The curious case of low-protein diets
Comments
๐บ๐ธ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ยท "CURIOUS" ยท ์ด 15๊ฑด
ํํฐ ๋ณด๊ธฐํ์ฌ ์ง์
50.0
0 = ๋ถ์ ์ฐ์ธ
50 = ์ค๋ฆฝ
100 = ๊ธ์ ์ฐ์ธ
์ต๊ทผ 7์ผ ๊ธฐ์ค 10,526๊ฑด์ ๋ถ์ํ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ, ๋ด์ค ์ฌ๋ฆฌ์ง์๋ 50.0(๊ท ํ)์ ๋๋ค. ๊ธ์ 1๊ฑด(0.0%)ยท์ค๋ฆฝ 10,524๊ฑด(100.0%)ยท๋ถ์ 1๊ฑด(0.0%)์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ค๋ฆฝ ๋น์ค์ด ๋๋ ทํ๊ฒ ๋์ต๋๋ค. ์ฑํฅ ์ง์๋ ์ข ํฉ 18.8(์ค๋ ๊ท ํ)์ ๋๋ค.
Comments
Mayor Zohran Mamdani's campaign guru Morris Katz wanted to feature his penis in a "puberty book" for "curious boys" as young as 10-years-old, but decided against it at the behest of his publisher.
Riding the hot hand did not apply to the Spurs in Game 1.
New graduatesโ careers are unfolding in an era when AI is not optional. The most successful engineers treat artificial intelligence as leverage, not competition. Here are seven tips to help keep young professionals in demand no matter how quickly the fieldโs tools evolve. 1. Master the fundamentals first. AI tools can help you code, but you still need strong fundamentals in: Data structures and algorithms for problem-solving. Operating systems, databases, and networking for system-level understanding. Core programming languages such as C++, Java, and Python. AI can autocomplete syntax, but if you donโt understand how things work under the hood, youโre likely to struggle to debug or optimize. 2. Learn how to work with AI, not against it. The best engineers will not try to out-code AI. Instead, they will learn to: Write clear prompts to generate better code snippets. Review and debug AI-generated code for accuracy, performance, and security. Use AI for productivity boosts while still exercising judgment. Think of AI as a teammate. The real skill is knowing when to trust it and when not to. 3. Build projects that showcase end-to-end thinking. Employers increasingly look for engineers who can design and build systems, not just solve problems. Create projects that show you can: Define requirements clearly. Use AI tools responsibly within the workflow. Deliver a product that scales and is maintainable. 4. Sharpen your system design skills early. Even junior engineers are now asked questions about basic system design with AI. Expect to explain to prospective employers: How you would responsibly integrate AI into a system. How to design fallbacks when AI fails. How to ensure scalability and reliability. 5. Develop strong communication skills. Todayโs engineers donโt just code in isolation. You will be expected to: Explain design choices to teammates and stakeholders. Document decisions clearly. Collaborate effectively in cross-functional teams. This is one area where AI cannot replace you. Clear communication is a career accelerant. 6. Stay curious and keep learning. The tech industry moves fast, and AI is accelerating that pace. Cultivate habits such as: Following industry news, blogs, and open-source projects. Experimenting with new AI tools, frameworks, and libraries. Engaging in communities such as GitHub, IEEE Collabratec, LinkedIn, and Medium. Employers value engineers who keep themselves sharp and relevant. 7. Think beyond coding. AI will increasingly handle routine coding tasks. The differentiators for you will be: Problem-framing: Can you take a vague idea and turn it into a solution? Architectural judgment: Can you design systems that scale and last? Ethical awareness: Can you spot risks in AI use and address them responsibly? For more career advice, subscribe to the IEEE Spectrum Career Alert Newsletter. The biweekly newsletter features the latest information on jobs, education, management, and the engineering workplace.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services administrator speculated that the president was โcuriousโ about the state of his health.
Rhea Ripley retains the WWE Women's Championship at Clash in Italy, defeating Jade Cargill with help from a surprise Charlotte Flair appearance.
The teamโs playoff run has brought a curious sense of amity to the city.
Olivia Ponton is launching a new era for her book podcast โ and as part of that, the influencer and model is looking to recast the blonde stereotype to show that someone can be both obsessed with fashion and beauty as well as intellectually curious. Ponton is renaming the show from โBooked & Busyโ to [โฆ]
"It's a Jackie Robinson moment." That declaration by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries struck a curious chord because Jeffries was calling for Black athletes to boycott SEC conference teams to protest not the existence but the elimination of racial discrimination.
