Grid-enhancing technologies (dynamic line rating, advanced power flow control)
Clean energy isn't scaling fast enough
The world needs to replace fossil fuels with clean energy sources fast — but we're not moving nearly quickly enough. Even as solar and wind costs have plummeted, we're still adding more fossil fuel capacity than clean energy in many regions. The challenge isn't just building more renewable power plants. It's also storing that energy when the sun isn't shining, upgrading ancient electrical grids, speeding up painfully slow permitting processes, and dealing with the reality that we've already built trillions of dollars worth of coal and gas infrastructure that someone paid for and expects to keep running.
Meanwhile, nearly a billion people still lack electricity entirely, and even in wealthy countries, our energy systems are rigid and wasteful. We need technology solutions that make clean energy cheaper, faster to deploy, and more reliable than fossil fuels — not just sometimes, but always.
The grid wasn't built for this and can't keep up
Most electrical grids were designed decades ago for large, centralized fossil fuel plants that could be turned on and off as needed. Now we're asking them to handle thousands of solar farms and wind turbines scattered across vast areas, producing variable output that changes by the minute.
The grid needs a complete overhaul — new transmission lines, smarter software, and systems that can automatically balance supply and demand in real-time across an increasingly complex network.
Grid-enhancing technologies (dynamic line rating, advanced power flow control)
Technologies that squeeze more capacity out of existing transmission lines without building new ones. Dynamic line rating uses weather data and sensors to safely increase power flows when conditions allow. Advanced power flow control devices can redirect electricity along optimal paths, reducing congestion and improving grid stability.