What to Expect
All sessions listed in US eastern time.
Thursday, February 15
Electric vehicles are taking to the roads like never before, and a grid with a growing share of renewables like wind and solar means grid storage is becoming ever more essential. That all adds up to batteries being a central technology required for the energy transition. And as the world’s demand for batteries skyrockets, so does the pressure to extract and process much more of their ingredients. Which battery technologies are most likely to break through? How will we build them all? And how can we begin to resolve the community conflicts that mining proposals often trigger? Join James Temple, MIT Technology Review’s Senior Editor for Energy, David Rotman, Editor at Large, and Casey Crownhart, Climate Reporter, for a discussion about the role batteries will play in a cleaner future, and what we’ll need to build them.
Related coverage:
- Climate tech is back—and this time, it can’t afford to fail
- How one mine could unlock billions in EV subsidies
- This town’s mining battle reveals the contentious path to a cleaner future
- Want to know where batteries are going? Look at their ingredients
- How old batteries will help power tomorrow's EVs