
-
Football and falls as first humanoid robot games launch in China
-
'Like hell': Indoor heat overwhelms Saudi Arabia's cooks, bakers
-
On VJ day, king pays tribute to UK veterans, warns of war's 'true cost'
-
Bayern's Bundesliga crown up for grabs after rocky summer
-
Arsenal face revamped Man Utd as new-look Liverpool open Premier League season
-
South Korea president vows to build 'military trust' with North
-
'Never again': Indigenous Bolivians sour on socialism
-
Indonesia's president touts economy, social welfare drive
-
World plastic pollution treaty talks collapse with no deal
-
Facing US tariffs, India's Modi vows self-reliance
-
Trump to meet Putin in high-stakes Alaska summit
-
Indian rescuers scour debris after 60 killed in flood
-
Ivory Coast village reburies relatives as rising sea engulfs cemetery
-
Stressed UK teens seek influencers' help for exams success
-
National Guard deploys 800 personnel for DC mission, says Pentagon
-
Japan emperor expresses 'deep remorse' 80 years after WWII
-
With waters at 32C, Mediterranean tropicalisation shifts into high gear
-
Historic Swedish church being moved as giant mine casts growing shadow
-
Malawi's restless youth challenged to vote in September polls
-
Indonesian roof tilers flex muscles to keep local industry alive
-
World's first humanoid robot games begin in China
-
Scott Barrett returns to lead All Blacks against Argentina
-
Five things to know about Nigeria's oil sector
-
New compromise but still no deal at plastic pollution talks
-
France's Cernousek seizes lead at LPGA Portland Classic
-
Putin-Trump summit: What each side wants
-
Desperate Myanmar villagers scavenge for food as hunger bites
-
Asia stocks mixed before US-Russia summit
-
Putin hails North Korean troops as 'heroic' in letter to Kim
-
Fleeing the heat, tourists explore Rome at night, underground
-
Online cockfighting thrives in Philippines despite ban and murders
-
Keeping cool with colours -- Vienna museum paints asphalt to fight heat
-
Raising the bar: Nepal's emerging cocktail culture
-
El Salvador plans 600 mass trials for suspected gang members
-
Trump's tariffs drown Brazil's fish industry
-
Hong Kong tycoon Jimmy Lai's collusion trial resumes after delay
-
Britain's Princess Anne turns 75 with typically minimal fuss
-
Japan posts modest growth despite US tariffs
-
Rugby Championship kicks off amid uncertain future
-
Israeli far-right minister backs contentious West Bank settlement plan
-
Hot putter carries MacIntyre to three-shot lead at BMW Championship
-
'Ridiculous': How Washington residents view the new troops in town
-
Global plastic pollution treaty talks extended in 'haze' of confusion
-
Trump's tariffs have not reduced Panama Canal traffic -- yet
-
YouTube turns to AI to spot children posing as adults
-
Sky's the limit for Duplantis ahead of 'super-sick' Tokyo worlds
-
New clashes in Serbia as political crisis escalates
-
Sinner swamps Auger-Aliassime in Cincinnati power display
-
California to change election maps to counter Texas, governor says
-
Apple Watch gets revamped blood oxygen feature

Tech's green wave hits choppy waters
Tech entrepreneurs have spent years selling the dream that we can save the planet without changing our ways, but the current focus of innovation is dividing experts and investors.
The tech industry loves splashy world-saving ideas and spends billions on the hunt for new energy sources, often clashing with calls from activists and experts simply to use less energy.
The Web Summit in Lisbon this week, one of Europe's biggest tech events, gave top billing to a Californian firm called Twelve that claims to be able to make sustainable jet fuel out of the carbon dioxide in the air.
"In a lot of ways we're mimicking trees and plants," Twelve cofounder Etosha Cave told the audience, describing a process that takes carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and converts it into fuel.
Cave painted a picture of a future where her company's tech could power long-haul flights and even help exploit mineral wealth on Mars -- a utopian vision that has helped her firm raise some $650 million.
The interviewer on stage with Cave told her it "sounds like magic".
Climate expert Mike Berners-Lee, a professor at the University of Lancaster in the UK, told AFP that world-changing claims about sustainable fuel or new energy sources needed to be viewed sceptically.
"Everyone's looking for a silver bullet that would mean we wouldn't have to do anything difficult," he said.
More broadly, the green wave in tech is entering a tricky period.
While Twelve and other major startups are attracting massive investment, Bloomberg recently reported that funding for climate tech was on track to fall 50 percent this year compared with last year.
- Big losses -
And climate tech has long been subject to the whims of politics and global economic trends.
The current green wave is the second this century.
The first -- now called Clean Tech 1.0 -- was fostered by US politician Al Gore, whose calls for funding were met with an estimated $25 billion of investments.
The period ended in 2011 after the global financial crisis ended cheap loans and China ramped up its solar panel output, wiping out most US startups and roughly half of investors' cash.
But those investments were not wasted.
They led to an era of inexpensive solar and wind power and laid the foundations for the electric vehicle revolution.
Clean Tech 2.0 began around 2018 as companies and governments committed to net-zero carbon targets laid out by the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement.
However, the US has re-elected Donald Trump as president with support from many leaders in the tech industry.
Trump -- an avowed climate-change denier whose campaigning slogan on fossil fuels was "dig baby dig" -- withdrew the US from the agreement in his first term and analysts believe he will do the same again.
And the global fight against climate change is still fraught, with national leaders meeting for the UN's COP29 climate summit in Azerbaijan this week divided on the idea of phasing out fossil fuels, the main driver of global warming.
- 'Severe reservations' -
All this leaves climate tech in a precarious moment, and startups without world-saving narratives are scrambling to get funding from a smaller pot.
Web Summit hosted dozens of them, hawking everything from blockchain-backed "virtual power plants" to smart widgets for stopping household leaks.
While some experts are cynical about the utility of these "shark tank" style events, Elisabeth Gilmore, a professor of environmental engineering at Carleton University in Canada, said she had no problem with young entrepreneurs making big claims.
"These innovations should be eyebrow-raising," she told AFP.
She said events like the Web Summit could focus minds, but cautioned that entrepreneurs must look beyond the profit motive and make products that help communities.
Berners-Lee questioned whether some of the most eye-catching ideas could be as good as they sounded.
"If these are real solutions that are ready to go, if they're as good as they look, they would be scaling up like crazy," he said.
Sustainable jet fuel, he said, was one of the toughest nuts to crack and would need major breakthroughs in storage and power usage.
Cave conceded on stage that Twelve needed "utility-level" renewables as well as power from the grid for her firm's plants, though she said it used far less land and energy than biofuels.
More broadly, Berners-Lee questioned whether the search for new power sources should even be an aim for humanity.
"I would have severe reservations about giving humanity an unlimited energy supply beyond carbon -- we're causing enough damage with the energy we've already got," he said.
T.Egger--VB