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Silicon batteries are no longer a lab experiment. They are shipping. And they may change how we think about power, speed, and national security. In this episode of Resilience, I sit down with Rick Luebbe, CEO of Group 14 Technologies, to talk about how silicon is replacing graphite inside lithium-ion batteries, unlocking up to 50 percent more energy density and radically faster charging. We break down what is actually happening at the chemical level. Why silicon can hold dramatically more lithium than graphite. Why expansion has been the core technical problem for 25 years. And how Group 14’s silicon-carbon composite stabilizes the material to deliver thousands of cycles instead of a few dozen. We also talk about what this means in real terms: • EVs with significantly more range • Phones that could charge in seconds instead of minutes • Drones and electric aircraft with higher power output • AI data centers that need instant energy at the rack level Rick explains how extreme fast charging is already being demonstrated, with some batteries reportedly charging from zero to full in around 90 seconds. We discuss what that could mean for consumer devices and why major brands may adopt silicon batteries within the next 18 months. Beyond performance, we get into geopolitics and supply chains. Today, about 90 percent of battery graphite is processed in China. Silicon anodes could reduce dependence on that supply chain, with manufacturing expanding in the United States, Korea, and Europe. We also touch on the military implications, electrification on the battlefield, and why energy storage is as much a security issue as a consumer convenience. If you care about EVs, AI infrastructure, defense technology, or the future of electrification, this conversation gives you a clear look at where battery tech is headed next.