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Artificial Intelligence

A Frisson of Fission: Why Nuclear Power Won’t Replace Natural Gas as North America’s Critical Fuel

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17 minute read

From the C2C Journal

By Gwyn Morgan
The recent collapse of the power grid in Cuba, plunging the island nation into darkness and grinding its meagre economy to a halt, served as a reminder of electricity’s centrality to modern civilization. That dependency is only expected to increase as more electric vehicles take to the road – and, writes Gwyn Morgan, as the tech sector’s voracious appetite for electrons expands unabated. Morgan pours a pail of cold water on the much-mooted “nuclear revival” that has yet to deliver any actual new electricity. He argues instead that what’s needed is clear-eyed recognition that the most reliable, most abundant, most flexible and most affordable energy source is a fossil fuel located in vast quantities right beneath North Americans’ feet.
Three Mile Island: now there’s a name only us retired folk will remember. On March 28, 1979 the Unit 2 reactor in the Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station near Middletown, Pennsylvania incurred a partial melt-down. This was and remains the most serious accident in U.S. nuclear power-plant operating history. Although nobody was killed or injured, the near-catastrophe gripped Americans for months (that was when the term “melt-down” entered the public lexicon). It further energized the powerful anti-nuclear movement – eerily, the movie The China Syndrome concerning a fictional reactor melt-down had been released just 12 days before the actual Three Mile Island event – and shifted public opinion further against generating electricity by splitting the atom. Construction of new facilities slowed dramatically and eventually the number of cancellations – 120 – exceeded the approximately 90 nuclear plants that actually operate; not one was built for 30 years.

Now, 45 years later, comes announcement of a deal by tech giant Microsoft Corporation with Constellation Energy, owner of the infamous Three Mile Island facility, to restart the mothballed nuclear plant’s sister reactor, Unit 1. It will be the first such restart in the U.S.

Nuclear revival? Forty-five years after the infamous partial reactor core melt-down at Three Mile Island (pictured at top left and centre) and release of the sensationalistic anti-nuclear movie The China Syndrome (starring Jane Fonda, pictured at bottom left), the plant’s sister reactor is set for a US$1.6 billion restart to power data centres supporting artificial intelligence (AI). Shown at top right, Nuclear Regulatory Commission staff during Three Mile Island crisis; bottom right, U.S. President Jimmy Carter’s motorcade leaves Three Mile Island nuclear power station. (Sources of photos: (top left) zoso8203, licensed under CC BY 2.0; (top centre) AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster; (top right) NRCgov, licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0; (bottom left) Everett Collection/The Canadian Press; (bottom right)  NRCgov, licensed under CC BY 2.0)

After all these years, why now? The answer is electricity demand for artificial intelligence (AI). Like many things in the tech realm, AI is a sneakily prodigious consumer of electricity, and AI’s use is exploding. The Microsoft/Constellation project is one of several such deals recently unveiled by tech giants.

A Goldman Sachs report from May of this year illuminates the issue, observing that, “On average, a ChatGPT query needs 10 times as much electricity to process as a Google search.” ChatGPT is a popular AI tool for information research and content creation (college kids particularly love it); a related and even more power-hungry tool spits out sophisticated digital imagery. And ChatGPT is only one of the burgeoning AI applications, which include everything from order processing and customer fulfillment to global shipping, generating sales leads, and helping operate factories and ports. Consequently, says Goldman Sachs, “Our researchers estimate data center power demand will grow 160% by 2030” – representing a remarkable one-third of all growth in U.S. electricity demand. “This increased demand will help drive the kind of electricity growth that hasn’t been seen in a generation,” says the report, which it pegs at a robust 2.4 percent per year during this period.

