World
Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council
Technology has become perhaps the greatest agent of change
in the modern world. While never without risk, positive technological
breakthroughs promise original solutions to the most pressing global challenges
of our time, from resource shortage to global environmental change. However, a
lack of appropriate investment, outdated regulatory frameworks and gaps in
public understanding prevent many promising technologies from achieving their
potential.
The World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council on Emerging
Technologies identifies recent key trends in technological change in its
annual list of Top 10 Emerging Technologies. By highlighting the
most important technological breakthroughs, the Council aims to raise awareness
of their potential and contribute to closing gaps in investment, regulation and
public understanding. For 2014, the Council identified ten new technologies
that could reshape our society in the future.
The 2014 list is:
- Body-adapted Wearable Electronics
- Nano structured Carbon Composites
- Mining Metals from Desalination Brine
- Grid-scale Electricity Storage
- Nano wire Lithium-ion Batteries
- Screen less Display
- Human Microbiome Therapeutics
- RNA-based Therapeutics
- Quantified Self (Predictive Analytic s)
- Brain-computer Interfaces
. Body-adapted Wearable Electronics
From Google Glass to the Fit-bit wristband, wearable technology has generated
significant attention over the past year, with most existing devices helping
people to better understand their personal health and fitness by monitoring
exercise, heart rate, sleep patterns, and so on. The sector is shifting beyond
external wearable s like wristbands or clip-on devices to “body-adapted”
electronics that further push the ever-shifting boundary between humans and
technology.
The new generation of wearable is designed to adapt to the
human body’s shape at the place of deployment. These wearable are typically
tiny, packed with a wide range of sensors and a feedback system, and secret to
make their use less unpleasant and more socially acceptable. These virtually
invisible devices include ear-buds that monitor heart rate, sensors worn under
clothes to track posture, a temporary tattoo that tracks health vitals and hap-tic
shoe soles that communicate GPS directions through vibration alerts felt by the
feet. The applications are many and varied: hap-tic shoes are currently proposed
for helping blind people navigate, while Google Glass has already been worn by
oncologists to assist in surgery via medical records and other visual
information accessed by voice commands.
Technology analysts consider that success factors for
wearable products include device size, noninvasive, and the ability to
measure multiple parameters and provide real-time feedback that improves user behavior.
However, increased uptake also depends on social acceptability as regards
privacy. For example, concerns have been raised about wearable devices that use
cameras for facial recognition and memory assistance. Assuming these challenges
can be managed, analysts project hundreds of millions of devices in use by
2016.
However, efficiency is only one concern – another of equal
importance is improving passenger safety. To increase the strength and toughness
of new composites, the interface between carbon fibers and the surrounding
polymer matrix is engineered at the nanoscale to improve fastening – using
carbon nanotubes, for example. In the event of an accident, these surfaces are
designed to absorb impact without tearing, distributing the force and
protecting passengers inside the vehicle.
A third challenge, which may now be closer to a
solution, is that of recycling carbon fiber composites – something which has
held back the widespread deployment of the technology. New techniques involve
engineering cleavable “release points” into the material at the interface
between the polymer and the fiber so that the bonds can be broken in a
controlled fashion and the components that make up the composite can be
recovered separately and recycled. Taken together, these three elements could
have a major impact by bringing forward the potential for manufacturing
lightweight, super-safe and recyclable composite vehicles to a mass scale.
1. Mining
Metals from Desalination Brine
As the global population continues to grow and developing
countries emerge from poverty, freshwater is at risk of becoming one of the
Earth’s most limited natural resources. In addition to water for drinking,
sanitation and industry in human settlements, a significant proportion of the
world’s agricultural production comes from irrigated crops grown in arid areas.
With rivers like the Colorado, the Murray-Darling and the Yellow River no
longer reaching the sea for long periods of time, the attraction of
desalinating seawater as a new source of freshwater can only increase.
