Engineering Professor Kara Kockelman describes how vehicle sharing and safety technologies will bring meaningful benefits to a sea of travelers.
Campus & Community - Energy 
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Energy Features
Tower Goes Dark for Earth Hour
The Tower will go dark Saturday evening to show the University's support...
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Tower lighting delayed for Earth Hour
The University of Texas at Austin will collaborate on global energy and climate change...
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Momentum builds at UT for sustainability initiatives
"We want our campus to be sustainable, but we also set an example -- the way universities...
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Here comes the sun
A ceremony held June 2 celebrated the completion of the largest solar power system...
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Tower shines orange tonight
The Tower at The University of Texas at Austin will be lighted orange Wednesday,...
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For now, the most practical and affordable solution are hybrids like the Prius; they aren't as clean as EV's but more practical. Lack of charging stations and limited range make EV's impratical for most Americans at the moment.
What about Acabion electric vehicles? Acabion's horizon covers 150 years easily, and its speed potential covers todays 120 km/h as well as tomorrows automated 600 km/h on elevated Acabion tracks or even 20 000 km/h in later maglev-driven intercontinental vacuum tubes. Acabion vehicles are the first official successor of the car, coming soon to the U.S.