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Young mobile home solutions developer AC Future has shared the final design of its flagship product – a solar-electric RV called the AI-Transformable Home or “Ai-TH” for short. Designed through a partnership with Hydra Design Labs, the Ai-TH has transcended beyond the concept phase and will be showcased as a physical demonstration unit at CES 2025 in Las Vegas next month.

AC Future is an Irvine, California, startup that emerged from stealth in 2023. According to the company, its mission is to “ignite a revolution in sustainable living by crafting innovative, transformable homes that seamlessly blend modern design, eco-conscious principles, and cutting-edge AI technologies.”

That journey begins with AC Future’s flagship product, a modular solar-electric RV called the AI-Transformable Home. The AI-TH project was launched in January 2024 to address the global crisis for affordable, sustainable, and mobile housing.

The RV is a zero-emissions housing solution that can transform into a 400 sq. ft. smart home at the push of a button. It offers its tenants complete off-grid capabilities, including solar charging, water generation, and internet connectivity.

AC Future initially unveiled its AI-TH RV concept at CES 2024, which caught the eye of Hydra Design Labs. The two companies would form a partnership to help bring the startup’s concept to fruition. As a result, the two companies have completed a final design, which you can see below before it makes its physical debut at CES 2025.

  • AC Future RV
  • AC Future RV

AC Future and Hydra to showcase electric RV at CES 2025

Per AC Future, its AI-TH electric RV concept has completed its final design, engineering, and fabrication with the help of Hydra Design Labs. The renderings above showcase the final design AC Future will now look to sell and produce.

AC Future shared that Hydra helped design the interior and exterior of the AI-TH RV and provided CAD surfacing, Class-A surfacing, color and trim design services, and UI/UX design. Through engineering and fabrication, Hydra was able to produce a functioning prototype that will be unveiled in Las Vegas next month.

According to AC Future, the latest renderings showcase the AI-TH electric RV’s new design direction and refinements that have evolved from the initial concept that debuted earlier this year. The images offer a first look at the final shape and functionality of the AI-TH prototype. Per Hydra Design Labs sounder and CEO Jon Hull:

Design played a foundational role in developing the AI-TH for AC Future, and optimizing the user experience guided every step of the process to maximize space and deliver efficient solutions. We are honored to work with the AC Future team and partners to turn this groundbreaking sustainable housing solution into a reality.

We don’t have any performance specs for the electric RV yet. Still, we can see that AC Future and Hydra have implemented an entire solar panel roof to enable off-grid living, which is perfect for mobile recreation. We also have yet to see what the interior will look like, but we will get a much better idea of the AI-TH’s design and capabilities at CES in January.

If you’re attending this year’s event, you can visit AC Future’s unveiling of the electric RV prototype on January 7, 2025, at 2 PM. Afterward, you can stop by the company’s booth #10515 in the North Hall to see it up close.

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Cadillac’s new Vistiq electric SUV starts at under $80,000, but higher trims can get pricey

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Cadillac's new Vistiq electric SUV starts at under ,000, but higher trims can get pricey

Cadillac’s new three-row electric SUV is almost here. As the Escalade IQ’s smaller sibling, the Cadillac Vistiq starts at under $80,000, but prices for higher trim options can reach upwards of $100,000.

Cadillac Vistiq electric SUV prices and specs

After introducing the new Vistiq electric SUV last month, we are already learning how much it will cost to get your hands on one.

Cadillac said 2026 Cadillac Vistiq prices would start at $78,790, including the destination fee. That’s for the base Luxury trim. Cadillac’s new electric SUV will also be available in Sport and Premium trims, while a range-topping Platinum model will launch next Summer.

As Car and Driver found on Wednesday, full pricing is now available. The Sport trim will start at $79,290, while prices jump significantly for the Premium and Platinum models at $93,890 and $97,890, respectively.

With options, you can easily spend over $100,000 on the top-of-the-line trims. Meanwhile, its big brother, the 2025 Cadillac Escalade IQ, starts at $129,990.

The Vistiq sits between the Lyriq and Escalade IQ in Cadillac’s growing EV lineup. Like the electric Escalade, the mid-size SUV features Cadillac’s new design with an illuminated pinstripe grille.

Cadillac-Vistiq-prices
2026 Cadillac Vistiq electric SUV (Source: GM)

Powered by a massive 102 kWh battery pack, Cadillac says the Visitiq gets 300 miles of range. It also packs up to 615 hp and 650 lb-ft of torque for a 0 to 60 mph sprint in 3.7 seconds. According to Cadillac, the electric SUV can gain 79 miles range in around 10 minutes with a DC fast charger.

Inside, the Vistiq offers all the luxury and premium tech you would expect from a Cadillac. It includes a curved 33″ infotainment and driver display cluster, which sits above an 8″ HVAC control screen.