Desalination has serious drawbacks, however. In addition to
high energy use (a topic covered in last year’s Top 10 Emerging Technologies),
the process produces a reject-concentrated brine, which can have a serious
impact on marine life when returned to the sea. Perhaps the most promising
approach to solving this problem is to see the brine from desalination not as
waste, but as a resource to be harvested for valuable materials. These include
lithium, magnesium and uranium, as well as the more common sodium, calcium and
potassium elements. Lithium and magnesium are valuable for use in
high-performance batteries and lightweight alloys, for example, while rare
earth elements used in electric motors and wind turbines – where potential
shortages are already a strategic concern – may also be recovered.
New processes using catalyst-assisted chemistry raise the
possibility of extracting these metals from reject desalination brine at a cost
that may eventually become competitive with land-based mining of ores or lake
deposits. This economic benefit may offset the overall cost of desalination,
making it more viable on a large scale, in turn reducing the human pressures on
freshwater ecosystems.
1. Grid-scale
Electricity Storage
Electricity cannot be directly stored, so electrical grid
managers must constantly ensure that overall demand from consumers is exactly
matched by an equal amount of power fed into the grid by generating stations.
Because the chemical energy in coal and gas can be stored in relatively large
quantities, conventional fossil-fuelled power stations offer dispatch able
energy available on demand, making grid management a relatively simple task.
However, fossil fuels also release greenhouse gases, causing climate change –
and many countries now aim to replace carbon-based generators with a clean
energy mix of renewable, nuclear or other non-fossil sources.
Electricity cannot be directly stored, so electrical grid
managers must constantly ensure that overall demand from consumers is exactly
matched by an equal amount of power fed into the grid by generating stations.
Because the chemical energy in coal and gas can be stored in relatively large
quantities, conventional fossil-fuelled power stations offer dispatch able
energy available on demand, making grid management a relatively simple task.
However, fossil fuels also release greenhouse gases, causing climate change –
and many countries now aim to replace carbon-based generators with a clean
energy mix of renewable, nuclear or other non-fossil sources.
Clean energy sources, in particular wind and solar, can be
highly intermittent; instead of producing electricity when consumers and grid
managers want it, they generate uncontrollable quantities only when favorable
weather conditions allow. A scaled-up nuclear sector might also present challenges
due to its preferred operation as always-on base load. Hence, the development
of grid-scale electricity storage options has long been a “holy grail” for
clean energy systems. To date, only pumped storage hydropower can claim a
significant role, but it is expensive, environmentally challenging and totally
dependent on favorable geography.
There are signs that a range of new technologies is getting
closer to cracking this challenge. Some, such as flow batteries may, in the
future, be able to store liquid chemical energy in large quantities analogous
to the storage of coal and gas. Various solid battery options are also
competing to store electricity in sufficiently energy-dense and cheaply
available materials. Newly invented graphene super capacitors offer the
possibility of extremely rapid charging and discharging over many tens of
thousands of cycles. Other options use kinetic potential energy such as large
flywheels or the underground storage of compressed air.
A more novel option being explored at medium scale in
Germany is CO2 meth nation via hydrogen electrolysis, where
surplus electricity is used to split water into hydrogen and oxygen, with the
hydrogen later being reacted with waste carbon dioxide to form methane for
later combustion – if necessary, to generate electricity. While the round-trip
efficiency of this and other options may be relatively low, clearly storage
potential will have high economic value in the future. It is too early to pick
a winner, but it appears that the pace of technological development in this
field is moving more rapidly than ever, in our assessment, bringing a
fundamental breakthrough more likely in the near term.
1. Nanowire
Lithium-ion Batteries
As stores of electrical charge, batteries are critically important in many aspects of modern life. Lithium-ion batteries, which offer good energy density (energy per weight or volume) are routinely packed into mobile phones, laptops and electric cars, to name just a few common uses. However, to increase the range of electric cars to match that of petrol-powered competitors – not to mention the battery lifetime between charges of mobile phones and laptops – battery energy density needs to be improved dramatically.
Batteries are typically composed of two electrodes, a
positive terminal known as a cathode, and a negative terminal known as an
anode, with an electrolyte in between. This electrolyte allows ions to move
between the electrodes to produce current. In lithium-ion batteries, the anode
is composed of graphite, which is relatively cheap and durable. However,
researchers have begun to experiment with silicon anodes, which would offer
much greater power capacity.
