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Good and bad deal in Baku, Bitcoin to $100,000 and Nvidia books record profits

A dystopian worldview of tropical trees and machines to remove carbon on the polar cap. Image created with Midjourney.

As Bitcoin approaches the hundred thousand dollar mark and Nvidia makes record profits, another topic deserves attention this week: COP29, the UN climate conference in Baku. In the technology and crypto world, the climate discussion is often seen as set in an alternate universe of stubborn school objectors and shag-smoking hippies wearing leather sandals in hemp pants. Yet that is where the greatest technological challenge of our time plays out: how does humanity remove the CO₂ already present in the atmosphere?

Days after COP29 was due to end, two agreements were reached in the extension: an agreement on a far too low amount that rich countries will pay to poor countries for compensation for damages suffered($300 billion seems like a lot, but is far too little for this problem) and an agreement on the general rules for launching carbon trading markets, better known as carbon credits, almost a decade after the idea was first proposed.

The agreement allows countries and companies to trade credits for reducing carbon emissions to offset their carbon footprint.

The carbon trading mechanism was first formally described in the COP21 Paris climate agreement in 2015, as a way for polluters to pay other countries to reduce emissions on their behalf. But it has proved controversial because of concerns that it will not result in the promised removal of carbon from the atmosphere.

Rich countries responsible

Poor countries are right when they accuse rich countries of not bearing enough responsibility. Since the industrial revolution, mainly Western economies have contributed to the emission of over 2,200 gigatons of CO₂, triggering global warming.

At the same time, poorer countries, often located around the equator, bear the brunt of climate change. Extreme heat waves, droughts, floods and more powerful hurricanes cause deaths, famines and destroyed infrastructure, especially in vulnerable countries. It was therefore to be expected that a group of poorer countries would leave the climate conference furious, as happened yesterday.

Rich countries are therefore obliged both to combat warming and to compensate for the damage done to poor countries. That leads to the questions of how much to pay, on the one hand, in compensation and, on the other, in investing in solutions that prevent global warming.

Climate activists are partly right

Climate activists argue that the only solution is to immediately stop using fossil fuels, the largest source of carbon emissions, and that limiting them is crucial to prevent further warming.

Moreover, they stress that investing in renewable energy is cheaper in the long run than repairing the damage caused by climate change. Quitting fossil fuels also offers important health benefits, such as reduced air pollution and lower medical costs. According to climate activists, immediate action is essential because every ton of CO₂ avoided reduces the likelihood that the temperature increase will exceed the critical 1.5-degree limit.

These demands are logical and justifiable, but completely ignore the fact that an immediate transition to a completely fossil-free world is not realistic. Of course, stopping CO₂ emissions as soon as possible is eminently important, just as stopping the faucet is useful when you want to drain a swimming pool.

But even if humanity were to stop all CO₂ emissions from tomorrow morning, it "only" means that no fifty gigatons of CO₂ emissions would be added annually; but even then, the historical burden of 2,200 gigatons in the atmosphere would remain unchanged. Without removal of that CO₂, warming will continue to exceed the 1.5-degree limit, with all its consequences.

Annual CO2 emissions compared to CO2 already in the atmosphere. Source: Tracer

I've been working at the intersection of sustainability and technology for almost a decade now, and I'm still looking for the first meaningful plan from an environmental or climate activist that shows a plan of action for the removal of that 2200 Gigatonnes. The only repeating sound is "stop emissions and plant forests. But that's not realistic and it doesn't make enough progress.

Fossil fuels still necessary

It is both economically and technically impossible to achieve a completely carbon-neutral world within a few years. Fossil fuels are the backbone of the global economy and are unfortunately still indispensable.

Renewable energy is growing rapidly but cannot yet fully meet current global energy demand. In addition, means of transportation such as aircraft, ships and trucks remain largely dependent on fossil fuels.

Low-income countries rely on cheap energy sources such as coal to enable their economic growth, making a sudden transition to renewable energy especially complex for them.

Moreover, in many regions, the infrastructure for renewable energy is not yet sufficiently developed to be widely deployed. Abruptly stopping fossil fuels would therefore lead to economic instability, massive unemployment and energy poverty, especially in the vulnerable countries most under pressure.

