested in previous discussions about topics ranging from mixed reality tech to gene editing to AI’s climate impact, check out some of the highlights from the past year’s events. This international surveillance project aims to protect wheat from deadly diseases For as long as there’s been domesticated wheat (about 8,000 years), there has been harvest-devastating rust. Breeding efforts in the mid-20th century led to rust-resistant wheat strains that boosted crop yields, and rust epidemics receded in much of the world.But now, after decades, rusts are considered a reemerging disease in Europe, at least partly due to climate change.  An international initiative hopes to turn the tide by scaling up a system to track wheat diseases and forecast potential outbreaks to governments and farmers in close to real time. And by doing so, they hope to protect a crop that supplies about one-fifth of the world’s calories. Read the full story. —Shaoni Bhattacharya

The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 Meta has taken down its creepy AI profiles Following a big backlash from unhappy users. (NBC News)+ Many of the profiles were likely to have been live from as far back as 2023. (404 Media)+ It also appears they were never very popular in the first place. (The Verge) 2 Uber and Lyft are racing to catch up with their robotaxi rivalsAfter abandoning their own self-driving projects years ago. (WSJ $)+ China’s Pony.ai is gearing up to expand to Hong Kong.  (Reuters)3 Elon Musk is going after NASA He’s largely veered away from criticising the space agency publicly—until now. (Wired $)+ SpaceX’s Starship rocket has a legion of scientist fans. (The Guardian)+ What’s next for NASA’s giant moon rocket? (MIT Technology Review) 4 How Sam Altman actually runs OpenAIFeaturing three-hour meetings and a whole lot of Slack messages. (Bloomberg $)+ ChatGPT Pro is a pricey loss-maker, apparently. (MIT Technology Review) 5 The dangerous allure of TikTokMigrants’ online portrayal of their experiences in America aren’t always reflective of their realities. (New Yorker $) 6 Demand for electricity is skyrocketingAnd AI is only a part of it. (Economist $)+ AI’s search for more energy is growing more urgent. (MIT Technology Review) 7 The messy ethics of writing religious sermons using AISkeptics aren’t convinced the technology should be used to channel spirituality. (NYT $)
8 How a wildlife app became an invaluable wildfire trackerWatch Duty has become a safeguarding sensation across the US west. (The Guardian)+ How AI can help spot wildfires. (MIT Technology Review) 9 Computer scientists just love oracles 🔮 Hypothetical devices are a surprisingly important part of computing. (Quanta Magazine)
10 Pet tech is booming 🐾But not all gadgets are made equal. (FT $)+ These scientists are working to extend the lifespan of pet dogs—and their owners. (MIT Technology Review) Quote of the day “The next kind of wave of this is like, well, what is AI doing for me right now other than telling me that I have AI?” —Anshel Sag, principal analyst at Moor Insights and Strategy, tells Wired a lot of companies’ AI claims are overblown.
The big story Broadband funding for Native communities could finally connect some of America’s most isolated places September 2022 Rural and Native communities in the US have long had lower rates of cellular and broadband connectivity than urban areas, where four out of every five Americans live. Outside the cities and suburbs, which occupy barely 3% of US land, reliable internet service can still be hard to come by.
The covid-19 pandemic underscored the problem as Native communities locked down and moved school and other essential daily activities online. But it also kicked off an unprecedented surge of relief funding to solve it. Read the full story. —Robert Chaney 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.) + Rollerskating Spice Girls is exactly what your Monday morning needs.+ It’s not just you, some people really do look like their dogs!+ I’m not sure if this is actually the world’s healthiest meal, but it sure looks tasty.+ Ah, the old “bitten by a rabid fox chestnut.”

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Equinor Secures $3 Billion Financing for US Offshore Wind Project

Equinor ASA has announced a final investment decision on Empire Wind 1 and financial close for $3 billion in debt financing for the under-construction project offshore Long Island, expected to power 500,000 New York homes. The Norwegian majority state-owned energy major said in a statement it intends to farm down ownership “to further enhance value and reduce exposure”. Equinor has taken full ownership of Empire Wind 1 and 2 since last year, in a swap transaction with 50 percent co-venturer BP PLC that allowed the former to exit the Beacon Wind lease, also a 50-50 venture between the two. Equinor has yet to complete a portion of the transaction under which it would also acquire BP’s 50 percent share in the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal lease, according to the latest transaction update on Equinor’s website. The lease involves a terminal conversion project that was intended to serve as an interconnection station for Beacon Wind and Empire Wind, as agreed on by the two companies and the state of New York in 2022.  “The expected total capital investments, including fees for the use of the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal, are approximately $5 billion including the effect of expected future tax credits (ITCs)”, said the statement on Equinor’s website announcing financial close. Equinor did not disclose its backers, only saying, “The final group of lenders includes some of the most experienced lenders in the sector along with many of Equinor’s relationship banks”. “Empire Wind 1 will be the first offshore wind project to connect into the New York City grid”, the statement added. “The redevelopment of the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal and construction of Empire Wind 1 will create more than 1,000 union jobs in the construction phase”, Equinor said. On February 22, 2024, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) announced

