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Keller, McBain, Guenther, and Stenlund scored in the win; Schmaltz recorded his 300th NHL assist; Vejmelka stopped 27 of 28 …
After a scoreless first period, the Mammoth had a strong second which started with the captain. Keller’s goal 1:44 into the middle frame got Utah on the board. Utah’s captain led by example and his strong play tonight pushed the team to keep fighting for a full 60-minute effort.
“(Keller), he competes. I think tonight he wanted to make the difference,” Tourigny said of the captain. “He scored a big goal, made a great play on (Stenlund’s) goal, but it’s more than that. It’s the fight he had. I felt like that about our team and it started with our captain.”
Nick Schmaltz recorded his 300th career NHL assist with the primary assist on Keller’s goal. In addition to leading the team in assists (19) and points (31), Schmaltz has switched to center with Logan Cooley out of the lineup. The forward has had a significant impact with his increased role, and has led the Mammoth with seven assists in nine games this month.
McBain scored his fourth of the season in the final six minutes of the second period, which increased the Mammoth’s lead to 2-0. Michael Carcone and Sean Durzi picked up assists on the play. Carcone (2G, 1A) and Durzi (1G, 2A) each have three points in their last three games.
“Really good pass by (Carcone),” McBain said of his goal. “It’s something you see him do a lot, kind of take them to the net, and whenever he does that I try to go backdoor and give him an option, so it worked out.”
In addition to the two second period goals, Utah’s penalty kill kept Detroit off the board in the middle frame. 36 seconds after the Mammoth killed off the first penalty in the second, the team went right back on the PK. However, Utah remained strong shorthanded and held the eighth-best power play to only three total shots on goal through two power plays.
“They do such a great job and at key moments,” Tourigny said of the PK. “The game was on the line at that time, and it was a key moment, so really good job.”
“I think it’s been great,” McBain explained of the penalty kill. “It’s something we’ve worked on a lot over the years and it’s kind of coming around. Our jobs just to try to keep the team in the game. Obviously, there’s really good players in this league, really good power play and you’re not going to get them all, but I think it’s been doing a good job.”
Detroit pushed back in the third. The Red Wings scored their first goal of the game on the power play halfway through the third period. Emmitt Finnie’s eighth of the year cut the Mammoth’s lead to 2-1.
However, the Mammoth scored twice in 31 seconds to reclaim momentum. Dylan Guenther’s team-leading 16th goal of the season increased Utah’s lead to 3-1 before Kevin Stenlund scored his third of the year less than a minute later to make it 4-1. The Mammoth held on in the final minutes and won the final game of the three-game road trip. Utah now has three wins in its last four games.
“We need to keep rolling,” Tourigny shared. “I think we’re playing a simpler game with more drive, with more net presence, with more dirty goals, going in the dirty area, I think that paid off. Our first two goals are what I call blue paint goals where you go to the net, and then after the rest open up. We had a few good plays here and there, but I think we need to keep going.”
Additional Notes from Tonight (per Mammoth PR)
Selected 20th overall in the 2014 NHL Draft, Schmaltz has become the eighth player from his draft class to register 300 career assists.
With the opening goal tonight, Keller has now found the scoresheet in all three of Utah’s meetings with Detroit (1g, 2a). He has posted a team-high 17 points (9g, 8a) in 14 career games against the Red Wings.
Guenther has six goals in his last six games (12/8-12/17), and his seven goals in December (10 GP) are tied for the fourth-most in the NHL.
Three of McBain’s goals this season have been on the road. In addition, his 12 goals on the road since the start of last season are tied for the fifth-most of any Utah skater.
The Mammoth return home for two games. Utah hosts the New Jersey Devils on Friday night.
Utah immigration attorneys said they have identified another change in removal operations in recent weeks that includes a pattern of ICE officials — and increasingly Customs and Border Patrol agents — …
KEY POINTS
The number of street arrests in Utah by federal immigration authorities surged to 118 in September.
Immigration attorneys report an increase in arrests during traffic stops and late night raids in Utah.
Law enforcement experts say these tactics are normal and needed to address illegal immigration.
Street arrests conducted by federal immigration authorities spiked in Utah during the month of September to five times the level of President Donald Trump’s first six months in office — and 50 times the average under President Joe Biden.
