Freethink | Nearly-free clean energy? This could be the cheap solution we need @freethink | Uploaded September 2024 | Updated October 2024, 1 week ago.
This new more sustainable battery could offer “endless” affordable clean energy.
We made this video series, In The Arena with Evan Baehr, in partnership with Arena Hall, a community that explores ideas, tells stories, and funds projects–all to advance American ideals. Check them out here ► arenahall.com/?utm_source=ft_youtube&utm_medium=video&utm_campaign=freethink_2024
Watch more from In The Arena ► Iyoutube.com/playlist?list=PLXthoedLVIdJp1SkcjaM6Ft8tlNL0wmX3
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Despite a push in recent decades for cleaner, more sustainable energy sources, fossil fuels still account for the vast majority of energy in the US.
Could producing infinite clean energy be as simple as “getting cheap stuff hot?” Meet the entrepreneur who has built a battery that clean, cheap, always-on energy to industry.
So, how does this battery work, and could it truly be a “silver bullet” solution for the climate crisis? In the Arena host Evan Baehr investigates.
This new more sustainable battery could offer “endless” affordable clean energy.
We made this video series, In The Arena with Evan Baehr, in partnership with Arena Hall, a community that explores ideas, tells stories, and funds projects–all to advance American ideals. Check them out here ► arenahall.com/?utm_source=ft_youtube&utm_medium=video&utm_campaign=freethink_2024
Watch more from In The Arena ► Iyoutube.com/playlist?list=PLXthoedLVIdJp1SkcjaM6Ft8tlNL0wmX3
Subscribe to Freethink on YouTube ► https://freeth.ink/youtube-subscribe
Despite a push in recent decades for cleaner, more sustainable energy sources, fossil fuels still account for the vast majority of energy in the US.
Could producing infinite clean energy be as simple as “getting cheap stuff hot?” Meet the entrepreneur who has built a battery that clean, cheap, always-on energy to industry.
So, how does this battery work, and could it truly be a “silver bullet” solution for the climate crisis? In the Arena host Evan Baehr investigates.