If you want to go the EV route, the battery is not the only thing electric regarding the 2025 Kia EV6 GT-Line, because the driving experience should also share that description. Considering 641 horsepower and 568 pound-feet in GT mode, the EV6 is simply electrifying. Combine that with bold styling in ‘26, all-wheel-drive maneuverability, and impressive efficiency with fast charging, this crossover hits the bullseye for drivers who want an EV that feels dynamic without simply “settling” for everyday comfort.
Photos courtesy of Kia
The body is more curvaceous, the Star Map LED lighting is futuristic, and overall exterior design lets the public know the GT-Line is not shy on power with its sporty look. However, the interior is arguably the most impressive regarding this year’s enhancements. KIA delivers a cabin that feels modern, sporty, and thoughtfully designed. A 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster flows seamlessly into a 12.3-inch touchscreen with navigation, creating a wide, high-tech display that anchors the dashboard. I dig that. Passengers also get some love with heated front seats, a heated steering wheel, and a power-adjustable driver’s seat with memory steps up the comfort. Wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto bring ideal connectivity, alongside a premium audio system, and the signature Kia Connect services collectively keep the driver content.
2025 EV62025 EV6
Safety and driver assistance are also a priority, with features like forward collision avoidance; blind-spot collision avoidance; lane keeping and lane following assist; smart cruise control with stop-and-go; and parking distance warning. These systems work quietly in the background, enhancing confidence without all the often-annoying alerts some cars overdue.
2025 EV6
With a total MSRP around $60K as equipped, the 2025 Kia EV6 GT-Line AWD positions itself as a premium, yet resourceful electric crossover. It delivers head-turning design, mind-easing efficiency, and exhilarating performance in a package that feels well thought out. For drivers ready to go electric coupled with power without giving up style, the EV6 GT-Line continues to be one of the most recommended options in its class.
A fast charging EV startup is filing for bankruptcy protection amid broader disruption across the electric vehicle industry. San Francisco-based Ample filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy this week, citing a “deteriorating commercial and capital environment,” regulatory delays, and liquidity challenges, according to a filing.
Although the broader political and economic environment in the U.S. has certainly proven difficult for the EV industry, other failed battery swapping concepts hint there may be other factors at play in Ample’s demise, Electrek reported.
Ample was founded in 2014 with a goal of “solving slow charging times and infrastructure incompatibility” for commercial EV fleets such as those in logistics, ride-hailing, and delivery, the filing states. To-date, Ample has raised more than $330 million across five rounds of funding to finance research and development and deployment. Rather than tackling fast charging, its strategy involved developing “fully autonomous modular battery swapping,” capable of delivering a fully charged battery in just five minutes. The technology requires purpose-built “Ample stations” that look a little like carwashes. A car is guided into the bay and elevated on a platform. A robot then identifies the location of a car’s battery module, removes it, and replaces it with a charged module, Canary Media reported.
The company also boasts partnerships with Uber, Mitsubishi, and Stellantis, and notes it has deployed its technology—or is pursuing deployment—in San Francisco, Madrid and Tokyo. Even so, it ran up against funding issues.
In its filing, Ample attributed its bankruptcy to macroeconomic and industry headwinds, such as “severe supply chain disruptions,” “contraction in both public and private investment in renewable energy” and the “reduction, delay, or redirection of government incentives intended to accelerate EV adoption.” The filing notes that regulatory and permitting delays slowed its launch in international markets, after which access to capital foiled its scaling efforts.
The company eliminated all but two full-time, non-executive employees after formerly employing about 200.
Ample did not respond to Inc.’s request for comment.
Folks in Dakota County, Minnesota, are raising environmental and health concerns after lead battery casings were discovered in the ground.
Brian McMahon documented what he discovered while helping to redevelop a property in Eagan, taking pictures of what he says are chopped-up lead battery casings in the ground.
“The pictures showing the trench with the battery casings and the containers being hauled off by the roll-off truck. Those are literally the truck was parked right in that area there. The battery casings were over here,” McMahon said.
McMahon says the reason for the buried casing goes back decades. It’s a practice he believes stopped around 2000.
“Pea gravel is one of the more expensive gravels, and battery casings or chips work well as a replacement or substitute for pea gravel. Cities allowed it. It was common practice back then, and it was also used as a road base. Underneath the asphalt, there were concrete, driveways, parking lots, that kind of thing,” McMahon said.
Brian McMahon
McMahon explained the danger of having battery casings in the ground.
“The most obvious one is lead, because everybody understands that lead is, you know, bad. It’s not 100% efficient. You’re not going to get all the lead out of the battery casings,” McMahon said.
McMahon showed us what he’s talking about.
“These are typical batteries that you’d find in automobiles or semi-trucks or lawn and garden equipment and snowmobiles,” McMahon said.
He explained the lead in the plastic casing is removed.
“You’ve got lead studs, lead plates in here. They claim now that they’re washing the battery casings, that’s a very costly process. But in the old days, they would literally just break them open. The main goal was to get the valuable part out of there, which is the lead, and the remaining black plastic is still saturated with the lead. So what a lot of guys would do is they literally just throw them in a pile and break them up with an excavator or some type of equipment, and have laborers just hand sift the lead out of there as best they can,” McMahon said.
University of Minnesota professor Carl Rosen is an extension soil scientist who has studied lead in soil.
“There are things that we have done in the past that would not be acceptable today. Maybe 50, 60 years ago, it was thought that this was a good way of reusing plastic, reusing something, and getting more life out of it. But I don’t think they thought about the contamination from lead,” Rosen said.
He says there’s no way of knowing how much contamination there could be from the battery casings.
“It just tells me that it’s in the soil. It could be more widespread than we think, but I don’t think there’s any way of being able to find out where it is, unless you do a test on every area where there’s a house,” Rosen said.
In 2018, WCCO shared the story of a Ramsey County couple who learned their home was built on battery casings.
The homeowner told WCCO, “I figured I got about a thousand batteries on this lot. No one ever suspected they were contaminated.”
The couple felt stuck, unable to sell with the known danger. The home has since been demolished.
“What is your concern with all of this?” Mayerle asked McMahon.
“My main concern is that we don’t know the extent of it,” McMahon said.
Dakota County Environmental has started keeping a list of sites where battery casings have been identified. Some areas reportedly treated, others unknown.
A number of them are on Gopher Resource property, a lead battery recycling plant. Others are nearby.
A resident provided WCCO with documentation regarding their subdivision formerly being a recycling/salvage facility, noting “clean-up … to remove remnant battery casings” and that “homeowners may find remnants of battery casings located on their property.”
Gopher Resource told WCCO:
“Gopher Resource is committed to the safe and responsible recycling of lead batteries, which helps reduce landfill waste, conserve natural resources, and strengthen the domestic supply chain. Our work supports one of the nation’s most successful closed-loop industries, with over 99% of lead batteries being recycled and each new battery typically containing 80% recycled material.