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USA Crude Oil Stocks Drop Week on Week

U.S. commercial crude oil inventories, excluding those in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), decreased by 1.2 million barrels from the week ending December 20 to the week ending December 27, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) highlighted in its latest weekly petroleum status report, which was released on January 2. Crude oil stocks, excluding the SPR, stood at 415.6 million barrels on December 27, 416.8 million barrels on December 20, and 431.1 million barrels on December 29, 2023, the report revealed. Crude oil in the SPR came in at 393.6 million barrels on December 27, 393.3 million barrels on December 20, and 354.4 million barrels on December 29, 2023, the report showed. Total petroleum stocks – including crude oil, total motor gasoline, fuel ethanol, kerosene type jet fuel, distillate fuel oil, residual fuel oil, propane/propylene, and other oils – stood at 1.623 billion barrels on December 27, the report revealed. This figure was up 9.6 million barrels week on week and up 17.8 million barrels year on year, the report outlined. “At 415.6 million barrels, U.S. crude oil inventories are about five percent below the five year average for this time of year,” the EIA said in its latest report. “Total motor gasoline inventories increased by 7.7 million barrels from last week and are slightly below the five year average for this time of year. Finished gasoline inventories decreased last week while blending components inventories increased last week,” it added. “Distillate fuel inventories increased by 6.4 million barrels last week and are about six percent below the five year average for this time of year. Propane/propylene inventories decreased by 0.6 million barrels from last week and are 10 percent above the five year average for this time of year,” it went on to state. In the report, the EIA noted

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More telecom firms were breached by Chinese hackers than previously reported

Broader implications for US infrastructure The Salt Typhoon revelations follow a broader pattern of state-sponsored cyber operations targeting the US technology ecosystem. The telecom sector, serving as a backbone for industries including finance, energy, and transportation, remains particularly vulnerable to such attacks. While Chinese officials have dismissed the accusations as disinformation, the recurring breaches underscore the pressing need for international collaboration and policy enforcement to deter future attacks. The Salt Typhoon campaign has uncovered alarming gaps in the cybersecurity of US telecommunications firms, with breaches now extending to over a dozen networks. Federal agencies and private firms must act swiftly to mitigate risks as adversaries continue to evolve their attack strategies. Strengthening oversight, fostering industry-wide collaboration, and investing in advanced defense mechanisms are essential steps toward safeguarding national security and public trust.

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Researchers warn of ‘catastrophic overtraining’ in Large Language Models

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More A new academic study challenges a core assumption in the development of large language models (LLMs), warning that more pre-training data may not always lead to better models. Researchers from some of the leading computer science institutions in the West and around the world — including Carnegie Mellon University, Stanford University, Harvard University, and Princeton University — have introduced the concept of “Catastrophic Overtraining,” showing that extended pre-training can actually make language models harder to fine-tune, ultimately degrading their performance. The study, titled “Overtrained Language Models Are Harder to Fine-Tune”, is available on arXiv and led by Jacob Mitchell Springer, along with co-authors Sachin Goyal, Kaiyue Wen, Tanishq Kumar, Xiang Yue, Sadhika Malladi, Graham Neubig, and Aditi Raghunathan. The law of diminishing returns The research focuses on a surprising trend observed in modern LLM development: while models are pre-trained on ever expanding pools of data — licensed or scraped from the web, represented to an LLM as a series of tokens, or numerical representations of concepts and ideas — this practice of increasing the token number during pre-training may lead to reduced effectiveness when those models are later fine-tuned for specific tasks. The team conducted a series of empirical evaluations and theoretical analyses to examine the effect of extended pre-training on model adaptability. One of the key findings centers on AI2’s open source OLMo-1B model. The researchers compared two versions of this model: one pre-trained on 2.3 trillion tokens and another on 3 trillion tokens. Despite the latter being trained on 30% more data, the latter model performed worse after instruction tuning. Specifically, the 3T-token model showed over 2% worse performance on several standard language model benchmarks compared to its 2.3T-token

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The first trial of generative AI therapy shows it might help with depression