Power-hungry tech: The rise of AI tools like ChatGPT is forecast to increase power demand from data centres by 160 percent over the next six years, part of a robust expected increase in overall electricity consumption. Shown at bottom, Google data centre for the company’s Gemini AI platform. (Sources of photos: (top) Ju Jae-young/Shutterstock; (bottom) Google)

That’s a lot of juice. So where will all this additional power come from? In the U.S., 60 percent of electricity comes from natural gas and coal. Nuclear energy supplies 19 percent, hydroelectric facilities 6 percent, while wind and solar provide the remaining 14 percent. But wind and solar are intermittent, difficult to scale quickly, geographically limited – and, above all, cannot be counted on for the large-scale, uninterrupted, secure “base load” that AI requires.

The small modular reactor – a digital rendering of which is shown here – is said to offer great potential for adding nuclear power in manageable increments; the technology remains in testing, however, and is unlikely to hit the ground in Western Canada before 2034. (Source of image: OPG)

And while there is something of a nuclear revival happening in the U.S. and around the world, it will be four years before Three Mile Island comes back on-stream (at an anticipated cost of US$1.6 billion). Such a time-frame even to restart an existing facility underscores the long lead times afflicting the design, construction and commissioning of any technically complex, large-scale and politically controversial infrastructure. There’s a lot of talk about shortening that cycle by focusing on a new generation of “small modular reactors” (SMR), which generate about one-quarter the power of the regular kind. But SMRs remain largely untested and, here too, their lead times are long. Alberta and Saskatchewan, for example, have been talking with other provinces for the last four years about the concept, but haven’t even begun writing the governing regulations, let alone holding public hearings. The most optimistic scenario has the first SMR coming online in 2034.

Realistically, then, most of the growth in power demand for AI will have to be met by fossil fuels, however distasteful this will be to America’s tech moguls, who want to be seen as hip and earth-friendly even if not all of them are actually left-leaning. (A laughable detail of the recent Constellation/Microsoft deal is that Three Mile Island is being renamed the “Crane Clean Energy Center”, as if it’s some kind of Google-style campus.)

Those tech moguls will have to come to terms with natural gas. Natural gas is by far the lowest-emission fossil fuel. It is readily transportable by pipeline around North America. Large-scale gas-fired generating facilities can be built quickly, at reasonable cost and at low risk using mature technology, and can be located almost anywhere. And, fortunately for Americans, natural gas is in robust supply, with production setting new records nearly every year, and is currently cheaper than dirt. Indeed, the Goldman report itself forecasts (too conservatively, in my view) that the growth in electricity demand will in turn trigger “3.3 billion cubic feet per day of new natural gas demand by 2030, which will require new pipeline capacity to be built.”

In Canada, 60 percent of our electricity comes from hydro power, but very few viable new dam sites are left (Quebec recently commissioned a new dam after years of delay, and does have a few additional candidate sites, but these are the rare exceptions). Ontario’s nuclear plants supply 16 percent. Expansion of this is under consideration but, as noted, any new capacity is many years away. Coal and coke supply 8 percent (and are being further scaled back), natural gas 8 percent, and solar and wind 6 percent. So Canada’s growing electricity demand, much of it driven by AI and other tech requirements, will also need to be fuelled by natural gas. Fortunately, Canada too has enormous untapped natural gas reserves, and is also setting new production records.

Plentiful, flexible, transportable, cheap: The lowest-emission fossil fuel, natural gas offers the best way to meet growing global energy demand, representing an enormous export opportunity for Canada and the U.S. Shown at top left, Freeport LNG Liquefaction facility, Freeport, Texas; top right, LNG Canada project under construction in Kitimat, B.C. (Sources: (top left photo) Freeport LNG; (top right photo) The Canadian Press/Darryl Dyck; (graph) Canadian Energy Regulator)

In contrast to the United States and Canada, Europe is struggling just to meet existing electricity demand after natural gas imports from Russia dropped from 5.5 trillion cubic feet in 2021 to 2.2 trillion cubic feet last year. Europe’s only option is importing liquefied natural gas (LNG). Germany, previously the largest importer of Russian gas – and which in the face of the resulting energy shortage chose to shut down the last of its nuclear plants – is constructing LNG import/regasification terminals on an urgent basis. Regrettably, the situation could get even worse for Europe; China is in talks with Russia that could lead to complete stoppage of remaining gas flows, further escalating Europe’s need for LNG.

