14 C
Munich
星期四, 2 7 月, 2026

Inside the world’s deepest and longest subsea road tunnel

Must read

Apple's first-ever foldable iPhone is as popular as the plague, as it turns out

Wait, wasn't the iPhone Ultra supposed to be a hit?! #Apple039s #firstever #foldable #iPhone #popular #plague #turns

Wacky Wimbledon menu features strawberry sushi and duck slathered in Pimm’s

Wimbledon fans can now get even more involved with all the tennis action as one London location has launched a menu centred around the...

SpaceX may build more than just a network to outshine AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon

SpaceX may be about to become a threat to Android and Apple as well. #SpaceX #build #network #outshine #ATampT #TMobile #Verizon

Woman left with 38 brain parasites years after foreign trip and passing massive tapeworm

A Welsh woman who backpacked around India in 2007 says she later suffered seizures and a mental health crisis after doctors found 38 parasitic...

I’m currently around 1,000 feet beneath the North Sea, in a dark, dank cave. It smells weird. And I’m increasingly aware of the pressure from millions of tons of seawater just above my head.

I’m under the iconic fjords of Norway to visit what will soon become the world’s longest and deepest subsea road tunnel—an exceptional engineering feat that will carry drivers deep beneath the North Sea.

I’m here to understand how you make a 16.6-mile highway that sits 1,280 feet below the sea at its deepest point. And also—at a time when it can feel hard to get anything done—to reassure myself that ambitious engineering is still possible. That we can still make things. 

Step inside Norway’s Rogfast tunnel and see how engineers are making it happen.

This story is from the next edition of our magazine, which is all about engineering. Subscribe now to get a copy when it lands on Wednesday!

Want to get a data center online quickly? Give it some flex.

The AI boom is putting unprecedented pressure on the electric grid. But rather than rushing to build new power plants, companies could find part of the solution right under our noses—or, more precisely, in the transmission lines under our feet and above our heads.

If data centers can limit the power they draw during high-demand stretches, they won’t need to wait for big infrastructure upgrades or build their own off-grid generation.

The idea of flexibility isn’t entirely foreign to grid operators. But a new generation of software could make the process faster, smarter, and more precise for the AI era.

#worlds #deepest #longest #subsea #road #tunnel

- Advertisement -

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -

Latest article

Apple's first-ever foldable iPhone is as popular as the plague, as it turns out

Wait, wasn't the iPhone Ultra supposed to be a hit?! #Apple039s #firstever #foldable #iPhone #popular #plague #turns

Wacky Wimbledon menu features strawberry sushi and duck slathered in Pimm’s

Wimbledon fans can now get even more involved with all the tennis action as one London location has launched a menu centred around the...

SpaceX may build more than just a network to outshine AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon

SpaceX may be about to become a threat to Android and Apple as well. #SpaceX #build #network #outshine #ATampT #TMobile #Verizon

Woman left with 38 brain parasites years after foreign trip and passing massive tapeworm

A Welsh woman who backpacked around India in 2007 says she later suffered seizures and a mental health crisis after doctors found 38 parasitic...

T-Mobile customers using very old devices will lose connectivity next month

T-Mobile is shutting down 2G. #TMobile #customers #devices #lose #connectivity #month