The first clinical trial of a therapy bot that uses generative AI suggests it was as effective as human therapy for participants with depression, anxiety, or risk for developing eating disorders. Even so, it doesn’t give a go-ahead to the dozens of companies hyping such technologies while operating in a regulatory gray area.  A team led by psychiatric researchers and psychologists at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College built the tool, called Therabot, and the results were published on March 27 in the New England Journal of Medicine. Many tech companies have built AI tools for therapy, promising that people can talk with a bot more frequently and cheaply than they can with a trained therapist—and that this approach is safe and effective. Many psychologists and psychiatrists have shared the vision, noting that fewer than half of people with a mental disorder receive therapy, and those who do might get only 45 minutes per week. Researchers have tried to build tech so that more people can access therapy, but they have been held back by two things.  One, a therapy bot that says the wrong thing could result in real harm. That’s why many researchers have built bots using explicit programming: The software pulls from a finite bank of approved responses (as was the case with Eliza, a mock-psychotherapist computer program built in the 1960s). But this makes them less engaging to chat with, and people lose interest. The second issue is that the hallmarks of good therapeutic relationships—shared goals and collaboration—are hard to replicate in software. 
In 2019, as early large language models like OpenAI’s GPT were taking shape, the researchers at Dartmouth thought generative AI might help overcome these hurdles. They set about building an AI model trained to give evidence-based responses. They first tried building it from general mental-health conversations pulled from internet forums. Then they turned to thousands of hours of transcripts of real sessions with psychotherapists. “We got a lot of ‘hmm-hmms,’ ‘go ons,’ and then ‘Your problems stem from your relationship with your mother,’” said Michael Heinz, a research psychiatrist at Dartmouth College and Dartmouth Health and first author of the study, in an interview. “Really tropes of what psychotherapy would be, rather than actually what we’d want.”
Dissatisfied, they set to work assembling their own custom data sets based on evidence-based practices, which is what ultimately went into the model. Many AI therapy bots on the market, in contrast, might be just slight variations of foundation models like Meta’s Llama, trained mostly on internet conversations. That poses a problem, especially for topics like disordered eating. “If you were to say that you want to lose weight,” Heinz says, “they will readily support you in doing that, even if you will often have a low weight to start with.” A human therapist wouldn’t do that.  To test the bot, the researchers ran an eight-week clinical trial with 210 participants who had symptoms of depression or generalized anxiety disorder or were at high risk for eating disorders. About half had access to Therabot, and a control group did not. Participants responded to prompts from the AI and initiated conversations, averaging about 10 messages per day. Participants with depression experienced a 51% reduction in symptoms, the best result in the study. Those with anxiety experienced a 31% reduction, and those at risk for eating disorders saw a 19% reduction in concerns about body image and weight. These measurements are based on self-reporting through surveys, a method that’s not perfect but remains one of the best tools researchers have. These results, Heinz says, are about what one finds in randomized control trials of psychotherapy with 16 hours of human-provided treatment, but the Therabot trial accomplished it in about half the time. “I’ve been working in digital therapeutics for a long time, and I’ve never seen levels of engagement that are prolonged and sustained at this level,” he says. Jean-Christophe Bélisle-Pipon, an assistant professor of health ethics at Simon Fraser University who has written about AI therapy bots but was not involved in the research, says the results are impressive but notes that just like any other clinical trial, this one doesn’t necessarily represent how the treatment would act in the real world.  “We remain far from a ‘greenlight’ for widespread clinical deployment,” he wrote in an email. One issue is the supervision that wider deployment might require. During the beginning of the trial, Heinz says, he personally oversaw all the messages coming in from participants (who consented to the arrangement) to watch out for problematic responses from the bot. If therapy bots needed this oversight, they wouldn’t be able to reach as many people. 

I asked Heinz if he thinks the results validate the burgeoning industry of AI therapy sites. “Quite the opposite,” he says, cautioning that most don’t appear to train their models on evidence-based practices like cognitive behavioral therapy, and they likely don’t employ a team of trained researchers to monitor interactions. “I have a lot of concerns about the industry and how fast we’re moving without really kind of evaluating this,” he adds. When AI sites advertise themselves as offering therapy in a legitimate, clinical context, Heinz says, it means they fall under the regulatory purview of the Food and Drug Administration. Thus far, the FDA has not gone after many of the sites. If it did, Heinz says, “my suspicion is almost none of them—probably none of them—that are operating in this space would have the ability to actually get a claim clearance”—that is, a ruling backing up their claims about the benefits provided.  Bélisle-Pipon points out that if these types of digital therapies are not approved and integrated into health-care and insurance systems, it will severely limit their reach. Instead, the people who would benefit from using them might seek emotional bonds and therapy from types of AI not designed for those purposes (indeed, new research from OpenAI suggests that interactions with its AI models have a very real impact on emotional well-being).  “It is highly likely that many individuals will continue to rely on more affordable, nontherapeutic chatbots—such as ChatGPT or Character.AI—for everyday needs, ranging from generating recipe ideas to managing their mental health,” he wrote. 

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How a bankruptcy judge can stop a genetic privacy disaster

