When infrastructure fails, the assumptions built into energy policy fail with it Thirty-three kilometres. That’s all the water separating the Persian Gulf from the open ocean at the Strait of Hormuz. A fifth of the world’s oil and gas moves…
The System Behind the Science: A Conversation with Holger Thorsten Schubart
There is a particular kind of frustration that accumulates in energy journalism over years of watching the same pattern repeat. A technology appears that does not fit the established categories. The coverage that follows reaches for the nearest available vocabulary,…
The Light That Stays On: How Reliable Power Unlocks What Schools Were Built to Do
What uninterrupted electricity really means for children who study by candlelight, and why the Neutrino® Energy Group believes power reliability is the hidden variable in global education Picture a child sitting at a wooden desk in the late afternoon. Outside,…
Scarcity Is a Design Flaw: The Philosophy Behind the Neutrino® Energy Group’s 50-Year Vision
How one mathematician’s conviction that energy poverty is a civilizational error became the founding logic of neutrinovoltaic technology There is a particular kind of thinker, rarer than innovators and rarer still than inventors, who does not ask how to improve…
The Equation That Came Before the Machine: How the Neutrino® Energy Group Reversed the History of Energy Innovation
There is a pattern so consistent across the history of energy that it feels almost like a law of its own: first we build the machine, then we figure out why it works. James Watt perfected the steam engine decades…
When the Grid Disappears: Inside the Science of Power That Never Shuts Off
There is an uncomfortable truth buried inside every electricity bill, every blackout headline, every geopolitical standoff over natural gas pipelines: the way modern civilization generates and distributes power is fundamentally fragile. It was designed for a world of stable borders,…
Energy Without Intermittency Anxiety: Stability Beyond Sun and Wind
Every renewable system has a shadow. Solar arrays perform with elegance under clear skies, yet at sunset their output declines with mathematical certainty. Wind farms can produce power at night, but atmospheric patterns are irregular. Modern grids compensate through storage,…
Sustainable, Affordable, Inevitable: Engineering Energy Within Physical Law
The energy transition is often described in percentages and policy targets, but its deeper crisis is architectural. Modern civilization still relies on centralized combustion to sustain decentralized life. Power plants remain geographically isolated nodes that feed vast networks of passive…
Rethinking Decentralized Power Beyond Intermittency and Storage Dependencies
Modern energy systems are still designed around maximum output, yet failures rarely occur at the peak. They occur during gaps, ramps, and transitions, when fuel delivery is delayed, weather shifts unexpectedly, or storage is depleted faster than forecast. From a…
Measurement Before Myth, How Energy Claims Survive the Laboratory
The laboratory does not reward belief. It rewards calibration, patience, and the slow elimination of alternative explanations. In an era when energy claims spread faster than instruments can verify them, the most radical position a scientist can take is methodological…