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Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Beam Data, Not Energy: Space-based Solar vs Space-based Data Centers

Space Data Centers: The Ultimate High Ground

Powering Our Digital Future

Our energy needs are growing faster than a rocket at Max Q. Data centers for AI and computing could consume up to 8% of global electricity by 2030. This surge strains resources and pushes innovation. Some experts tout space-based solar power as the savior. Yet space-based data centers offer another option. As we hurtle towards an increasingly digital future, we're looking to the stars for solutions.

Space-based solar power promises to harness the sun's energy directly from orbit and beam it back to Earth. It's an audacious idea that has captured the imagination of scientists and entrepreneurs alike. Orbital arrays capture constant sunlight, beam it down via microwaves, and power any of our electrical needs.

But if data centers are the crux of our energy problem, maybe there's another way?

In Space, No One Can Hear Your Server Fan Scream

Instead of bringing space energy down to Earth, why not move our energy-hungry operations up into orbit? Space-based data centers offer a revolutionary approach to our computational conundrum. By relocating our digital infrastructure to sun-synchronous orbits, we can tap into a 24/7 365 unlimited power source while simultaneously reducing our terrestrial footprint.

Orbiting our refining might be a smarter move than beaming energy from space back to our blue marble. We'll examine the advantages, challenges, and potential impact of this cosmic computing revolution. Buckle up, because we're about to take a journey to the final frontier of data processing!

The Terawatt Tangle

Our current computational cravings are creating an energy conundrum of cosmic proportions. Data centers already gobble up a significant slice of global energy consumption, and projections suggest this digital diet will double by 2030. Let's look at two proposed space-based solutions and see which one works better. Option one: space-based energy, harvest solar energy in space and beam it down to be used here on Terafirma. Option two: put data centers in space where the massive power demands for data processing can be met without any demand on our earthly grid.  

Stellar Solar Solutions

Space: the final frontier for computing, offers some compelling advantages. Picture this: solar panels basking in the uninterrupted glow of our nearest star (Sol, or as you may refer to it, the Sun), soaking up 36% more rays than their earthbound cousins. In sun-synchronous orbits, these cosmic collectors never experience a sunset, providing a constant stream of energy.

Remember those noisy fans keeping your laptop from melting? In the vacuum of space, they're as obsolete as a floppy disk. The cosmos provides unlimited radiative cooling in the shadow of the solar panel, eliminating the need for energy-hungry cooling systems that typically consume 30-40% of a traditional data center's power budget.

Data vs. Energy: A Cosmic Showdown

When it comes to efficiency, transmitting data wins out over beaming power every time. Space-based solar power promises plentiful power, but losses add up. Despite higher initial solar efficiency, end-to-end efficiency lingers at a mere10-20%; it's hit hard by conversions from solar to electricity, then to microwaves or lasers, atmospheric absorption, and finally ground reconversion. Up to 80-90% of harvested energy evaporates as heat or scatter. 

Space-based data centers flip the script. They consume solar power on-site, dodging transmission troubles entirely. In orbit, satellites soak up constant sunlight at 1,366 watts per square meter, five to ten times more effective than terrestrial solar, sans nights or clouds. Data beams to the Starlink constellation using low-power optical lasers, clocking gigabits per second at under one watt. Let's call it Starthink, and it slashes emissions per compute unit by tenfold, sparing our strained grids.

Let's break it down:

Aspect Space Data Centers Earth-based Power Beaming
Energy Loss Minimal (data transmission) Significant (atmospheric interference)
Scalability High (modular expansion) Limited (large receiving stations)
Environmental Impact Low (no land use) Moderate (large terrestrial infrastructure)
Maintenance Challenging but infrequent Easier but constant

Dollars and Sense: Economic Orbit-rations

The elephant in the room, or rather, the rocket on the launchpad, is cost. Currently, SpaceX's Falcon 9 launch costs hover around 60 to 70 million dollars (uncrewed). That's enough to make most wallets wince. However, as launch costs continue to plummet, the long-term return on investment for orbital computing starts to look stellar.

Technical Tribulations: Houston, We Have a Problem

Of course, it's not all stardust and rainbows. Space presents its own unique set of challenges. Radiation hardening is crucial to prevent cosmic rays from flipping our zeros to ones, resulting in binary gibberish. And let's not forget about latency, because even at the speed of light, data takes its sweet time traversing the cosmos, but there are plenty of operations that don't need real-time replies.

Earth's Sigh of Relief: Environmental Impacts

Here's where things get really exciting for us tree-huggers. Space-based data centers could significantly reduce our terrestrial footprint. Let's compare:

Environmental Factor Earth-based Data Centers Space-based Data Centers
Land Use High Negligible
Water Consumption Significant None
Carbon Footprint Variable (grid-dependent) Low (solar-powered)
E-waste Significant Minimal (long lifespan)

Prepare for Launch

A start-up called Starcloud has their first server in space, and they trained an AI model on this server in space in late 2025. Google has a program called Project Suncatcher that's targeting 2027 for first tests.

Stellar Summation

While the challenges are significant, the benefits of space-based data centers are out of this world. They offer a path to a future where our increasing computational needs don't come at the cost of our planet's health. As we continue to push the boundaries of technology and exploration, perhaps the solution to our earthly problems lies not beneath our feet, but high above our heads. The final frontier might just be our best hope for a sustainable digital future. Cosmic compute offers data processing without ground grief. So, let's shoot for the stars. Our planet, and our data, will thank us.

Monday, February 2, 2026

The Turing Test of Energy: Proving Virtual Power Plants are Practical (and even better)

The Grid Gets a Personality Check

The US power grid is a grumpy, aging beast. It is the largest machine on Earth; it's also quite stubborn. For a century, we've relied on giant, smoke-belching towers to keep our lights on. These central plants were easy to see. They were easy to control. You simply threw more coal or gas into the furnace when people turned on their air conditioners. This system worked for a long time; however, the world is changing. We are moving toward a cleaner way of living. This shift requires a smarter approach to electricity. We need a system that's smart and flexible. This is where the Virtual Power Plants, or VPPs, enter the picture. A VPP is not a central, physical building; it's a digital symphony of hundreds or thousands of small, distributed devices. These include home batteries, smart thermostats, electric water heaters, and electric vehicle charging equipment. When the grid is stressed, the VPP tells these devices to help out. It's an on-call volunteer firefighter squad of electrons controlled by sophisticated software. It turns a neighborhood into a powerhouse. This technology is growing at a staggering rate. It is moving from a niche experiment to a mainstream solution.

Shared Energy, Grid Synergy

The growth of VPPs in the US is truly impressive. We are seeing a massive surge in connected devices. Every smart thermostat is a brick in the new power plant. Every EV is a rolling battery. VPP capacity is on a trend to triple by 2030. Utilities and datacenters need stable energy, and VPPs are the fastest way to get there. If a utility wants to build a new power plant or battery storage system, there are months (if not years) of permits, hearings, and big-ticket items that have to be approved. A VPP, on the other hand, takes advantage of the infrastructure already on the grid. All that's needed is the software to manage it, no permits, no public hearings, no massive infrastructure spending.  

This is a fundamental shift in how we build infrastructure. Utilities used to be skeptical. They liked their big, reliable gas plants. They did not trust a bunch of residential water heaters to save the day. That skepticism is finally melting away. New software platforms are making these distributed resources reliable. They are showing that a large swarm of bees can be as effective as a bear. A VPP can now respond to grid signals in seconds. This spin-up speed is actually faster than traditional plants. It is a beautiful bit of binary brilliance. We are seeing these systems pop up on the US West Coast, in Texas, and in New England. They are proving their worth during heatwaves. They are keeping the lights on without burning extra fuel and without additional distribution lines.