That makes meeting the electricity demands of the EU’s smaller but also growing AI sector even more challenging. Moreover, Europe’s power grid is the oldest in the world at 50 years, so it needs both modernization and expansion. The above-quoted Goldman Sachs report states that, “Europe needs $1 trillion [in new investment] to prepare its power grid for AI.” Goldman’s researchers estimate that the continent’s power demand could grow by at least 40 percent in the next ten years, requiring investment of US$861 billion in electricity generation on top of the even higher amount to replace those old transmission systems. The situation is complex and challenging, but one thing is clear: the electricity Europe requires for AI can be fuelled in large part only by natural gas imported from friendly countries.

The AI frenzy may still seem incomprehensible to most Canadians, so it’s important to understand how its applications are spreading through more and more of the economy. Toronto-based Thomson Reuters is a well-known company that provides data and information to professionals across three main industries: legal, tax & accounting, and news & media. A recent Globe and Mail article about Thomson Reuters’ journey from reticence to embrace of the AI world provides helpful perspective. After spending a year of assessment, management concluded that AI was key to the company’s future. Thomson Reuters pledged to spend US$100 million annually to develop its AI capacity. Knowing that this is the cost for just one medium-sized Canadian company puts into perspective the potential scale of AI’s electricity-hungry global growth.

More juice needed: As many more companies – like Toronto-based information conglomerate Thomson Reuters – come to understand the need to embrace AI technology, the global appetite for electricity will continue to grow, demand that will only increase with the further advancement of cryptocurrencies and electric vehicles. (Sources of photos: (left) The Canadian Press/Lars Hagberg; (right) Shutterstock)

Almost forgotten in the electricity-devouring list are cryptocurrencies. In 2020-21 Bitcoin “mining” (the data centres that compete to solve the encrypted blockchains as quickly as possible) consumed more electricity than the 230 million people of Pakistan. Meeting the tech sector’s voracious and – if the growth forecasts are accurate – essentially insatiable demand for electricity will be challenging enough, but there’s another major source of electricity demand growth: electric vehicles (EVs). An International Energy Agency report estimates that EV power needs in the U.S. and Europe will rise from less than 1 percent of electricity demand today to 14 percent in 2030 if electric vehicle mandates are to be met. This C2C article examines the specific implications for Canada.

Who could have imagined that these celebrated new technologies – billed as clean, green and “sustainable” – would end up being the biggest drivers of fossil fuel growth! With our incredible endowment of accessible natural resources, our nation should seize this enormous natural gas export opportunity by getting rid of the bureaucratic time-consuming processes and other roadblocks that have so long discouraged getting new LNG export terminals built and operating.

Gwyn Morgan is a retired business leader who was a director of five global corporations.

