Author: admin

  • Solving the AI power puzzle: Taming data center demand with flexible grid-scale storage

    Solving the AI power puzzle: Taming data center demand with flexible grid-scale storage

    Data centers – the vast, physical warehouses where IT servers and systems are kept – are experiencing a boom in demand, particularly across the USA. Driven by the rapid ascent of AI, analysts project that the global electricity demand for data centers is expected to double by 2030, reaching consumption levels that rival entire developed nations. Still, the challenge goes beyond the sheer volume of power needed. Data centers operate 24/7 and experience pronounced swings in demand which legacy grids simply aren’t engineered to handle.

    Luckily, answers are emerging. Grid-scale batteries can respond quickly enough to tame this volatile demand, and when properly coordinated by a sophisticated operating system – like Kraken – they can contribute to building a healthier, better-balanced grid overall.

    Data centers have uniquely volatile demand profiles

    The fundamental nature of data center electrical loads distinguishes them from traditional industrial consumption, being not just especially large, but unusually “spiky” and unpredictable. When tech companies launch AI training algorithms or massive computing clusters activate, the resulting power draw is instantaneous and intense. This poses a pressing stability problem. The grid’s legacy generators, such as slow-ramping gas-fired peaker plants, aren’t merely relatively expensive and slow to build, but are ultimately technically incapable of matching huge demand spikes that occur in milliseconds.

    This critical mismatch between fast demand and slow supply results in immediate frequency instability, severe stress on local transmission and distribution networks and significantly higher balancing costs for grid operators (if they can meet that demand at all). And this volatility is only compounded as clusters of data centers concentrate in particular geographical regions. A faster, smarter solution is clearly needed.

    Coordinating grid-scale storage to tame demand

    Fortunately, the flexibility afforded by large batteries is well-suited to addressing pronounced immediate swings, charging up whenever energy is cheapest and cleanest and discharging instantaneously to flatten out spikes and maintain critical grid frequencies.

    But installing batteries along the grid isn’t enough. These flexible assets must be intelligently optimized to keep up with data center demand. To achieve this, operators need a few things:

    • Digital operating systems that can provide real-time visibility into both grid signals and market pricing
    • Accurate forecasting that accounts for changes in data center load, broader grid constraints and the wider availability of electricity
    • Automated, synchronized dispatch across entire portfolio battery assets

    When these batteries are intelligently managed, they also allow owners to ‘value-stack’ – unlocking new, overlapping, non-speculative monetization opportunities for their owners through energy arbitrage, balancing markets and capacity services.

    This sophisticated, real-time coordination between dynamic grid signals, fast-moving market pricing and on-site operational demands requires robust software solutions. Today’s digital operating systems are ready and able to deliver this support and Kraken’s Generational Flexibility capability is a case in point.

    Co-locating batteries and data centers creates overlapping benefits

    Grid-scale batteries are especially useful when ‘co-located’ together with data centers (situated alongside a data center behind its grid connection). These batteries can then charge up at times when the grid is least constrained and energy is cleanest and cheapest, and in turn, discharge to save data centers from relying on more expensive grid electricity, especially during peaks in demand.

    Data centers themselves can use next-generation operating systems to internally balance the energy they draw from the grid and any stored electricity that they draw from their batteries to meet demand most efficiently. Additionally, these batteries could also be used to help balance the grid outside of peak times, providing other sources of income for data centers, while enhancing grid flexibility. By coupling a facility with storage and allowing it to participate in local or national flexibility markets, operators ultimately offset operational costs and dramatically enhance both their own resilience and that of the wider grid.

    This also opens the door to building more data centers in places where grid capacity is constrained.  Electricity distribution infrastructure is built to handle a maximum electrical load at peak times during the day, and will have spare, underutilized capacity the rest of the time. In fact, a EU Joint Research Center study calculated that some grid infrastructure is used between just 2-20% of the time. Many data center projects are denied or delayed because utilities and grids can only supply the required power for (say) 95% of the year. In this case, grids would normally aim to upgrade their infrastructure to meet capacity 100% of the time, which is costly, and time-consuming.

    However, where data centers are co-located with batteries, they could use their own backup storage to cover those 5% of time periods that the grid alone cannot meet, using an intelligent operating system to forecast and schedule this off-grid generation. This would delay, or remove, the need for upgrades, allowing many more data-center projects to go ahead, without putting additional build costs and pressure on utilities, and ultimately, consumers.

    Data center demand will define the grid’s next decade

    Data centers will undoubtedly define the next decade of grid planning. It’s not a question of whether grids accommodate them, but how. If this new, volatile demand is managed intelligently – with responsive distributed assets and smart, optimizing software – then data centers could become an integrated part of tomorrow’s smarter, cleaner energy system.

    Continue Reading

  • Real Madrid: Xabi Alonso slams the referee after defeat to Celta Vigo

    Real Madrid: Xabi Alonso slams the referee after defeat to Celta Vigo

    Xabi Alonso

    After Sunday night’s defeat at the Santiago Bernabéu against Celta Vigo, Xabi Alonso found an excuse: the refereeing.

