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Archive for the ‘sustainability’ category: Page 38

Jun 9, 2024

Toshiba unveils new fast-charging, cobalt-free battery

Posted by in categories: climatology, sustainability

Japanese electronics company Toshiba has developed a new kind of cobalt-free battery that could lead to cheaper, more sustainable EVs in the future.

The challenge: Road transportation is a significant contributor to climate change, accounting for 12% of global greenhouse gas emissions, so transitioning from fossil fuel-powered cars and trucks to electric vehicles (EVs) is crucial to meeting our climate goals.

The lithium-ion batteries used in most of today’s EVs have several problems, though, and a big one is that their cathodes are made of cobalt, a rare and expensive metal often mined using child labor and environmentally destructive practices.

Jun 9, 2024

Bill Gates-backed startup creates Lego-like brick that can store air pollution for centuries: ‘A milestone for affordably removing carbon dioxide from the air’

Posted by in categories: computing, food, sustainability

The pipe dream of carbon capture is one step closer to reality thanks to a Bill Gates-backed startup that is burying bricks made from plants.

The Washington Post detailed a “deceptively simple” procedure by Graphyte to sequester blocks of wood chips and rice hulls, calling it “a game-changer” for the industry, which has been held back by the cost ineffectiveness of other methods.

Continue reading “Bill Gates-backed startup creates Lego-like brick that can store air pollution for centuries: ‘A milestone for affordably removing carbon dioxide from the air’” »

Jun 8, 2024

Tesla’s Robotaxi Event: Potential Partnership Announcement to Boost $TSLA

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, sustainability, transportation

Brighter with Herbert.

Jun 8, 2024

New method optimizes lithium extraction from seawater and groundwater

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability, transportation

As the electric vehicle market booms, the demand for lithium—the mineral required for lithium-ion batteries—has also soared. Global lithium production has more than tripled in the last decade. But current methods of extracting lithium from rock ores or brines are slow and come with high energy demands and environmental costs. They also require sources of lithium which are incredibly concentrated to begin with and are only found in a few countries.

Jun 8, 2024

Elon Musk plans ‘world’s most powerful’ supercomputer’ in Memphis

Posted by in categories: economics, Elon Musk, robotics/AI, supercomputing, sustainability

Memphis may get most powerful super computer yet.

Memphis, Tennessee, may host the world’s largest supercomputer, the “Gigafactory of Compute.”:


The Memphis Shelby County Economic Development Growth Engine (EDGE), Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), and governing authorities hold the key to finalizing the project. If approved, it would be the largest investment in Memphis history.

Continue reading “Elon Musk plans ‘world’s most powerful’ supercomputer’ in Memphis” »

Jun 6, 2024

The Researcher Trying to Glimpse the Future of AI

Posted by in categories: climatology, robotics/AI, sustainability

Imagine if the world’s response to climate change relied solely on speculative predictions from pundits and CEOs, rather than the rigorous—though still imperfect—models of climate science. “Two degrees of warming will arrive soon-ish but will change the world less than we all think,” one might say. “Two degrees of warming is not just around the corner. This is going to take a long time,” another could counter.

This is more or less the world we’re in with artificial intelligence, with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman saying that AI systems that can do any task a human can will be developed in the “reasonably close-ish future,” while Yann LeCun, Chief AI Scientist at Facebook, argues that human-level AI systems are “going to take a long time.”

Jaime Sevilla, a 28-year-old Spanish researcher, is trying to change that. It is far from clear whether and how the capabilities of the most advanced AI systems will continue to rapidly progress, and what the effects of those systems will be on society. But given how important AI already is, it’s worth trying to bring a little of the rigor that characterizes climate science to predicting the future of AI, says Sevilla. “Even if AI innovation stopped, this is already a technology that’s going to affect many people’s lives,” he says. “That should be enough of an excuse for us to get serious about it.”

Jun 6, 2024

Tesla builds 50 million 4680 battery cells at Giga Texas

Posted by in category: sustainability

Tesla announced major progress in 4,680 battery cell production with a new milestone at Giga Texas.

Jun 5, 2024

Tesla investor Ron Baron backs Musk’s $56 bln pay plan

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, sustainability, transportation

Prominent investor Ron Baron has come out in support of Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s $56 billion pay package, which is up for a shareholder vote next week, according to an open letter from the Baron Capital founder on Tuesday.

Jun 5, 2024

China opens world’s biggest solar farm that spreads over 200,000 acres

Posted by in categories: solar power, sustainability

China has just connected what it believes to be the world’s biggest solar power plant to the grid in northwestern Xinjiang. The plant covers an area of 200,000 acres and is reported to have an output of 6.09 billion kWh annually.

The new plant is in the deserts near the region’s capital Ürümqi. The site came online this Monday (June 3) and is being run by the Chinese state-owned Power Construction Corporation, according to Reuters.

Jun 5, 2024

Bulldozer-resistant tough Lego bricks made from 90% plastic trash

Posted by in categories: materials, sustainability

The brick looks like concrete but avoids typical issues like water absorption and cracking.


Newly-introduced Lego-like bricks may make the construction process easier than ever.

Continue reading “Bulldozer-resistant tough Lego bricks made from 90% plastic trash” »

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