In case you didnโt notice, the Antichrist is back. All right, forgive the hyperbole โ this biblical agent of Satan hasnโt actually returned to lead a rebellion against God before Christโs second coming. But in the year of our Lord 2026, a curious surge in chatter about this herald of the apocalypse seems to be [โฆ]
Becky Schmitt, the chief people officer of PepsiCo, says the legacy brand is still looking for old-school skills even as it shifts gears in the current AI transformation.
Can a conference purporting to be a place for โcurious seekers,โ who want to โstretch [their] minds,โ stand any actual intellectual diversity? If the latest lineup at the Aspen Ideas festival is anything to go by, NPR libs arenโt budging any of the stereotypes about their political close-mindedness. Of the speakers listed so far for ...
Last week's indictment of Raul Castro and five Cuban pilots for the 1996 killing of four Americans flying humanitarian missions near Cuba had a curious footnote: One of the pilots is already in the U.S.
A decision to stave off litigation between Fox and FIFA turned into a bonanza worth hundreds of millions of dollars in discounted World Cup rights to the broadcaster.
โWhy are you here?โ Fabrizio Pilo, an electrical engineer, asks me as we sit in an outdoor cafรฉ near his home in Cagliari, an ancient city on the island of Sardinia. Itโs a fair question. Iโm a journalist from the United States. Iโd just stepped off my flight 2 hours prior and come straight to this meeting, suitcase still stowed in my rental car. Iโm here to see three intriguing new energy projects under development in Sardinia. Iโd heard thereโs strong public resistance to renewable energy, and I want to understand why that is. I tell Pilo, who is vice rector for innovation at the University of Cagliari, that I hope heโll share some insights before I head out on a reporting trip across the island. (My answer seems to satisfy him, and he kindly gives me an hour of his time). This wonโt be the first time that Iโm asked to explain my presence on the island. Iโd expected it, to some extent; Iโm a foreign journalist poking around, after all. What I didnโt expect was the depth of Sardiniansโ distrust, not just of journalists, but of any outsider, particularly ones with authority. Over the last few years, developers of wind and solar projects, most of whom arenโt from here, have been absorbing the bulk of this smoldering, communal wariness. Activists Maria Grazia Demontis [left] and Alberto Sala, photographed inside the archaeological monument Giantsโ Tomb of Pascarรฉdda, have worked to stop the construction of wind farms by organizing protests and taking legal actions through their organization Gallura Coordination. Luigi Avantaggiato In fact, the resistance is so widespread among Sardinians that over the course of two months in 2024, a grassroots petition to ban new wind and solar projects gathered over 210,000 certified signatures. Thatโs more than a quarter of Sardiniaโs typical voter turnout and represents a cross-party consensus. People stood in long lines in public squares to sign. And it worked: Political leaders responded swiftly with an 18-month moratorium on renewable energy construction. โIโve never seen so much engagement for anythingโ in Sardinia, says Elisa Sotgiu, a literary sociologist at the University of Oxford, who was born and raised on the island. โSardinia has a bunch of problems like enormous unemployment. Thereโs lots of emigration because there are no jobs. Itโs one of the poorest areas in Europe. The area is just decaying,โ she says. โAnd yet the thing people are demonstrating against is renewable energy.โ And the opposition continues: A network of mayors has mobilized for the cause. Thousands of people show up at organized protests. Activists vandalize grid equipment. Families are passing down these stories of resistance to their children as a point of pride. Local media outlets are egging it on, frequently publishing misinformation tinged with fearmongering. These arenโt just NIMBY complaintsโnot in the pejorative sense, at least. The resistance, and the distrust underlying it, is rooted in the islandโs complex history, both recent and ancient. Itโs based on a past that the Sardinian people carry with themโa past that has seeded a deep sense of suspicion and vulnerability. Resistance, I learn, is part of what it means to be Sardinian. Fabrizio Giulio Luca Pilo, vice rector of innovation at the University of Cagliari, has been working to help Sardinia transition to cleaner, more reliable energy. Luigi Avantaggiato โIt is a very sad situation,โ Pilo tells me. โThere are a lot of economic reasons to do the [energy] transition.