The Turing Test of Energy 

To understand how far we have come, we must look at the Huels Test. This concept is a direct nod to the famous Turing Test for artificial intelligence. Alan Turing wanted to know if a machine could mimic a human. He proposed the imitation game. If a human could not tell the difference between the responses from a computer and a person, the machine passed. Matt Huels and the team at EnergyHub applied this logic to the energy world. They realized that VPPs faced a similar hurdle. Utility operators are creatures of habit. They want their control screens to look a certain way. They want predictable, steady lines of data. For a VPP to truly succeed, it must pass the Huels Test. This means the grid operator should not be able to distinguish the behavior of a VPP from a traditional gas peaker plant. If the VPP provides the same reliability, it passes. If it follows the same scheduling rules, it wins. This is the ultimate goal for decentralization. We want the complexity of a thousand homes to look like the simplicity of a single switch. It is a high bar for software. It requires an understanding of all the devices in aggregate and timing. It requires massive amounts of data.

The Maturity Model Breakdown

Passing the Huels test is not an overnight achievement. It is a journey through different levels of technical skill. Most early programs were basic. They were simple emergency measures. Today, we are seeing the rise of sophisticated, automated systems. These systems do more than just turn things off. They manage the flow of power with surgical precision. They predict when a storm will hit. They charge batteries before the price of energy spikes. They are becoming proactive instead of reactive. The following table illustrates the different stages of VPP development as they move toward the Huels standard.

Maturity Level Name Primary Function Data Frequency
Level 1 Peak Shaver Simple emergency load sheading Hourly or daily
Level 2 Reliable Resource Predictive dispatch and basic telemetry Every 15 minutes
Level 3 Huels Standard Full parity with gas peaker plants Under 5 minutes
Level 4 Grid Orchestrator Autonomous, localized grid support Real time

Why Utility Snobs are Finally Impressed

The jump from Level 2 to Level 3 is difficult. It requires high-frequency telemetry. This is a fancy way of saying the VPP must report its status constantly. If a cloud passes over a solar array, the system must adjust instantly. The software must also handle something called the snapback effect. When a VPP turns off a thousand air conditioners, the house gets warm. When the event ends, all those units want to turn on at once. This creates a massive spike in demand. A VPP that passes the Huels test avoids this. It staggers the recovery. It creates a smooth ramp. This level of control is what makes utilities feel safe. It is what makes them willing to retire old, dirty peaker plants. As we learn how to more effectively manage VPPs, we are seeing a 20% to 30% increase in VPP efficiency every few years. The costs are also falling. It is much cheaper to pay people to use less power than it is to build a new $100,000,000 power station. This is basic math. It is also common sense. The US energy market is finally waking up to this reality. We are seeing a move away from centralized control. We are seeing a move toward a democratic grid.

Sparking a Smarter Tomorrow

The success of the Huels Test represents a turning point for our environment. It proves that we do not need to rely on the old ways. We can use our devices to save the grid. We can use our electric cars to power our homes. This is a quiet and growing revolution. It does not require giant construction projects. It only requires software and smart incentives. We are building a more resilient system. It is a system that can handle the unpredictability of wind and sun. The growth of these programs is a signal of hope. It shows that innovation can solve our most pressing problems. We are no longer just dreaming of a better way to manage energy. We are actually doing it. Every home that joins a VPP is one more member of an attack swarm that protects us from instability and high costs. It moves us toward a more elegant solution for our electricity needs. As we refine these systems, we move closer to a future free from fossil fuels.

Sunday, February 1, 2026

Why EVs Outpace Other Alternatives in Personal Transport

Introduction: Prioritizing Petroleum's True Value

Petroleum has powered our world in ways far beyond the roar of engines; think plastics for medical devices, fertilizers to feed billions, lubricants for machinery, and asphalt for roads. These uses are vital, nearly irreplaceable at the global industrial scale, and far more valuable than burning the stuff to spew out of tailpipes. We can't discuss petroleum without covering transportation of goods and people, which guzzles about 40% of US oil. Electric vehicles (EVs) stand out as the scalable powerhouse to displace petrol. Thanks to plummeting battery costs, expanding infrastructure, and policy pushes, the EVs market is growing. Other alternatives? They shine in niches but falter on emissions, infrastructure, and/or the scalability needed for widespread adoption. Full lifecycle emissions tell the story: from extraction to tailpipe, EVs slash greenhouse gases by 49% compared to gasoline cars, even on today's grids. By 2030, that could hit 70% as renewables surge. Let's break it down.

The Current Landscape

Consider the landscape. Biofuels like ethanol and biodiesel offer drop-in ease but wrestle with feedstock limits and land fights. Gaseous options such as propane and methane cut some pollution while doing little for others. Hydrogen and algae fuels dazzle in labs but stumble on cost and scale. EVs? They are already surging, with global sales topping 14 million in 2024 and projections for 17% of new car sales by 2030. Only they can meet the trillions of miles Americans drive annually without choking on supply chains or requiring several states' worth of land for feedstock or algae pools.

Key Comparisons at a Glance

To compare, here's a snapshot of lifecycle GHG reductions versus gasoline vehicles and scalability by 2030. Data draws from recent analyses, assuming average US conditions.

Fuel Option Lifecycle GHG Reduction vs. Gasoline Projected US Market Share by 2030 Key Scalability Hurdle
EVs (Battery Electric) 49-70% 25-30% of new sales Grid upgrades, but on track
Ethanol (E85) 20-40% <5% (blends only) Corn limits, water use
Biodiesel/Algae 50-68% 2-4% Feedstock scarcity, high costs
Propane (LPG) 10-20% <1% Fossil-derived, station gaps
Natural Gas (CNG) 20-30% <2% Methane leaks, infrastructure
Hydrogen (FCEVs) 0-50% (gray H2 negative) <0.5% 96% fossil-sourced, $10-15/kg

EVs lead because they are scalable, affordable, and effective; plus, their emissions drop as the grid's emissions are reduced.

Breaking Down the Alternatives

Let's take a look at ethanol. Flex-fuel vehicles on E85 burn 20-40% fewer GHGs over their life, thanks to corn's carbon uptake. By 2030, biofuels might hit 6% of road energy globally. Land diversion for crops competes with food, and water demands strain aquifers. EVs sidestep this, needing no cropland, just minerals we can mine responsibly and recycle. Solar panels can be placed on rooftops and cover parking lots. Even when solar is placed on farmland, it can be a dual-use agrovoltaic system that generates energy and benefits the crops and grazers.

Biodiesel and algae-based fuels fare better on paper, with up to 68% cuts from algae's CO2-munching growth. Algae could yield 10 times the oil per acre of soy, fitting marginal lands. But reality bites: production costs $3-10 per gallon, and commercial scale lags pilots. By 2030, advanced biofuels might save 5% on emissions if we add 10 billion gallons, but that's a drop against EVs' projected 40% petroleum displacement in light-duty fleets. EVs win on volume; one gigafactory churns out batteries for millions of cars yearly.

Gaseous fuels like propane and CNG offer 10-30% reductions and cheaper operation, propane at $2.50 per gallon equivalent. Fleets love them for quick refills. Still, both stem from fracking, with methane leaks offsetting gains, and stations number under 5,000 nationwide. Scaling to personal cars? Unlikely before 2030, as EVs' charging network explodes to 200,000 public spots. Natural gas might trim 26% CO2 if the fleet converts, but EVs do double that without fracking and pipeline sprawl.

Hydrogen's hype fades under scrutiny. Fuel cells emit only water, but 96% of hydrogen comes from fossil methane via steam reforming, yielding higher lifecycle emissions than gasoline in many cases. Green hydrogen, from electrolysis, could match EVs at 50% cuts, but it costs $4-12 per kg to produce, fueling a Mirai for $50-60 per 100 miles. Stations? A measly 70 in the US, mostly in California. By 2030, FCEVs might claim a 0.5% share, versus EVs' 25%. Expensive, inefficient (30% energy loss versus EVs' 70% efficiency), and fossil-tethered. Hydrogen may suit ships or trains, but not your daily commute.