In Asia, for example, people react with dismay to arguments, mainly from Europeans, that canonize the train as a mobility solution: of course it is a fine alternative to air travel within Europe, but how do you take the train between the thousands of islands in Indonesia and the Philippines? Not to mention a commuter train between, say, Sydney and Hong Kong.

Five billion Asians don't want a cargo bike

It is often forgotten in the West, but Asia has nearly five billion inhabitants compared to about seven hundred and fifty million Europeans and less than four hundred million inhabitants of North America. You wouldn't begrudge your worst enemy a cargo bike ride across a rolling rice field in forty degrees and eighty percent humidity, would you?

During the first day of COP29, a major breakthrough was announced in the area of carbon credits, the common term for carbon credits where one carbon credit equals one thousand kilograms of CO₂ emissions. This system allows companies, as well as countries such as Singapore and Peru, to pay for projects that avoid, reduce or remove emissions.

In Baku, agreement was reached for the first time on a very vague standardization of these credits, described by the Financial Times as a kick-start for the carbon credit market, increasing transparency and reliability. But years of further detailing (read: negotiation) will be required before a functioning global system can emerge.

Differences between carbon credits crucial

Without better standardization and quality control of carbon credits, all kinds of fraudulent projects and junk credits will remain in circulation. Because there are three totally different types of carbon credits that need to be properly distinguished from each other:

  • Avoidance Credits: these are issued for preventing CO₂ emissions, such as by stopping deforestation or handing out brick kilns in Africa. Often these projects turn out to be totally useless.
  • Reduction Credits: these reduce CO₂ emissions, such as by implementing more efficient technologies. Think solar panels or wind turbines. Fine to do, but why does emitting less CO₂ deserve a bonus in the form of carbon credits?
  • Removal Credits: these are credits issued for actually removing CO₂ from the atmosphere. This is the necessary Holy Grail.

For example, Direct Air Capture uses machines to extract and store CO₂ directly from the air. This solution is still very capital intensive, and the question is whether it is the most efficient technique, measured by energy consumption and capital requirements.

Reforestation offers natural absorption of CO₂, although it comes with risks such as deforestation. For example, forest fires are still frequent, precisely because of global warming, and not all forests turn out to be planted as expected. In addition, they often turn out to be less effective than hoped and expected.

Biochar converts biomass into stable carbon that can be stored for centuries, while Ocean Alkalinity Enhancement treats oceans so they can absorb more CO₂. The greatest potential is most likely in these types of methods used by the oceans, such as that of the Dutch SEA02.

Overview of carbon dioxide removal (CDR) technology. Source: Tracer

Carbon removal credits fund crucial technology

Because while climate activists see all carbon credits as a license for companies to continue their emissions, the role of removal credits is invaluable. These credits make it financially possible to develop the aforementioned technologies, see the example of Microsoft and Royal Bank of Canada, so that those 2200 Gigatonnes of CO₂ can actually be removed from the atmosphere.

Environmental movements are focused on ethics and activism and lack the ability to assess technological innovations, let alone the economic scalability of those solutions. A striking example of this is the rise of Tesla and the global transition to electric vehicles initiated by Tesla's success.

Example: Tesla

In 2010, no prominent environmental activist would have predicted that Tesla would become the driver of a massive shift to electric mobility. Back then, Tesla was selling less than a thousand cars a year.

Then we look at last month: 1.43 million so-called "new energy vehicles" (NEVs) were sold in China in October alone, up 50 percent year-on-year, setting a new single-month sales record. Nearly 10 million NEVs have already been sold in China this year, up 34 percent from 2023.

Of these ten million vehicles, about 60% had all-electric propulsion, or a fuel cell: that's six million new cars driving around with zero carbon emissions. This unprecedented transition was driven by market forces, technological innovation and strategic government investments(yes, including Tesla) including tax breaks; not activist predictions.

In the last five years, Tesla shares rose nearly 1500%. This shows that there is an investment model for innovative technology. Assessing the possible solutions to remove CO₂ from the atmosphere should be left as much to climate activists as to politicians busy winning votes or oil and gas company executives dreaming of their bonus at night, rather than a livable world.

Academia and the venture capital industry, especially the segment dedicated to financing technological innovations, have the specialists to make the right trade-offs. But where should the money come from for these investments?