Decades ago, it was not uncommon for entities throughout the state, including scrapyard operators and similar businesses in Dakota County, to collect spent lead batteries. Some of those businesses would separate the battery casings from the lead and provide the casing material for use in construction, landscaping, septic systems, drainage fields, and similar projects. To be clear, Gopher Resource was not one of those businesses and such activities were not part of our operations. In the past, we have collaborated with Dakota County to assist homeowners who discovered battery casing materials on their property by processing the materials when they were removed even though we had no connection to or responsibility for the placement of the materials on their land. It has never been our practice to give away battery casings or any other byproduct of our recycling process. In fact, for decades, Gopher Resource has processed, treated and pelletized plastic battery casings so that we can sell the plastic back to battery manufacturers for use in the production of new batteries. This is a key part of our business and reflects our commitment to safety, regulatory compliance, and environmental responsibility.”
In the last year, casings found on the upcoming Amazon site in Eagan prompted the state pollution control agency to respond. The online retail giant bought the former Thomson Reuters campus for tens of millions of dollars earlier this year. Dakota County documents show the lead-impacted soil was properly disposed of in September.
McMahon says he felt compelled to speak up.
“So it’s a serious health issue, it’s a serious governmental failure on my I believe, on their part, and I think that somebody needs to point that out and see what, if anything, can be done about it,” McMahon said.
Click here to see information shared by MPCA about what to do if you discover battery casings.
The state health department told WCCO no one could speculate about how much lead could be left or the health impact.
Have you come across battery casings in the state? We want to hear from you. Send us a tip here.
A judge has agreed to revoke bond for a man accused of trying to rape a woman on an Orange County trail.The man, 23-year-old Jacoby Tillman, was out on a $9,500 bond after he was accused of attacking a woman from behind and attempting to rape her on July 25. Tillman was arrested on Oct. 10 and charged with attempted sexual battery, battery by strangulation and false imprisonment.The incident happened on a running trail near Econ Park. Tillman’s bond release sparked outrage from Orange County Sheriff John Mina.Prosecutors said they wanted him locked up until his trial, and they filed a new motion for it to happen. They also upped his charge to attempted first-degree murder. After being released on bond, prosecutors said Tillman posted a TikTok and made comments directed at the witness and used a text message that the witness had sent him in the past.The state argues that this violated the judge’s no-contact order with the victim and witnesses, which is a condition for his release.The judge agreed that Tillman violated court orders. At that time, he was charged with attempted sexual battery. In a new court filing, prosecutors said they want Tillman to be sentenced as a “habitual violent felony offender.”Tillman’s criminal record includes convictions for aggravated battery and misdemeanor battery in Orange County.His girlfriend at the time also reported abusive behavior, including an incident where he choked her until she lost consciousness, according to the OCSO.Related content
ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. —
A judge has agreed to revoke bond for a man accused of trying to rape a woman on an Orange County trail.
The man, 23-year-old Jacoby Tillman, was out on a $9,500 bond after he was accused of attacking a woman from behind and attempting to rape her on July 25.
Tillman was arrested on Oct. 10 and charged with attempted sexual battery, battery by strangulation and false imprisonment.
The incident happened on a running trail near Econ Park.
Tillman’s bond release sparked outrage from Orange County Sheriff John Mina.
Prosecutors said they wanted him locked up until his trial, and they filed a new motion for it to happen. They also upped his charge to attempted first-degree murder.
After being released on bond, prosecutors said Tillman posted a TikTok and made comments directed at the witness and used a text message that the witness had sent him in the past.
The state argues that this violated the judge’s no-contact order with the victim and witnesses, which is a condition for his release.
The judge agreed that Tillman violated court orders.
At that time, he was charged with attempted sexual battery. In a new court filing, prosecutors said they want Tillman to be sentenced as a “habitual violent felony offender.”
Tillman’s criminal record includes convictions for aggravated battery and misdemeanor battery in Orange County.
His girlfriend at the time also reported abusive behavior, including an incident where he choked her until she lost consciousness, according to the OCSO.
>> Video above: Previous coverageA man who was arrested for allegedly attempting to rape a woman on a running trail in Orange County could have his bond revoked.According to court records on the Orange County Clerk’s website, a motion has been filed to revoke 23-year-old Jacoby Vontell Tillman’s bond.The Orange County Sheriff’s Office spent months searching for Tillman, following a report that he assaulted a woman while she was jogging on the Little Econ Greenway Trail in July.OCSO said Tillman attacked a woman from behind and attempted to rape her. The woman said he grabbed her and wrapped both arms around her neck, choking her, causing her to see stars and eventually blacking out.Once she woke up, the woman said she was still face down and realized her shorts and underwear were gone, according to the OCSO. Tillman was arrested on Oct. 10 and charged with attempted sexual battery, battery by strangulation and false imprisonment. However, he was released from jail on Sunday on a total bond of $9,500, according to the Orange County Corrections Department.Tillman’s bond release sparked outrage from Orange County Sheriff John Mina.”This is atrocious! He should have never been released,” Mina said on Facebook.The attempted rape victim has also shared concerns about Tillman’s release. “I think he is a danger. Not just to women, but to kids,” she said.Tillman’s criminal record includes convictions for aggravated battery and misdemeanor battery in Orange County.His girlfriend at the time also reported abusive behavior, including an incident where he choked her until she lost consciousness, according to the OCSO. This is a developing news story and will be updated as more information is released.
>> Video above: Previous coverage
A man who was arrested for allegedly attempting to rape a woman on a running trail in Orange County could have his bond revoked.
According to court records on the Orange County Clerk’s website, a motion has been filed to revoke 23-year-old Jacoby Vontell Tillman’s bond.
The Orange County Sheriff’s Office spent months searching for Tillman, following a report that he assaulted a woman while she was jogging on the Little Econ Greenway Trail in July.
OCSO said Tillman attacked a woman from behind and attempted to rape her.
The woman said he grabbed her and wrapped both arms around her neck, choking her, causing her to see stars and eventually blacking out.
Once she woke up, the woman said she was still face down and realized her shorts and underwear were gone, according to the OCSO.
Tillman was arrested on Oct. 10 and charged with attempted sexual battery, battery by strangulation and false imprisonment.
However, he was released from jail on Sunday on a total bond of $9,500, according to the Orange County Corrections Department.
Tillman’s bond release sparked outrage from Orange County Sheriff John Mina.
“This is atrocious! He should have never been released,” Mina said on Facebook.
The attempted rape victim has also shared concerns about Tillman’s release.
“I think he is a danger. Not just to women, but to kids,” she said.
Tillman’s criminal record includes convictions for aggravated battery and misdemeanor battery in Orange County.
His girlfriend at the time also reported abusive behavior, including an incident where he choked her until she lost consciousness, according to the OCSO.
This is a developing news story and will be updated as more information is released.
For decades, rolling blackouts and urgent calls for energy conservation were part of life in California — a reluctant summer ritual almost as reliable as the heat waves that drove them. But the state has undergone a quiet shift in recent years, and the California Independent System Operator hasn’t issued a single one of those emergency pleas, known as Flex Alerts, since 2022.