One engineering challenge is that silicon anodes tend to
suffer structural failure from swelling and shrinking during charge-discharge
cycle. Over the last year, researchers have developed possible solutions that
involve the creation of silicon nanowires or nanoparticles, which seem to solve
the problems associated with silicon’s volume expansion when it reacts with lithium.
The larger surface area associated with nanoparticles and nanowires further
increases the battery’s power density, allowing for fast charging and current
delivery.
Able to fully charge more quickly, and produce 30%-40% more
electricity than today’s lithium-ion batteries, this next generation of
batteries could help transform the electric car market and allow the storage of
solar electricity at the household scale. Initially, silicon-anode batteries
are expected to begin to ship in smartphones within the next two years.
Screen less display may also be achieved by projecting
images directly onto a person’s retina, not only avoiding the need for weighty
hardware, but also promising to safeguard privacy by allowing people to
interact with computers without others sharing the same view. By January 2014,
one start-up company had already raised a substantial sum via Kickstarter with
the aim of commercializing a personal gaming and cinema device using retinal
display. In the longer term, technology may allow synaptic interfaces that
bypass the eye altogether, transmitting “visual” information directly to the
brain.
This field saw rapid progress in 2013 and appears set for
imminent breakthroughs of scalable deployment of screen less display. Various
companies have made significant breakthroughs in the field, including virtual
reality headsets, bionic contact lenses, the development of mobile phones for
the elderly and partially blind people, and hologram-like videos without the
need for moving parts or glasses.
1. Human
Microbiome Therapeutics.

The human body is perhaps more properly described as an
ecosystem than as a single organism: microbial cells typically outnumber human
cells by 10 to one. This human microbiome has been the subject of intensifying
research in the past few years, with the Human Microbiome Project in 2012
reporting results generated from 80 collaborating scientific institutions. They
found that more than 10,000 microbial species occupy the human ecosystem,
comprising trillions of cells and making up 1%-3% of the body’s mass.
Through advanced DNA sequencing, bioinformatics and
culturing technologies, the diverse microbe species that cohabitate with the
human body are being identified and characterized, with differences in their
abundance correlated with disease and health.
It is increasingly understood that this plethora of microbes
plays an important role in our survival: bacteria in the gut, for example,
allow humans to digest foods and absorb important nutrients that their bodies
would otherwise not be able to access. On the other hand, pathogens that are
ubiquitous in humans can sometimes turn virulent and cause sickness or even
death.
Attention is being focused on the gut microbiome and its
role in diseases ranging from infections to obesity, diabetes and inflammatory
bowel disease. It is increasingly understood that antibiotic treatments that
destroy gut flora can result in complications such as Colostrum difficult
infections, which can in rare cases lead to life-threatening complications. On
the other hand, a new generation of therapeutics comprising a subset of
microbes found in healthy gut are under clinical development with a view to
improving medical treatments. Advances in human microbiome technologies clearly
represent an unprecedented way to develop new treatments for serious diseases
and to improve general healthcare outcomes in our species.
1. RNA-based
Therapeutics
RNA is an essential molecule in cellular biology,
translating genetic instructions encoded in DNA into the production of the
proteins that enable cells to function. However, as protein production is also
a central factor in most human diseases and disorders, RNA-based therapeutics
have long been thought to hold the potential to treat a range of problems where
conventional drug-based treatments cannot offer much help. The field has been
slow to develop, however, with initial high hopes being dented by the sheer
complexity of the effort and the need to better understand the variability of
gene expression in cells.
Over the past year, there has been a resurgence of interest
in this new field of biotech healthcare, with two RNA-based treatments approved
as human therapeutics as of 2014. RNA-based drugs for a range of conditions
including genetic disorders, cancer and infectious disease are being developed
based on the mechanism of RNA interference, which is used to silence the
expression of defective or overexpressed genes.
Extending the repertoire of RNA-based therapeutics, an even
newer platform based on messenger RNA (mRNA) molecules is now emerging.
