How We Need to Think about AI Energy Demand Now
Tech journalist Rich Miller explains why the bears and the bulls may both be wrong about AI energy demand.
Tech journalist Rich Miller explains why the bears and the bulls may both be wrong about AI energy demand.
Trump’s energy emergency declaration tries to upend how the nation thinks and talks about energy. What happens to distributed energy in the upheaval?
The Trump administration’s DOGE says it’s about efficiency, but apparently not energy efficiency.
Trouble and promise seem to characterize what’s ahead for distributed energy. So how should we approach 2025?
The competition for dominance is just beginning as various industries enter the home energy management space.
The term “off-grid” conjures a cabin in the woods, not sophisticated urban buildings. But that’s beginning to change, and the latest example is an apartment building in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Energy entrepreneur Alex Bazhinov had to take bigger steps than most to create his company. It wasn’t just a matter of finding the right business plan and financing. He had to find a new
country.
Household investment in energy is on the rise as consumers install more distributed energy resources in their homes
Distributed energy should be the first resource considered before we build riskier, larger projects to meet AI-driven electric demand.
A moonshot goal for distributed energy resources could get us all rowing in the same direction and quicken the pace of local energy development.