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Artificial Intelligence

Everyone is freaking out over DeepSeek. Here’s why

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From The Deep View

$600 billion collapse

Volatility is kind of a given when it comes to Wall Street’s tech sector. It doesn’t take much to send things soaring; it likewise doesn’t take much to set off a downward spiral.
After months of soaring, Monday marked the possible beginning of a spiral, and a Chinese company seems to be at the center of it.
Alright, what’s going on: A week ago, Chinese tech firm DeepSeek launched R1, a so-called reasoning model, that, according to DeepSeek, has reached technical parity with OpenAI’s o1 across a few benchmarks. But, unlike its American competition, DeepSeek open-sourced R1 under an MIT license, making it significantly cheaper and more accessible than any of the closed models coming from U.S. tech giants.
  • But the real punchline here doesn’t have to do with R1 at all, but with a previous language model — called V3 — that DeepSeek released in December. DeepSeek was reportedly able to train V3 using a small collection of older Nvidia chips (about 2,000 H800s) at a cost of about $5.6 million.
  • Still, training is only one cost of many tied to AI development/deployment; while the costs associated with researching, developing, training and operating both R1 and V3 remain either unknown or unconfirmed, DeepSeek’s apparent ability to reach technical parity at a far reduced cost, without state-of-the-art GPU chips or massive GPU clusters, has a lot of implications for America’s now tenuous position in AI leadership. (Though DeepSeek says it is open-sourced, the company did not release its training data).
Since the release of R1, DeepSeek has become the top free app in Apple’s App Store, bumping ChatGPT to the number two slot. In the midst of its spiking popularity, DeepSeek restricted new sign-ups due to large-scale cyberattacks against its servers. And, as Salesforce Chief Marc Benioff noted, “no Nvidia supercomputers or $100M needed,” a point that the market heard loud and clear. 
What happened: Led by Nvidia, a series of tech and chip stocks, in addition to the three major stock indices, fell hard in pre-market trading early Monday morning. All told, $1.1 trillion of U.S. market cap was erased within a half hour of the opening bell.
  • Performance didn’t get better throughout the day. Nvidia closed Monday down 17%, erasing some $600 billion in market capitalization, a Wall Street record. TSMC was down 14%, Arm was down 11%, Broadcom was down 17%, Google was down 4% and Microsoft was down 2%. The S&P fell 1.4% and the Nasdaq fell 3.3%. An Nvidia spokesperson called R1 an “excellent AI advancement.”
  • This is all going into a week of Big Tech earnings, where Microsoft and Meta will be held to account for the billions of dollars ($80 billion and $65 billion, respectively) they plan to spend on AI infrastructure in 2025, a cost that Wall Street no longer seems to feel quite so good about.
It’s hard to miss the political tensions underlying all of this. The tail end of former President Joe Biden’s time in office was marked in part by an increasingly tense trade war with China, wherein both countries issued bans on the export of materials needed to build advanced AI chips. And with President Trump hell-bent on maintaining American leadership in AI, and despite the chip restrictions that are in place, Chinese companies seem to be turning hardware challenges into a motivation for innovation that challenges the American lead, something they seem keen to drive home.
R1, for instance, was announced at around the same time as OpenAI’s $500 billion Project Stargate, two impactfully divergent approaches.
What’s happening here is that the market has finally come around to the idea that maybe the cost of AI development (hundreds of billions of dollars annually) is too high, a recognition “that the winners in AI will be the most innovative companies, not just those with the most GPUs,” according to Writer CTA Waseem Alshikh. “Brute-forcing AI with GPUs is no longer a viable strategy.”
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, however, thinks this is just a good time to buy into Nvidia — Nvidia and the rest are building infrastructure that, he argues, China will not be able to compete with in the long run. “Launching a competitive LLM model for consumer use cases is one thing,” Ives wrote. “Launching broader AI infrastructure is a whole other ballgame.”
“I view cost reduction as a good thing. I’m of the belief that if you’re freeing up compute capacity, it likely gets absorbed — we’re going to need innovations like this,” Bernstein semiconductor analyst Stacy Rasgon told Yahoo Finance. “I understand why all the panic is going on. I don’t think DeepSeek is doomsday for AI infrastructure.”
Somewhat relatedly, Perplexity has already added DeepSeek’s R1 model to its AI search engine. And DeepSeek on Monday launched another model, one capable of competitive image generation.
Last week, I said that R1 should be enough to make OpenAI a little nervous. This anxiety spread way quicker than I anticipated; DeepSeek spent Monday dominating headlines at every publication I came across, setting off a debate and panic that has spread far beyond the tech and AI community.
Some are concerned about the national security implications of China’s AI capabilities. Some are concerned about the AI trade. Granted, there are more unknowns here than knowns; we do not know the details of DeepSeek’s costs or technical setup (and the costs are likely way higher than they seem). But this does read like a turning point in the AI race.
In January, we talked about reversion to the mean. Right now, it’s too early to tell how long-term the market impacts of DeepSeek will be. But, if Nvidia and the rest fall hard and stay down — or drop lower — through earnings season, one might argue that the bubble has begun to burst. As a part of this, watch model pricing closely; OpenAI may well be forced to bring down the costs of its models to remain competitive.
At the very least, DeepSeek appears to be evidence that scaling is one, not a law, and two, not the only (or best) way to develop more advanced AI models, something that rains heavily on OpenAI and co.’s parade since it runs contrary to everything OpenAI’s been saying for months. Funnily, it actually seems like good news for the science of AI, possibly lighting a path toward systems that are less resource-intensive (which is much needed!)
It’s yet another example of the science and the business of AI not being on the same page.
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Artificial Intelligence