CO-load possible solution

Introduction of an annually gradually increasing tax on CO₂ emissions could lead to a structural solution, provided that the proceeds of a "carbon tax" could be used to invest in CO₂ removal technology and fund a compensation fund for the poorer, hardest-hit countries.

The climate crisis requires action on all fronts. It is time for rich countries, corporations and activists to work together on a realistic and comprehensive plan that both stops emissions and repairs historical damage.

For anyone interested in this complex topic, Tracer publishes a free weekly newsletter on LinkedIn, in which, to be fair, I also contribute to.

Categories
AI crypto technology

Links from Nov. 17 to 24, 2024: Chopping, not hacking, Anthropic raises $4 billion, Marques Brownlee reviews Apple Intelligence, Phantom beats Coinbase and the six-million banana

A number of links to notable cases that unfortunately lack space and time to cover at length.

Chopping, not hacking?

Are we spending years using cybersecurity to keep the enemy out of our critical infrastructure, they just wreck the submarine cables. Quite by accident, there was a Russian captain on the Chinese ship, which had absolutely nothing to do with anything anyway. Those cables attacked the ship.

Anthropic raises $4 billion from Amazon

Most of us spend money at Amazon during this nonsensical Cyber Monday, Freaky Friday, Soupy Sunday or whatever these commercial holidays are all called. The creator of Claude just raised money there and, with Google Gemini, is basically the only remaining direct competitor to OpenAI. Tens of billions are going into this type of LLM, when the world would benefit more if such sums were invested in carbon removal technology.

Marques Brownlee reviews Apple Intelligence

Brownlee neatly emphasizes that he can only review what is available in the iPhone so far of all the AI tools announced by Apple; only to burn them down mercilessly. A nice moment in his review is when Brownlee summarizes Apple Intelligence by referencing an absurdist moment from a recent Apple video: a man sees a woman on the street with a dog, and instead of asking her what kind of dog it is, he takes a picture of the dog and asks his iPhone. "You can do that," Brownlee smiles. "But do you have to want to?" And that's his summary of the current state of Apple Intelligence.

TikTok helps Phantom get past Coinbase

In recent years, the number of downloads of the Coinbase app has been a good gauge, or grazier, of interest in Bitcoin and other crypto currencies. But now something unusual is happening: because of advice videos on TikTok, more people are downloading the much more complex Phantom app, which also allows the purchase of memecoins, which is not possible with Coinbase. Does this appear to be the starting gun to a bull run on cryptocurrencies other than just Bitcoin and the other major tokens?

The banana of six million

Few will have failed to notice that last week a banana and a piece of tape sold for over six million dollars. That, too, is indicative of the current bull run in crypto: buyer, after all, was Justin Sun, a crypto entrepreneur who rarely sees a mirror he doesn't like.

Banana-gate is indicative of the amount of money circulating in the crypto market and the increased self-confidence in the sector, where egos had been badly dented last year by the falling prices and prison sentences of former wonderboys like Sam Bankman-Fried (FTX) and Changpeng "CZ" Zhao (Binance). CZ is making a tentative comeback, although he prefers not to be interviewed by journalists, but by Nikita Sachdev, owner of Luna PR.

Thanks for the interest and see you next week!

Categories
investing crypto technology

The week of Elon Musk, Netflix and Dogecoin

The week's winner: Elon Musk. Image created with Midjourney.

There is already so much reporting on politics that it is usually easy to avoid the topic here. Only Elon Musk is unavoidable, including last week. First, Donald Trump appointed his new best friend Musk and fellow querulant Vivek Ramaswamy to head a Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) to be created, an initiative aimed at reducing "bureaucratic spending." Sounds like an American version of the Ministry of Magic from Harry Potter, in a global political climate where wishful thinking has become the norm on both sides of the center.

DOGE is S3XY

Not coincidentally, the acronym DOGE corresponds to the popular cryptocurrency Dogecoin, which Musk has previously backed. Dogecoin, measured by market value the seventh largest cryptocurrency in the world, rose as much as 83% over the past week. Fans of Musk recognized in the acronym Doge the same joke Musk previously played on the naming of Tesla models that appeared chronologically as S, X, 3 and Y, but together spell S3XY.