Experts and officials say the Golden State has reached a turning point, reflecting years of investment in making its electrical grid stronger, cleaner and more dependable. Much of that is new battery energy storage, which captures and stores electricity for later use.
In fact, batteries have been transformative for California, state officials say. In late afternoon, when the sun stops hitting solar panels and people are home using electricity, batteries now push stored solar energy onto the grid.
California has invested heavily in the technology, helping it mature and get cheaper in recent years. Battery storage in the state has grown more than 3,000% in six years — from 500 megawatts in 2020 to more than 15,700 megawatts today.
“There is no question that the battery fleet that has grown rapidly since 2020, along with the state’s expanding portfolio of other supply and demand-side resources, has been a real game changer for reliability during summer periods of peak demand,” said Elliot Mainzer, CAISO’s president and chief executive.
It was only five years ago that a record-shattering heat wave pushed the grid to its limit and plunged much of the state into darkness. In the wake of that event, California’s energy leaders vowed to take action to make the grid more resilient.
Since then, CAISO has overseen a massive build-out of new energy and storage resources, including more than 26,000 megawatts of new capacity overall, which has also helped make the grid more stable, Mainzer said. The state hasn’t seen rolling blackouts since 2020.
“Extreme weather events, wildfires and other emergencies can pose reliability challenges for any bulk electric system,” he said. “But the CAISO battery fleet, along with the additional capacity and close coordination with state and regional partners, have provided an indisputable benefit to reliability.”
Solar panels and battery storage units at the Eland Solar and Storage Center in the Mojave Desert of Kern County on Nov. 25, 2024.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
Already, batteries have enabled the grid to operate with dramatic decreases in the use of planet-warming fossil fuels. Now they’re becoming a more cost-effective and reliable replacement for aging gas-fired power plants, according to Maia Leroy, founder of the California energy consulting firm Lumenergy LLC and co-author of a recent report on the rise of battery storage over gas generation in California.
“Historically, Flex Alerts have always come through in summertime when it’s super hot and everyone is cranking their AC,” Leroy said. “But also in the summertime, we’re seeing that gas plants underperform because combustion doesn’t work well with ambient heat. So when we’re able to shift that need from having to use gas plants to something more stable, dispatchable and flexible like battery storage, then we’re able to meet that demand in the summer without having to rely on those underperforming gas plants.”
Battery energy storage is not without challenges, however. Lithium-ion batteries — the most common type used for energy storage — typically have about four to six hours of capacity. It’s enough to support the grid during peak hours as the sun sets, but can still leave some gaps to be filled by natural gas.
Nikhil Kumar, program director with the energy policy nonprofit GridLab, said the technology already exists for longer-duration batteries, including through different chemistries such as iron-air batteries, which release energy through oxidation, and flow batteries, which store energy in liquid chemicals that flow through a reactor.
Those batteries are not yet as mature and can be more expensive and larger than their lithium-ion counterparts, Kumar said. But a recent GridLab report indicates that equation is changing, with the average cost of a new gas plant often on par with four-hour lithium-ion batteries and only slightly less expensive than longer-duration battery technologies.
“Batteries are going to get cheaper,” Kumar said. “Gas isn’t.”
The battery storage shift is occurring as the Trump administration takes steps to stifle solar and other forms of renewable energy in favor of fossil fuels such as oil, gas and coal. At the end of September, the administration announced that it would open 13 million acres of federal lands for coal mining and provide $625 million to recommission or modernize coal-fired powered plants, which officials said would help strengthen the economy, protect jobs and advance American energy.
During an hourlong news conference on the initiative, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum described wind and solar energy as intermittent sources that are “literally dependent on the weather” — but neither he nor any other official mentioned the growth of battery storage that has made those sources more reliable and more promising.
It’s not a partisan issue. ERCOT, which operates Texas’s electrical grid, has more than 14,000 megawatts of batteries online, a nearly threefold increase from early 2023. California and Texas are constantly trading places as the top state for battery storage.
Battery storage units at the Eland Solar and Storage Center in the Mojave Desert of Kern County on Nov. 25, 2024.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
But Trump has made moves to support the production of batteries in the U.S. Currently, about three-quarters of the world’s batteries are made in China, and Trump’s tariffs — including a proposed 100% tariff on China — have been good for at least one Sacramento-based battery manufacturer, Sparkz.
“The administration wants critical material manufacturing to happen in the U.S.,” said Sanjiv Malhotra, founder and chief executive. “They basically are very much in favor of domestic manufacturing of batteries.”
Sparkz is making lithium-iron batteries that don’t use nickel and cobalt — a composition that has long been an industry darling but that depends on imported metals. Instead, their lithium-iron-phosphate batteries have a supply chain that is entirely based in the U.S., which means they can take advantage of federal tax credits that favor the production of clean energy components made mostly of domestic parts, Malhotra said. The company’s clients include data centers and utilities.
Malhotra added that California has done an excellent job “beefing up” the grid’s storage capacity in the last few years. He said batteries are a major reason why the state hasn’t seen a Flex Alert since 2022.
“The numbers basically tell the story that it was all because of, essentially, energy storage,” he said.
There is still work to do. While the state’s grid has seen improvements, it is more than a century old and was built primarily for gas plants. Experts and officials agree that it needs additional substantial upgrades and reforms to meet current energy demands and goals.
Permitting is also a hurdle, as California typically requires lengthy environmental review for new projects. The state, sometimes controversially, is now speeding review, and recently approved a massive solar and battery storage farm, the Darden Clean Energy Project in Fresno County, through a new fast-track permitting program. It will make enough electricity to power 850,000 homes for four hours, according to the California Energy Commission.
Safety remains a considerable concern. In January, a fire tore through one of the world’s largest battery storage facilities in Moss Landing, Monterey County. The facility housed around 100,000 lithium-ion batteries, which are exceptionally dangerous when ignited because they burn extremely hot and cannot be extinguished with water, which can trigger a violent chemical reaction. The blaze emitted dangerous levels of nickel, cobalt and manganese that were measured within miles of the site.
“When you’re dealing with large technologies in general, there’s always going to be some kind of danger,” said Leroy, of Lumenergy. “This points to the big need for diversifying the technologies that we use.”
Other forms of energy, such as oil and coal, also pose considerable health and safety risks including the emission of air pollution — soot, mercury, nitrogen dioxide and carbon dioxide contributing to climate change.
California is in the process of eliminating coal power and expects to be completely coal-free by November. And while natural gas still makes up a large piece of the state’s portfolio, renewables represented nearly 60% of California’s in-state electricity generation in 2024, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
The numbers continue to trend upward. In the first six months of this year, CAISO’s grid was powered by 100% clean energy for an average of almost seven hours each day.
“We have literally just demonstrated that California is able to run with super clean resources, with backups from natural gas,” said Kumar, of GridLab. “And it works. We don’t have Flex Alerts.”