Niche Roles for Alternatives

Sectors like long-distance air travel crave these alternatives. Batteries currently flop there due to weight, so sustainable aviation fuel from algae or waste oils could slash 80% emissions. Hydrogen might power regional jets. But for personal transport, EVs are the clear winner. They scale with solar farms and wind turbines, dodging oil wars and spills. Policies can accelerate: tax credits make EVs $7,500 cheaper upfront, while biofuels need subsidies to compete.

Conclusion: Plugging In for the Future

We are at an inflection point and face choices that echo across generations. Petroleum's best role is in high-value products, not exhaust fumes. EVs deliver the timely, scalable shift we need, curbing 1.5 gigatons of CO2 yearly by 2030 if adoption hits targets. Alternatives enrich the mix for hard-to-electrify corners, but let's not kid ourselves. For the cars, trucks, and SUVs carrying families to school and work, batteries are our lifeline. Time to plug in and leave the pump behind as we transition to a future free from fossil fuels.

Saturday, January 31, 2026

The Evolution of SAFE: From Petroleum Reduction to Renewable Sovereignty

Fueling the Fire of Freedom

The story of energy in America is often a tale of two addictions. First, we had the black gold; we drank oil like it was water at a desert marathon. Second, we had an addiction to a global supply chain that felt more like a toxic relationship than a trade agreement. Enter Securing America's Future Energy (SAFE). This group decided that the US needed a strategic intervention. They did not start with picket signs or kumbaya circles; they started with four-star generals and Fortune 500 CEOs. This "brass and business" approach changed the conversation from climate guilt to national survival. Today, SAFE is the primary architect of a world where our cars run on sunlight, and our minerals come from friends instead of foes.

The Birth of a Better Barrel Strategy

The year was 2004. The US was deeply entangled in Middle Eastern conflicts. Oil prices were climbing like an anxious mountain goat. Robbie Diamond, an entrepreneur with a knack for connecting disparate dots, saw a glaring vulnerability. He realized that 92% of US transportation relied on a single, volatile commodity: petroleum. This was not just an environmental problem; it was a massive security leak.

Diamond did not want to yell into the void. He recruited heavyweight champions of the establishment. He brought in Frederick W. Smith, the founder of FedEx. He enlisted General Paul X. Kelley, the 28th Commandant of the Marine Corps. Together, they formed the Energy Security Leadership Council (ESLC) in 2006. This council was the engine of SAFE. Their original goal was simple: break the oil monopoly. They wanted to maximize domestic production while simultaneously curbing consumption. They understood that every dollar sent to a hostile oil producer was a dollar used against US interests.

Slick Security Schemes

In those early days, the rhetoric was all about the "oil trap." SAFE argued that the US was a "price taker" in a market rigged by OPEC. They pushed for higher fuel efficiency standards. They supported the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007. This was the era of the "grand bargain." The group advocated for more domestic drilling to bridge the gap, but they also demanded that we stop wasting the fuel we had.

The focus was relentlessly on the tailpipe. If a vehicle used oil, it was a liability. This was a pragmatic, almost cold-blooded approach to energy. They did not talk much about melting ice caps. They talked about the $100 billion per year, or more, that leaked out of the US economy to pay for foreign oil. They talked about the risk of a blocked strait or a sudden embargo. It was a strategy built on the reality of the barrel.

Moving from Petroleum to Power

The world did not stay still, and neither did SAFE. By the mid-2010s, the shale revolution had turned the US into a top oil producer. Suddenly, the "we are running out of oil" argument lost its teeth. However, a new threat emerged on the horizon. As the world began to eye electric vehicles (EVs), the supply chain shifted from liquid fuels to solid minerals. SAFE noticed that while we were winning the oil war, we were losing the battery race.

The transition from an oil focus to a renewable focus was not a pivot; it was an expansion. They realized that electricity is the ultimate domestic fuel. You cannot easily embargo a wind turbine or a solar farm. The group began to champion the electrification of everything. This shift was finalized in the early 2020s. They launched the Center for Critical Minerals Strategy to ensure that the lithium and cobalt needed for this new era did not become the "new oil" controlled by adversaries.

Feature The Oil Era (2004) The Mineral Era (2026)
Primary Threat OPEC and global oil price shocks Foreign control of battery supply chains
Main Solution Fuel efficiency and domestic drilling EVs, renewables, and domestic mining
Key Tech Internal combustion engines Batteries, AI, and autonomous systems
Grid Status Static and fossil-heavy Modernized, renewable, and resilient
Top Priority Breaking the petroleum monopoly Securing the "Pillars of Power"

Minerals, Metals, and Modernity

By 2026, SAFE has become a multi-front powerhouse. Their mission now covers the entire industrial base of the nation. They are no longer just the "oil guys." They are the "everything that makes us strong" guys. This evolution is visible in their 2025/2026 leadership change. Robbie Diamond transitioned to Executive Chairman, passing the CEO torch to Avery Ash. Ash is a veteran of government affairs who understands that modern security requires a smart grid and smarter cars.

One of their most significant pushes in 2026 is the "Pillars of Power" strategy. This plan acknowledges that renewable energy is the only way to meet the massive power demands of AI and new manufacturing. They argue that wind and solar are "fuel-free" assets. Once you build a solar field, the "fuel" arrives for free every morning. This is the ultimate form of energy sovereignty. They also support autonomous vehicles (AVs). SAFE views AVs as a way to make transportation more efficient. They are pushing for the "AMERICA DRIVES" Act to create a federal framework for self-driving tech. They believe that if the US does not lead in AV software, we will simply be importing this technology from competitors.

Pragmatic Power Policies

The organization has also focused heavily on the power grid. In 2025, their Center for Grid Security released reports highlighting that our current wires cannot handle our future demands. They want permitting reform to happen yesterday. They argue that if it takes ten years to plug a wind farm into the grid, the wind farm is useless. This is where their pro-environmental stance meets their casual, results-oriented tone. They do not want to save the world with a poem; they want to save it with action and permits.

Their support for renewables is deeply tied to reindustrialization. They want to see aluminum smelters and steel mills powered by carbon-neutral, domestic energy. They believe that the US can win the next industrial revolution by having the cheapest and cleanest power on the planet. This involves "friend-shoring" materials from allies like Australia and Canada. It also involves recycling batteries to create a circular economy. They are moving us away from a "take, make, and waste" model toward a "secure, use, and reuse" model.

A Future Free From Fossil Fuels

SAFE has come a long way from its 2004 roots. It began as a desperate attempt to stop the bleeding from high oil prices. It has grown into a sophisticated map for American energy growth. They have proven that you can be pro-environment without being a dreamer. You can be a hawk for national security while also being a fan of solar panels. By focusing on the supply chain, they show that the transition to sustainable energy is a patriotic duty.

The organization continues to bridge the gap between the boardroom and the battlefield. They know that energy security is not just about what we burn; it is about what we build. As we look toward the 2030s, their influence is etched into every battery plant and wind farm across the country. They are reframing the argument. It's not about trying to save the planet; it's about trying to win the future. If this is the message that it takes to get Washington, D.C. to listen, I'm onboard.

Friday, January 30, 2026

The Internet of Energy is Microgrids All the Way Down

The Victorian Voltage Vanishes

The current electrical grid is the most impressive system that humanity has ever invented. That said, it's also a relic. It's a massive, spinning, synchronous machine. The engineering concepts it was built upon are over a century old, and frankly, not up to the task for our modern energy needs. It was designed as a tops-down "push" model. Power flows from big plants, to substations, to houses. This system is fragile and inefficient. If a single line fails, an entire region can go dark. We're still using 19th-century logic to power 21st-century lives. We treat electricity like a scarce commodity. We meter every single watt. We worry about peak hours. We check our bills with a sense of dread.

If we were to reinvent an electrical grid today, it would look nothing like the fragile system that we currently have. But we've invested so much in the grid as it is now, it would be impossible to replace it, right? Well, we've seen this before, and when done correctly, a complete overhaul is possible. In the early days of the internet, we used a modem and the telephone network to connect to the internet (or a BBS - cue modem beeping and buzzing sounds). The phone system proved to be completely inadequate for our growing data needs. This opened the door for upgrading the entire system, fiber optics proliferated, and the new packet-based network soon carried all of your data and even your phone calls. The old phone companies didn't disappear; they were repurposed.

