
World's largest sand battery switched on in Finland; stores heat for entire town
Lithium batteries get all the attention, but they're costly and come with their own environmental baggage. The Finnish team at Polar Night Energy decided to go back to basics and use sand, which is often just industrial waste from fireplace factories. The sand sits in a silo, and when there's surplus electricity, a current is passed through, heating the sand up to a scorching 400 to 500 degrees Celsius. Thanks to clever insulation, the sand holds onto that heat for weeks, losing only about 10 percent along the way. When warmth is needed, hot air is drawn out and sent into the district heating network, as reported by ZME Science.
This new battery in Pornainen is a powerhouse. It can store about 1,000 megawatt-hours of heat, enough to keep roughly 260 homes warm for a week in winter. The economics are hard to ignore - sand is cheap, and in this case, it's basically recycled material. The process is simple, but it works.
The big question is whether this Finnish innovation can work elsewhere. Sand batteries are a great fit for places with district heating systems, like Northern Europe, because they're cheap, reliable, and don't rely on rare materials. In Pornainen, the new battery is expected to cut heating emissions by nearly 70 per cent, saving about 160 metric tons of carbon dioxide every year.
Not every country has a clean grid or the right infrastructure, though. In places where electricity still comes mostly from coal or gas, charging a sand battery could just shift the emissions upstream. Still, the core idea is flexible. You could use other cheap, local materials like crushed brick or volcanic rock and adapt the design to fit what's already there. If this catches on, sand - something most of us overlook - could play a starring role in the clean energy story.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NDTV
9 hours ago
- NDTV
Top Universities In Finland For Indian Students, As Per QS Rankings
Top Universitites In Finland 2025: Finland continues to be a popular destination for students due to its world-class education system, which emphasizes highly trained teachers and gives them the freedom to decide their teaching methods and pace. Several Finnish universities have secured top positions in the QS Global University Rankings 2026. Teachers in Finland are mandatorily required to hold a bachelor's and master's degree in teaching and must go through competitive training programs. Education in Finland is seen as a National priority in Finland. Here are some of the top Finnish universities that Indian students can consider, based on the QS World Rankings 2026. 1. Aalto University, Finland Aalto University is ranked 114th among the top universities of the world and currently has 2,750 international students studying. While Alto University provides courses in both bachelor's and master's, it puts more emphasis on its Masters by providing 94 courses in several disciplines, including Arts and Humanities (18), Business and Management (12), Engineering and Technology (47), Life Sciences and Medicine (1), Natural Sciences (4), Social Sciences and Management (12 programs). Tuition-Fees For Bachelor's Programs - Rs.12,02,544 to Rs.15,03,180 For Master's - Rs.15,03,180 to Rs.20,04,240 2. University of Helsinki, Finland The University of Helsinki is the second best Finnish university with a global rank of 116. It has a total of 1,437 students studying as of now and is the largest and oldest academic institution, developed in 1640. The University provides bachelor courses in only Faculty of Science and a total of 35 master's programs in various faculties including Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry (6), Faculty of Arts (4), Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences (5), Faculty of Educational Sciences (1), Faculty of Law (2), Faculty of Medicine (1), Faculty of Pharmacy (1), Faculty of Science (11), Faculty of Social Sciences (4). The tuition-fees starts from Rs.13,02,756 for both the degrees. 3. University of Oulu, Finland The University of Oulu, Finland is ranked 342 among the top universities of the world with currently 909 international students enrolled. It provides one bachelor's program in International Business Management and 21 Master's programs in several fields, including: Faculty of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine (1) Faculty of Education and Psychology (2) Faculty of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering (6) Faculty of Medicine (1) Faculty of Technology (3) Oulu Business School (6) Oulu Mining School (1) Oulu School of Architecture (1) The tuition-fee for admission to the University of Oulu starts from Rs.12,02,544 and can vary up to Rs.60,12,720. 4. University of Turku, Finland The University of Turku, Finland is an international research university ,ranked 366th among the top universities of the world as per the QS World University Rankings 2026. Currently, 705 international students are enrolled in the University. The tuition-fee starts from 11,000 euros (Rs.11,02,332). 5. Lappeenranta-Lahti University of Technology (LUT) LUT is the fifth best Finnish university with a global ranking of 397 as per the QS World University Rankings 2026. The university currently has 1,002 students studying in both Undergraduate and Postgraduate programs.