Normally, Colton the dog is a very good boy. The Sasser family from Chapel Hill, North Carolina, was shocked after their very sweet boy managed to start a fire in their home last year. David Sasser with Chapel Hill Fire Rescue said they normally crate Colton, but on this particular day, they left the house to visit with family. The curious and playful dog was having the time of his life while playing in the family room and managed to pull a few items off the counter. That’s when Colton got hold of a lithium rechargeable backup battery. The battery then caught a rug on fire. “Thankfully, we have a monitored alarm system, so once Colton started the fire, our local department was called to respond,” Sasser said. He also said that everyone was safe; however, “Colton’s battery privileges have been revoked,” he said.What to know about lithium batteries:Stop using the battery if you notice these problems: • Odor • Change in color • Too much heat • Change in shape • Leaking • Odd noises Battery Disposal How to dispose of batteries: • Do not put lithium-ion batteries in the trash. • Recycling is always the best option. • Take batteries to a battery recycling location or contact your community for disposal instructions. • Do not put discarded batteries in piles. Find out more about fire safety here.
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. —
Normally, Colton the dog is a very good boy.
The Sasser family from Chapel Hill, North Carolina, was shocked after their very sweet boy managed to start a fire in their home last year. David Sasser with Chapel Hill Fire Rescue said they normally crate Colton, but on this particular day, they left the house to visit with family.
The curious and playful dog was having the time of his life while playing in the family room and managed to pull a few items off the counter. That’s when Colton got hold of a lithium rechargeable backup battery. The battery then caught a rug on fire.
“Thankfully, we have a monitored alarm system, so once Colton started the fire, our local department was called to respond,” Sasser said. He also said that everyone was safe; however, “Colton’s battery privileges have been revoked,” he said.
What to know about lithium batteries:
Stop using the battery if you notice these problems:
• Odor
• Change in color
• Too much heat
• Change in shape
• Leaking
• Odd noises Battery Disposal
How to dispose of batteries:
• Do not put lithium-ion batteries in the trash.
• Recycling is always the best option.
• Take batteries to a battery recycling location or contact your community for disposal instructions.
Four U.S. companies landed a spot on MIT Technology Review‘s annual list of Climate Tech Companies to Watch. Spanning industries from nuclear and geothermal power to battery recycling and gene editing, these businesses demonstrate resilience and potential to thrive in spite of—or in some cases because of—shifting political and economic forces in the U.S.
These climate tech companies were selected based on a number of criteria including the likelihood that the technologies can mitigate climate change threats or reduce emissions, and whether they are likely to actually succeed as businesses, according to MIT Technology Review senior editor James Temple.
This year’s list is also shorter than lists of past years and is much more “geographically diverse,” Temple noted, which reflects the challenges facing these technologies and businesses at large. Alongside U.S. companies, the list includes those from Canada, China, Germany, India, and Sweden.
Here are the four homegrown climate tech companies featured on MIT’s list:
An Inc.com Featured Presentation
Fervo Energy
Fervo Energy is a Houston-based company applying oil and gas practices to make geothermal energy more cost effective and accessible. Whereas geothermal energy extraction is usually location-specific (think: Iceland), Fervo uses hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling to access the energy source almost anywhere. In June, Fervo landed $206 million, much of it from Bill Gates’s Breakthrough Energy Catalyst, to continue building out the world’s first enhanced geothermal power plant in Utah (and in September got a big shoutout in Gates’s famous blog).
When the Trump administration’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act passed into law in July, it curtailed or eliminated a number of tax incentives for various industries like solar, wind, and EVs. But key Biden-era tax incentives were largely preserved for geothermal and nuclear. Plus, U.S. energy secretary Chris Wright listed geothermal as a priority alongside advanced nuclear, hydropower, and fossil fuels when expanding on Trump’s early, energy-related executive orders.
That said, possible risks to the technology’s viability include lengthy permitting processes, and the seismic risks that fracking more broadly can pose, according to MIT.
Kairos Power
Alameda, California-based Kairos Power is developing advanced nuclear reactors that executives say can produce reliable and abundant nuclear power more safely and affordably than today’s fission reactors. Kairos’s reactor design uses a robust fuel form that can remain intact at high temperatures, as well as a molten fluoride salt as a coolant, rather than water. The company has backing from Google, with which it struck a deal that is poised to help develop its small modular reactor technology and inked a historic deal in August with a major U.S. utility.
Like Fervo, Kairos Power operates in an industry with which the Trump administration’s has taken a comparatively friendlier stance. Kairos aims to kick off commercial operations as soon as 2030, but risks remain. MIT Technology Review noted Kairos isn’t the first to experiment with molten salt reactors—other such projects have failed—plus Kairos’s unique fuel requires specialized uranium that previously was mostly sourced from Russia.
Pairwise
Pairwise applies Crispr gene editing technology to crops. In partnership with biotech giants Bayer and Corteva, the Durham, North Carolina-based startup aims to produce crops that can withstand the increasingly hostile conditions of a planet with a changing climate, according to MIT.
The company already introduced a less bitter mustard green, and now it is turning its focus toward sturdier corn, high-yield yams, and disease-resistant cacao trees with various partners including the Gates Foundation and global candy company Mars. Pairwise has not yet successfully introduced to market any of its climate optimized foods, and risks remain about how consumers might receive them, MIT noted.
Redwood Materials
Carson City, Nevada-based Redwood Materials has already made a name for itself as a U.S. leader in battery recycling. Now it’s moving into battery upcycling, turning end-of-life EV batteries into microgrids that experts believe could be crucial for shoring up the grid amid rising energy demand.
As more consumers adopt electric vehicles, there’s increasing domestic and global demand for minerals like lithium and cobalt. Redwood says that recycling batteries reduces the need for mining and boosts the domestic supply chain, all while cutting carbon emissions by 70 percent compared with processing mined materials, MIT Technology Review reported. Plus, this new microgrid technology could help quickly meet power needs as data centers demand ever more energy. But as MIT points out, Redwood still has technical and scaling hurdles to clear for its microgrids, and the viability of the business could be threatened if consumer demand for EVs tumbles.
Check out the full list of Climate Tech Companies to watch here.
Apple has taken the second approach with caveats. Rumors suggest the iPhone 17 Air’s battery capacity will sit around 2,900 mAh, a steep drop from prior iPhone models, especially at the 6.6-inch screen size. But the company is supposedly making up for it with power-saving tricks to make sure battery life remains similar to other iPhones, including Apple’s more efficient C1 modem that debuted on the iPhone 16e earlier this year.
Luebbe declined to comment on whether Group14’s silicon-carbon composite is being used in the iPhone 17 Air’s batteries; Sila Nanotechnologies and Enovix did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
What’s the Catch?
The problem with silicon batteries is that they expand. When you lithiate raw silicon, Luebbe says it can expand up to three times its initial volume. Lithium-ion batteries also swell; you’ve probably heard of or maybe even experienced this, as it can happen for a myriad of reasons. It means something has gone wrong, and the battery is now a safety risk.