EnergyNet: Packet-Switching Power

What would the new energy grid look like, and what's needed to make it happen?

The core idea for the new and improved grid is simple. We should treat electrons like data, a network of kilowatts instead of kilobytes. In the old (current) grid, energy is a continuous stream. In an EnergyNet, we use power electronics to create energy "packets." This is just the first of three fundamental blocks. 

The second feature is we use a protocol to send these energy packets exactly where they're needed. We do not just dump energy into the wires. We buffer it and store it in local batteries. This requires a shift from "dumb" wires to "smart" nodes. Your house becomes a node. Your neighbor’s house is another node. This is the EnergyNet. 

The third aspect of this new grid vision is that it's made up of interconnected microgrids. It is a system of systems, just like the internet is a system of interconnected networks. It is decentralized and resilient. If any node or microgrid collapses, it doesn't take down the network. 

The internet is not just one big network where all packets go to a central router and are forwarded from there. This would, one, be a huge bottleneck, and two, be a fragile system with a central single point of failure. Instead, internet communications happen point-to-point via the shortest route. Additionally, there are caches to speed up access and shorten the path for popular content. So, when you access smart devices in your home with their app on your phone, or print something on your home printer, the packets may never leave your house. Similarly, much of the content you access online may be coming from a cache that your ISP hosts, so the conversation never leaves your county.

Let's apply this same idea to energy. The energy you need should be sourced as locally and as cheaply as possible. The first request is to the solar panels on your roof (assuming you have them). The second request is to the batteries in your garage or driveway (again, assuming you have them). The third and fourth sources are your neighbors' solar panels and batteries, if they have energy to spare. This request continues until an available source is found, just like an internet data request would. Don't worry, just as with the internet, you don't have to know all the ins and outs; there's a protocol that takes care of it for you, so (from your perspective) the power you need just automagically arrives. 

The Protocol Paradox: Rules for Radiant Resources

Let's look a little deeper. How do these nodes talk to each other? They use the Energy Protocol. This is the Internet Protocol (IP) of electricity. It is an open-source set of rules. It allows different devices to communicate. Your solar inverter, your EV, your home battery, and your neighbor's systems all speak the same language, regardless of who made them. This protocol is critical for a networked microgrid. It removes the need for a central dictator. There is no "Master Control Room"; instead, the nodes negotiate.

The Energy Protocol works on a peer-to-peer basis. It prioritizes local energy. If your solar panels are making extra juice, the protocol looks for a nearby energy demand. It might be the EV in your driveway. It might be the heat pump next door. The protocol handles the handshake. It manages the price and the timing. It ensures that the local microgrid balances itself before asking peers or the macro-grid for help. This reduces the load on long-distance transmission lines. It makes the whole network more efficient.

Microgrids All the Way Down

The secret to making all of this work is galvanic separation. Traditional grids are physically connected across thousands of miles. A surge in one place can travel everywhere. Galvanic separation breaks this dependency. Electronic converters make a separation that is only pierced when both sides agree. These devices act like firewalls for energy routers. They allow power to pass through without a direct metal-to-metal connection. This prevents cascading failures. If a tree hits a line in the next town, your microgrid stays stable. It is physically isolated but digitally connected. It is a self-healing system. It is the ultimate insurance policy for our modern lifestyle.

Feature Traditional Grid Networked Microgrid (EnergyNet)
Topology Centralized and linear Decentralized and meshed
Flow Logic One-way "Push" Multi-directional "Exchange"
Fail-Safe Large-scale blackouts Localized isolation
Protocol Proprietary and closed Open Energy Protocol
Role of Storage Minimal and expensive Ubiquitous and distributed
Primary Asset Massive power plants Networked buffers and EVs

The Flat-Fee Frontier: Subscribing to Sunlight

The economics of this system are wild. Birgersson argues that we should stop paying for kilowatt-hours. He compares energy to the internet. We used to pay for long-distance calls by the minute. Now, we pay a flat monthly fee for unlimited data. We can do the same for power. Once the infrastructure is built, the marginal cost of a photon is zero. The sun does not send a bill. The wind does not have a payroll.

Imagine paying a flat $40 or $50 USD a month for all the energy you need. This covers the maintenance of the network. It pays for the "routers" and the wires. It does not matter if you charge your car or bake ten cakes. The price stays the same. This only works in a networked microgrid. Because the system is so efficient, there is an abundance of energy. We move from a world of scarcity to a world of plenty. In the US, this would be a massive boost to the economy. It frees up thousands of dollars for the average household every year. It turns energy from a stressful variable cost into a predictable utility.

The Electric Vehicle: The Battery on the Border

Your EV is the hero of this story. It is not just a car. It is a massive, mobile buffer. Most EVs have enough storage to power a home for several days. In a networked microgrid, the EV acts as a local reservoir. It soaks up energy when the sun is high. It feeds it back to the microgrid when the sun goes down. The Open Energy Protocol manages this balance.

We often hear that EVs will break the grid. That is old-school thinking. It assumes a "dumb" grid that cannot talk back. In an EnergyNet, the EV is the solution. It provides the flexibility that renewables need. Millions of cars plugged into a networked system create a massive virtual power plant. We do not need to build more coal or gas plants. We just need to use the batteries we already own. It is an elegant solution. It is also a very profitable one for the car owner. Your car could literally pay for its own subscription by being a good network citizen.

The Energy Cache: Akamai for Electrons 

Batteries are the Content Delivery Networks of the EnergyNet. In the digital world, Netflix doesn't stream every movie from one server in California. It uses internet caches like Akamai, so the content source is much closer to you. This reduces latency and congestion. Batteries do the same for our sockets. They're local caches for electrons. EnergyNet doesn't pull power from a plant five hundred miles away. It requests it from next door, down the street, and the battery at the local substation. This reduces strain on transmission lines by 40%. It makes the grid snappy, reliable, and modern. We're building a global buffer. Your V2H car is a fast energy cache. And on EnergyNet, it's efficient, elegant, and revolutionary. It's the end of the central server model.

A Networked Nirvana

The transition to a networked microgrid is inevitable. The technology is already here. Power electronics are getting cheaper every day. Solar panels are becoming standard on new roofs. EVs are filling up our garages. We just need to change the software. We need to adopt the Open Energy Protocol. We need to stop thinking like Victorian engineers. We need to start thinking like network architects.

This is not a utopian dream. It is a logical progression. It is the same path that data and telecommunications followed. We are simply applying proven internet principles to our power lines. The result is a system that is more reliable, more affordable, and much cleaner. It empowers the individual prosumer. It stabilizes the local community. It creates a robust infrastructure that can handle any challenge. We are building a world where energy is as ubiquitous as the air we breathe. We are creating a resilient and clean infrastructure. We are finally moving toward a future free from fossil fuels.

Thursday, January 29, 2026

Drill, Baby, Drill: Reclaiming the Slogan for a Future Free from Fossil Fuels

The Big Hot Ball Beneath Our Feet

Let's talk about the giant, glowing ball of rock we call home. Right under our shoes, there's a 6,000°C furnace that never turns off. It doesn't care if it's raining. It doesn't care about the seasons or passing clouds. It's just sitting there, waiting for us to notice it. This is geothermal energy. It's the reliable, slightly sweaty cousin of the renewable energy family. It's time we stopped treating it like a niche hobby for Icelanders and started treating it like the powerhouse it is. Innovation isn't just for shiny solar panels and lithium batteries. Geothermal is finally having its own moment. It's getting a high-tech makeover that could change how we power everything.