โ It could attract new companies such as data centers, which would create new jobs, he argues. It could reduce Sardiniaโs reliance on imported gas and fuel, making the island more independent. New economic activity on the island might help reverse its population decline, he adds. And while whatโs happening on Sardinia is unique, it also represents a larger trend: A growing number of communities around the world are opposing wind- and solar-farm construction, to the consternation of stakeholders. By 2025, nearly one-fourth of the counties in the United States had enacted some impediment to new utility-scale wind and solar energyโup from as few as 15 percent two years earlier, according to a USA Today analysis. In Africa, community pushback successfully canceled major projects such as the 60-megawatt Kinangop Wind Park in Kenya. In India, local pastoralists are challenging the 13-gigawatt Ladakh solar and wind project. And the European Unionโs top-down push for renewable energy has created opposition in many communities. Their reasons varyโland-use preferences, generational ethos, government resentment, property values, economic effects, aestheticsโbut all of these struggles have this in common: The resisters are passionate and they are often successful in blocking development. This is a looming problem for the energy transition. Unlike large, centralized coal and nuclear power plants, renewable energy is geographically spread out, so it touches far more communities. Sardinia offers one of the clearest cases of what can go wrong when renewable-energy developers and authorities fail to consider the complexities of the local situation on the ground. Why is Sardinia resisting renewable energy? Roughly the size of New Hampshire, Sardinia juts out of the Mediterranean Sea about 200 kilometers west of Italyโs mainland. Technically itโs part of Italy, but Sardinians are quick to point out their islandโs autonomous statusโa subtle way of saying, โWe do things our way.โ Its mountains seem to echo the sentiment. With the highest peaks running in a chain along the east side of the island, Sardinia resolutely turns its back to the mainland. At first glance, the island looks like the kind of place thatโs ripe for an energy transition. Its two coal plants are aging and are targeted to be shut down to meet climate commitments. It has no nuclear power, nor does it produce its own natural gas. Wind and sun, however, are abundant and could easily meet the energy needs of Sardiniaโs sparse population of about 1.5 million. But while the resources may be ready for a transition, the people emphatically are not. When I first arrive in Sardinia and take in its beauty, I assume that the impetus behind the fight against wind and solar farms boils down to how they look. Waves of silicon, metal, and concrete would spoil views of Sardiniaโs stunning beaches, rugged mountains, ancient pastures, and idyllic medieval villages, after all. Residents of the city of Orgosolo in 1969 famously stopped the construction of a military firing range on communal grazing land known as Pratobello. Its village walls are still covered in murals advocating social protest and antiauthoritarianism. Luigi Avantaggiato But the islandโs aestheticโand the tourism industry that depends on itโare only part of the equation. The far stronger cultural forces at play are rooted in Sardiniaโs past. Over millennia, the island has endured successive invasions from outsiders seeking to exploit the land. These incursions, and Sardiniansโ rebellious responses to them, have become an integral part of the islandโs identity passed down through generations. The invasions started with the relatively peaceful settlement of the Phoenicians in the 9th and 8th centuries B.C.E. Then came the Romans, the Byzantines, and the Iberians, who conquered with violence, looting, and enslavement. But legend has it that despite the might of these ancient conquerors, pockets of Sardinia sometimes managed to defend themselves. โNot even the Roman empire could conquer the shepherds of the highland regions,โ is the oft-repeated tale. Whether thatโs true or just an idealization is beside the point; such stories serve as an enormous source of pride and identity. Sardinia exported about 30 percent of the electricity it generated in 2025, largely to Corsica and the Italian mainland via two existing submarine cables. The island is โfiercely proud of its identityโฆespecially in the center of Sardinia, which was the most resistant part,โ says Andrea Vargiu, a sociologist at the University of Sassari in Sardinia. โThis long history of exploitation is still in our DNA, along with a proud sense of autonomy,โ he says. Sardiniaโs unification, in the mid-1800s, with what would become the Kingdom of Italy is seen by many as an act of colonization. It didnโt help that Italy then proceeded to exploit Sardiniaโs forests and other resources for the benefit of the mainlandโa practice that continued through the 20th century, says Vargiu. Sardinian bandits sometimes fought back with their own sense of justice, settling matters through raids, kidnappings, and violence. Their stories live on in Sardinian lore with an almost mythical quality, the brigands admired for their intractability. Pasquale Mereu, mayor of Orgosolo, helped organize the Pratobello 24 movement against renewable energy in Sardinia. Luigi Avantaggiato Italyโs use of the island for military purposes particularly irked locals. In a famous case in 1969, residents of the town of Orgosolo successfully thwarted the construction of a firing range on communal grazing land known as Pratobello. That name has since become synonymous with the defense of oneโs territory, and a rallying cry. โSardinia has always been a land of conquest,โ says Pasquale Mereu, mayor of Orgosolo, who spoke with IEEE Spectrum through an interpreter. โWe believe that even today we are still a colony of Italy, and Iโm not ashamed to say it even though I represent an institution.