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: A tech company accumulates a ton of user data, hoping to figure out a business model later. That business model never arrives, the company goes under, and the data is in the wind.  The latest version of that story emerged on March 24, when the onetime genetic testing darling 23andMe filed for bankruptcy. Now the fate of 15 million people’s genetic data rests in the hands of a bankruptcy judge. At a hearing on March 26, the judge gave 23andMe permission to seek offers for its users’ data. But, there’s still a small chance of writing a better ending for users. After the bankruptcy filing, the immediate take from policymakers and privacy advocates was that 23andMe users should delete their accounts to prevent genetic data from falling into the wrong hands. That’s good advice for the individual user (and you can read how to do so here). But the reality is most people won’t do it. Maybe they won’t see the recommendations to do so. Maybe they don’t know why they should be worried. Maybe they have long since abandoned an account that they don’t even remember exists. Or maybe they’re just occupied with the chaos of everyday life.  This means the real value of this data comes from the fact that people have forgotten about it. Given 23andMe’s meager revenue—fewer than 4% of people who took tests pay for subscriptions—it seems inevitable that the new owner, whoever it is, will have to find some new way to monetize that data. 
This is a terrible deal for users who just wanted to learn a little more about themselves or their ancestry. Because genetic data is forever. Contact information can go stale over time: you can always change your password, your email, your phone number, or even your address. But a bad actor who has your genetic data—whether a cybercriminal selling it to the highest bidder, a company building a profile of your future health risk, or a government trying to identify you—will have it tomorrow and the next day and all the days after that.  Users with exposed genetic data are not only vulnerable to harm today; they’re vulnerable to exploits that might be developed in the future. 
While 23andMe promises that it will not voluntarily share data with insurance providers, employers, or public databases, its new owner could unwind those promises at any time with a simple change in terms.  In other words: If a bankruptcy court makes a mistake authorizing the sale of 23andMe’s user data, that mistake is likely permanent and irreparable.  All this is possible because American lawmakers have neglected to meaningfully engage with digital privacy for nearly a quarter-century. As a result, services are incentivized to make flimsy, deceptive promises that can be abandoned at a moment’s notice. And the burden falls on users to keep track of it all, or just give up. Here, a simple fix would be to reverse that burden. A bankruptcy court could require that users individually opt in before their genetic data can be transferred to 23andMe’s new owners, regardless of who those new owners are. Anyone who didn’t respond or who opted out would have the data deleted.  Bankruptcy proceedings involving personal data don’t have to end badly. In 2000, the Federal Trade Commission settled with the bankrupt retailer ToySmart to ensure that its customer data could not be sold as a stand-alone asset, and that customers would have to affirmatively consent to unexpected new uses of their data. And in 2015, the FTC intervened in the bankruptcy of RadioShack to ensure that it would keep its promises never to sell the personal data of its customers. (RadioShack eventually agreed to destroy it.)  The ToySmart case also gave rise to the role of the consumer privacy ombudsman. Bankruptcy judges can appoint an ombuds to help the court consider how the sale of personal data might affect the bankruptcy estate, examining the potential harms or benefits to consumers and any alternatives that might mitigate those harms. The U.S. Trustee has requested the appointment of an ombuds in this case. While scholars have called for the role to have more teeth and for the FTC and states to intervene more often, a framework for protecting personal data in bankruptcy is available. And ultimately, the bankruptcy judge has broad power to make decisions about how (or whether) property in bankruptcy is sold. Here, 23andMe has a more permissive privacy policy than ToySmart or RadioShack. But the risks incurred if genetic data falls into the wrong hands or is misused are severe and irreversible. And given 23andMe’s failure to build a viable business model from testing kits, it seems likely that a new business would use genetic data in ways that users wouldn’t expect or want.  An opt-in requirement for genetic data solves this problem. Genetic data (and other sensitive data) could be held by the bankruptcy trustee and released as individual users gave their consent. If users failed to opt in after a period of time, the remaining data would be deleted. This would incentivize 23andMe’s new owners to earn user trust and build a business that delivers value to users, instead of finding unexpected ways to exploit their data. And it would impose virtually no burden on the people whose genetic data is at risk: after all, they have plenty more DNA to spare.

Consider the alternative. Before 23andMe went into bankruptcy, its then-CEO made two failed attempts to buy it, at reported valuations of $74.7 million and $12.1 million. Using the higher offer, and with 15 million users, that works out to a little under $5 per user. Is it really worth it to permanently risk a person’s genetic privacy just to add a few dollars in value to the bankruptcy estate?     Of course, this raises a bigger question: Why should anyone be able to buy the genetic data of millions of Americans in a bankruptcy proceeding? The answer is simple: Lawmakers allow them to. Federal and state inaction allows companies to dissolve promises about protecting Americans’ most sensitive data at a moment’s notice. When 23andMe was founded, in 2006, the promise was that personalized health care was around the corner. Today, 18 years later, that era may really be almost here. But with privacy laws like ours, who would trust it? Keith Porcaro is the Rueben Everett Senior Lecturing Fellow at Duke Law School.

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The Download: peering inside an LLM, and the rise of Signal

