Today’s Solutions: November 17, 2024

Transportation

From autonomous EVs to electric planes, from hydrogen trains to biofuel transportation, check out the most recent developments on how we’re moving transportation towards a more sustainable future in the good news section below.

Volvo to electrify its entire

Volvo to electrify its entire fleet, will release battery-electric vehicle in 2019

Gas is nice and cheap right now, but it's not going to stay that way forever. That's why, despite the continuation of strong truck and SUV sales, automakers are still working to add electricity into the mix. Volvo's just announced a very ambitious goal of selling one million electrified cars by Read More...

Best electric cars 2016

Best electric cars 2016

Love them or loathe them, the electric car is a hot topic in the motor industry. Manufacturers are investing heavily in the technology and most major car-makers now have a model on sale or one in the pipeline. Governments are equally keen for electric cars to become a legitimate choice for Read More...

Honda creates Clarity line of

Honda creates Clarity line of hydrogen fuel cell cars

Honda will launch three cars over the next three years under its Clarity nameplate, potentially turning the automaker's fledgling Clarity badge into family of vehicles that could become a symbol of Honda's environmental aspirations. The first car will be the Honda Clarity Fuel Cell. It will go on Read More...

How autonomous cars are drivin

How autonomous cars are driving the city of the future

The idea of self-driving cars is plastered across the media. But a lot of the talk is about a futuristic, Jetson-style approach at a fairly superficial level. Some pieces go deeper, but there’s a dearth of investigation on the subject. And it’s becoming reality faster than anyone Read More...

The Netherlands moves to ban s

The Netherlands moves to ban sale of fossil fueled cars by 2025

The Dutch parliament has adopted a motion to ban non-clean car sales by 2025. It stipulates that the sale of new cars on diesel or gasoline would be banned from 2025 onward, while existing fossil fuel cars would still be allowed. The motion still has to pass the Read More...

Self-driving car completes 1,2

Self-driving car completes 1,200-mile roadtrip across China

Chongqing Changan Automobile Co., Ford Motor Co.’s partner in China, said it completed a 1,200-mile road trip to test a self-driving car as part of its ambitions to produce highly automated vehicles by 2020. The car set off from the company’s headquarters in Chongqing and reached Read More...

Global electric car sales on t

Global electric car sales on the rise

After four years of steady growth, U.S. plug-in electric car sales were essentially flat last year. Low gas prices and increased demand for SUVs had a dampening effect on the segment, which still accounts for a very small fraction of U.S. new-car sales. However, in other parts of the world, it was Read More...

Will the Tesla Model 3 be the

Will the Tesla Model 3 be the first truly self-driving car?

On the evening of March 31st, Elon Musk unveiled Tesla’s sinuous Model 3, the company’s first “affordable” electric-car model. After touting the sedan’s punchy acceleration, two-hundred-and-fifteen-mile battery range, and sweeping, seamless glass roof, he mentioned its Read More...

What it really takes to drive

What it really takes to drive an electric car revolution

Last week, I explained a dismaying reality for planet-savers everywhere: Not even mega-blowout sales for Tesla’s new Model 3 sedan are enough to substantially green and decarbonize our global transportation system. There are simply too many cars on the road and too many new Read More...

Ford’s self-driving car

Ford's self-driving car works in total darkness

Headlights are for humans. Ford is testing self-driving cars that can "see" the road in total darkness. Watch CNET Update below to learn how it works. And if you're looking for robots to do other work for you, check out the Deebot D79 vacuum. It can empty its own dirt bin -- but there's a catch: Read More...