โ A longstanding mural on one of his villageโs walls reads: โYou are in the territory of Orgosolo; here the people rule supreme and the government obeys.โ Sardiniaโs History Shapes its Identity Driving around the island and talking to people, I can feel the weight of Sardiniaโs historyโand peopleโs propensity for holding onto it. Elaborate heritage festivals occur nearly every autumn weekend in the islandโs interior. Theyโre well attended, multigenerational affairs that aim to keep old traditions alive. In the medieval town of Belvรฌ, men roast chestnutsโmarroniโover an open fire in a frying pan the size of a swimming pool and then serve them to the crowd by shoveling them into troughs. Theyโre delicious. In an adjacent amphitheater, the crowd sways along to costumed performers leading traditional dances. Then there are the Bronze Age stone structures, called nuraghi, that are pretty much everywhere. Built before the violent conquests, these conical towers have come to symbolize a romanticized vision of the heyday of Sardiniaโs independence. More than 7,000 of them remain, ranging from unremarkable piles of rocks to complex towers, each one carefully documented on an interactive online map. I visit one of the more intact ones thatโs fenced off and requires an admission fee. As I take some video with my phone, an employee asks me who I am and what Iโm doing and informs me Iโll need to get permission from the government before posting anything online. This rock hollowed out by erosion and walled up with stones was likely used by shepherds as a shelter near the historic Sardinian village of Tempio Pausania. Luigi Avantaggiato But in interviews with residents, Iโm continually reminded of the darker side of Sardiniaโs past. People often bring up painful things that happened 50 or 500 years ago. A middle school science teacher named Giannina Serpi, and her husband, Roberto Moro, meet me at a cafรฉ in the seaside town of SantโAntioco. When I ask why people are so opposed to renewable energy, they (like many people I interviewed) point to the 1970s. Sheep return from pasture in Bonorva, Sardinia, near the Bonorva wind farm operated by EDF Renewables. Luigi Avantaggiato That decade brought a new kind of exploitation: not by empires or governments, but by technology companies. Petrochemical, aluminum, and other industrial companies from overseas built factories on the island, creating jobs and adjacent businesses. But after a few decades, economic and geopolitical factors led the companies to close the factories, sinking local economies and in some cases leaving behind toxic contamination. In the northern city of Porto Torres, several petrochemical plants, a thermoelectric power plant, and an industrial harbor employed about 8,000 workers in the early 1970s. But the oil crises of that decade took its toll on jobs, and when environmental contamination became evident in the 1990s, employment plunged further. By 2010, most of the petrochemical plants had closed. Studies show that residents of Porto Torres during that time had curiously high rates of death from cancer, although there is no consensus on the cause. Similarly, studies have found higher rates of lead in children in the Portovesme area in the southwest, about a 20-minute drive from where I sit with Serpi and Moro in SantโAntioco. There, the U.S. aluminum producer Alcoa operated a smelter that employed about 500 people and supported an estimated 1,500 adjacent jobs. But the company shut down the smelter in 2012. Three years earlier, Russian aluminum manufacturer Rusal had idled its Eurallumina factory nearby. The impacts of these events still feel fresh, Serpi explains through a digital translator. She says she teaches this history to her students but doesnโt tell them how to feel about it. โI let them decide,โ she says. Energy Colonialism in Sardinia Against this backdrop, renewable-energy developers in the early 2010s began sizing up Sardinia. They were drawn by the cheap land, low population, strong wind, and sun that shines an average of about 300 days a year. EF Solare Italia commissioned an 11-MW solar plant in 2010. Rome-based Enel Green Power began construction of a 90-MW wind farm in Portoscuso the following year. Other developers followed, and they mostly came from elsewhereโmainland Italy, Europe, and later, China. The way many Sardinians saw it, the new plants didnโt bring many long-lasting jobs. Most of the work ended after the design and installation phases, and profits went back to the companiesโ headquarters outside of Sardinia, they argued. People called it โenergy colonialismโ and lauded landowners who refused to sell or lease their property to developers. Pink granite called Ghiandone Limbara was extracted from the Sinnada quarry in northern Sardinia from the late 1970s to 2011. Luigi Avantaggiato The uncle of Oxfordโs Sotgiu is one of those landowners. She says that a couple of years ago a solar company asked him if he would allow the installation of an array on his family farm in Logudoro in Sardiniaโs interior. โFrom that, he would have gotten something around โฌ150,000 a year, which is more money than heโs seen in his life,โ says Sotgiu. The money could have covered his three kidsโ college education, she says. โBut he refused.