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Business Tech News: Latest Updates on Innovations, Startups, and Market Trends | The HinduBusinessLine

Geo-engineering against climate change ZincGel vs Li-ion battery Why the energy sector isn’t AI-ready yet IT services giant TCS takes an AI-led avatar IIT-M revives forgotten route to industrial wastewater treatment IIT-Kanpur-incubated start-up develops unique battery technology Two faces of water Why the made-in-India ePlane is unique Moving satellite data at laser speed Longer-lasting zinc battery How simulation tech can ready robots for the real world DAE commissions world’s first nuclear heat-based copper-chlorine hydrogen plant DAE commissions world’s first nuclear heat-based copper-chlorine hydrogen plant Subterranean forest of fungi Using sound waves to bypass charge-based circuits AI aides to decode Indian law How the US funding cut impacts cancer research The time to deploy thorium is now The protein-peptide bonds that heal IIT-Kanpur hosts India’s first DORIS beacon How plants summon help Fishing out fake news using a deep-learning neural network IIT-Madras sets up testing tank for ships, submarines Dentistry’s prehistoric drill With AI, science is borderless How ‘spent’ graphite breathes new life into fuel cell Coal gas can yield clean hydrogen at $1.25 a kg Light, compact antennas IMD launches pilot weather forecast within 1 km radius in UP, national roll out in 2-3 years Nationwide ban soon on Paraquat herbicide over toxicity concerns, health risks ParvAI: ‘Windows to the soul’ and workplace safety Why agreeable AI is a liability in competitive markets Indian material for magnet making Using lasers to punch holes in cell walls When the grid becomes an all-knowing data system Micro-mining for critical rare earth minerals Half the capex, less carbon: The molten magic inside Tata Steel’s HIsarna bet Cosmic aid for miners Efficient brakes and EV range India contributes ₹745 crore to multi-country ITER Big budgets, slow science: BARC under-spends on R&D Artemis-2: Hurtling moon-ward on an epochal mission Power supply lessons for AI Why nuclear fusion is gaining funding Defence research stays underfunded Micro attacks on sewer lines Turning the ubiquitous optical fibre into a sensor The PRAGYA tokamak Mind-reading tech No exam is too hard for AI? Carnot battery: Carbon dioxide as ideal ‘working fluid’ On a leash of light On a wing and an AI-powered tool How do ‘natural polypills’ work? AI tool for capturing and managing hospital records How sea microbes can protect agri fields Why India should choose to build not just powerful, but also governable AI Flaring and quaking Qualcomm has an Edge in India Soil testing of rhizosphere CMFRI achieves captive breeding of threatened mangrove clam No erasures RDI scheme could be operationalised this year IIT-M’s ramjet shell is an engineering marvel Sun-powered supercapacitor 10 years on, NALCO yet to start gallium extraction project Budget doubles allocation for nuclear research to ₹2,410 cr Underwater water Recent successes in science-led atmanirbharta Electric mobility may take wing in the not-too-distant future Eco-friendly semiconductors Twinning prayers and AI at mega temple festival Solar cells of efficiencies above 30% A lesson from Germany on infrastructure maintenance Fabled city in the high mountains Optimising bioreactor design Sensing UV-C in femtoseconds ISRO to kick off 2026 with launch of Earth Observation Satellite Indo-Lankan leg-up for S&T Using AI to better assess cyclone damage War on drug resistance goes undersea Big, bad business of junk food Rosatom’s mini variant of small modular reactor Clear thinking on pranayama Can GenAI be a responsible teaching assistant? Pharma PLI fetches ₹26,832 cr sales ‘Scripting’ ideal AI output Honeywell’s technology may bring biomass to the centre stage India-made human-like robot Scorched by 163-year drought NTT’s quantum leap into near sci-fi realm A reality check on AI’s negotiation skills Salinity-proof epoxy coating for marine installations Heat from small-scale solar units could accelerate India’s net-zero transition Cross-species transplantation is at a regulatory crossroads Nature, the ultimate climate warrior Breakthrough in desalination technology, using carbon ‘flowers’ Epidemiology-ML collab decodes India’s struggles with air quality
Thriving in extremes
M Ramesh · 2025-12-29 · via Business Tech News: Latest Updates on Innovations, Startups, and Market Trends | The HinduBusinessLine

What do you think lies in the depths of the Arctic Ocean? Just a lot of very, very cold water, right?

Wrong? There is thriving life, a vibrant ecosystem.

A multinational research team led by UiT The Arctic University of Norway, working as part of the Ocean Census Arctic Deep — EXTREME24 expedition, investigated the depths of a certain point in the ocean, barely 1,200 km from the North Pole. There, at depths of 3,640 m, are tiny mounds of gas hydrates, or iced methane. (Methane rises from below the earth’s crust, meets the cold seawater and crystallises into ice — gas hydrates.) These mounds are called methane seeps.

Below the point in the Arctic (79 degrees North and 3 degrees East) lies a methane hydrate formation called ‘Freya Hydrate Mounds’. The temperatures are very close to zero and, as you can imagine, it is very dark at such depths. There — in such an inhospitable environment — exists a world that we can only imagine.

It’s a world of chemosynthetic creatures — organisms that depend not on sunlight but methane and hydrogen sulphide for food. At the bottom of the food chain are bacteria that ‘eat’ methane (methanotropic). They form dense microbial mats — often white, grey or orange — on hydrate surfaces and seep sediments. These microbes are the primary producers, playing the role of plants on land. Other creatures — such as siboglinid tubeworms, maldanid worms, amphipods and snails — form a food chain, and you do find some fish and eel too.

After documenting this strange world, the researchers stress that this ecosystem must be protected from human activities such as deep-sea mining, so that we do not stale Nature’s infinite variety.

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