World Economic Forum pushes digital globalism that would merge the ‘online and offline’

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From LifeSiteNews

By Frank Wright

If we do not limit the freedom of reach of AI now, we will have neither liberty nor security. The digital world is already here. Who will watch whom, and according to whose rules? With the World Economic Forum, you get policed by liberal extremists.

The real-world influence of the World Economic Forum (WEF) is certainly waning – which may explain a fresh report of its push towards digital globalism.

A white paper published by the WEF last November is a roadmap for a transition from the real to the virtual world. This transition is not only about methods of governing, of course.

It means the mass migration of humanity into a virtual world.

As the document says, the World Economic Forum is calling for “global collaboration” to “redefine the norms” of a future digital state, which it calls “the metaverse.”

Merging online and offline

Titled “Shared Commitments in a Blended Reality: Advancing Governance in the Future Internet,” this agenda presumes a borderless reality for humans in which “online and offline” are merged.

As usual, there is a disturbing method in the diabolical madness of the WEF. Saying that the required technology has already arrived, it urges “aligning global standards and policies of internet governance” to moderate our increasingly digital lives.

Yet this is not about policing online speech. It is about ruling the new “blended reality.”

Mentioning mobile phones, virtual reality and the refinement of artificial intelligence in predicting and reproducing human activity, the WEF report states: “These technologies are blurring the line between online and offline lives, creating new challenges and opportunities … that require a coordinated approach from stakeholders for effective governance.”

Stakes and their holders

Yet the people holding the stakes in this online and offline game of life are not only globalists like Schwab and Soros. The vampire hunters of populism are all strong critics of globalism – the replacement of all nation states with a single world government.

It would seem that the WEF’s dream of digital globalism may be terminally interrupted by the new software running through the machinery of power.

Yet digital globalism is not the only game in town.

Amidst the welcome relief and tremendous hope sparked in the West by Trump’s “Common Sense Revolution,” there is a devil in the details of the death of the liberal order.

The algorithm of power is not going anywhere. It is here, now, and it is simply a question of how far it goes.

Digital globalism, or national digitalism?

Digital globalism may simply be swapped for national digitalism – government by algorithm in one country. Its values are not liberal, which is a change. Yet neither are the values of China, where a form of digitalism has been long established.

It is worthwhile taking a look at the community whose guidelines may rule your “online and offline” life in the absence of those of the globalists.

Here is an announcement from one globalist “datagarch,” Oracle’s Larry Ellison, one of the billionaires whose monopoly of your data enriched their lives at the expense of the capture of yours. Ellison says “citizens will be on their best behavior” with an all-pervasive AI surveillance system. 

 

Oracle’s founder CEO has said a government powered by AI could make everyone safer – because everyone would be under permanent surveillance. Comforting, isn’t it?

Ellison was named after his place of arrival in the U.S. – Ellis Island. In 2017 he donated $16 million to the Israeli army, calling Israel “our home.”

Wikipedia states, “As of January 20, 2025, he is the fourth-wealthiest person in the world, according to Bloomberg Billionaires Index, with an estimated net worth of US$188 billion, and the second wealthiest in the world according to Forbes, with an estimated net worth of $237 billion.”

In 2021, he offered Benjamin Netanyahu a “lucrative position on the board of Oracle.” That seems to partly help understand why Netanyahu, with such friends in very high places, has such an extraordinary influence on almost every single member of the U.S. Congress and Senate.

Ellison’s Oracle was named after a database he created for the CIA, in his first major programming project. In fact, “the CIA made Larry Ellison a billionaire,” as Business Insider reported.

What kind of values inspire his vision of digital governance? His biography supplies one answer:

“Ellison says that his fondness for Israel is not connected to religious sentiments but rather due to the innovative spirit of Israelis in the technology sector.”