โ He had many reasons. For one, switching from sheep grazing to the more passive business of leasing land would have put the fate of his income in the hands of an outsider. โIf you deprive a region of any sort of economy that is self-reliant, then itโs really fragile,โ says Sotgiu. Her uncle didnโt trust that the income would last, and worried heโd be left with a ruined farm, she says. Plus, his farm has been in the family for generations and one of his sons is interested in continuing the business. โSo I understand his pride in saying, โNo, this is my farm, I donโt care about the money,โโ she says. Sardinia has one of the largest carbon footprints per capita in Europe. Despite that kind of grassroots resistance, development continued. In 2023, the Italian government authorized the construction of a 1-GW submarine power cable to connect Sardinia to Sicily and the Italian mainland. When completed, the bidirectional cable, called the Tyrrhenian Link, will increase electricity exchange between the regions, bolster grid reliability, and help grid operators efficiently use more renewable energy. Sardinian activists, however, view the cable as a way to justify even more construction of wind and solar plants, and to export the islandโs energy for the benefit of non-Sardinians. The island already exports about 30 percent of its electricity, largely to Corsica and the Italian mainland via two existing submarine cables. The Florinas wind farm, commissioned in 2004, was one of the earliest wind farms built in Sardinia. Luigi Avantaggiato And then came the tipping point. In June 2024, in an effort to meet the European Unionโs 2030 renewable energy targets, Italy committed to building more than 80 GW of new wind and solar energy capacity over December 2020 levels. The national government divvied up the burden among its regions and told Sardinia to build its portion, 6.2 GW. The move triggered an onslaught of requests from wind and solar developers wanting to build projects in Sardinia. The queue at one point topped 50 GW of grid-connection requests. That represented more than 700 solar and wind projects, many of which came from companies outside of Sardinia. The southern newspaper LโUnione Sarda ran wild with the numbers. Almost daily, for months, it published stories about the โwind assault.โ The call-to-arms posts urged people to protest. โThe Attack on the Landscape Does Not Stop; The Threat From Agrivoltaics Is Growing,โ read a July 2024 headline. Unsubstantiated articles tried to link wind and solar developers to organized crime. โIt was scaremongering,โ says Sotgiu. โIt was a little dishonest, as I saw it, because they kept exaggerating and scaring people into thinking that we were going to be invaded.โ (Representatives of the newspaper declined to comment.) The numbers did scare people. Lost was the fact that a grid-connection request is just the start of a multiyear process that involves permitting and legal review and often ends in withdrawn or downsized projects. Submitting a request is inexpensive, and developers often cast a wide net by entering lots of these queues globally to increase the odds of being accepted. In the end, only a fraction come to fruition. In other words, building all, or even most, of the requested 50 GW was never going to happen. โI tried to explain thisโ to the public, says an industrial engineer at the University of Cagliari, in Sardinia, who asked to remain anonymous to avoid any detrimental impacts of speaking out. โI went to the regional television station. But itโs difficult with technical information. And the newspaper communication is so bad, and its impact is so strong in the community, that itโs very difficult to change peopleโs minds,โ he says. Pratobello 2024 and Anti-Wind Protests And so the collective angst caused by powerful outsiders, industry, and the state united Sardinians into a singular cause. Faced with what felt like another attempted conquest, they did what their families and community had taught them to do: They resisted. Says Mereu: โThis is what we are rebelling against: the idea that Sardinians are few and therefore must put up with everything.โ In a nod to the 1969 resistance in Orgosolo, they dubbed the movement โPratobello 2024.