Breaking the Volcano Monopoly

For a long time, geothermal had a major location problem. You basically had to live on a volcano to use it. If you weren't in Iceland or near a geyser in California, you were out of luck. You needed a very specific "Holy Trinity" of geology: heat, water, and cracks in the rock. If you missed even one, your multi-million dollar hole was just a very expensive grave for your hopes and dreams. This changed with the invention of Advanced Geothermal Systems, or AGS. These are closed-loop systems. Think of them like a giant underground radiator. Instead of sucking up dirty brine, mineral-heavy groundwater, we pump our own fluid through sealed pipes. It's a closed circuit. The fluid never touches the soil or the rocks. It just picks up the heat and brings it back to the surface. This means we can build these plants almost anywhere. You don't need a tectonic plate boundary. You just need to drill deep enough to hit hot rock. In the US, that's basically everywhere if you have a big enough drill bit.

Density is the New Driver

The newest trick in the book is doing away with pumps entirely. This sounds like something out of a science fiction novel; however, it's just basic physics. It's called the thermosiphon effect. Cold water is heavy and dense. Hot water is lighter and buoyant. In a very deep loop, the heavy cold water naturally sinks into the earth on the inlet pipe. This gravity-driven descent pushes the hot water back to the surface in the outlet side of the loop. It creates a natural, self-sustaining loop. As long as the Earth is hot, it will keep circulating without needing a single watt of electricity to move the fluid. There's no mechanical pump to break. There's no electricity wasted on moving the water. This creates a heat conveyor belt that can be used directly or to spin turbines. You get power and heat without the overhead; it's the ultimate energy hack. It's like a car that's going downhill no matter where you drive.

The Grid's New Best Friend

We need to talk about the concept of baseload power. Grids need a steady, boring flow of electricity to keep the lights on. Batteries are getting better, but they're expensive. Geothermal is the "firm" power that grids crave. It runs 100% of the time. It doesn't need the sun to shine or the wind to blow. It's the silent hero of the energy transition. Unlike solar or wind farms that take up thousands of acres, a geothermal plant has a tiny surface footprint. Most of the action happens miles underground. You could have a power plant in the middle of a park, and nobody would even notice it. It's quiet, it's clean, and it's always on. This complements other intermittent renewable energy sources.

Table 1: The Energy System Job Interview
Feature Solar Wind Power Closed-Loop Geothermal
Availability Intermittent: 25-30% Intermittent: 35-45% 24/7/365: 90%+
Land Use High: Thousands of acres Medium: Large spacing Very Low: Mostly underground
Mineral Intensity High: Lithium, Cobalt (for batteries) Medium: Rare Earths Low: Steel and Water
Reliability Weather dependent Weather dependent Rock solid

From Oil Rigs to Heat Rings

One of the best things about this tech is the workforce. The oil and gas industry has spent a century learning how to drill deep holes. They're very good at it. As we move away from burning things, we don't have to leave those workers behind. The same engineers who designed offshore rigs can design geothermal loops. The same crews who drill for crude can drill for heat. It's a perfect talent swap. We're turning "drill baby drill" into a sustainable motto. We're using the expertise of the past to build the infrastructure of the future. This isn't just an ecological win; it's an economic one. It's much easier to pivot an existing industry than to build one from scratch.

The Price of Going Deep

Of course, nothing is free. The thermosiphon effect might be free, but the holes are not. Drilling several miles into the crust is a massive investment. A single project can cost $20,000,000 or more. We're at the beginning of the learning curve. Think back to where solar was twenty years ago. It was an expensive curiosity for rich people and satellites. Now, it's the cheapest form of electricity in history. Geothermal is on that same path. As we drill more holes, we get faster. As we get faster, the cost drops. We're already seeing massive projects in Germany, Alberta, and the US. These are proving the concept at scale. The more we do it, the more the cost shrinks.

Table 2: Geothermal Evolutionary Steps
Geothermal Technology Requirement Main Limitation
Gen 1 Hydrothermal Natural steam Rare locations only
Gen 2 Enhanced (EGS) Man-made cracks Potential seismic risk
Gen 3 Advanced Closed-Loop Just Deep Rock High initial drilling cost

A Deep Dive into the Deep Heat

Geothermal energy is the missing piece of the renewable puzzle. It's the boring, reliable, always-on foundation that makes everything else work. It's what allows the gas turbine plants to be permanently turned off. We've spent far too long ignoring the massive energy source we're all standing on. Innovation in closed-loop systems and the thermosiphon effect has removed the old excuses. We don't need volcanoes anymore. We don't need natural hot springs. We just need the courage to look down as well as looking up. It's an incredible feeling to realize that the solution to our energy needs has been under our feet the whole time. It's clean. It's silent. It's inexhaustible. And we're finally learning how to tap into the Earth's internal radiator without making a mess. This technology will be the backbone of a stable, reliable, and sustainable grid. It's the keystone to a future free from fossil fuels.

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Peak ICE, the Year That EVs Became Unstoppable


The Critical Cracking of Combustion

Technology adoption changes gradually, then suddenly. It starts as a stroll, turns into a turbulent mess, followed by a vertical ascent. This is how tipping points go. The magical hockey stick moment happens after a new technology captures roughly 15% to 18% of the total market. This is called crossing the chasm. Once the "Early Majority" hops over this gap, the new technology is on the path to domination, and the old way of doing things will quickly become a historical footnote.

In the automotive world, 2025 was that decisive year. The internal combustion engine is not just losing its lead. It is losing its future relevance. This transition is not just about tailpipes or tax credits; it is about the inevitable shift of capital, culture, and convenience. We are witnessing the most significant transport transformation since the horse was released from the stagecoach.

The Peculiar Physics of Popularity

The Diffusion of Innovations theory describes how ideas spread through a population. It categorizes consumers into distinct groups based on their tolerance for risk. First come the "Innovators." These people like shiny, expensive, and sometimes buggy gadgets. They represent the first 2.5% of the market. These are the people who bought the Tesla Roadster in 2008-2012, and the first generation Model S. Next come the "Early Adopters." These individuals are the opinion leaders. They represent about 13.5% of the market. These are people who bought the Nissan Leaf, Chevy Volt in 2010 - 2014, and the Tesla Model 3 in 2018 - 2022. When these two groups are saturated, critical mass is established.

This critical mass is around 16% for most technologies. At 16%, the technology is no longer a weird hobby for Silicon Valley residents. It becomes a viable tool for suburban parents, commuters, and logistics managers. This percentage is the point of no return. This is an important amount because it robs the incumbent technology of market growth; this means the economies of scale for legacy products begins its reversal; once this starts, the end is already written.

Beyond this line, the "Early Majority" enters the fray. These people are pragmatic. They wait for the bugs to be worked out. They want to know that the tech will not vanish in three years. Once they see their neighbors charging in their driveways, the floodgates open. This is when the growth curve stops being a gentle slope. It becomes a rocket launch. The market stops asking "will it work?" and starts asking "how can I get one?"

The Global Grid: Winners, Whiz-kids, and Wait-and-seers

Looking back at 2025, the data tells a story of diverging regional destinies. Globally, we have crossed the threshold. Approximately 25.5% of new car sales last year were cars-with-cords (this includes both battery electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids). However, this shift is not spread evenly around the globe.

China is the clear leader in this race. It cleared the 15% line in 2021. Today, over half of its new car sales are electrified. Europe followed a similar path. It hit the tipping point around the same time. Despite some political friction in 2024, European adoption remains robust at 26%. Then there is the US. The US is a laggard. We currently sit at 10.5% and have not yet cleared the 16% hurdle. High interest rates and inconsistent federal policy have kept the "Early Majority" on the sidelines for now. However, albeit a slowburn, the momentum is still building.

EV Adoption Milestones by Region

 Region   2025 Market Share    Tipping Point Year    Adoption Phase  
 China  53%  2021  Late Majority
 Europe   26.2%  2021  Early Majority
 Global  25.5%  2023  Early Majority
 US  10.5% (Lagging)  Projected 2028  Early Adopters

The Impending Infrastructure Inversion

Economics drives the engine of change. For years, the upfront cost of EVs was the main barrier. Today, that barrier is dissolving. Battery prices have plummeted. We are seeing a massive shift in how people view their cars as financial assets. A gas-powered vehicle purchased today is a depreciating asset with a looming expiration date. What will the resale values be for a gas car in 2032, when most new cars are cars-with-cords? Why would a buyer in 2032 want a 2026 vehicle that requires expensive fuel and specialized maintenance?