The standard AWD system is fitted with Road Noise Cancellation tech for an even smoother, quieter drive that EVs are known for.

At 205.6″ long, Cadillac’s new electric SUV is slightly longer than the Rivian R1S, which is 201 ” long but slightly shorter (71″ vs. 77″ tall).

2026 Cadillac Vistiq trim Starting Price
Luxury $78,790
Sport $79,290
Premium $93,290
Platinum $97,890
2026 Cadillac Vistiq electric SUV prices by trim (including the destination fee)

Rivian’s R1S starts at $75,900 and has an EPA-estimated range of up to 270 miles. The R1S Dual, on the other hand, offers a 410-mile driving range for $82,900.

Cadillac is expected to begin Vistiq production early next year, with the Luxury, Sport, and Premium trims set to go on sale first.

Which electric SUV are you choosing? Cadillac’s new Vistiq or the Rivian R1S? Drop us a comment below and let us know.

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EPA approves CA’s clean air rules that Trump says he’ll revoke (but can’t)

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EPA approves CA's clean air rules that Trump says he'll revoke (but can't)

In the waning days of a Biden Administration which has been marked by huge progress on clean air and EV policy, the US government has approved California’s emissions rules which would end gas-only car sales within the state by 2035.

California’s “Advanced Clean Cars 2” light-duty emissions rules, which were finalized in 2022, have now received their final step of approval from the federal government, in the form of an EPA “waiver” that allows California to set its own emissions rules over and above those of the federal government.

The EPA also approved a requested waiver for low-NOx regulations for heavy duty and off-road engines at the same time.

Environmental organizations responded positively to the move – with EarthJustice, Sierra Club, the Environmental Defense Fund and CALSTART joining the chorus in our email inboxes this morning.

California has requested waivers for several other sets of emissions rules, but some are still pending and may or may not be granted by the EPA within the next month.

Environmental organizations further called on the EPA to approve California’s other requested waivers as soon as possible. Sierra Club Clean Transportation for All Director Katherine Garcia said “we urge the EPA to swiftly grant the remaining California waivers, which are crucial for states to protect their residents from transportation pollution.” 

EPA said in its release today that “EPA continues reviewing additional waiver requests from California and is working to ensure its decisions are durable and grounded by law.”

The history of California’s emissions rules

For decades now, California has had a special “waiver” given by the federal government, allowing it to set its own emissions rules as long as they are stricter than the rules for the US overall.

This is due to heavy smog problems in California – especially in the areas around Los Angeles, its largest city and home to the nation’s largest container port; and in the central valley, which is the most agriculturally productive land in the country. Both of these places have geography that traps smog from the millions of cars driving on their roads every day and results in particularly bad air quality.

And so, since the 1960s when the California Air Resources Board was created (by then-Governor Ronald Reagan), California has generally exercised its state’s right to set its own emissions rules. Other states are allowed to follow these rules, but only if they copy them exactly.

These clean air rules have been a success, resulting in a >98% reduction in vehicle-based pollutants in the LA area, even as total vehicle miles traveled have gone up (and that news was from 2012 – it’s gotten even better since then due to EVs). But there’s still more to be done, because California still has air quality problems.

California’s new set of rules has been in the works since 2020, and will have the effect of ensuring that there are no new gas-only vehicles sold in the state by 2035 (though there can be 20% plug-in hybrids, but those hybrids have to fit certain requirements to ensure they actually get used properly).

California intentionally chose this less-ambitious 2035 timeline because it thought it would make it easier for other states to follow along. And as a result, 11 other states covering around a third of the US new vehicle market have said that they will adopt the standards.

The new emissions rules are expected to save Californians $13 billion in health costs, avoid thousands of deaths, cut auto emissions by half, and result in almost a billion fewer barrels of petroleum being burned. Other states will see similar improvements in health and money savings.

EPA grants new California waiver – with another clean air fight looming

All of this was contingent on the EPA signing off on the regulation, which it did so today.

The approval isn’t unexpected, but comes quite late during President Biden’s term, which has been marked by significant improvements in emissions rules and EV policy, leading to a boom in domestic manufacturing jobs and investment.

While a procedural step like this normally would not be particularly notable, there are some complicating factors here.

First, since it is late in the current Congressional term, the incoming Congress could attempt to reverse it through use of the Congressional Review Act, which republicans have made use of often in recent years to try to stop regulations that might improve Americans’ health. However, since the waiver is not actually a federal regulation and rather a state one, the Congressional Review Act doesn’t apply.

The larger threat is that, unfortunately for America, the next occupant of the White House is convicted felon Donald Trump, who finally received more votes than his opponent on his third attempt (despite committing treason in 2021, for which there is a clear legal remedy). Mr. Trump has stated quite forcefully that he wants to reverse President Biden’s clean air policies, thus saddling Americans with dirtier air, higher costs and poorer health, and sending EV jobs to China to ensure that this new boom in American manufacturing is unable to flourish.