It’s this problem that researchers and companies have spent decades trying to solve, and the solution lies in the carbon part of the name. It starts to get a bit technical here—and each silicon anode company has its own proprietary process—but Luebbe says Group14’s approach is to start with a porous carbon material.
“Imagine a carbon sponge, but the pores of that sponge are on the single-digit molecule wide, we’re talking less than 10 nanometers wide,” he says. These pores are filled with silane gas (the silicon), but only about halfway. The particle you’re left with is made up of silicon, carbon, and void space. When the lithium ions head over from the cathode to the anode and the silicon lithiates, it expands to fill the void spaces of the particle.
“It mitigates the expansion at the particle level, so the battery doesn’t see the expansion, so it stabilizes the battery, and you get excellent cycle life,” Luebbe says. “That’s the critical insight in the invention: really learning how to internalize that expansion, so that it’s insulated from the battery chemistry and mechanical operations.”
Vincent Chevrier has been a researcher in the silicon field for 15 years and is a partner at battery consulting firm Cyclikal. He says while silicon is here to stay as a material to be used in lithium-ion batteries, there are still a few challenges for broader adoption, namely cost.
Companies like Group14 use silane gas instead of solid silicon, which yields better battery performance, but could be 10 times the cost. That could make it harder to sell their composite to battery makers, and it could drive up the prices of consumer electronics. The iPhone 17 Air is rumored to cost around $1,099, a potential $200 bump from the iPhone 16 Plus it’s expected to replace, though there could be other factors affecting its price, like tariffs.
Chevrier also says he often sees silicon-carbon makers inflate the energy density claims. Group14, for example, says on its website that its silicon batteries can deliver up to 50 percent more energy density than conventional lithium-ion batteries. But if the material is just dropped in to replace graphite and not much else is changed with the battery, you’re more likely going to see a 10 percent boost in energy density with a switch to a silicon-carbon anode. Redesign the battery cell, and then it’d be possible to see an increase of up to 30 percent.
If you are planning to travel to a place with a warm climate, you can also power a mini cooler, or a high-power table fan to create a chill zone.
Whether you are camping in the woods, or simply watching a live sports match with your friends in your backyard, the Luminous Edge Go 1500 enables you to do all of it, without having to worry about dragging an extension power cord.
In simple words, the Luminous Go is not just an electricity power house, it is a party monster that can power anything in outdoor celebrations.
Gone are the days when you had to compromise on your enjoyment in trips, just because you did not have access to a power socket. Luminous has launched its Edge Go 1500 portable power station, a first-of-its-kind product in India, which can power an entire backyard party. Not only can it charge your laptops and cameras, but it can also run a heater, an iron box, an induction cooker, and other essential appliances.
Not just that, the new Luminous power station also doubles up as a music system. You can connect your guitar or other acoustic directly to the battery pack to create the perfect party environment. Let’s have a closer look at the Luminous Edge Go and how it transforms the way we plan our outdoor trips.
Luminous Edge Go 1500: What’s New?
The Luminous Edge Go 1500 is a portable power station with a battery capacity of 1120Wh. It supports a maximum power output of 1200W and comes with two AC sockets, two DC outlets, two USB-A ports, two USB-C ports, and a car socket. This battery pack can power almost all party gadgets. It also has an IP34 rating for water resistance, along with a fire-resistant case design for maximum safety.
The Edge Go supports 90-minute fast charging over a normal AC outlet. You can also charge it from a car socket or a portable solar panel. The battery pack has two handles, making it easy to carry around.
In addition to its battery prowess, this power station also comes with an integrated 90W audio system. It includes two full-range speakers and a 6-inch woofer with a bass output of up to 97dB. In simple words, the Luminous Go is not just an electricity power house, it is a party monster that can power anything in outdoor celebrations.
How Luminous Edge Go 1500 Elevates Your Outdoor Trips
There are a ton of portable battery packs on the market that can power devices. But here are some unique features of the Luminous Edge Go 1500, which can truly upgrade your outdoor party experience and open up new possibilities in ways you plan your holidays.
Connect Your Guitar
The Luminous Edge Go 1500 comes with a guitar port, using which you can directly connect your guitar to the powerful 90W speakers. It also has RGB lights around the integrated speaker to add a party look. You also get two microphones, which can be used to play karaoke, along with your guitar.
Power a Projector
This power station can run a portable 4K projector, which you can use to cast a 100-inch screen anywhere. Whether you are camping in the woods, or simply watching a live sports match with your friends in your backyard, the Luminous Edge Go 1500 enables you to do all of it, without having to worry about dragging an extension power cord.
Cool Your Drinks in a Mini Fridge
You can also carry a portable mini fridge on your trips and power it using this battery pack. The 1120Wh capacity means you can keep your drinks cold for an extended duration, without the hassle of carrying those bulky ice boxes. If you are planning to travel to a place with a warm climate, you can also power a mini cooler, or a high-power table fan to create a chill zone.
Create a Workstation Anywhere
If you are someone who enjoys working from the whistling woods or from the comfort of your remote farmhouse away from the chaotic city life, then the Luminous Edge Go 1500 is an excellent companion. It can power a complete desktop computer with multiple monitors, allowing you to complete your assignments without any interruptions.
Enjoy Console Gaming
The concept of villa vacations or Airbnb is getting popular in India, especially in hill stations. If you love console gaming, then you can carry your favourite PlayStation, Xbox, or any other console, along with a portable monitor. You can enjoy gaming virtually anywhere, on the terrace of your villa, or in the lush green backyard, where it is often difficult to have a stable power connection.
Luminous Edge Go 1500: Where to Buy?
The Luminous Edge Go 1500 is priced at Rs 1,14,999 in India. it is available for purchase on Amazon, Luminous India website, and authorized dealers in the country. This portable power station is also available in P700, P1000, and P1200 capacities starting from Rs 29,999. These offer the same power features as the Edge Go 1500, but the built-in speaker is only available on the top model.
Luminous is offering a 5-year warranty on its new portable power stations, with a direct replacement policy. This will be serviced in-house by the company through its chain of 350+ service centres in India.
FAQs
Q. How many hours of battery backup does the Luminous Edge Go 1500 provide?
Luminous does not specify the exact battery backup. It supports over 90 types of household appliances, and the battery backup depends on the type of load connected.
Q. How heavy is the Luminous Edge Go 1500?
The Luminous Edge Go 1500 weighs 15kg.
Q. What type of battery is used on the Luminous Edge Go 1500?
The Luminous Edge Go 1500 features a LiFePO4 Lithium-Ion battery. It is rated for up to 3000 charge cycles.
Q. Can I charge an electric vehicle with the Luminous Edge Go 1500?
Technically, you can charge an EV 2-wheeler using the Luminous Edge Go 1500. However, it is not designed for it, and you may not get a meaningful recharge, so it’s not recommended to charge a vehicle using this portable power station.