This creates a "death spiral" for legacy technology. Businesses want to support growing markets. As demand for gasoline drops, gas stations will close. Maintenance shops will transition to electrical work. Spare parts for old engines and transmissions will become rare and expensive. The infrastructure that once made the gas car convenient will become its greatest liability. The cost of ownership for an electric car is already lower. Maintenance is simpler, fueling is cheaper. There are no oil changes, timing belts, or spark plugs to replace. In 2026, with the proliferation of LFP batteries, the sticker price will match. Buying a new V8 in 2026 is like buying a high-end fax machine in 1998. It might look impressive on your desk; however, your colleagues are going to look at you with a mix of pity and confusion while sending emails to each other talking about that guy who still wants to fax people.

The Scintillating Schedule of the Silent Shift

The road ahead has several specific markers that will define the next decade. Let's look at a timeline. We just discussed 2026's "Sticker Price Parity." This means an EV SUV, crossover, or sedan will be equivalent to a similar-sized gas burner. When this happens, no subsidies are required to make the purchase math work for the average consumer. The financial argument for combustion is simply evaporating.

In 2027, battery advancements will continue. This may be the year that solid-state batteries enter the consumer market. These batteries could offer 700 miles of range and charge in ten minutes. But even if solid-state never arrives, battery tech gets better by 5% to 7% each year. Stack another decade of improvements, and this will be the final nail in the coffin for all corners of ICE transportation. By 2030, we will reach "Peak ICE." This is the point where the total number of gas cars on the road actually starts to decrease globally. Even if some people still buy them, the scrap heap will grow faster than they roll off showroom floors. By 2035, the global market share will clearly be past 50% (even in the US). The sound of a revving engine will shift from a symbol of power to a nostalgic curiosity. It will be something you hear at a classic car show, not at a stoplight.

The Final Farewell to the Fire-Breathers

The transition is happening. It is not an act of charity; it's driven by economics. It is an act of evolution. We are moving toward a world that is quieter, cleaner, and more efficient. The internal combustion engine served us well for a century. It powered our growth, our wars, and our adventures. But its time is up. The math is simple; the momentum is absolute and undisputable.

We are not just changing how we fuel our cars. We are changing how we interact with our cities and our surroundings. The air will be clearer. The streets will be quieter. The economic benefits will be distributed more broadly as we move away from volatile oil markets. As we look toward the 2030s, we can see the outline of a smarter transportation system. The global tipping point is behind us. The steep part of the curve is starting now. We are finally driving toward a future free from fossil fuels.

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

From Supervised to Unsupervised: Tesla Will Offer Two Tiers of FSD

The Sweet Slumber of the Silicon Chauffeur

Imagine it is a Tuesday evening in late August 2027. You are commuting home through the sprawling, neon-lit arteries of a major US city. Instead of gripping the steering wheel with white-knuckled intensity, you are sprawled across the back seat of your Tesla. The climate control is set just right, and a heavy weighted blanket covers your legs. You are halfway through a particularly gripping novel, or perhaps you are simply sawing logs after a long day. The car navigated the merge. It handled the aggressive delivery truck. It successfully made way for the cyclist who swerved without signaling. For the first time in history, you are not the driver (and not even the supervisor) of a car that you own. You are merely precious cargo. This is the promise of Unsupervised Full Self Driving. It represents a fundamental shift in how we perceive transit, risk, and responsibility. When this happens, we will have moved beyond the era of driver assistance. We will have entered the age of autonomous tranquility. This transition is not just about cool software. It is a calculated restructuring of the entire automotive economy. It involves a massive pivot in vehicle ownership and insurance liability. It demands a new way of thinking about how much a peaceful commute is worth. The era of the "10 and 2" (or more correctly, 9 and 3 nowadays) grip is dead. The era of the silicon chauffeur has arrived.

Subscription Schemes and the Software Shift

The road to this upcoming autonomous nirvana was paved with funds from early adopters who purchased (or subscribed to) FSD, even when it had few features and frequently made errors. The diligence of these drivers gave Tesla a mountain of feedback indicating where FSD (Supervised) worked and (more importantly) where it didn't.

In early 2026, Tesla made a decisive move. They discontinued the option to purchase FSD as a one-time, life-of-vehicle asset. The February 14, 2026, deadline is only about 2 weeks away as I write this, and it marks the end of the $8,000 "buy it and forget it" era. After that date, FSD becomes a subscription-only service. This was a masterstroke of financial engineering. Software that controls a multi-ton kinetic object is not a static product. It is a living, breathing liability. By forcing a subscription model, Tesla gained the ability to price risk and benefits in real-time. They stopped selling a feature; they started renting a service. This shift was essential for the eventual release of the unsupervised tier. A one-time payment cannot cover a lifetime of potential legal claims. An adjustable monthly fee can. It allows the company to adjust prices based on the latest safety data. It ensures they have the capital to back their claims. If the software improves, the price can remain stable or decrease; if the value increases, the price can increase. If the legal environment becomes more litigious, the subscription cost can rise accordingly. It is a dynamic solution for a dynamic problem.

Liability as a Service (LaaS)

The most significant hurdle for autonomous vehicles has always been the question of blame. If a computer crashes a car, who gets the ticket? Under traditional Level 2 driver assist systems, the human behind the wheel has the responsibility. You were the "supervisor." If the AI does something wrong and that results in a fender bender, you take the blame for not taking over to avoid the incident. With the release of Unsupervised FSD, Tesla will introduce Liability as a Service (LaaS) as part of the package. If the human remains liable, then the system cannot be considered unsupervised. If you (and your insurance) will be legally liable, crawling in the back and taking a nap is not a good idea. So, I assert that part of a true unsupervised FSD package must include Tesla taking on the liability risk when Unsupervised FSD is engaged. This means when you toggle the "Unsupervised" switch to on, you are handing the liability hot potato to Tesla.

This liability requirement points toward a two-tier FSD structure: Supervised and Unsupervised. Supervised is the driver assistance system that we have today, where the person behind the wheel takes the legal and insurance responsibility regardless of the state of FSD. The Unsupervised FSD will pass the liability off to Tesla. By opting into the higher-tier subscription, you are paying for more than just code. You are paying for a legal shield. Tesla, through its internal insurance arm and partners like Lemonade Insurance, assumes the primary liability. This turns FSD into a service rather than just a tool. However, Tesla will only green-light Unsupervised mode if your service is current and your tires are healthy. Between the sensors and the software, your car knows exactly when you're trying to roll on bald or underinflated rubber. Tesla has the data to prove their system is safer than humans. If the car makes a mistake in unsupervised mode, it is a product failure. They are willing to bet their balance sheet on FSD's abilities. LaaS is the bridge between "cool tech" and "real world utility." It removes the anxiety of driving and replaces it with a corporate assurance.

Pricing the Peace of Mind

How much is your safety worth? More importantly, how much is your time worth? Tesla’s pricing strategy for Supervised vs Unsupervised will reflect a clear liability bifurcation of the market. The supervised tier remains the entry point. It is for those who still want to feel the road. It is for the budget-conscious commuter who still wants enhanced safety. The unsupervised tier is the premium experience. It is the luxury of indifference. To make this work, this level of service will move beyond the old $99 price point. Tesla must account for the insurance premium that they will carry on your behalf. The average US car insurance policy costs roughly $150 to $200 per month. If Tesla takes over that risk, they must charge accordingly. However, they have a couple of secret weapons: data and their own internal insurance company. FSD is statistically significantly safer than human drivers. This allows them to bundle insurance with Unsupervised FSD at a rate far cheaper per mile than traditional insurers.