Specific mRNA sequences injected intramuscularly or intravenously can act as
therapeutic agents through the patient’s own cells, translating them into the
corresponding proteins that deliver the therapeutic effect. Unlike treatments
aimed at changing DNA directly, RNA-based therapeutics do not cause permanent
changes to the cell’s genome and so can be increased or discontinued as
necessary.
Advances in basic RNA science, synthesis technology and in
vivo delivery are combining to enable a new generation of RNA-based drugs that
can attenuate the abundance of natural proteins, or allow for the in vivo
production of optimized, therapeutic proteins. Working in collaboration with
large pharmaceutical companies and academia, several private companies that aim
to offer RNA-based treatments have been launched. We expect this field of
healthcare to increasingly challenge conventional pharmaceuticals in forging
new treatments for difficult diseases in the next few years.
1. Quantified
Self (Predictive Analytics).
The quantified-self movement has existed for many years as a
collaboration of people collecting continual data on their everyday activities
in order to make better choices about their health and behavior. But, with
today’s Internet of Things, the movement has begun to come into its own and
have a wider impact.
Smartphones contain a rich record of people’s activities,
including who they know (contact lists, social networking apps), who they talk
to (call logs, text logs, e-mails), where they go (GPS, Wi-Fi, and geotagged
photos) and what they do (apps we use, accelerometer data). Using this data,
and specialized machine-learning algorithms, detailed and predictive models
about people and their behaviors can be built to help with urban planning,
personalized medicine, sustainability and medical diagnosis.
For example, a team at Carnegie Mellon University has been
looking at how to use smartphone data to predict the onset of depression by
modelling changes in sleep behaviors and social relationships over time. In
another example, the live hoods project, large quantities of geotagged data
created by people’s smartphones (using software such as Instagram and
Foursquare) and crawled from the Web have allowed researchers to understand the
patterns of movement through urban spaces.
In recent years, sensors have become cheap and increasingly
ubiquitous as more manufacturers include them in their products to understand
consumer behavior and avoid the need for expensive market research. For
example, cars can record every aspect of a person’s driving habits, and this
information can be shown in smartphone apps or used as big data in urban
planning or traffic management. As the trend continues towards extensive data
gathering to track every aspect of people’s lives, the challenge becomes how to
use this information optimally, and how to reconcile it with privacy and other
social concerns.
1. Brain-computer
Interfaces
The ability to control a computer using only the power of
the mind is closer than one might think. Brain-computer interfaces, where
computers can read and interpret signals directly from the brain, have already
achieved clinical success in allowing quadriplegics, those suffering “locked-in
syndrome” or people who have had a stroke to move their own wheelchairs or even
drink coffee from a cup by controlling the action of a robotic arm with their
brain waves. In addition, direct brain implants have helped restore partial
vision to people who have lost their sight.
Recent research has focused on the possibility of using
brain-computer interfaces to connect different brains together directly.
Researchers at Duke University last year reported successfully connecting the
brains of two mice over the Internet (into what was termed a “brain net”) where
mice in different countries were able to cooperate to perform simple tasks to
generate a reward. Also in 2013, scientists at Harvard University reported that
they were able to establish a functional link between the brains of a rat and a
human with a non-invasive, computer-to-brain interface.
Other research projects have focused on manipulating or
directly implanting memories from a computer into the brain. In mid-2013, MIT
researchers reported having successfully implanted a false memory into the
brain of a mouse. In humans, the ability to directly manipulate memories might
have an application in the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder, while
in the longer term, information may be uploaded into human brains in the manner
of a computer file. Of course, numerous ethical issues are also clearly raised
by this rapidly advancing field.
This list was compiled by the World Economic Forum’s Global
Agenda Council on Emerging Technologies. Noubar Afeyan, Managing
Partner, Flagship Ventures is the Council’s Chair. Mark Lynas, Freelance
Writer on Science, Technology and Climate Change, and Sir David King, Special
Representative for Climate Change, Foreign and Commonwealth Office of the
United Kingdom, are its Vice-chairs. For a full list of the Council’s members,
see here.










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