Newly released U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement data, running through mid-October, confirms a reported shift in tactics that have escalated in the 11 months since the Trump administration asked ICE field offices to each conduct 75 arrests per day of immigrants suspected to be in the country illegally.
Utah immigration attorneys said they have identified another change in removal operations in recent weeks that includes a pattern of ICE officials — and increasingly Customs and Border Patrol agents — pulling over suspected illegal immigrants on their morning commute, or pulling them into an unmarked van in the middle of the night.
Former New York City ICE field office director Scott Mechkowski said these strategies are not unusual for Border Patrol, and that ICE has always pursued “noncustodial” arrests. These street arrests, including of individuals with no criminal record, are necessary, he said, following the largest surge in illegal immigration in U.S. history.
“It was never illegal, or never frowned upon, if we picked somebody up regardless if they were a criminal or not,” said Mechkowski, who worked in immigration law enforcement for 24 years before his retirement in 2025. “This is a national security priority. We don’t know who these people are.”
ICE arrests by the numbers
Monthly ICE arrests have risen steadily in Utah and surrounding states since Trump returned to the White House, according to a Deseret News analysis of government data provided by ICE in response to a FOIA request for the Deportation Data Project.
In Utah, total ICE arrests increased from an average of 115 per month before Trump entered office, to more than 290 during his first six months. Arrests rose again to around 380 per month from July to mid-October, driven by an increase in street arrests and arrests of those with no criminal record but who have violated federal immigration law by overstaying a visa or otherwise being in the country illegally.
September saw a dramatic jump in noncustodial arrests — which are those that occur outside of the criminal justice pipeline which ICE traditionally relied on for the vast majority of enforcement actions. In custodial cases, ICE picks up detainees from local jails where they have been kept for breaking the law.
Street arrests, which can take place almost anywhere, have increased in Utah from less than three per month under Biden, to around two dozen per month during Trump’s first six months, before jumping to 118 in the month of September, contributing to an average of 72 per month between July and mid-October.
Deportation officers with Enforcement and Removal Operations in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s New York City field office arrest a man during an early morning operation, Tuesday, Dec. 17, 2024, in the Bronx borough of New York. | Julia Demaree Nikhinson, Associated Press
The monthly average of arrests of those with no pending charges or convictions likewise increased in Utah — from an average of seven per month under Biden, to more than 40 per month between January and June, and surpassing 70 per month from July to October.
Once arrested, individuals are typically taken to county jails in Tooele County, Salt Lake County or Uinta County, Wyoming, until space opens up at the official ICE detention center in Pahrump, Nevada, according to Christopher Vizcardo, an immigration attorney at Trujillo Acosta Law in South Jordan.
Arrested individuals are nearly always given the right to see a judge in order to request asylum, agree to voluntary departure or sign a deportation order, Vizcardo said. But in cases when individuals are unable to secure legal representation, they often choose deportation over remaining detained during a process that can take anywhere from one month to one year.
“Not everything is doom and gloom,” Vizcardo told the Deseret News. “That piece of the system is still working. There are still cases being reviewed by immigration judges. That’s not a line the administration has dared to cross, but they have made it harder.”
Vizcardo echoed complaints made by Murray-based immigration attorney Nicholle Pitt White, that since Trump entered office, ICE operations have become less transparent, the ICE Online Detainee Locator System has become less accurate and arrests appear to have become more indiscriminate.
A similar trend has played out in Arizona, where total average arrests have tripled from 300 a month under Biden, to more than 950 during the late summer and early fall. During that time, average monthly noncustodial arrests increased tenfold from around 30 to 325, and arrests without a criminal record increased from around 55 to over 280 per month.
Nevada has seen total average monthly arrests quadruple from 65 to more than 270, with noncustodial arrests and arrests of those without criminal records multiplying by at least that much. Idaho has not seen the same level of ICE enforcement action, with total average monthly arrests increasing from around 30 to 80.
Change in tactics?
Protesters gather in front of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) field office in Salt Lake City on Monday, Dec. 8, 2025. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News
While ICE arrests appeared to slow down in Utah during the November federal government shutdown, they have multiplied in recent weeks, according to Tiffany Young, a local activist who has built an online community of around 20,000 residents who report and verify ICE activity in the state.