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This only affects new smartphones launching in the EU after June 2025, which means the iPhone 16 does not have to adhere to this law. The regulation doesn’t just touch on batteries though. Manufacturers need to sell critical spare parts for seven years and offer at least five years of software updates. These laws often influence other regions, which is why Apple is likely testing this battery replacement process in its latest phone. It’s unclear whether the new adhesive would be fully compliant with the EU’s regulations.
“The point of the legislation is that it won’t most likely require [Apple] to completely change the design of the product,” says Ugo Vallauri, codirector of the Restart Project and a founding member of the Right to Repair Europe coalition. “As long as they can supply the spare part as well as the tools needed to perform the repair, and it can be performed by a generalist—someone with some level of competence—they would not need to change much further, which can be potentially be seen as a weakness of the legislation. We will see what happens in that respect.”
Matching Game
But easier battery replacements are just one part of the story. Apple is notorious for “parts pairing,” the policy where it uses software to identify and approve parts. Apple will disable certain features if it finds the part wasn’t sourced from Apple’s official channels—even if the part comes directly from another iPhone. For example, as iFixit’s website says, if you replace your iPhone’s screen with a genuine but secondhand part, your device will lose access to Apple’s True Tone and autobrightness features, even though the screen will otherwise function normally. You may also see warning messages for replaced parts that Apple cannot identify.
New laws in Oregon and Colorado prohibit the practice of parts pairing to discriminate against otherwise compatible parts, and Apple earlier this year said it would expand repair options to support used genuine parts starting this fall. That now applies to the Face ID sensor in the TrueDepth selfie camera—you can now swap this component from one unit to another without compromising security, safety, and privacy, according to Apple.
Apple also says that now, if you use a third-party part that isn’t available in its cloud-based calibration servers, the phone will try to activate the part and make it work to its full capability. It will also show the repair history of the device within Settings and list which parts have been replaced. Any used Apple parts will now be able to be calibrated after you install them, and these will appear as “used” parts in the device’s repair history. That means features like True Tone will finally be enabled for third-party displays, and you’ll be able to see health data for third-party batteries. The front camera and lidar scanner will also stay operational if the module is replaced.
“I’ve always felt like the goal of right to repair is to create the incentive for these manufacturers, who are the ones good at making stuff, to prioritize or at least incorporate repairability into their objectives,” says Nathan Proctor, senior director of the Campaign for the Right to Repair at Public Interest Research Group. “And once they do, they are actually coming up with new ways to make things easier to fix in ways I couldn’t have predicted or thought up. It’s exciting to see Apple engineers coming up with solutions for making things more fixable.”
Lock Step
Photograph: Apple
But there’s a new concern on the horizon with iOS 18 rolling out to Apple devices: Activation Lock. You might be familiar with this if you have erased an iPhone in the past but forgot to remove your Apple account details, essentially locking a new owner out from the device unless they have your password. In iOS 18, this Activation Lock feature now extends to iPhone parts. The idea is that this will deter thieves from stealing iPhones to sell parts. If the iPhone detects that a used part has been installed, it will ask for the original part owner’s Apple account password.
Proctor says the number one complaint he’s heard from device refurbishers is around Activation Lock—these companies have devices legally acquired from donations or recycling programs, but they cannot do anything to unlock the phone. (Apple has ways to bypass Activation Lock if you have proof of purchase documentation.)
“We need a way to verifiably say this is not a stolen part,” Proctor says. “I really respect and appreciate and understand the value of the way Activation Lock thwarts theft, but there’s got to be some middle ground where a reputable recycler doesn’t have to shred working parts and working phones. It’s ridiculous. It has the potential to undermine any environmental gains from all the other stuff that they’re doing.”
There are a few things worth thinking about when you’re shopping for a portable charger.
Capacity: The capacity of a power bank is measured in milliampere-hours (mAh), but this can be a little misleading because the amount of power you get out depends on the cable you use, the device you’re charging, and the charging method (Qi wireless charging is less efficient). You will never get the maximum capacity. We try to provide an estimate of what you’ll get in terms of charges for devices.
Charging speeds and standards: The charging rate for devices like smartphones is measured in watts (W), but most power banks list the voltage (V) and the amperage (A). Thankfully, you can calculate the wattage yourself simply by multiplying the voltage and amperage. Unfortunately, getting that maximum rate also depends on your device, the standards it supports, and the charging cable you use. Many smartphones, including Apple’s iPhones, support the power delivery standard, meaning you can use higher-power power banks to recharge the device with no issues. A few phones, such as Samsung’s Galaxy S range, support a supplementary PD protocol called PPS (Programmable Power Supply) that goes up to 45 W. Many phones also support Qualcomm’s proprietary Quick Charge (QC) standard. There are also other proprietary fast-charging standards, but you won’t generally find power banks that support them unless they come from the smartphone manufacturer.
Pass-through: If you want to charge your power bank and use it to charge another device simultaneously, it will need pass-through support. The Nimble, GoalZero, Biolite, Mophie, Zendure, and Sharge portable chargers listed support pass-through charging. Anker discontinued support for pass-through in some of its products because it found that differences between the output of the wall charger and the input of the device charging can cause the power bank to cycle on and off rapidly and shorten its lifespan. Monoprice does not support pass-through charging, either. We would advise caution when using pass-through, as it can also cause portable chargers to heat up.
Travel: It’s safe to travel with a power bank, but there are two restrictions to keep in mind when you board a flight: You must have the portable charger in your carry-on luggage (it cannot be checked), and it must not exceed 100 Wh (watt-hours). If your power bank has a larger capacity than 27,000 mAh, you should check with the airline. Below that should not be a problem.
We have a few tips and pointers on what to think about before you shop for a portable power station.
Price: Portable power stations can be very expensive, but discounts, sales, and deals are common. If you can afford to wait, you can very likely get your chosen power station for less.
Capacity: Figure out how much power you need. The capacity is listed in watt-hours (Wh) or sometimes kilowatt-hours (kWh). If you think about the devices you want to run from it and how long you need to run them, you can start to calculate the capacity you need. Manufacturers will often display stuff like 12 hours of TV or 30 minutes of electric chain saw use, but consider that not all TVs draw the same amount of power. You must calculate how much the gadgets you own actually use.
Portability: The term “portable” is stretching it sometimes. Batteries are heavy. The larger-capacity power stations are typically on wheels and have telescopic handles, and they are still tough to cart around. If you’re looking for something you can actually carry on foot for a distance, you may need to temper your expectations on capacity.
Battery technology: There are various battery technologies, but the main ones used in portable power stations today are types of lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries, often lithium nickel manganese cobalt oxide (Li-NMC) or lithium iron phosphate (LiFePO4 or LFP). The latter is safer (less prone to combustion) and tends to last longer (more cycles) before it starts to degrade. Overheating can be an issue for Li-NMC batteries and they degrade faster, but they do have a higher energy density. Zendure also offers semi-solid-state batteries in its top-of-the-line SuperBase listed above, which it promises are more stable and resilient, therefore safer, and have a higher energy density.