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. Anthropic can now track the bizarre inner workings of a large language model The news: The AI firm Anthropic has developed a way to peer inside a large language model and watch what it does as it comes up with a response, revealing key new insights into how the technology works. The takeaway: LLMs are even stranger than we thought.Why it matters: It’s no secret that large language models work in mysterious ways. Shedding some light on how they work would expose their weaknesses, revealing why they make stuff up and can be tricked into going off the rails. It would help resolve deep disputes about exactly what these models can and can’t do. And it would show how trustworthy (or not) they really are. Read the full story. —Will Douglas Heaven
What is Signal? The messaging app, explained.
With the recent news that the Atlantic’s editor in chief was accidentally added to a group Signal chat for American leaders planning a bombing in Yemen, many people are wondering: What is Signal? Is it secure? If government officials aren’t supposed to use it for military planning, does that mean I shouldn’t use it either?The answer is: Yes, you should use Signal, but government officials having top-secret conversations shouldn’t use Signal. Read the full story to find out why. —Jack Cushman This story is part of our MIT Technology Review Explains series, in which our writers untangle the complex, messy world of technology to help you understand what’s coming next. You can read more of them here. “Spare” living human bodies might provide us with organs for transplantation —Jessica Hamzelou This week, MIT Technology Review published a piece on bodyoids—living bodies that cannot think or feel pain. In the piece, a trio of scientists argue that advances in biotechnology will soon allow us to create “spare” human bodies that could be used for research, or to provide organs for donation. If you find your skin crawling at this point, you’re not the only one. It’s a creepy idea, straight from the more horrible corners of science fiction. But bodyoids could be used for good. And if they are truly unaware and unable to think, the use of bodyoids wouldn’t cross “most people’s ethical lines,” the authors argue. 

I’m not so sure. Read the full story. 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 A judge has ordered Trump’s officials to preserve their secret Signal chat While officials are required by law to keep chats detailing government business, Signal’s messages can be set to auto-disappear. (USA Today)+ The conversation detailed an imminent attack against Houthi rebels in Yemen. (The Hill)+ A government accountability group has sued the agencies involved. (Reuters)+ The officials involved in the chat appear to have public Venmo accounts. (Wired $) 2 The White House is prepared to cut up to 50% of agency staffBut the final cuts could end up exceeding even that. (WP $)+ The sweeping cuts could threaten vital US statistics, too. (FT $)+ Can AI help DOGE slash government budgets? It’s complex. (MIT Technology Review)  3 OpenAI is struggling to keep up with demand for ChatGPT’s image generationThe fervor around its Studio Ghibli pictures has sent its GPUs into overdrive. (The Verge)+ Ghibli’s founder is no fan of AI art. (404 Media)+ Four ways to protect your art from AI. (MIT Technology Review)
4 Facebook is pivoting back towards friends and familyLess news, fewer posts from people you don’t know. (NYT $)+ A new tab shows purely updates from friends, with no other recommendations. (Insider $)5 Africa is set to build its first AI factoryA specialized powerhouse for AI computing, to be precise. (Rest of World)+ What Africa needs to do to become a major AI player. (MIT Technology Review)6 A TikTok network spread Spanish-language immigration misinformationIncluding clips of the doctored voices of well-known journalists. (NBC News) 7 Your TV is desperate for your dataStreamers are scrambling around for new ways to make money off the information they gather on you. (Vox)
8 This startup extracts rare earth oxides from industrial magnets 🧲It’s a less intrusive way of accessing minerals vital to EV and wind turbine production. (FT $)+ The race to produce rare earth elements. (MIT Technology Review) 9 NASA hopes to launch its next Starliner flight as soon as later this yearAfter its latest mission stretched from a projected eight days to nine months. (Reuters)+ Europe is finally getting serious about commercial rockets. (MIT Technology Review) 10 The Sims has been the world’s favorite life simulation game for 25 yearsBut a new Korean game is both more realistic and multicultural. (Bloomberg $) Quote of the day “It’s like, can you tell the difference between a person and a person-shaped sock puppet that is holding up a sign saying, ‘I am a sock puppet’?”
—Laura Edelson, a computer science professor at Northeastern University, is skeptical about brands’ abilities to ensure their ads are being shown to real humans and not bots, she tells the Wall Street Journal. The big story The race to fix space-weather forecasting before next big solar storm hits
April 2024As the number of satellites in space grows, and as we rely on them for increasing numbers of vital tasks on Earth, the need to better predict stormy space weather is becoming more and more urgent.Scientists have long known that solar activity can change the density of the upper atmosphere. But it’s incredibly difficult to precisely predict the sorts of density changes that a given amount of solar activity would produce.Now, experts are working on a model of the upper atmosphere to help scientists to improve their models of how solar activity affects the environment in low Earth orbit. If they succeed, they’ll be able to keep satellites safe even amid turbulent space weather, reducing the risk of potentially catastrophic orbital collisions. Read the full story. —Tereza Pultarova 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.) + This is very cool—a nearly-infinite virtual museum entirely generated from Wikipedia.+ How to let go of that grudge you’ve been harboring (you know the one)+ If your social media feeds have been plagued by hot men making bad art, you’re not alone.+ It’s Friday, so enjoy this 1992 recording of a very fresh-faced Pearl Jam.