Bitcoin reached a new "all time high" but Dogecoin rose four times as fast this week.

SpaceX and xAI raise billions

The devil sch33t on the big heap last week. as Musk's companies xAI and SpaceX raised impressive funding, with valuations of $45 billion and over $250 billion, respectively.

SpaceX, the largest privately held company in the US, is preparing for a tender offer in December in which existing shares in the company will be sold for about $135 each, according to insiders. This would value the rocket builder at more than $250 billion, up $40 billion - more than one and a half times the value of Philips, to put it in perspective - from the $210 billion during a similar deal earlier this year.

In addition, Musk's AI start-up xAI has raised $5 billion on a valuation of $45 billion, nearly double the valuation of a few months ago. Meanwhile, Musk's team's lightning-fast construction of a supercomputer on Nvidia technology spooked competitors to the point that a rival company even flew over Musk's data center in Texas to investigate what was going on.

Finally, on Friday, Tesla closed a stock market week full of declines with a 3% gain; in total, TSLA shares rose 45% last month. We can conclude that last week, both politically and corporately, the left was not winning.

Netflix live with UFC?

The boxing match between Mike Tyson and Jake Paul, streamed live on Netflix, yesterday marked the streaming platform's debut in live sports broadcasting. The match drew such a large simultaneous worldwide viewing audience that Netflix was plagued by ongoing streaming problems.

No doubt Netflix will learn from this, nor is it to be expected that there will ever be another boxing match that draws as many viewers as a fight between the elderly best boxer of all time and Mr. Leerdam. Not even if, as rumors suggest, Netflix strikes a deal with the UFC to broadcast MMA fights live for the next few years. The question is whether Apple will get more involved in live sports besides U.S. MLS matches (mainly because of Messi).

AI and Augmented Reality (AR) in your ears

Foursquare founder Dennis Crowley's new company Hopscotch Labs is developing a service that uses data in large AI systems and today's ubiquitous AirPods. It then adds smartphone functionality to provide relevant local information when someone walks past a particular location, such as a restaurant, cocktail bar or even a street corner.

As author of the article on Hopscotch, the unsurpassed Om Malik states, "It feels like a panacea for information overload. Instead of looking into a browser or constantly peeking at a phone, the information comes through our ears or other devices, such as glasses."

I continue not to believe that many people will voluntarily wear glasses, but the choice of AirPods is a very interesting variant for information transfer and Crowley always develops very nice products. Hopscotch is a startup to follow.

Microsoft organizes "bake-off" for CO2 removal 

Microsoft faces a challenge to meet its goal of becoming carbon-negative by 2030, as the company has seen carbon emissions increase by more than 40% since 2020, in part due to the growth of its AI business. Microsoft therefore already invested in Direct Air Capture (DAC), where it funds startups and purchases carbon credits upfront. However, DAC is still in development and the carbon credits from DAC could quickly cost many times more than other types of carbon removal credits.

Microsoft and the Royal Bank of Canada have now committed to purchase 10,000 metric tons of CO₂ over ten years from Deep Sky, a DAC project in Alberta, Canada. Deep Sky is organizing a "bake-off" for Microsoft and inviting eight startups to test their carbon removal technologies on site. In the week when COP29 in Baku is dominated by unappearing politicians, it is notable that business is taking the lead in removing CO₂ from the atmosphere.

"Bitcoin could go to $800,000"

"There is much less selling pressure. The reality is that although people say they're going to sell at $100,000 or $125,000, when Bitcoin gets to parity with gold, that means $800,000 per Bitcoin. So I think many Bitcoin holders will hold for the long term, and we can see that in the charts. Big 'whales' with more than a thousand coins have barely moved coins to exchanges this year." Thus crypto guru Meltem Demirors at CNBC.

The question is when Bitcoin's total market value will equal the size of the gold market, but the largest cryptocurrency is on its way. According to Demirors, the moment Bitcoin's market size equals that of gold, the price per Bitcoin will be $800,000. Sounds astronomically high, but so did $93,000 this summer, and that highest price ever was smoothly reached this week.

2024 is a bizarre stock market year: the S&P 500 is rising faster than Apple, and despite all the hype, Bitcoin has risen less than Nvidia and Palantir.

