How China cracked the US ‘super code’ that controls most power grids in the world
Breakthrough could shake-up global tech markets with nations able to run their own grids and break away from US dominance

The Southern Regional Electricity Market (SREM) – the world’s largest unified power market – has switched fully to Tianquan, a solver developed by Chinese engineers with speeds 14 per cent faster than American products, according to a report by the official Science and Technology Daily.
Solvers decide when power plants turn on, how markets clear and how trillions in assets are allocated. The United States held a near-monopoly for over 30 years as a silent ruler of industrial civilisation.
These tools, known as the “core of industrial software”, operate as black boxes: fast, reliable but completely opaque. No one outside their creators knows exactly how they work.