Today’s Solutions: December 17, 2025

The rise of cheap renewable energy is starting to upend the bottom lines of fossil-fuel companies all over the world. Initially, that was why so many of them instinctively fought the newfangled technologies. Increasingly, it’s why many of them are shifting strategy, hustling to try to profitably harness the wind and the sun.

In the latest sign of this sea change, Equinor, the Norwegian oil-and-gas giant formerly known as Statoil, will announce today that it plans to pour money into an approximately $180 million investment fund focused on battery and related technologies. That tech is intended to spread the use of renewables by allowing them to be stored in ways that make economic sense.

Equinor’s announcement comes less than three weeks after Norway’s government said the country’s sovereign-wealth fund, which manages a mind-boggling $1 trillion in assets, would sell off holdings in oil-and-gas exploration and production companies.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

More US states and cities are boosting minimum wages in 2026. What does it me...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM As the federal minimum wage remains frozen at $7.25 an hour, unchanged since 2009, cities and states across ...

Read More

3 organization hacks for Type B brains that actually work

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Scroll through any productivity blog or time-management book, and you’ll find a familiar formula: rigid routines, detailed planners, ...

Read More

An easy hack to counteract the harmful health effects of sitting all day

Humans are not designed to spend the entire day seated. Nonetheless, billions of us do it at least five days per week, as Western ...

Read More

Ensuring no pet goes hungry: The rise of pet food banks in the UK

Pete Dolan, a cat owner, recalls the tremendous help he received from Animal Food Bank Support UK, a Facebook organization that coordinates volunteer community ...

Read More