Cryptomarket ready for a bull run

At top investor Andreessen Horowitz, the flags went up after the election of Donald Trump and lickety-split is looking forward to new crypto legislation:

"This will enable a future in which we can realize the many consumer benefits we are excited about: giving people ownership of their digital identities, new revenue models for creative creators, cross-border transactions with stable coins at low to no cost, new ways for small businesses like restaurants to connect with their customers, the emergence of decentralized social networks, the development of physical infrastructure like energy grids, and blockchains that democratize AI and games - and much more we can't even imagine right now."

Still doesn't sound fascinating, but maybe the enthusiasm will come when those blockchain-based products hit the market. Andreessen Horowitz urges crypto entrepreneurs to get started already. Under President Biden, all crypto was lumped together while notorious scammers like Sam Bankman-Fried of FTX were not given a leg up. Clear regulations will have to lead to new, better crypto projects.

Private chefs in Silicon Valley lash out

Customers who only drink the first sip of a can of Coke, or tea that has to be boiled and cooled in three stages and then drunk half lukewarm: private chefs in Silicon Valley experience the craziest things with customers who don't know the difference between a truffle and an apple pie - as long as it's expensive and inconvenient.

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AI invest crypto technology

Secretive data company Palantir is the winner of the week

It was a remarkable week in the tech world. The US presidential election kept tech companies quiet on the PR front, while Trump's victory created speculation about what this means for technology and innovation policy. One thing is clear: Elon Musk has a new role as President Trump's tech supremo.

In this edition, I share the news items that stood out: from space cowboys and crypto to AI and an extraordinary story about cancer self-treatment. But most of all: lots about Palantir, the absolute winner of the week.

Is Trump for nuclear-powered data centers, crypto and AI?

From fairly unexpected quarters, because we don't usually have to be in the conservative data center sector for a broader view, came this excellent analysis from Data Center Dynamics on what the tech and innovation sector can expect under Trump. From AI to crypto, chips and space; pretty much everything is covered.

Trump leads to 4 billion tons of additional CO2 emissions

Add up the annual emissions of the EU and Japan, or take all the emissions of the one hundred and forty least emitting countries in the world, and you have the additional emissions the US will produce in 2030 from Trump's election, Carbon Brief calculated earlier this year. It's twice as many emissions as all the savings from renewable energy worldwide in the last five years.

Science editor at the Volkskrant Maarten Keulemans nevertheless hopes for an alternative climate course that is not based on the Paris climate agreement, for example through initiatives that do not come from the government. That's an interesting thought also espoused by Blue City Solutions, the independent group of freethinkers I support in developing private initiatives against climate change.

"Saddle up, space cowboys" 

Chances are that Elon Musk is going to make major reorganizations and cutbacks at his great adversary NASA, in his role as presidential adviser. That his company Space X is profiting from this is, of course, entirely coincidental.

OpenAI has a hardware bazin

Caitlin Kalinowski is the former head of augmented reality glasses projects at Meta. On Monday, Kalinowski, CK for intimates, reported in a post on LinkedIn that she will lead robotics and consumer electronics at OpenAI.

In late September, OpenAI leaked that CEO Sam Altman would be working with Apple legend Jony Ive on an "iPhone for AI," whatever that might be. With Kalinowski starting at OpenAI, the question is how her work will relate to OpenAI's project with Ive. Kalinowski and Ive know each other well, as she previously worked at Apple on Macbook hardware during the time Ive was Chief Design Officer there under Steve Jobs. Will OpenAI come with glasses, a mobile device or something entirely new?

Palantir beats Nvidia

Almost silently, Palantir snuck into the S&P 500 last month. The software company of Peter Thiel and Alex Karp, always surrounded by a fog of secrecy, rose a whopping 252% on Wall Street this year, even more than Nvidia. 

Nabeel Qureshi, former developer at Palantir, wrote a fascinating story about his time at the data analytics company. It is highly recommended for anyone working in the field of innovation. It starts off right away, when Qureshi quotes an interview with CEO Karp about his unique approach to job interviews:

"I like to meet candidates without any information about them: no resume, no preliminary interviews or job description, just the candidate and I in a room. I ask a fairly random question, something that has nothing to do with what they would do at Palantir. Then I watch them parse the question and see if they recognize how many different ways there are to look at the same thing. I like to keep interviews short, about ten minutes. Otherwise, people move on to their learned answers and you don't get a good picture of who they really are."