There has been a notable increase in enforcement efforts that take the form of early morning traffic stops targeting work trucks along roads like Bangerter Highway in west Salt Lake County, Young said. Several photos and videos obtained by the Deseret News appear to show such interactions with immigration authorities.
A new emphasis on traffic stops has coincided with a change of leadership over the ICE Salt Lake City Field Office located in West Valley City, with the new director coming from Customs and Border Patrol, according to Young and Pitt White. Deseret News confirmed this change with local law enforcement, and the name of the new director, Brian Henke.
Before the past few months, White, who specializes in immigrant removal defense at Contigo.Law, said her clients never reported being stopped and arrested while in their vehicles. Now it has become commonplace, often leaving family members at home with no idea of what has happened, White said.
Customs and Border Patrol agents question occupants of a vehicle they pulled over, during an immigration crackdown in Kenner, La., Friday, Dec. 5, 2025. | Gerald Herbert, Associated Press
“I’ve seen them break windows in Utah and pull people out of their cars, even while children are inside — kind of the worst bits of humanity is what we’re seeing,” White told the Deseret News. “Any empathy or sympathy that did exist in this system is basically gone now.”
White said these instances were relayed to her directly by individuals seeking legal consultation, and in one case included personal dashcam footage of the interaction, which the Deseret News could not independently verify.
In another video taken in Taylorsville on July 9, which the Deseret News independently verified through video metadata information, a man in a Border Patrol vest can be seen questioning Hispanic workers in a truck, which the immigration authorities said they had followed from a nearby 7-11.
Border Patrol are known for using this approach as part of their “area control” enforcement, typically done within 100 miles of the southern border, according to former ICE field office director Mechkowski.
Salt Lake is more than 800 miles from the border but it appears that the Trump administration is using Border Patrol as a “force multiplier” for ICE, Mechkowski said.
“I don’t see any cons in using any law enforcement agency,” Mechkowski said. “I say it’s all hands on deck, and I don’t see anything negative about it. … I don’t think they’re arresting people fast enough.”
From January to June, the ICE Salt Lake City area of responsibility, which covers Utah, Nevada, Idaho and Montana, conducted an average of 21 arrests per day — less than one-third of the quota established by the administration early on. This average increased to 25 from July to October.
During his time leading ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations in New York City during the first Trump administration, Mechkowski said arrests typically targeted convicted criminals with easily accessible case files. But ICE also regularly conducted raids looking for those with deportation orders and no criminal record.
Mechkowski believes the public is being “lied to” by the mainstream media when they are told ICE has changed its tactics. It hasn’t, according to Mechkowski — it has only expanded its focus to target more heavily those who are in the country illegally without criminal charges: “everybody is fair game.”
What’s behind public perception?
Federal immigration enforcement agents keep watch as they detain a man who took off running as they were walking on North Clark Street near West Superior Street in the River North neighborhood, Sept. 28, 2025, in Chicago. | Ashlee Rezin, Chicago Sun-Times via the Associated Press
But the tactics that are increasingly impacting the clients of Vizcardo appear far outside the realm of typical immigration law enforcement efforts, he said.
Just in the past month, Vizcardo said the number of people seeking help for themselves or a loved one who was arrested by immigration authorities has more than doubled, with many reporting that arrests took place while they were going about their normal days.
In one such instance, a client, who is currently detained in the Nevada detention center, was heading home from work, and was surrounded by unmarked SUVs while leaving a fast food restaurant in Kearns during the early morning hours of Dec. 6, Vizcardo said.
The client was then allegedly put inside a van which drove around for the rest of the night picking up other suspected illegal immigrants.
“And in that time they would stop the vehicle for 20 minutes, half an hour, and then drive somewhere real fast, and then another person would be chucked in the back of the van,” Vizcardo told the Deseret News. “By the time they headed to the office, some four hours later, the van was full of people that had been detained during that night.”
Vizcardo said he has “no idea whatsoever” why ICE chose to target his client. He said he does not know whether ICE works from a list of suspected illegal immigrants that it uses to identify individuals to arrest, or whether the arrests are based on other factors.
ICE did not respond to a request for comment on these changing tactics.
