The widespread adoption of AI is causing a significant increase in energy demand, particularly for data centers. Tech companies are exploring various energy sources, including fossil fuels, nuclear, ...
When Exxon made some of the earliest solar energy technology investments in the early 1970s, the oil company couldn’t have expected it was jump-starting technological breakthroughs that would one day ...
Carbon dioxide usually gets blamed for climate change, not praised for solving it. But Google plans to flip the script. The company just announced a partnership with Italian firm Energy Dome to help ...
Tech giants are looking for more energy, but building new reactors takes time. In the AI arms race, all the major players say they want to go nuclear. Over the past year, the likes of Meta, Amazon, ...
Google has announced that it has signed a global commercial partnership with Milan-based startup Energy Dome and has also invested in its long duration energy storage (LDES) tech for renewable energy.
No wonder Google is desperate for more power: The company’s data centers more than doubled their electricity use in just four years. The eye-popping stat comes from Google’s most recent sustainability ...
A major renewable energy purchase and a pair of clean-energy business reports indicate economic strength in the Clean Tech sector despite the Trump administration's retreat from climate action. On ...
Generative AI is a power-hungry beast. As its demands for more, larger data centers continue to grow, so does the strain placed on existing power grids and power plants. The answer to the growing AI ...
China's dominance in clean energy manufacturing is fueled by favorable policies, low production costs, and substantial government investment. The U.S. is attempting to compete with China through ...
Jan. 3 (UPI) --A string of announcements about big investments in nuclear energy production signal a revival for the industry that already produces about 20% of U.S. electricity. Google, Microsoft and ...
Forum Energy Technologies (FET) has surged 106% YTD, yet remains deeply undervalued relative to its robust growth outlook.