Ports: While you will find certain ports across the board with portable power stations, from AC outlets to USB-A, it is crucial to check the maximum charging rate and supported charging standards to avoid disappointment. You might find USB-C ports, car ports, barrel ports, and maybe inputs for solar, but assume nothing. Check the specs before you buy.
Charging speed: Large-capacity power stations can take a long time to recharge. Ensure you understand how quickly your chosen power station can charge from the mains and from other sources if you plan to use solar panels, a car battery, or another power source for top-ups. Some power stations enable you to fast-charge from two or more inputs.
Heat and noise: Batteries generate heat. If you are charging your power station up in a hurry or have a half dozen things plugged into it, things will heat up fast. Every power station we tested has fans to keep the temperature down, and these things can get surprisingly loud even under a relatively low load, especially if you have it in an enclosed space with you. Unfortunately, there is not much you can do about this.
Maximum output: If you want to use power tools, an AC unit, or in the UK, a kettle, you need to be able to draw thousands of watts. Power stations all state the maximum output, but often they will have a surge function that enables them to go higher for a short period of time. Sometimes they give it a silly name. For example, Zendure calls this “AmpUp,” and EcoFlow calls it “X-Boost.” Make sure your chosen power station can handle the wattage you need.
UPS and EPS: Some power stations can act as an uninterruptible power supply (UPS); others are classed as an emergency power supply (EPS). If you have your power station plugged into the mains and then devices plugged into it, they will work from the mains, but if there is a power outage, a UPS will switch to battery power instantly (under 10 milliseconds). An EPS will also switch when there’s a blackout but may take a bit longer (30 milliseconds or so).
Floyd Mayweather Jr. has been sued by a man who claims he was physically assaulted by a bodyguard for the boxing legend after trying to film Mayweather at a downtown Los Angeles restaurant nearly two years ago.
In a complaint filed Monday in Los Angeles Superior Court, Eduardo Andres Torres Martinez alleges that he spotted Mayweather at the Yard House at L.A. Live on Feb. 10, 2022, and began recording video of the undefeated fighter with his cellphone.
According to the lawsuit, Mayweather, 46, noticed Torres Martinez’s activity, and Mayweather and/or a member of his team “signaled” toward his bodyguards.
“At the behest, request, command, demand and/or prompting of the Mayweather Money Team,” the complaint states, a bodyguard approached Torres Martinez and struck him, which knocked him to the ground.
The bodyguard then began “wrestling with Plaintiff in an attempt to confiscate Plaintiff s cell phone, causing further injuries and damages to Plaintiff,” the filing states, adding “by reason of the aforementioned acts, Plaintiff was placed in great fear for his life, health and safety.”
The lawsuit names Mayweather, the Money Team LLC and the Yard House as defendants, with causes of action that include assault and battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, general negligence and negligent hiring training and supervision.
Torres Martinez is seeking unspecified “general damages for past, present and future pain, distress, anguish and suffering, including physical and mental pain and suffering, inconvenience, emotional stress, and impairment of the quality of life,” as well as other damages, the lawsuit states.
According to the Los Angeles Police Department, police responded to a radio call of a battery/assault on that date and at that location, but no report was taken.
The Times was unable to reach Mayweather, who has denied that any such incident occurred. Torres Martinez’s attorney did not immediately respond to a message from The Times.
Apple is sending payments to millions of iPhone users whose older devices were slowed after the tech giant made software updates, part of a legal settlement over what came to be known as “batterygate.”
The payments, which have started landing in consumers’ bank accounts, are larger than expected, attorneys representing Apple customers said in a statement on Monday. Here’s what to know about the payments.
How much will I get under the Apple iPhone settlement?
Apple is paying a total of $310 million to $500 million to settle the lawsuit over battery issues with older iPhones, according to Cotchett, Pitre & McCarthy, one of the law firms representing Apple customers. That breaks down to $92.17 per claimant, Mark C. Molumphy, a partner at the law firm, said in a statement.
The amount “exceed[s] our original estimates, and [is] more than 100% of the claimed damages,” Molumphy noted.
What was batterygate all about?
The 2018 lawsuit related to claims that Apple deliberately slowed down the overall performance of older iPhones in making updates to its iOS mobile platform, allegedly to prevent aging batteries from shutting down completely when power demands were high.
For its part, Apple said its reason for reducing performance wasn’t to made to hide battery defects, but rather was designed to prolong the lifespan of the devices, the company told the Verge in 2017. The settlement is not an admission of wrongdoing by Apple, the claim website notes.
How many people are eligible for the payments?
About 100 million consumers may have been eligible for money under the Apple settlement, but only about about 3.3 million iPhone users submitted claims prior to the deadline, according to legal documents.
The settlement was available to iPhone 6, 6 Plus, 6S, 6S Plus and SE users running iOS 10.2.1 or later and iPhone 7 and 7 Plus users running iOS 11.2 or later before Dec. 21, 2017, according to the settlement site.
What if I didn’t submit a claim?
Unfortunately, if you didn’t submit a claim prior to the October 6, 2020, deadline, you aren’t eligible to receive a check.
How will I know the payment is from Apple?
According to posts on social media from people who received payments, the settlement money will appear as a direct deposit with the payment line “IN RE APPLE INC.”
Aimee Picchi is the associate managing editor for CBS MoneyWatch, where she covers business and personal finance. She previously worked at Bloomberg News and has written for national news outlets including USA Today and Consumer Reports.
Ever since the Covid pandemic touched off crime sprees all over the country, carjacking and car thefts have plagued many cities around the country.
Most of the time, these are tragic stories that don’t have a good ending. But when a man tried to carjack a 65-year-old woman at a grocery store, he was confronted by a brave 15-year-old hero.
Fifteen-year-old Andrew Papp is a hero, but the sophomore at Riverview High School hardly said a word about it in school.
His principal, Brian Spiro, told Andrew’s Junior ROTC class how he saved a woman as others stood and watched.
“Andrew saw that as an opportunity to step in and protect her, and he did so decisively,” Spiro said.
Andrew didn’t pause for an instant when he dashed across a supermarket parking lot to save the woman from a violent carjacker.
“He told me to give him my keys, and I said no and turned away from him, and he was still all over me,” 65-year-old Billie Richert told FOX 13 News shortly after the attack.
So we know what kind of kid Andrew is – but why did he do it?
That is an even better answer, one that is noticeably absent from much of American life these days.
“It’s just the right thing to do,” he said. “I mean that could be someone’s mom, someone’s aunt. Like if that was my mom, and someone did that to my mom, and he got away, that’s just like, that’s terrible.”
The suspect was 42-year-old Robert Moore, who was charged with robbery and battery on a victim over 65.
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A Glendale man accused of hurling concrete stones, rocks and racial slurs at street vendors in early November was charged with three misdemeanors, including a hate crime.
The Glendale Police Department announced charges on Monday against Emanuel Gulakian, 36, with one count each of a violation of civil rights, assault of a person and battery.
Gulakian was arrested Nov. 2 and is home awaiting trial on $30,000 bond. His next court date is Feb. 2.
Police say Emanuel Gulakian threw concrete chunks at street vendors including the one above.