Mr. Trump previously squatted in the White House between 2017-2021, after having obtained the 2nd most votes in the 2016 election. During that period, he attempted to poison Americans by worsening California’s emissions rules – but in keeping with his pattern of incompetence, he failed to do so.

The primary actual outcome of the last fight with California was to de-harmonize federal and California standards. While California has mostly gone it alone since the 60s, there was a brief period in the 2010s where California and federal rules were harmonized – but industry lobbying resulted in a shattering of that harmony, giving companies a more difficult regulatory environment.

Industry learned their lesson, but republicans still aiming for dirty air

As a result, this time around, industry has decided to lobby against shattering emissions standards, recognizing the chaos that was caused the last time an ignoramus got involved in setting auto regulations.

Despite the desires of the industry in question, Mr. Trump has signaled that he wants to “rip up” California’s waiver again – even though the law does not specify a method to revoke a waiver once it is granted, as EPA did today.

There is in fact no legal pathway described in the Clean Air Act which allows for the revocation of a waiver once granted. So according to the law, even if the upcoming EPA run by a dirty air advocate wanted to revoke the waiver, it would have no legal way to do so – it could only refuse to grant a waiver for future requests by California. But since California’s current ACC2 regulation covers model years up until 2035, a refusal to grant a waiver in the next 4 years would likely have little effect.

So it is yet to be seen if the incoming EPA will take the more reasonable approach desired by big auto, doctorsnursesscientists, environmental groupsother businessespeople who have lungs, and so on; or if it will instead do what big oil, the industry Mr. Trump asked for a $1 billion bribe from and which kills millions of people around the world every year wants him to do. Make your bets now.

Further complicating the issue is that this time, Mr. Trump has a corrupt kangaroo court at his backing, which has routinely ignored the law to legislate from the bench. However, that same court did decide twice in recent days to let California’s clean air rules stand, so let us hope that they continue to see reason in this realm – we’ll have to wait and see.

(Note: this article has been updated from an article last Friday which commented on earlier rumors that the approval was upcoming)


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Toyota lands $4.5M to boost EV battery sustainability

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Toyota lands .5M to boost EV battery sustainability

Toyota just got a $4.5 million boost from the US Department of Energy (DOE) to make EV batteries more sustainable.

The funding comes from ARPA-E’s CIRCULAR program, which focuses on creating a sustainable, domestic supply chain for EV batteries.

The project, led by Toyota Research Institute of North America (TRINA), aims to tackle one of the EV industry’s biggest challenges: What do we do with old batteries?

Right now, disassembling battery packs and figuring out which parts can be reused or recycled is a slow, manual, and costly process. Toyota, teaming up with Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), and Baker Hughes’ Waygate Technologies, is working to change that.

Building the battery recycling center of the future

The project will focus on resolving the primary bottlenecks in the battery supply chain cycle, which are automating battery pack disassembly, data-driven battery classification, and addressing cell degradation. Think of it as a high-tech recycling center where every part of a used battery is carefully evaluated.

This approach could extend the life of valuable battery materials, reducing waste and the need to mine new resources. The ultimate goal? A blueprint for what Toyota calls a “3R facility of the future” – a place to reduce, reuse, and recycle batteries on an industrial scale.

Nik Singh, principal scientist at TRINA and principal investigator on this project, says the project could reshape how the industry approaches battery recycling:

This project and program will highlight avenues for everyone to rethink their approach to battery circularity, and help prioritize the extension of battery life, facilitate battery reuse, and reduce battery waste.

Tech innovations to close the loop

The team’s plan includes:

  • Automated battery pack disassembly to speed up the recycling process.
  • Advanced diagnostic tools to assess the condition of battery cells and modules.
  • Refabrication methods to turn old cells into new energy systems.

The payoff? Batteries that are reused and refurbished first – recycling becomes the last resort.

Marm Dixit, leading ORNL’s contributions, points out the environmental benefits. “By extending the life of the battery components, we reduce their total emissions per mile. That’s a big deal for the role EVs can play in the energy transition,” Dixit said.

NREL’s role will involve cutting-edge tech like machine learning and imaging using nano computed tomography to analyze the health and lifespan of batteries quickly. Baker Hughes’ Waygate Technologies will bring its expertise in non-destructive testing with advanced imaging systems.

Toyota’s Battery Lifecycle Solutions (BLS) team plans to take these innovations from the lab to real-world applications. “By applying the innovations established from this project, we aim to create a framework that not only reduces battery waste but also enhances the circularity of our battery supply chain,” said Sarah Kennedy, BLS manager, who is leading the technology to market deployment.

Read more: EV batteries may last up to 40% longer than expected – Stanford


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