Israel has a massive, lucrative, military-industrial complex and related software industry as revealed in “The Palestine Laboratory: How Israel exported its occupation to the world“ by Antony Loewenstein, one of many Israeli Jews who have become highly critical of the surveillance industry.

Israel’s “innovation” includes the use of predictive AI to identify, target and kill people, and systems like Pegasus – which can enter literally any phone or computer undetected and read everything. It is an astonishingly powerful program that sells for a high price and earns Israel a lot of income.

The company which makes the “no click spyware” Pegasus is called NSO. This Israeli company was sanctioned by the U.S. in 2021 to prevent its undetectable intrusion into phones and computers being used on Americans by any company, or agency, which buys it.

On January 10, an Israeli report said that Donald Trump’s Gaza ceasefire deal could see these sanctions lifted.

Do you buy the idea that this will make you safe? Do you think AI will be effective? Ellison thinks so. He says AI can produce “new mRNA vaccines in 48 hours to cure cancer.”

Do you want to live in his world? 

Buyer beware

Buyer – beware. The algorithm of digital power is here, and it is powered by data mined from your life.

People like Oracle’s Ellison, Palantir’s Alex Karp, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, and Google’s Larry Page and Sergey Brin are all data miners. So is X’s Elon Musk – who is the only one of the data oligarchs warning you that AI needs to be controlled by humans – and not the other way around.

 

Two forms of digital tyranny

So what are the dangers? Under the “metaverse” proposed by the WEF, your life can be partnered with a “digital twin.”

This is the symbiotic merger of human with machine presented as the vision of our future by Klaus Schwab and the digital globalists.

Of course, your online life can be suspended or even ended if you violate the community guidelines. These rules are not written by people who agree with you.

Some people you may agree with are proposing quite the reverse. Under the algorithm of the “national digigarchy” – you will be watched, recorded, filed, and assessed for the potential commission of future crimes. You will be free to say what you like online, but depending on what you say, maybe only the algorithm will see you.

And what it sees it will never forget.

Limiting the reach of AI

If we do not limit the freedom of reach of artificial intelligence now, we will have neither liberty nor security.

The digital world is already here. Who will watch whom, and according to whose rules? With the World Economic Forum, you get policed by liberal extremists. You will be free to agree with Net Zero, degeneracy, denationalization, and a diet of meat-like treats supplied to the wipe-clean mausoleum in which you will cleanly and efficiently live.

Yet the alternative emerging also says that the rule of machines will make everything safe and effective.

Safe and effective AI?

Alex Karp sells his all-seeing Palantir as the only guarantee of public safety. He also says your secrets are safe with him – because he is “a deviant” who might like to take drugs or have an affair.

After years of crisis manufactured by policy, and with the West sick of liberal insanity, this moment of tremendous relief contains a serious threat. More people than ever have the number of the globalists, and it is not a number most faithful Christians would want to call.

People generally have seen what the WEF is selling, and they are not buying it. The danger presented by the likes of Schwab is now out in the open, shouting the quiet part out loud.

As liberal-globalist bureaucracies like these become more isolated in the Trump Revolution, they will fight for their lives. In doing so, they are displaying their true intentions. This is the only thing they can do to survive.

Everyone will see what is really on offer, few will want this devil’s bargain, and so the business model will go bust.

Yet this is not the only dangerous game being played with your life.

Beware the specter at the feast

The data miners whose programs refine the algorithm of power are selling you a new digital reality. They are telling you that it will make you safe – because everyone will be watched, forever, by machines which have no values and no heart at all, whether liberal or otherwise.

If we are not watching out, no one will notice that the new algorithm of digital power has simply been limited to the West.

In Shakespeare’s play it was the guilty man, Macbeth, who saw the specter at the feast he held for his coronation.

The ghost in the machine is not dead. The danger is that the innocent may not see it or may foolishly not want to see it. Yet it sees you. This is the algorithm of power, and for now – but not for long – we still have the power to say who it watches – and where.

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