In ten minutes you won't go into depth about your time as praeses with the corps, your family life or your hobbies, so that already gives a pretty good indication of the atmosphere and focus at Palantir.

Not FTE but FDE

Interestingly, according to Qureshi, Palantir is organized around two types of developers:

  • developers working with customers, also known as FDEs, forward deployed engineers.
  • developers who work in the core product team on product development, PD-ers, and who rarely visit customers.

FDEs work "onsite" at customer sites three to four days a week, resulting in a tremendous amount of travel, highly unusual for software developers at a Silicon Valley company.

The goal of this approach is to gain in-depth knowledge of business processes in complex industries (such as healthcare, intelligence, aerospace, etc.) and then use that knowledge to design software that actually solves the problem.

The PD developers "productize" what the FDEs build. In other words, they convert the FDEs' custom work into standard products, developing the software that in turn helps the FDEs do their jobs better and faster on subsequent projects in the same industry. Qureshi spent nearly a year in France at Airbus, so Palantir learned what kind of products the aerospace industry needs.

It is an original approach that stands midway between the customization the big IT consulting firms claim to provide (cough) and the "one size fits all" approach of traditional ERP companies.

'Whatever you want Ben'

A piece of venture capitalism to the people: top investor Ben Horowitz donated money to the Las Vegas Police Department, which , at his request, used it to buy drones from a supplier in which his company invested. The manufacturer obviously made good money on this order, in a modern variation of vest-pocket-via-police-breast-pocket.

Companies want employees back in the office. What's really going on?

In a podcast, The Verge discusses with two experts the true reasons why many companies want their employees back in the office. It's not just cutbacks in disguise, hoping people will quit. Surely many companies value team building and expect higher productivity in the office.

Nvidia passes $3.6 trillion market value mark

Wall Street expects Trump to roll back the Biden administration's restrictions on AI development, which caused Nvidia to overtake Apple via the right as the world's most valuable company.

Nvidia past Microsoft and Apple; for how long?

The market values of the top three are now as follows:

  • Microsoft: $3.14 trillion
  • Apple: $3.43 trillion
  • Nvidia: $3.62 trillion

NVDA shares rose 206% this year. It is not a PLTR, but remains highly exceptional for a company of this size. In the last five days, Microsoft, Apple and Nvidia rose 3.1%, 2.6% and 7.6% respectively against a 41.8% rise for Palantir. With that, Palantir rose even much harder than the cryptos, of which so much was expected by investors and speculators.

The occasion was the excellent quarterly figures, which showed that Palantir's sales were up 30% compared to the same quarter last year. Profits even increased by 101%. Palantir achieves an operating profit of almost 20%, compared with 15% at Salesforce, for example, whose revenue grew by only 8%.

The nine largest crypto currencies by market value rose after U.S. election

Where cryptocurrencies were expected to go through the roof after Trump's victory, the rise for the volatile crypto world still remained relatively modest. Bitcoin established a new high but stabilized reasonably.

Cardano's rise stands out in this chart, but it is deceptive: ADA's share price rose "only" 28% over the last year so this was a correction rather than a breakout. On average, the largest crypto stocks rose 16% last week.

There is justice: memecoins did worse than a real company like Palantir

So were the biggest gains in those silly speculative coins of dogs (with or without hats), or frogs and other goofy things? No, because the biggest memecoins rose "only" 12% last week.

Anyone who unexpectedly ends up at a circle birthday party or in a soccer canteen this Sunday with bleating monkeys orating about bizarre price gains on memecoins can arm themselves with the knowledge that the largest memecoin, Dogecoin, rose 198% last year.

Nice and all, but the world's most valuable technology company, Nvidia, which unlike memecoins actually develops unique technology and is therefore much less susceptible to speculation, rose 214% in the last year. Stand there, with your pink cake or your cheese dice in your hand bragging about Dogecoin.

Palantir, up 252% this year, is on a huge rise; from $15 at the beginning of the year, the share price rose to $58 last Friday. This of course raises the question of whether, with a stratospheric P/E ratio of 295, the company will be able to maintain this appreciation.