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“Spare” living human bodies might provide us with organs for transplantation

This week, MIT Technology Review published a piece on bodyoids—living bodies that cannot think or feel pain. In the piece, a trio of scientists argue that advances in biotechnology will soon allow us to create “spare” human bodies that could be used for research, or to provide organs for donation. If you find your skin crawling at this point, you’re not the only one. It’s a creepy idea, straight from the more horrible corners of science fiction. But bodyoids could be used for good. And if they are truly unaware and unable to think, the use of bodyoids wouldn’t cross “most people’s ethical lines,” the authors argue. I’m not so sure. Either way, there’s no doubt that developments in science and biotechnology are bringing us closer to the potential reality of bodyoids. And the idea is already stirring plenty of ethical debate and controversy. One of the main arguments made for bodyoids is that they could provide spare human organs. There’s a huge shortage of organs for transplantation. More than 100,000 people in the US are waiting for a transplant, and 17 people on that waiting list die every day. Human bodyoids could serve as a new source.
Scientists are working on other potential solutions to this problem. One approach is the use of gene-edited animal organs. Animal organs don’t typically last inside human bodies—our immune systems will reject them as “foreign.” But a few companies are creating pigs with a series of gene edits that make their organs more acceptable to human bodies. A handful of living people have received gene-edited pig organs. David Bennett Sr. was the first person to get a gene-edited pig heart, in 2022, and Richard Slayman was the first to get a kidney, in early 2024. Unfortunately, both men died around two months after their surgery.
But Towana Looney, the third living person to receive a gene-edited pig kidney, has been doing well. She had her transplant surgery in late November of last year. “I am full of energy. I got an appetite I’ve never had in eight years,” she said at the time. “I can put my hand on this kidney and feel it buzzing.” She returned home in February. At least one company is taking more of a bodyoid-like approach. Renewal Bio, a biotech company based in Israel, hopes to grow “embryo-stage versions of people” for replacement organs. Their approach is based on advances in the development of “synthetic embryos.” (I’m putting that term in quotation marks because, while it’s the simplest descriptor of what they are, a lot of scientists hate the term.) Embryos start with the union of an egg cell and a sperm cell. But scientists have been working on ways to make embryos using stem cells instead. Under the right conditions, these cells can divide into structures that look a lot like a typical embryo. Scientists don’t know how far these embryo-like structures will be able to develop. But they’re already using them to try to get cows and monkeys pregnant. And no one really knows how to think about synthetic human embryos. Scientists don’t even really know what to call them. Rules stipulate that typical human embryos may be grown in the lab for a maximum of 14 days. Should the same rules apply to synthetic ones? The very existence of synthetic embryos is throwing into question our understanding of what a human embryo even is. “Is it the thing that is only generated from the fusion of a sperm and an egg?” Naomi Moris, a developmental biologist at the Crick Institute in London, said to me a couple of years ago. “Is it something to do with the cell types it possesses, or the [shape] of the structure?” The authors of the new MIT Technology Review piece also point out that such bodyoids could also help speed scientific and medical research.

At the moment, most drug research must be conducted in lab animals before clinical trials can start. But nonhuman animals may not respond the same way people do, and the vast majority of treatments that look super-promising in mice fail in humans. Such research can feel like a waste of both animal lives and time. Scientists have been working on solutions to these problems, too. Some are creating “organs on chips”—miniature collections of cells organized on a small piece of polymer that may resemble full-size organs and can be used to test the effects of drugs. Others are creating digital representations of human organs for the same purpose. Such digital twins can be extensively modeled, and can potentially be used to run clinical trials in silico. Both of these approaches seem somehow more palatable to me, personally, than running experiments on a human created without the capacity to think or feel pain. The idea reminds me of the recent novel Tender Is the Flesh by Agustina Bazterrica, in which humans are bred for consumption. In the book, their vocal cords are removed so that others do not have to hear them scream. When it comes to real-world biotechnology, though, our feelings about what is “acceptable” tend to shift. In vitro fertilization was demonized when it was first developed, for instance, with opponents arguing that it was “unnatural,” a “perilous insult,” and “the biggest threat since the atom bomb.” It is estimated that more than 12 million people have been born through IVF since Louise Brown became the first “test tube baby” 46 years ago. I wonder how we’ll all feel about bodyoids 46 years from now. 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.

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The TAO of data: How Databricks is optimizing  AI LLM fine-tuning without data labels

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More AI models perform only as well as the data used to train or fine-tune them. Labeled data has been a foundational element of machine learning (ML) and generative AI for much of their history. Labeled data is information tagged to help AI models understand context during training. As enterprises race to implement AI applications, the hidden bottleneck often isn’t technology – it’s the months-long process of collecting, curating and labeling domain-specific data. This “data labeling tax” has forced technical leaders to choose between delaying deployment or accepting suboptimal performance from generic models. Databricks is taking direct aim at that challenge.  This week, the company released research on a new approach called Test-time Adaptive Optimization (TAO). The basic idea behind the approach is to enable enterprise-grade large language model (LLM) tuning using only input data that companies already have – no labels required – while achieving results that outperform traditional fine-tuning on thousands of labeled examples. Databricks started as a data lakehouse platform vendor and increasingly focused on AI in recent years. Databricks acquired MosaicML for $1.3 billion and is steadily rolling out tools that help developers create AI apps rapidly. The Mosaic research team at Databricks developed the new TAO method. “Getting labeled data is hard and poor labels will directly lead to poor outputs, this is why frontier labs use data labeling vendors to buy expensive human-annotated data,” Brandon Cui, reinforcement learning lead and senior research scientist at Databricks told VentureBeat. “We want to meet customers where they are, labels were an obstacle to enterprise AI adoption, and with TAO, no longer.” The technical innovation: How TAO reinvents LLM fine-tuning At its core, TAO shifts the paradigm of how developers personalize models for

