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Technology

The Stanford logo and green energy.
Technology

The Climate Tech Accelerator with a Football Team

What happens when Stanford tackles sustainability.

Sparks

The Coolest Thing in Climate Tech Just Got More Buyers

Rondo Energy is taking its hot rock batteries on the road.

Green
Technology

AM Briefing: VW and Rivian Team Up

On a major EV joint venture, livestock taxes, and tipping points

Yellow
Climate

AM Briefing: Fires, Floods, and Federal Court

On a Minnesota dam, a California utility, and a Utah railway.

Yellow
A New Coalition Is Pushing Governments to Make More Ambitious Climate Plans

AM Briefing: A New Climate Coalition

On Mission 2025, Heirloom’s new facility, and geoengineering’s unintended consequences

Yellow
Climate

AM Briefing: Summer of Solar

On the fastest-growing power source, Hawaii’s climate settlement, and friendly monkeys

How Solar Is Helping Keep the Lights On This Summer
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: China issued a rainstorm warning for its already-sodden southern provinces • Two people were killed in severe storms in Moscow • America’s brutal heat wave will shift into the Mid-Atlantic this weekend.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Solar to provide one-fifth of global electricity during peak summer hours

During the sunniest hours of the longest days of the year, solar power can now provide about 20% of the world’s electricity, according to new estimates from energy think tank Ember. That’s up from 16% last year. Throughout the entire month of June, solar will account for roughly 8.2% of global electricity, up from 6.7% in the same month last year, and higher than the 5.5% annual average across the whole of 2023. The report underscores the rapid expansion of solar, which is now the fastest-growing source of electricity. “As solar continues to expand, it is poised to further transform the power sector and accelerate the world’s transition to renewable energy,” the authors said.

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Technology

Carbon Capture Heads Out to Sea

Seabound is out to scrub carbon from shipping exhaust.

Mirror images of ships.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

If the global shipping industry were its own nation, it would be the sixth largest emitter of carbon dioxide, belching about a billion tons of the stuff into the atmosphere every year. And not to state the obvious, but the sector isn’t going anywhere. Not only is cargo shipping the means by which 80% of global trade is carried out, but transporting goods via ship is actually much more fuel-efficient than the alternatives.

That means that slashing shipping emissions, which account for nearly 3% of the global total, is 100% necessary for a decarbonized future. But unlike most other industries, there’s a global regulatory body — the International Maritime Organization — that can set goals and mandates to ensure that decarbonization happens on schedule. The IMO is targeting net-zero shipping emissions by 2050, with a 40% reduction in the carbon intensity of international shipping by 2030 compared to 2008. And while these goals aren’t binding, forthcoming measures set to be developed and adopted late next year will be.

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