โ Activist groups, called โcommittees,โ organized protests, and created social media campaigns and videos. Thousands of people started showing up at planned demonstrations. A lawyer went on a hunger strike. Vandals unscrewed bolts on wind turbine blades and set fire to grid and construction equipment. Italyโs transmission system operator, Terna, had to switch to company cars without logos to avoid being targeted. Students studying the electricity system in a masterโs program sponsored by Terna were verbally attacked at an airport, according to a professor at their school who spoke with me about the violence. Celebrities got involved. Italian actress and Bond Girl Caterina Murino met with Sardiniaโs president to ask her to reject wind farms. Murino posted on Instagram: โNobody touch Sardinia!!!!โ On Italian national TV, the jazz legend Paolo Fresu performed on trumpet while popular TV host Geppi Cucciari read an impassioned lament about the exploitation of the island. Sardinian author Erre Push penned a graphic novel titled Fร ula Birdi about a protagonist who resisted an imposition from outsiders. He wrote it upon the request of the activist group ReCommon, whose mission is to โchallenge corporate and state power responsible for the plunder of territories.โ Push hopes the book will inspire more people to follow the protagonistโs lead. โRenewables are another imposition like in the pastโnot to help Sardinians but to help external people like industry managers or founders of companies,โ he told me through an interpreter. Concerned about the influx of solar and wind farms being built in Sardinia by outsiders, Roberto Pusceddu, under his pen name Erre Push, published a graphic novel that aimed to inspire young people to resist such impositions. Luigi Avantaggiato Mereu and a network of mayors drafted the petition that gathered so many signatures. The people had spoken. In response, Sardinian politicians passed a law that imposed an 18-month ban on construction of wind and solar projects within 7 km of a nuraghe or other archeological site. It wasnโt a total ban, but it might as well have been. โIf you put a circle with a 7-km radius around each archeological site, you cover all of Sardinia,โ says Emilio Ghiani, a power systems expert at the University of Cagliari. โIn this way, it is impossible to find a place to install a new plant.โ The move was like giving the Italian governmentโand the EUโs clean energy targetsโthe middle finger. And it sent renewable-energy developers scrambling. One company building an agriphotovoltaic plant raced to bring construction to 30 percent completion, which the new law said was the threshold for being allowed to proceed. The company asked not to be named in this story to avoid trouble. Furious, the government in Rome challenged the Sardinian regional law in Italyโs Constitutional Court, and in January this year it prevailed. In its decision, the court rejected the law, saying that renewable-energy projects should be evaluated case by case. Project development quickly resumed. So did the backlash. A headline in LโUnione Sarda declared: โEnough With Top-Down Decisions Without Consulting Communities.โ Sardiniaโs Renewable Energy Conflict Where the island goes from here is unclear. Thereโs a willingness among a portion of the population to move forward with an energy transition. For example, some of Sardiniaโs largest cheese makers are powering their operations with renewable energy and installing systems to utilize waste heat for efficiency. But for the most part, the public isnโt budging in its resistance. Researchers are trying to dispel inaccurate information, but regional newspapers seem bent on perpetuating fear. Plus, there are technical issues to work out before a full-scale energy transition can be made. Sardiniaโs transmission system was built around the centralized generation of two coal plants; it wasnโt made for the distributed generation of wind and solar plants. Renewables require a more dynamic grid, more energy storage, and a wider range of power sources to compensate for their intermittency. Engineers are working on it, but theyโve got a ways to go. The new Tyrrhenian Link undersea power cable will help with that. By connecting Sardinia, Sicily, and the mainland, the cable creates more flexibility in the system. When wind or solar generation slows in Sardinia, for example, electricity from the mainland can fill in the gap, and vice versa. โIt will increase the reliability of the system, and after itโs installed, it will be possible to switch off the old generation plants that use coal,โ says Ghiani. In January, Terna finished laying the western section of the cable between Sardinia and Sicily, and in April it completed the eastern section between Sicily and Campania on the mainland. Doing so set a world record for power cable depth, at 2,150 meters below sea level, according to Terna. Italy originally ordered Sardiniaโs two coal plants to shut down by 2025 but later extended the deadline to 2038. The link is one of the most innovative high-voltage direct current (HVDC) projects in Europe. It can move up to a gigawatt of power and reverse that power flow nearly instantaneously. By using voltage source converter (VSC) technology, it can also help prevent power-flow problems by regulating frequency and smoothing out oscillations in the grid in real time. And it has