FSD Subscription Tiers

Feature Supervised FSD (Tier 1) Unsupervised 
FSD (Tier 2)
Monthly Cost* ~$99 to $125 ~$149 to $350
Liability Carrier Vehicle Owner's Insurance Tesla / Lemonade
Human Requirement Constant Attention Required Zero Attention Required
Active Monitoring Cabin Camera Tracking, Torque sensor monitoring No Active Driver Monitoring
Ideal User The Enthusiast The Executive or Sleeper

* Tesla has not announced any official pricing other than to say that the subscription price of FSD will increase.

Ecological Efficiency: The Carbon Conscious Car

The environmental benefits of this shift are subtle but profound. Autonomous systems do not drive like humans. They do not indulge in aggressive, jackrabbit starts. They do not engage in road rage at perceived slights. They are programmed for efficiency. An FSD fleet can communicate with infrastructure. They can time lights to reduce energy consumption and provide a smoother ride. Furthermore, unsupervised FSD changes urban geography. If your car can drop you off and then park itself in large parking structures miles away, we do not need parking lots and miles and miles of street parking in city centers. We can reclaim that asphalt and turn that downtown space into community gardens, parks, or housing. This is an environmentally conscious revolution hidden inside a software update. The cars are already electric. FSD will make them even more efficient. FSD moves with a collective intelligence that minimizes waste. It is a sustainable solution for a crowded world. Couple this with Boring Co. tunnels and it gets even better.

Actuarial Darwinism and the Data Advantage

The traditional insurance industry is facing an existential crisis. Companies like Geico or State Farm rely on broad demographic data. They look at your age, your zip code, and your credit score. Tesla looks at your braking pressure, your cornering acceleration, and your following distance. They see the exact millisecond that Automatic Emergency Braking (AEB) or other parts of the Collision Avoidance Assist suite took over to avoid a collision. This is actuarial Darwinism. The legacy insurers are dinosaurs. Tesla and their partners at Lemonade are the nimble mammals. By using vehicle telemetry, they can price risk with higher accuracy. They know exactly how safe the Unsupervised mode is because they built the AI-driver, and they see the daily logs. This data advantage allows them to undercut the competition. They can offer better coverage for less money because they have less uncertainty. The result is a total disruption of the insurance market. The "safe driver" discount is no longer a marketing gimmick. It is a mathematical certainty.

Waking Up in a Better World

As your Tesla pulls into your driveway in August 2027, you wake up from your ride-home nap. You feel refreshed. You are ready to engage with your family. You did not spend the last hour shouting at traffic or dodging erratic lane changers. You paid for a subscription, and in return, you bought back your life. The Liability as a Service model has smoothed out the friction of the modern commute. It has aligned the interests of the manufacturer, the insurer, and the owner. Tesla is incentivized to make the software perfect. The insurance partner is incentivized to keep the data accurate. You are incentivized to keep your feet up. This is the ultimate win-win scenario. It is a glimpse into a society where mobility is a right, not a chore. We are moving toward a more efficient, less stressful, and more ecologically responsible era.

Monday, January 26, 2026

15 Million Cybercabs

TL;DR

Tesla robotaxi deployment could result in 15 million Cybercabs manufactured per year at maturity. Cybercab production ramps from a meager start in 2026 to 15M annually by 2040. This growth is driven by a decline in personal vehicle ownership as autonomy improves. Tesla to capture 35% marketshare by 2028 and 45% by 2040 (higher in US, lower in China). Autonomous ridehail is a $10T opportunity. Challenges include regulations and China competition.

Introduction

Tesla's Cybercab was unveiled in October 2024. Initial production is expected to start in 1H26, with manufacturing slowly ramping in 2026 with a significant step-up in 2027. Musk tweeted on January 20-21, 2026, "For Cybercab and Optimus, almost everything is new, so the early production rate will be agonizingly slow, but eventually end up being insanely fast."

Market Projections

The global robotaxi market is forecast to expand dramatically. Long-term estimates peg ridehail as $10 trillion opportunity, driven by shifts from personal car ownership to on-demand services(Source). Tesla's slice of this pie hinges on its manufacturing prowess and AI edge. Analysts from RBC project Tesla's robotaxi revenue hitting $1.7 trillion by 2040(Source). 

Cybercab Current Status and Near-Term Plans

The two-seater Tesla Cybercab is optimized for autonomous operation without traditional controls like steering wheels or pedals. The initial focus is on US markets such as Austin and select California cities. Elon Musk has repeatedly forecasted unsupervised full self-driving rolling out soon; he (incorrectly) forecasted that Tesla ride-hailing services would serve half of the US population by the end of 2025. Regardless of the timeline, this aligns with broader industry trends, where competitors like Waymo already offer limited services today, logging around 250,000 paid rides weekly in 2025 with intentions to expand to all population-dense regions(Source).

Early fleet deployments remain modest. Analysts anticipate Tesla's robotaxi count surpassing 1,000 vehicles by mid-2026, starting from pilots of 20 to 30 units in 2025 in select areas(Source). Such cautious scaling reflects regulatory scrutiny and the need for robust safety data. Tesla's vision-only approach, relying on cameras and neural networks trained on billions of miles from its existing fleet, promises cost advantages over lidar-heavy rivals. Operating costs could dip to $0.20 to $0.30 per mile, undercutting current ridehail fares and fostering wider adoption.

Tesla's Ridehail Market Share

By 2028, Tesla could command 35% of the market, bolstered by rapid production ramps and competitive pricing. This share might climb to 45% by 2040, equating to a fleet of 50 to 70 million vehicles and annual revenues around $1.1 trillion. Such growth assumes Tesla outpaces players like Waymo, which leads in current ride volumes but scales more slowly due to higher costs. In China, local firms such as Baidu may limit Tesla to 20% to 30% penetration, yet US and European markets could see Tesla holding over 50%. Induced demand from lower prices, potentially boosting vehicle miles traveled by 20% to 40%, would further amplify fleet needs and solidify Tesla's position.

Competitor Projected Global Market Share by 2040 Key Strength Estimated Annual Revenue ($ Billions)
Tesla 45% Cost efficiency, data moat 1,100
Waymo (Alphabet) 20% Early mover advantage 500
Baidu/Pony.ai 25% China dominance 600
Others (Uber, Cruise) 10% Existing ridehail business 200

This table illustrates a fragmented landscape, with Tesla benefiting from vertical integration to capture the largest portion.

Annual Robotaxi Manufacturing Projections

To achieve these fleet targets, Tesla must "solve" FSD and ramp production aggressively. Initial output focuses on the Cybercab, with factories in Austin and Shanghai retooling for volumes starting at 100,000 units in 2027. Projections draw from analyst models and Musk's timelines, assuming a 50% annual growth rate through 2030, tapering to 20% thereafter as markets mature and replacement cycles stabilize. Vehicle lifespans of 8 to 10 years necessitate ongoing production for both expansion and retirements.

The following table outlines estimated annual manufacturing from 2026 through 2040, based on scaling to support a 50-million-plus global fleet by mid-century. These figures incorporate escalating production with new facilities coming online (Source).

Year Estimated Annual
Production (Units)
Key Drivers
2026 5,000 Pilot launches in US cities, initial factory ramps
2027 100,000 Regulatory approvals expand to Europe
2028 400,000 Cost reductions enable mass production
2029 750,000 Fleet growth accelerates with AI improvements
2030 1,250,000 Entry into additional Asian markets
2031 2,000,000 Replacement cycles begin
2032 3,000,000 Additional Gigafactory comes online
2033 5,000,000 Peak expansion phase opens more markets
2034 7,000,000 Stabilization in mature markets
2035 9,000,000 Additional Gigafactory comes online
2036 12,000,000 Focus on growth in emerging economies
2037 13,000,000 Personal vehicle ownership in urban areas continues to decline
2038 14,000,000 Autonomous rides are mainstream
2039 14,500,000 Balanced growth and replacements
2040 15,000,000 Mature market equilibrium

These estimates assume steady technological progress and minimal disruptions, potentially totaling ~95 million cumulatively Tesla robotaxis on the road by 2040.

