Batteries
Perhaps no scientific or engineering objective under study today would have a greater impact than a big leap in batteries. Beyond the potential to bring electric cars to the masses, advances in batteries might mean reliable electricity for 1.4 billion more people. Incumbents in the energy sector might be utterly disrupted. Climate change might become much less of a threat. And geopolitics might be shaken anew.
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- HOT METALSThe surprising ways to cash in on the electric-car boomQuartz • October 5, 2017
- SOLAR BUCKSTesla is releasing a solar roof calculator to show if your home will make money from the sunQuartz • May 10, 2017
- 1+1Simple math is why Elon Musk’s companies keep doing what others don’t even consider possibleQuartz • May 10, 2017
- A MISUNDERSTANDINGTesla’s big worry is people think the Model 3 will be better than it isQuartz • May 3, 2017
- CAR CHASEChina is selling more electric vehicles than the US—and it’s not even closeQuartz • May 3, 2017
- 1 TO 1China wants its electric-vehicle owners to have the best charging experience everQuartz • April 28, 2017
- CHARGING AHEADThe hottest thing in the markets right now is an obscure metal mined in DR CongoQuartz • April 27, 2017
- SECOND ACTWanted: shuttered coal plants to turn into giant batteriesQuartz • April 14, 2017
- ENERGY DEFICITTesla plans to unveil a semi-truck but batteries still can’t pack enough energy for long-haul truckingQuartz • April 13, 2017
- HOT WHEELSAn iconic Porsche from Steve McQueen’s 1971 film “Le Mans” is now an electric supercarQuartz • April 9, 2017