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Ars Technica Jun 10, 2026 at 13:13 Big Tech Rising Hot

GM Energy introduces V2G support and new energy storage battery chemistry

There are more than a quarter of a million V2G-capable GM EVs on the roads already.

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By Roberto Baldwin Original source
GM Energy introduces V2G support and new energy storage battery chemistry

Electric vehicle sales might be better now than the end of last year when demand fell off a cliff following the surge of purchases ahead of the end of the federal financial incentives, but it's clear they haven't panned out as well as many in the automotive industry had hoped. Still, at a GM event Ars attended in San Francisco this week, the company continues to stick to its guns with an EV lineup spanning its brands. The automaker shared that it has also been working toward the adoption of bidirectional charging to help balance the grid. With the rise of AI, data centers are placing more and more pressure on the nation's electric infrastructure. GM wants to relieve some of that pressure with news that its GM Energy products now support vehicle-to-grid (V2G) in addition to vehicle-to-home. The grid integration requires working with utilities and includes launch partners PG&E in California and DTE Energy in Michigan. For standalone energy storage solutions, the company also announced partnering with Peak Energy on the development of sodium-ion batteries built specifically for grid energy storage. Read full article Comments

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Jun 10, 2026 at 13:13 Ars Technica

GM Energy introduces V2G support and new energy storage battery chemistry

There are more than a quarter of a million V2G-capable GM EVs on the roads already.

Jun 10, 2026 at 12:45 TechCrunch

Why everyone’s an energy company now

Electricity demand from AI data centers is pushing everyone — including automakers like GM and Ford — into the energy storage business.

Jun 9, 2026 at 21:05 Ars Technica

Starlink charges $10 monthly hardware fee in move away from one-time purchases

Starlink, SpaceX's top moneymaker, also raised service prices by $5 to $10.

Jun 9, 2026 at 20:56 Ars Technica

Locked in heated rivalry with researcher, Microsoft fixes 0-day they disclosed

A separate zero-day also disclosed by Nightmare Eclipse appears to be patched as well.

Jun 9, 2026 at 20:35 Ars Technica

Three key vital signs make up the "urban pulse" of a city

Cities are dynamic, not static grids, and urbanization is a "spiky," cyclical, and asynchronous process.

Jun 9, 2026 at 20:25 Ars Technica

Commonwealth Fusion makes the physics case for its 400 MW reactor

Five peer-reviewed papers update the design and model its expected output.

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