black-start capability: In the event of a shutdown, it can help restore the grid without relying on an external electric network. These features are particularly helpful for an isolated network like Sardiniaโs. Italy has created new incentives and regulations to build a market for grid-scale energy storage. Having plenty of storage is a key to scaling up renewables because it provides backup power when the wind isnโt blowing or the sun isnโt shining. To this end, Italy created MACSE, an auction that gives storage developers revenue certainty. Its name translates to mechanism for the procurement of electricity storage capacity. The first auction round, in September, successfully awarded 10 GWh. Energy experts in Sardinia are also working with policymakers to change the rules around grid-connection requests. But these kinds of nerdy details donโt grace most household conversations. Industrial Sites Host Energy Storage Something more accessible that the public can get behind is building renewables on Sardiniaโs abandoned industrial sites. โTo be honest, not everything is so beautiful here. We have a lot of industrial areas where you can place PV panels. We have a lot of rooftops,โ electrical engineer Pilo says. โWe have unused coal mines.โ I visit one such project thatโs proceeding with local supportโor at least without much opposition. Itโs a coal mine near Gonnesa that shut down in 2018 and is now being turned into a data center and a pumped-hydro energy storage system. The plan is to move water through the mineโs vertical geometry via an enclosed membraneโlike a soft pipeโand use the flow to turn a turbine that generates electricity. The water then gets pumped back to the surface and stored in pear-shaped vessels above ground. The scheme will help power the data center, which will be built both above and below ground, including in the mineโs largest chambers nearly 500 meters below the Earthโs surface. Energy Vault will remove old mining equipment from the Carbosulcis coal mine near Gonnesa to make way for an underground data center [above]. It will be powered by a pumped-hydro energy storage system that flows through the mineโs vertical geometry and stores water in above-ground tanks [top].Luigi Avantaggiato Energy storage developer Energy Vault is building it, and despite being based in Lugano, Switzerlandโthat is, not Sardiniaโthe company seems to have avoided protest. It helps that the mine is owned by Carbosulcis, a Sardinian regional-government-owned company, which is calling the shots on the project. Plus, doing nothing with the mine costs money. The mine closed eight years ago because it wasnโt profitable, but Carbosulcis must continue maintaining it because of its high methane emissions, which require monitoring and ventilation to prevent explosions and leaks. Carbosulcis managers figured that if theyโre going to continue putting money and personnel into the mine, they might as well do something useful with it, Luca Manzella, vice president for Europe, Middle East, and Africa at Energy Vault, says as he and I tour the mine. An innovative project in Sardiniaโs interiorโEnergy Domeโs grid-scale carbon dioxide batteryโseems to be avoiding protest as well. Built in a gated industrial complex near Ottana, this energy-storage facility looks like a giant bubbleโthe kind that fits over a stadium or tennis complex. Itโs filled with carbon dioxide that is compressed to store 200 MWh of electricity for the grid. Although the bubble is visible from several of the surrounding hillside villages, and although the developer is headquartered on the mainland, thereโs little sign of public pushback. Energy Dome began operating its 20-megawatt, long-duration energy-storage facility in July 2025 in Ottana, Sardinia. In partnership with Google, the company this year aims to build replicas of the system on multiple continents.Luigi Avantaggiato Another path forward is through โenergy communities.โ In this grassroots approach, consumers work together to build their own solar plant or other power generation. Dozens of these communities are already active on the island, according to the Sardinian Electricity Association, a group that provides guidance to consumers. But by far the greatest need is for energy developers and authorities to understand the people and the history of the land on which they want to build. โWhen Europe or the national government make a law, they have to also consider the background of Sardinian people and why they are so afraid,โ says Simone Micheletti, CEO at Futura Group, a renewable-energy developer based in Serramanna, Sardinia. โYou cannot apply the same law to Sweden and Sicily. Sometimes you need to understand [the situation] locally,โ he says. Decision makers everywhere would be wise to listen. Otherwise, they may suffer the same fate as their counterparts in Sardinia: despised by locals, delayed by politics, and surprised at how badly it all went. Special thanks to Luigi Avantaggiato for interpreting and additional reporting. This story was updated on 13 May, 2026 to correct the percentage of electricity that Sardinia exports.