Peter Thiel, co-founder of Palantir, could use some help in this regard from his friends in the White House; for Thiel has been so invited to not only follow Trump's lead early on, he is also a mentor and friend of new Vice President JD Vance.

Scientist treated her cancer with viruses she developed herself

Happy to end this week's newsletter on a positive note, with the extraordinary achievement of someone who did this entirely on her own: virologist Beata Halassy says in Nature that self-treatment worked and was a positive experience - but researchers warn that this is not something others should try.

Halassy, a virologist at the University of Zagreb, successfully treated her own breast cancer by injecting the tumor with laboratory-grown viruses, sparking a discussion about the ethics of self-experimentation.

Halassy discovered in 2020, at age 49, that she had breast cancer at the site of a previous mastectomy. It was the second recurrence at that site since her left breast had been removed, and she did not want to undergo another round of chemotherapy under any circumstances.

After an extensive literature review, Halassy chose an unproven treatment and administered herself a treatment called oncolytic virotherapy (OVT) to treat her own stage 3 cancer. She has now been cancer-free for four years.

Thanks for the interest and see you next week!

Michiel Frackers

The English version of this newsletter appears here on LinkedIn.

This newsletter does not contain investment advice but only a personal opinion based on knowledge, experience and self-aggrandizement.

The list of past newsletters is at Frackers.com.

Follow me on LinkedIn, X, Instagram or TikTok.

Categories
AI invest technology

Energy consumption of AI helps climate tech make final breakthrough

Last week two developments came together that will shape the global technology picture in the coming years. First, OpenAI launched new products with which it is attacking Google and Microsoft head-on. The AI market is exploding for both consumer and business use, with the adverse consequence of correspondingly increasing energy consumption and carbon emissions.

Perhaps precisely because of these rising carbon emissions, developments in "Climate Tech," the umbrella term for all technology that combats climate change, also seem to be accelerating. Bill Gates even calls 2024 the year when climate tech has finally broken through.

OpenAI now direct competitor of Google

OpenAI last week launched "ChatGPT with Search," a feature that allows users to retrieve real-time, up-to-date information directly in their conversations. This search functionality, integrated into the existing ChatGPT interface, is currently available to paying users and will soon be available to everyone.

Rather than a separate product as in a separate app or separate Web page, the search feature in, for example, the Chrome browser allows ChatGPT to automatically consult Web resources when relevant to the question being asked. Users can also manually activate search themselves to find specific information.

ChatGPT's search feature offers additional interactive features, such as displaying maps with place markers for recommended locations and displaying current stock prices and news articles. With each search, users can open a sidebar with clickable resources to access the original articles or data.

OpenAI states that collaboration with Microsoft Bing and media partners such as the Associated Press and Reuters ensures that the information provided is accurate and reliable. These collaborations also mitigate legal issues surrounding "data scrapping," as OpenAI gains authorized access to data through these partners.

New: ad-free current information 

This new search offering helps OpenAI with a new focus on reliable up-to-date information, which is especially important in sensitive topics such as elections, where reliable information is essential. In doing so, ChatGPT avoids the use of ads or sponsored links, a big difference from Google Search, which, on the contrary, generates most of its revenue through ads.

Instead, OpenAI is focusing on providing an independent user experience that will have to be funded from subscriptions. While it will continue to be possible for free users to take advantage of the search feature, we can expect limits on the number of free searches.

For more details and background on the latest developments in AI, I recommend the weekly newsletter from Michiel Schoonhoven of content marketing specialist NXTLI. On LinkedIn, Michiel has shared more details aboutthe latest updates from ChatGPT.

Gates: 2024 breakthrough of 'climate tech'

In May, Goldman Sachs, surely not known as climate activists weekly on the A12, estimated that the growth of AI will lead to a 160% increase in energy consumption by data centers by 2030. In Europe alone, the modern generation of bankers, dressed in the new uniform of sleeveless body warmers, estimates that 800 billion Euros will be invested in improving the electricity grid.

So Bill Gates enthusiastically headlined in the annual report of his investment company BreakThrough Energy: 'The State of the Transition. Climate tech has arrived.' According to Gates, 2024 will retrospectively prove to be a pivotal moment in the fight against climate change, reminding him of the period around 2000 when large-scale decisions were made to combat infant mortality.