    On Sunday, Real Madrid fell to Celta Vigo (0-2) in La Liga. During the match, Los Blancos lost their composure…

    Continue Reading

  • The key role Oscar Piastri played in Abu Dhabi that helped seal Lando Norris’ 2025 World Championship

    The key role Oscar Piastri played in Abu Dhabi that helped seal Lando Norris’ 2025 World Championship

    As the thrilling 2025 season came to a close in Abu Dhabi, all the attention was focused on new F1 World Champion Lando Norris after the McLaren man won the title by two points over Max Verstappen – the now-deposed World Champion won the race…

    Continue Reading

  • Literary Hub » A Young Woman and Her Literary Dreams, Caught in the Churn of German History

    Literary Hub » A Young Woman and Her Literary Dreams, Caught in the Churn of German History

    My grandmother dreamed of becoming a writer all her life. When she was a child, her mother, like many women in the workers’ quarters of Essen, Germany, took in lodgers, subletting a room in their apartment, often to single men, in…

    Continue Reading

  • Wireless Device ‘speaks’ To Brain With Light

    Wireless Device ‘speaks’ To Brain With Light

    In a new leap for neurobiology and bioelectronics, Northwestern University scientists have developed a wireless device that uses light to send information directly to the brain – bypassing the body’s natural sensory pathways.

    The soft,…

    Continue Reading

  • The Longest Solar Eclipse for 100 Years Is Coming. Don’t Miss It

    The Longest Solar Eclipse for 100 Years Is Coming. Don’t Miss It

    The duration of a total solar eclipse always varies. In April 2024, the eclipse that crossed North America lasted 4 minutes and 28 seconds. By contrast, the one that will reach Spain in August 2026 will only last 1 minute and 43 seconds. In less…

    Continue Reading

  • BASF introduces low-VOC polyurethane catalyst Lupragen® N 208

    BASF introduces low-VOC polyurethane catalyst Lupragen® N 208

    • Modern catalyst to meet stringent low VOC standards
    • Broadly applicable for production of flexible, semi-rigid and rigid foams
    • Reactive version of blowing catalyst Lupragen® N 205

    Ludwigshafen, Germany, December 8, 2025 – BASF is adding a modern amine catalyst, Lupragen® N 208, to its portfolio of Lupragen amine catalysts for the production of polyurethane (PU) foams. Lupragen N 208 (chemical name: N,N,N’-trimethyl-N’-hydroxyethyl-bisamino ethylether, HE-TMAEE, CAS 83016-70-0) will be produced at BASF’s Ludwigshafen Verbund site and will be marketed worldwide under the Lupragen trademark.

    As a reactive catalyst, Lupragen N 208 is firmly integrated into the PU polymer network during foam production; thus it cannot escape from the foam afterwards. This prevents the emission of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), which can cause unwanted effects such as odor. Overall, this property makes Lupragen N 208 particularly suitable for the manufacture of PU products for applications in which stringent low VOC standards must be met. Examples range from flexible foams for mattresses and upholstery to more rigid foams for automotive interiors such as dashboards or armrests.

    “We welcome Lupragen N 208 as new member in our portfolio of Lupragens to complement our existing blowing catalyst Lupragen N 205 (Bis(2-dimethylamino-ethyl)ether, BDMAEE). With this development we are responding to an increasing demand for low-VOC solutions from our customers,” says Gereon Altenhoff, Product Manager PU Catalysts, Intermediates Europe, BASF.

    BASF offering one of the broadest amine catalyst portfolios

    BASF is a leading producer of amines globally, including a broad portfolio of amine catalysts for PU marketed under the Lupragen brand. PU catalysts are typically tertiary amines, which are required to facilitate the reaction of the main components, isocyanate and polyol. Depending on the choice of catalyst, the PU forming process can be controlled to enhance the gelling or blowing reaction. BASF’s portfolio of amine catalysts includes several products, such as Lupragen N 208, which are designed to support customers in the polyurethane industry in their efforts to minimize emissions from foams.
     

    Continue Reading

  • The ‘hobbits’ may have died out when drought forced them to compete with modern humans, new research suggests

    The ‘hobbits’ may have died out when drought forced them to compete with modern humans, new research suggests

    Homo floresiensis — a small ancient human species nicknamed the “hobbit” — may have gone extinct around 50,000 years ago because declining rainfall levels reduced the prey available for hunting. This may have forced them to migrate to areas…

    Continue Reading

  • Artemis II Vehicle Manager Branelle Rodriguez Gets Orion Ready for “Go”

    Artemis II Vehicle Manager Branelle Rodriguez Gets Orion Ready for “Go”

    By the time the Artemis II Orion spacecraft launches to the Moon next year, its many components will already have traveled thousands of miles and moved across multiple facilities before coming together at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. Branelle…

    Continue Reading

  • ‘Kids can’t buy them anywhere’: how Pokémon cards became a stock market for millennials | Pokémon

    ‘Kids can’t buy them anywhere’: how Pokémon cards became a stock market for millennials | Pokémon

    Pokémon has been huge since the late 90s. Millions of people have fond memories of playing the original Red and Blue games, or trading cards in the playground for that elusive shiny Charizard (if your school didn’t ban them). The franchise has…

    Continue Reading