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ISO New England issues transmission RFP to access new wind resources

The New England grid operator on Monday published a request for proposals to address the region’s longer-term transmission needs, aimed at upgrading the electric system between anticipated wind generation in northern Maine and demand centers to the south. ISO New England said it published the RFP at the direction of the New England States Committee on Electricity. Proposals are due in September, though the schedule is subject to change, the ISO said. After evaluation by the ISO, a preferred solution may be selected by NESCOE as early as September 2026.  Proposals must aim to increase the amount of power that can flow across the Maine–New Hampshire and Surowiec–South transmission interfaces, and develop new infrastructure around Pittsfield, Maine, that could accommodate the interconnection of 1,200 MW of land-based wind generation, the ISO said. “A strong preference will be given to proposals with an in-service date on or before December 31, 2035, or as close as possible,” according to the RFP.  Massachusetts officials celebrated the announcement, noting that the first competitive RFP for longer-term transmission investments has been “a long-time goal of the New England states.”  “This RFP will address long-standing constraints on the New England power system and integrate new, affordable, onshore wind resources in the coming years,” according to a statement from Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey, D. Previously, New England lacked a mechanism to enable the ISO to procure transmission at the states’ request. The RFP process was developed in collaboration between the ISO and regional stakeholders, allowing the states to request that the grid operator pursue transmission investment “that is grounded in the evaluation of broad regional benefits and consumer interests,” according to the Massachusetts statement. “This milestone represents what can happen when we work together — innovative and cost-effective solutions to our region’s most pressing energy challenges,” Healey said. “We are grateful

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Macquarie Strategists Forecast USA Crude Inventory Rise

In an oil and gas report sent to Rigzone late Monday by the Macquarie team, Macquarie strategists revealed that they are forecasting that U.S. crude inventories will be up 4.2 million barrels for the week ending March 28. “This follows a 3.3 million barrel draw for the week ending March 21 and compares to our initial expectation for a larger crude build this week,” the strategists said in the report. “For this week’s crude balance, from refineries, we model crude runs down meaningfully (-0.4 million barrels per day) following a strong print last week,” they added. “Among net imports, we model a moderate increase, with exports (-1.0 million barrels per day) and imports (-0.7 million barrels per day) much lower on a nominal basis,” they continued. The strategists warned in the report that timing of cargoes remains a source of potential volatility in this week’s crude balance. “From implied domestic supply (prod.+adj.+transfers), we look for a bounce (+0.3 million barrels per day) this week,” they said in the report. “Rounding out the picture, we anticipate another small increase in SPR [Strategic Petroleum Reserve] stocks (+0.3 MM BBL) this week,” they added. The strategists also noted in the report that, “among products”, they “look for draws in gasoline (-0.9 million barrels) and distillate (-4.1 million barrels), with jet stocks effectively flat”. “We model implied demand for these three products at ~14.4 million barrels per day for the week ending March 28,” they said. In its latest weekly petroleum status report at the time of writing, which was released on March 26 and included data for the week ending March 21, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) highlighted that U.S. commercial crude oil inventories, excluding those in the SPR, decreased by 3.3 million barrels from the week ending March 14 to the

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NEO Energy seeks contractors for Donan, Balloch and Lochranza decommissioning

NEO Energy has released five tenders seeking contractors to help decommission its Donan, Balloch and Lochranza fields, along with the Global Producer III floating production offloading and storage (FPSO) vessel. According to data from the North Sea Transition Authority’s (NSTA’s) Pathfinder database, the decommissioning campaign is expected to start in the second quarter of 2026 at the earliest, when work to disconnect the subsea infrastructure is expected to commence. This will also see the FPSO unmoored and towed to an unspecified location. By 2027, NEO plans to begin recovering the subsea infrastructure, followed by plugging and abandoning a total of 19 wells in 2028.- To help with this, NEO Energy is looking for a contractor to perform P&A activities on the wells. The tender is expected to take place on 31 December 2025 and has a value of over £25 million The company also announced four additional tenders, each with a value of less than £25m, covering recycling the FPSO, flushing, isolating and disconnecting the subsea infrastructure from the FPSO, disconnecting the moorings and towing the FPSO, and bulk seabed clearance. NEO Energy recently announced plans to merge its North Sea operations with Repsol Resources UK’s. The deal will see Repsol retain $1.8 billion (£1.4bn) in decommissioning liabilities related to its legacy assets, which NEO said will enhance the cash flows of the merged business. NEO said it expects to complete the deal during the third quarter of 2025, subject to regulatory approvals. © Supplied by SystemNinian South. CNRL Canadian Natural Resources Ltd (CNRL) has issued two tenders to assist with decommissioning its Ninian field in the Northern North Sea, located east of Shetland. The decommissioning scope consists of three areas, covering the Ninian South Platform, Ninian Central Platform and the Ninian subsea infrastructure, which includes the Strathspey, Lyell, Columba