At the time, millions of children in South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa were dying annually from preventable diseases, despite the fact that vaccines and drugs often already existed. However, these drugs were difficult for poor countries to access, although they were stockpiled in richer countries. Through the use of a global health network, which produced and made available vaccines and drugs, child mortality fell by 50 percent within 20 years. This progress was possible by scaling up existing innovations and developing new methods, for example, in the fight against HIV and malaria.

Meanwhile, more and more technologies are being developed that are effective in reducing greenhouse gases. The next big challenge, however, according to Gates, lies in implementation: scaling up these technologies within the economy. Although large companies have mastered this scale well, until now they have often been reluctant to invest in clean technologies. They saw them primarily as ways to reduce their carbon footprint and contribute to the environment, without seeing them as a source of value to their own operations. In short, focusing on sustainability did not lead to higher profits. 

According to Gates, however, this has begun to change since 2024 and there has been a major shift in the perspective of investors and companies. Large global investors-such as foundations, sovereign wealth funds and infrastructure investors-are finally starting to invest seriously in climate technology. Top business executives are also increasingly understanding that climate tech offers more than just environmental gains; it can strengthen their companies and use their capital more efficiently. Let's hope Gates is right.

200 grams of yellow powder as effective as a tree

Half a pound of this yellow powder removes as much carbon dioxide from the atmosphere as a tree does in a year. Source photo: Zihui Zhou, UC Berkeley.

Gates said global fight against man-made climate change. California alone will need to capture or remove about 100 million tons of carbon dioxide annually - roughly equivalent to pollution from 250 gas-fired power plants - to meet its ambitious climate goals, including achieving carbon neutrality by 2045.

It seems as if innovative techniques for this removal of carbon dioxide are now becoming known on a weekly basis. For example, researchers at the University of California at Berkeley, have developed a new covalent organic framework (COF) that significantly improves the direct air capture (DAC) of carbon dioxide.

This material, a deep yellow powder, efficiently absorbs CO₂ from ambient air without degradation by water or other contaminants, a common problem with existing DAC technologies. The COF functions like a sponge, trapping CO₂ until it is saturated.

It can then be regenerated by heating, releasing the CO₂ for storage or reuse, and then reused for further collection cycles. Remarkably, 200 grams of this material can remove about 20 kilograms of CO₂ per year, comparable to the absorption capacity of a mature tree!

Technological tools can reduce CO₂ emissions and even remove existing emissions from the atmosphere. Source: image created with Midjourney.

This kind of innovative technology is many times more effective than planting trees, which appears sympathetic and is more understandable to the layman. The big question is whether the growth in investment in climate tech predicted by Gates will come in time to combat accelerated climate change, as recently predicted by the UN.

Investing in AI or climate tech?

A strange paradox thus arises: how does investing in climate tech compare with investing in AI? It is obvious that the financial results of investing in climate tech will take at least five to 10 years. Only companies whose CEOs look ahead longer than their own annual bonus will structurally try to become carbon neutral or even carbon negative, such as Microsoft.

The average increase this year of these companies propelled upward by AI is a whopping 119%. Even the accountant-less Super Micro is down only 9%.
Source: Google Finance

lucrative. See my completely arbitrary and subjectively compiled AI Spotlight 9, which is not financial advice, but attempts to paint a measurable picture of a visible trend.

The average share price increase this year of these companies propelled upward by AI is a whopping 119%. Interestingly, software company Palantir is experiencing higher share price appreciation than chipmakers such as AMD, Arm and Broadcom. But note that market leader Nvidia is not included in this list because Nvidia is already included in the overall tech-grade gauge Spotlight 9. By comparison, Nvidia shares are already up 181% this year, versus Palantir 153%.

In the short term, only memecoins are more lucrative than AI stocks. It is to be hoped for the world that Bill Gates is right and that there are enough investors who look a little beyond short-term returns. I myself will be at the particularly interesting Business & Philanthropy Forum in Singapore over the next few days, where the very idea of combining for-profit investing with the pursuit of a better world is being attempted. Hopefully I will be able to share some positive news next week.