(Glendale Police Department)
Gulakian is alleged to have yelled racial epithets and profanities at Latino street vendors near the intersection of Sonora Avenue and San Fernando Road after 11:30 p.m. on Nov. 1, according to Glendale police. At least two vendors were targeted.
Calls to a number listed for Gulakian were not returned.
Police responded and arrested Gulakian shortly after he allegedly threw loose concrete pieces at the vendors. The projectiles were as big as softballs, according to police reports. One of the vendors was struck and suffered minor injuries.
“Throughout the altercation, the suspect continued to spew racial slurs, perpetuating an atmosphere of hate and violence,” according to police.
In a Nov. 27 incident caught on video, Gulakian appeared to be harassing Glendale street vendors along West Glenoaks Boulevard and North Brand Boulevard. Video posted to social media by street vendor activist Edin Alex Enamorado appears to show the incident.
A man who appears to be Gulakian is filming a street vendor and says, “I don’t want this black market here; get all of it to Mexico.” In another post, he compares a Latina woman defending the street vendors to “your women in Tijuana.”
He also berates the street vendors and tells them that he is not giving them permission to record him while simultaneously filming them on a public street.
As demand for electric vehicles continues to grow, one start-up company is looking to make the cars even more sustainable – by turning used tires into batteries.
Most electric vehicles rely on lithium-ion batteries for their power. But critics say that those batteries are far from being as efficient, environmentally friendly and sustainable as they could be. That’s where one Chile-based company says old tires come into play.
The company, called T-Phite is putting used car tires through a process called pyrolysis, which entails putting the tires under extreme heat so that they break down into smaller molecules. T-Phite CEO Bernardita Diaz says those molecules become three primary byproducts – pyrolytic oil, steel and carbon black, a substance that contains graphite material essential to providing an electric pathway within batteries for energy to surge.
According to black carbon supplier Imerys, which is not involved with this project, carbon black is usually produced “by the incomplete combustion of heavy petroleum products such as FCC tar, coal tar, ethylene cracking tar, and a small amount of vegetable oil.”
Along with having “excellent electrical conductivity,” Imerys says that the substance is also known for being wear-resistant.
Making this substance out of used tires solves two problems, Diaz told Reuters.
“One is the final disposal of tires and the second is the demand that is being generated for electromobility materials,” she said. “And when you obtain materials from other waste, you are generating what is known as the circular economy.”
In the U.S. alone, roughly 250 million tires are left for scrap every year, according to the Federal Highway Administration. Of those tires, less than half are either recycled into new products or used to create tire-derived fuel, the agency said.
“Natural resources are already very limited and the fact that new solutions can be found from waste is very important,” Diaz said, adding that their process can go beyond lithium-ion batteries and extend to sodium batteries, “the next-generation batteries in electromobility.”
“It is very important and gratifying for us that this innovation has not only focused on a business niche, but that it provides much more openness,” she said.
Diaz’s company told Reuters that potential investors have shown significant interest in the process and may be looking to help scale it up to an industrial level. But while their process is certainly impressive, it is built on years of research into this possible solution.
In 2014, scientists from Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee found that carbon can be isolated from tire rubber-derived materials, and that the substance performed better than when derived from other materials. Further research from separate scientists published in 2021 found that carbon black can “systematically improve” battery performance so that they can charge faster.
CAPE CORAL, Fla. – A man was arrested in Cape Coral after allegedly getting physical with his Uber driver on Tuesday.
According to the Cape Coral Police Department, around 1:10 a.m., officers responded to a disturbance at 7-Eleven on 345 Cape Coral Parkway East.
The press release states that an Uber driver was taking Ryan Sheehan home. During the ride, Sheehan got angry and began acting aggressively toward the driver because he thought he was going the wrong way.
The driver stated that Sheehan started to grab him while the car was moving.
Trying to escape Sheehan, the driver pulled into a 7-Eleven to tell an employee and call the police.
When officers arrived at the scene, Sheehan refused to cooperate with law enforcement.
He also had two sandwiches in his hands that he stole from the store.
Employees state Sheehan appeared drunk and was causing a disruption. Officers saw the same behavior.
Sheehan was charged with one count of battery, one count of petit theft, disorderly intoxication and resisting an officer without violence.
A Riverside County man who alleges that he was wrongfully beaten by security personnel at Dodger Stadium on opening day in 2018 has been awarded $105,000 in punitive damages in Los Angeles Superior Court.
The court on Friday assessed $100,000 of Francisco Rodriguez’s damages against the Dodgers and $5,000 against Dodgers security officer Erik Pena, who was found to have acted with malice. Several other security officers included in the lawsuit were found not to have acted inappropriately.
Rodriguez alleged that security officers forcibly ejected him after he objected to the way another fan was being dealt with during the March 29, 2018, game against the San Francisco Giants. The guards escorting Rodriguez to the exit continually battered him, including jabbing his ribs with a baton and repeatedly punching him with closed fists, according to the lawsuit, which also alleges that a guard placed his knee on Rodriguez, who told him, “I can’t breathe.”
The Dodgers said that Rodriguez grabbed Pena by the collar outside the stadium gates and slugged him on the right cheek, according to court documents. Rodriguez admitted taking a swing at Pena and said the guard retaliated by punching him as many as six times.
The Dodgers have several lawsuits against them in the courts. Three suits filed in April 2022 outline three incidents in which security officers allegedly perpetrated acts of assault, battery, false imprisonment, civil rights violations and emotional distress against fans at Dodger Stadium.
According to court documents, the team’s security force is composed of “non-sworn persons,” uniformed off-duty sworn Los Angeles Police Department officers and sworn off-duty law enforcement officers without badges.
A Times investigation in September reported that security at Dodger Stadium increased after a 2011 incident in which two Dodgers fans confronted Giants fan Brian Stow and his friends in the parking lot after a game. They sucker-punched and kicked Stow, causing brain damage. The men were sent to prison for assault and mayhem.
The Dodgers and the LAPD responded to a report by Major League Baseball that cited a deterioration of crowd behavior and “a culture of apathy and indifference” among the team’s security staff by beefing up security with trained LAPD officers.
“We will expend whatever resources necessary to keep fans safe at Dodger Stadium,” said Charlie Beck, chief of police at the time. “This is going to be a game-changer.”
After Beck announced a crackdown, police in 2011 wrote only 20 reports, 12 of which involved assault, battery or other alleged violence against 12 victims at Dodger Stadium. By 2014, however, that total had grown to 69, including 33 violent incidents and 47 victims.
In 2022, 71 crime reports, including 35 violent incidents and 47 victims, were filed, and as of mid-August 2023, police had filed another 53reports — 27 for violence against 33 victims. The alleged behavior included battery, battery on a police officer, simple assault and assault with a deadly weapon.
The Dodgers forbid pregame tailgate parties in the parking lot, revoke season tickets for bad behavior and eject rowdy fans. Yet stricter enforcement by security staff has led to the rash of lawsuits for excessive use of force.