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Eni, Saipem Extend Biorefining Collaboration

Eni SpA and Saipem SpA have extended a deal to collaborate on building biorefineries and converting traditional refineries. The agreement, first signed 2023, combines Eni’s technological expertise with Saipem’s expertise in the design and construction of such plants. Italian state-backed integrated energy company Eni holds a 21.19 percent stake in energy engineering company Saipem. “The agreement concerns, in particular, the construction of new biorefineries, the conversion of traditional refineries into biorefineries and, generally, the development of new initiatives by Eni in the field of industrial transformation”, Eni said in an online statement. “Through this agreement, Eni, in line with its goal of decarbonizing processes and products, intends to further develop its biorefining capacity through the development of new initiatives to produce biofuels both for aviation (SAF, Sustainable Aviation Fuel) and for land and sea mobility (HVO, Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil). “At the same time, Saipem further strengthens its distinctive expertise in biorefining and decarbonization”. Under the agreement Eni recently awarded Saipem a contract for engineering, procurement services and the purchase of critical equipment for the upgrade of a biorefinery in Porto Marghera. The project will increase the plant’s capacity from 400,000 metric tons a year to 600,000 metric tons per year. The upgrade will also enable the facility to produce SAF from 2027. In November 2024 Eni also picked Saipem for the conversion of the Livorno refinery into a biorefinery, as part of their biorefining collaboration. In both projects Saipem also carried out preparatory engineering activities such as feasibility studies and front-end engineering design. The two contracts are valued about EUR 320 million ($345.4 million), according to Eni. Eni, through subsidiary Enilive, has a biorefining production capacity of 1.65 million metric tons per annum (MMtpa). Eni aims to raise this to over 5 MMtpa by 2030 as part of its efforts

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Talent gap complicates cost-conscious cloud planning

The top strategy so far is what one enterprise calls the “Cloud Team.” You assemble all your people with cloud skills, and your own best software architect, and have the team examine current and proposed cloud applications, looking for a high-level approach that meets business goals. In this process, the team tries to avoid implementation specifics, focusing instead on the notion that a hybrid application has an agile cloud side and a governance-and-sovereignty data center side, and what has to be done is push functionality into the right place. The Cloud Team supporters say that an experienced application architect can deal with the cloud in abstract, without detailed knowledge of cloud tools and costs. For example, the architect can assess the value of using an event-driven versus transactional model without fixating on how either could be done. The idea is to first come up with approaches. Then, developers could work with cloud providers to map each approach to an implementation, and assess the costs, benefits, and risks. Ok, I lied about this being the top strategy—sort of, at least. It’s the only strategy that’s making much sense. The enterprises all start their cloud-reassessment journey on a different tack, but they agree it doesn’t work. The knee-jerk approach to cloud costs is to attack the implementation, not the design. What cloud features did you pick? Could you find ones that cost less? Could you perhaps shed all the special features and just host containers or VMs with no web services at all? Enterprises who try this, meaning almost all of them, report that they save less than 15% on cloud costs, a rate of savings that means roughly a five-year payback on the costs of making the application changes…if they can make them at all. Enterprises used to build all of

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Cisco takes inspiration from Iron Man for its AI-driven platform engineer

“We deliberately named it after Iron Man’s AI assistant because we wanted that level of capability – an intelligent system that understands context, can access different tools and knowledge bases, and most importantly, works alongside engineers rather than just responding to commands,” Kalpage said. Platform engineering has hit a crisis point of complexity. The modern tech stack of Kubernetes, microservices, and cloud-native tools has created three critical pain points, Kalpage said, including:  The bottleneck problem: Engineers spend up to 70% of their time on repetitive tasks rather than innovation. JARVIS automates these workflows, turning day-long processes into minute-long ones.  The expertise gap: No human can master every component in today’s cloud stack. JARVIS bridges this gap by encoding platform knowledge and providing contextual assistance when engineers need it.  The integration nightmare: Most enterprises have dozens of disjointed tools. JARVIS creates a unified interface across these systems, orchestrating complex workflows that would normally require manual coordination across multiple platforms.  Technically, JARVIS operates as a distributed brain with four interfaces, including a Backstage portal, Webex, JIRA, and CLI, meeting engineers in their existing workflows, Kalpage said. “Under the hood, it uses a LangGraph architecture with supervised, specialized, and reflection agents working together in feedback loops.”  “It connects to knowledge bases, executes tool calls to various systems, and even generates Kubernetes configurations using hybrid ML approaches,” Kalpage said. The JARVIS architecture aligns with Cisco Outshift’s Internet of Agents and recently announced AGNTCY (pronounced “agency”) initiative. Outshift describes the Internet of Agents as standards-based, shared infrastructure components that enable quantum-safe, agent-to-agent communications. When AI agents begin to proliferate, a new, open structure will be needed so they can securely communicate and collaborate together to solve complex problems, Cisco stated.  The “Internet of Agents” is an open-sourced, three-layer architecture that would enable quantum-safe, agent-to-agent communication

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