Challenges and Opportunities

Despite optimism, Tesla faces obstacles. Regulatory delays and FSD performance could push timelines (Source). Safety incidents, competition from subsidized Chinese firms, and infrastructure needs for wireless charging networks pose risks. On the opportunity side, Tesla's ecosystem, including energy storage, Supercharger locations, and app integrations, creates network effects that retain users and boost utilization rates to 80%. If Tesla navigates these effectively, its robotaxi arm could comprise 90% of enterprise value by 2029 (Source).

Quote Owning a personal vehicle in major cities will feel as outdated and impractical as keeping a horse in Manhattan.

Owning A Horse in Manhattan

As autonomy matures and robotaxi fleets scale, personal vehicle ownership in urban areas will fade into obsolescence. Why own a car that sits idle 95% of the time, requires monthly insurance payments, new tires and wipers every few years, regular brake servicing, and constant parking fees? The math simply does not work at some point. 

Instead, residents summon a clean, quiet robotaxi via their phone for door-to-door service, arriving at their front door in minutes. No DMV or DEQ hassles, no registration fees, no depreciation worries, no surprise repair bills. Costs drop to pennies per mile as high-utilization robotaxis spread fixed expenses across thousands of daily rides. Urbanites reclaim time, garage space, and peace of mind, while cities benefit from fewer parked cars clogging streets and reduced emissions.

By the mid-2030s, owning a personal vehicle in major cities will feel as outdated and impractical as keeping a horse in 1920s Manhattan. This trend will drive the growth of robotaxi fleets. The future is not ownership. It is effortless, shared mobility.

Stepping Stones

If you look at Tesla's history, you'll see that they have been on a deliberate trajectory and (in the vehicle space at least) Cybercab is the ultimate destination. Their initial vehicle, the Tesla Roadster, was used to show that EVs could be far more than slow, boring vehicles. This allowed them to raise the capital they needed to create the Model S and X. In 2016 and most of 2017, the S and the X were the drivers of Tesla's sales and revenue. That changed when the Model 3 (and later Model Y) came out. Today, the Model S and X are an insignificant part of Tesla's revenue. In much the same way, Cybercab could grow to be the bulk of Tesla's vehicle production and revenue, such that Model 3 and Y are rounding errors. 

Conclusion

Tesla's robotaxi ambitions, anchored by the Cybercab, promise to transform transportation economics and accessibility. From modest 2026 production to potentially 15 million units annually by 2040, the company's trajectory hinges on innovation, regulation, and execution. While challenges abound, Tesla's advantages in scale and cost position it for 45% market leadership by mid-century, driving trillions in value. As this unfolds, observers will watch closely, anticipating a future where autonomous rides become as ubiquitous as smartphones today.

Sunday, January 25, 2026

Unchecked Acceleration: A Recipe for Global Ecological Suicide

Accelerationism: A Recipe for Planetary Catastrophe

Accelerationism is a set of ideologies originating in the late 20th century. It's a radical political and philosophical concept. It urges the intensification of capitalism's and technology's dynamics to force a rupture in the prevailing societal order. It emerged from thinkers influenced by Marx, Nietzsche, and later cyber theory. It posits that slowing or reforming these forces is futile; instead, one must accelerate them toward breakdown to birth something new.1 Yet, in our precarious ecological moment, this approach amounts to toddlers juggling knives and chainsaws. Earth is our only abode, a system with an irreplaceable biosphere. If we irreparably damage it through unchecked expansion, no cosmic mulligan awaits humanity. Accelerationism, whether in its left-wing or right-wing guises, disregards this stark reality. This blog post examines accelerationism's variants and their shared perils, particularly in energy-intensive fields like artificial intelligence (AI).

Left-Wing Accelerationism

Left-wing accelerationism envisions hastening capitalism's contradictions to catapult society into a post-capitalist utopia of equity and automation. Proponents argue that amplifying market efficiencies and technological disruption will expose capitalism's flaws so acutely that collective alternatives, such as worker-owned production or universal basic services, become inevitable.2 Drawing from Marxist dialectics, it treats economic crises not as tragedies to mitigate but as midwives to revolution. However, this crash zeal blinds adherents to immediate environmental costs. By endorsing unbridled growth, left-accelerationists risk accelerating biodiversity loss, soil degradation, and climate tipping points before any utopian transition materializes. Consider the irony: a philosophy rooted in emancipation could hasten the very enclosures that doom the proletariat to scarcity amid abundance. In practice, it echoes historical errors, like the Soviet Union's forced industrialization, which traded human and ecological health for ideological speed.

Right-Wing Accelerationism

Right-wing accelerationism is a pro-capitalist vision of unbridled technological development. Often intertwined with white supremacist ideologies, it seeks to exacerbate social fractures through violence or sabotage, aiming to ignite civil unrest or race wars that topple democracies, allowing them to install ethno-nationalist regimes.3 Figures like those in far-right militias view technological proliferation, including AI and surveillance tools, as instruments to sow discord and enforce hierarchies.4 

This type of accelerationism revels in chaos as a purifying fire. It is not redemptive; rather, it is apocalyptic, a deliberate push toward societal implosion for the "strong" and prepared to emerge dominant. This variant's environmental obliviousness is even more brazen, as it fetishizes collapse without regard for the poisoned well from which unprepared survivors would drink.

Both strands, despite ideological divergence, converge on a fatal hubris: the belief that systems can be gamed to yield their desired ends, ignoring the fact that they'd only be the kings of charred rubble. Feedback loops like global warming and the many natural system which human life depends upon that defy human scripting.

Planetary Boundaries and Technological Growth

At the heart of accelerationism's peril lies its disdain for planetary boundaries. This is currently the only planet that can support life, a vessel of finite carrying capacity, where overshoot invites irreversible harm. Technological growth, including AI and sprawling data centers, exemplifies this tension. AI's promise in medicine, climate modeling, and efficiency is undeniable, yet this infrastructure devours electricity and water resources at an alarming rate. Data centers, the digital colossi powering generative AI, already account for 1.5% of global electricity use. This figure is projected to surge as demand more than doubles by 2030 to 945 terawatt-hours annually.5 This escalation, if met by fossil fuels, will amplify greenhouse gas emissions by millions of metric tons, equivalent to entire nations' outputs.6 Moreover, cooling these facilities evaporates vast quantities of freshwater, straining aquifers in water-scarce regions, while e-waste piles mount from obsolete hardware.7 Extreme accelerationists (whether left or right) would cheer this frenzy as dialectical progress or civilizational forge, but it courts ecocide: melting ice caps, mass extinctions, and unlivable heat domes that no algorithm can reverse.

A Path to Balanced Growth

Balanced growth offers a saner path. Technological advancements need not be unhinged; they can harmonize with ecological imperatives. For instance, AI-driven innovations in renewable energy deployment, such as optimized solar farms or wind turbine designs, demonstrate potential synergies. Yet, any heightened electricity needs from data centers must be satisfied exclusively through renewables: solar, wind, and geothermal with energy storage systems, as well as cooling methods that don't drain local aquifers. Policies mandating 100% renewable sourcing for new facilities, coupled with efficiency standards and circular economies for hardware, could cap impacts. International accords, like expanded Paris Agreement clauses on digital emissions, must enforce this. The key is restraint: growth as steward, not saboteur.

Conclusion

Accelerationism's siren call toward collapse is a delusion unfit for our singular planet. Both its left-wing dreams of equity-through-excess and right-wing fantasies of order-from-anarchy imperil the biosphere we share, accelerating us toward a point of no return. With one Earth and no backups, we cannot afford such gambles. Instead, let us cultivate technological progress with fierce environmental guardianship, powering AI and beyond on renewables to ensure flourishing for generations. The stakes demand wisdom over haste; our home's survival hinges on choosing sustainability over species suicide.

References

  1. General overview of accelerationism origins.
  2. Left-wing accelerationist arguments from Marxist theory.
  3. Right-wing accelerationism and far-right ideologies.
  4. Technological tools in right-wing accelerationism.
  5. Data center electricity consumption statistics.
  6. Projected emissions from AI infrastructure.
  7. Water and e-waste impacts of data centers.