Mint
15 hours ago
- Mint
Nokia moves high court over rejection of 5G network slicing patent
Nokia Technologies, a subsidiary of Finnish multinational Nokia Corp., has approached the Delhi High Court challenging the Indian Patent Office's refusal to grant its patent for an 'enhanced registration procedure' designed to support its advanced 5G network slicing technology in India. On 17 July, Justice Saurabh Banerjee issued notice to the assistant controller of patents and designs, directing a response to Nokia's plea. The matter is scheduled for further hearing in November. Network slicing lets telecom companies divide one network into many separate parts, like creating different lanes on a highway. Each slice is used for different things, such as faster internet for phones, special connections for hospitals, or smooth gaming. This makes the internet faster, safer, and more reliable. The counsel for the patent office sought six weeks to file a reply, according to the court order. Any rejoinder, if required, can be filed within four weeks after that, the order said. Nokia's petition challenges the 8 January order of the assistant controller of patents, which rejected its invention on the grounds of lack of novelty, stating that the innovation already exists. Filed on 19 October, Nokia's patent claimed a faster, more secure method for devices to register on dedicated 5G network slices by immediately invoking third-party authentication during the registration ('attach') process. This approach, Nokia argued, ensures smoother and more secure connections, especially for enterprise-owned slices needing additional checks. The company said its method avoids devices attempting to access slices without proper authentication, enhancing overall network efficiency and security. Nokia also informed the patent office that similar patents had been approved in the United States, Japan, and South Korea, proving its international recognition However, the Indian Patent Office rejected all claims. It cited 3GPP's technical standard document D1 as prior art, stating that similar methods were already described, making Nokia's idea neither new nor inventive. The office added that the invention was purely software-based without any new hardware implementation, thus non-patentable under Section 3(k) of the Patents Act. Further reasons included unclear claim language, multiple dependent claims creating ambiguity, and failure to file updated disclosures within prescribed timelines. Due to these issues—lack of novelty, obviousness, software-only nature, unclear claims, and documentation non-compliance—the patent was refused despite Nokia's arguments An emailed query sent to Nokia Technologies remained unanswered till press time. Network slicing originated as a concept developed by telecom industry researchers and was standardized by 3GPP (3rd Generation Partnership Project) as part of global 5G standards (from Release 15 onward). 3GPP is a global collaboration of telecom standards organizations that develops technical standards for mobile networks. Leading telecom vendors including Nokia, Ericsson, Huawei, and Samsung have developed commercial network slicing solutions. Major operators such as Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, Vodafone, BT, Deutsche Telekom, China Mobile, and SK Telecom are actively deploying or testing it worldwide. Recently, Google Fiber announced that its customers may soon get more control over their home internet. On 30 June, Google Fiber said it has partnered with Nokia to test network slicing, which lets users create dedicated lanes for specific activities like gaming or video calls. Countries with live or pilot deployments include the US, the UK, Germany, Japan, South Korea, China, and parts of Europe, with applications spanning factories, ports, healthcare, and premium broadband services.


NDTV
16 hours ago
- NDTV
Children May Lose 1.5 Years Of Schooling Due To Climate Change: UN Report
Children exposed early to extreme heat may lose up to 1.5 years of schooling with climate change having a direct impact on education and threatening to undo educational gains of recent decades, according to a new global report. Climate related stressors such as heat, wildfires, storms, floods, droughts, diseases and rising sea levels, affect education outcomes. Most low and middle-income countries are experiencing climate-related school closures every year, increasing chances of learning loss and dropout, it noted. The report compiled by UNESCO's Global Education Monitoring (GEM) team, Monitoring and Evaluating Climate Communication and Education (MECCE) project and University of Saskatchewan in Canada has pointed out over that the past 20 years, schools were closed in at least 75 per cent of the extreme weather events, impacting five million people or more. Exposure to heat has significant detrimental effects on children's educational outcomes. An analysis linking census and climate data in 29 countries between 1969 and 2012 showed that exposure to higher than average temperatures during the prenatal and early life period is associated with fewer years of schooling, especially in Southeast Asia. "A child experiencing temperatures that are two standard deviations above average is predicted to attain 1.5 fewer years of schooling than children experiencing average temperatures. High temperatures reduced high-stakes test performance in China and led to reductions in both high school graduation and college entrance rates," the report said. "In the United States, without air conditioning, a school year hotter by 1 degrees Celsius reduced test scores by 1 pc. Very hot school days disproportionately impacted African American and Hispanic students, due to poor infrastructure conditions, accounting for roughly 5 per cent of the racial achievement gap," it added. The report noted that about half of public school districts need to update or replace multiple heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems. "In the most disadvantaged municipalities in Brazil, which were also amongst those most exposed to heat risk, students lost about 1 per cent of learning per year due to rising temperatures," it said. The global report flagged that climate-induced education vulnerability is worse for marginalised populations. Of the 10 countries most affected by extreme weather events in 2019, eight were low- or lower-middle-income countries. Of the 33 countries identified as bearing extremely high climate risks for children, where nearly 1 billion people live, 29 are also considered to be fragile states. In the United States, those with low income or without a secondary school certificate are 15 per cent more likely to live in areas with the highest projected increases in childhood asthma diagnoses due to climate-driven increases in particulate air pollution. "School districts in the United States that received federal disaster recovery funds had higher proportions of students from socially vulnerable groups," the report said. The team flagged that increasingly frequent natural disasters, including floods and cyclones, have led to the deaths of students and teachers and have damaged and destroyed schools. "Following the 2013 floods in Jakarta, access to schools was disrupted, schools were used as emergency shelters and some schools closed because of damage. Among schools surveyed, 81 per cent of those with disaster management plans and a standard operating procedure for dealing with flood emergencies agreed that these were effective in times of crisis," it said.