//
sign in
Profile
by @danabra.mov
Profile
by @dansshadow.bsky.social
Profile
by @jimpick.com
AviHandle
by @danabra.mov
AviHandle
by @dansshadow.bsky.social
AviHandle
by @katherine.computer
EventsList
by @katherine.computer
ProfileHeader
by @dansshadow.bsky.social
ProfileHeader
by @danabra.mov
ProfileMedia
by @danabra.mov
ProfilePlays
by @danabra.mov
ProfilePosts
by @danabra.mov
ProfilePosts
by @dansshadow.bsky.social
ProfileReplies
by @danabra.mov
Record
by @atsui.org
Skircle
by @danabra.mov
StreamPlacePlaylist
by @katherine.computer
+ new component
ProfilePosts









Loading...
Great read on what AI can do for science. Yes it has the potential to accelerate science but not it will not replace scientists. The paper also makes a great point about the need to maintain critical thinking and not blindly trust results www.amacad.org/publication/...
9d
Throughout history, scientific progress has been defined by the tools we build to extend our perception. Today, artificial intelligence stands as our newest instrument, not merely as a computational e...
www.amacad.org
Unlocking Scientific Intuition & Reasoning at Digital Speed
Hydrogen versus batteries in road transport Hydrogen is far behind in every category one can think of, and the progress in batteries are only extending the gap. Perhaps time to totally stop talking about hydrogen for road transport? Source: www.iea.org/reports/glob...
10d
Progress in batteries mean that they can now help decarbonise maritime transport. A recent paper shows that by 2030, electrification could apply to 30% of shipping energy demand and 20% GHG emissions… www.nature.com/articles/s44...
In 2025, global coal capacity increased by 3.5% but generation of electricity from coal decreased by 0.6%. This trend is particularly notable in China and India where renewables met the load growth. Coal plants are built as insurance more than primary resource
4d
Great illustration of how carbon dioxide removal and emission reductions are complementary to reach the point where climate change will stop. And the less reduction we do, the less interesting/relevant removal is since removal is always more expensive.
Note that if we were serious on electrification, the electricity demand growth from data centres would be small compared to that of major sectors such as transport or industry… hannahritchie.substack.com/p/ai-energy-...
3d
3d
Cool graph from @bloomberg.com showing the evolution of data centre capacity and the planned/announced projects. Data centres globally now consume close to 500TWh- basically as much as Germany. www.bloomberg.com/graphics/202...
China is in a world of its own with more than 70GW of new capacity but coal electricity production decreasing by 1.2%. That continues a trend observed for the last 10 years of a decrease in capacity factor for coal
4d
4d
3d
Greg De Temmerman
Greg De Temmerman
Greg De Temmerman
Greg De Temmerman
Greg De Temmerman
Link to the report: www.stateofcdr.org/report/3rd-e...
Greg De Temmerman
Greg De Temmerman
Greg De Temmerman
3d
The 3rd Edition of the State of Carbon Dioxide Removal report (2026).
www.stateofcdr.org
Greg De Temmerman
The State of Carbon Dioxide Removal Report - 3rd Edition | State of Carbon Dioxide Removal
All data here globalenergymonitor.org/research/boo...
3d
globalenergymonitor.org
Boom and Bust Coal 2026
Greg De Temmerman