The types of immigration enforcement actions appear to be continually changing. Mirroring trends from around the country, last week multiple immigrants were arrested on their way to appointments at the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services office in Salt Lake City, according to Young, Pitt White and multiple mediareports.
Manhattan Institute fellow Rafael Mangual expects one reason why federal agencies have focused more on noncustodial arrests is because it has become harder to work with some so-called “sanctuary city” municipalities to transition detained immigrants into ICE custody.
Pulling in Border Patrol to help expand deportation efforts beyond convicted criminals also aligns with what Trump has long campaigned on, which Mangual said is at least partially in response to the largest immigration wave in U.S. history, with at least 10 million immigrants entering the country from 2021 to 2024, according to census data.
Customs and Border Patrol agents question occupants of a vehicle they pulled over, during an immigration crackdown in Kenner, La., Friday, Dec. 5, 2025. | Gerald Herbert, Associated Press
“To the extent it’s a problem, it’s one that was invited by the Biden administration’s malfeasance on the border,” Mangual told the Deseret News. “That creates a mess, and cleaning up that mess is not always going to be efficient. It won’t always look great on camera.”
But Mangual suspects the uproar over Trump’s immigration policies has more to do with ideological opposition to the president than with ICE tactics. Many of Trump’s detractors would be displeased with any level of enforcement of immigration law, Mangual said.
Critics of the administration have also gone out of their way to interfere with ICE activities, whether that be following agents around with cameras, or blocking the streets, Mangual said.
At the end of November, the Department of Homeland Security, reported a more than 1,000% increase in assaults against ICE officers compared to 2024.
In Salt Lake City and West Valley City, anti-ICE organizations have reportedly placed around 400 signs at businesses that read “Immigrants are welcome here,” “No I.C.E. allowed,” “I.C.E. cannot enter private areas of this business without a judicial warrant signed by a judge” and “I.C.E. out of Utah.”
“I don’t think that that reaction is a byproduct of the style of the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement efforts,” Mangual said. “I think it’s just a backlash to the fact that any immigration enforcement is being done at all.”
In his 24 games for the Jazz this season, Sensabaugh has averaged 8.5 points on 43.1% shooting from the field to pair with 2.5 rebounds and 1.7 assists— currently seventh on Utah’s roster in total …
Everyone knows that Brice Sensabaugh can score the basketball–– he’s been a spark plug scorer that can get hot at the right time since he’s entered the league.
But, of course, in the NBA, there’s more to being an effective rotational player than just scoring. So Sensabaugh, who’s hard-wired with a nose for the basket, has had to make some key developments in his early seasons with the Utah Jazz to tailor his game to getting consistent rotational minutes as a quality, more well-rounded piece on the wing.
In his third year with the Jazz, that top emphasis for making those aspirations has been focused on one key: doing whatever takes to impact winning whenever he’s out on the floor.
“Really just trying to impact winning,” Sensabaugh said of his biggest emphasis during a post-practice presser.
“I think for me, in my short stints, I’m just trying to give maximum effort: crashing the glass, generating extra possessions, getting defensive stops. and just kind of being a voice while I’m out there. On the offensive end, just using my shot to get into the paint at times. And then when I’m open, just letting it go.”
Brice Sensabaugh Putting Emphasis on Winning Basketball
In his 24 games for the Jazz this season, Sensabaugh has averaged 8.5 points on 43.1% shooting from the field to pair with 2.5 rebounds and 1.7 assists— currently seventh on Utah’s roster in total minutes with around 16 a night.
The offensive upside within his game has always been clear since joining the league in 2023 But it’s on the other side of the ball that’s gotten a bit more attention from Sensabaugh to key in on within recent weeks.
“Definitely the defensive end. I feel a big difference out there,” Sensabaugh continued. “When I’m watching the film, the effort that I’m making sure I’m giving is kind of showing up and paying off. So, it’s just been a laser focus for me to continue to do that. Those kind of things change the game.”
Dec 7, 2025; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Utah Jazz head coach Will Hardy (left) speaks with forward Brice Sensabaugh (right) before the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images | Rob Gray-Imagn Images
“So, you know, as as long as I’m out there, whether I’m finishing games or whether it’s a short little stint, I’m just trying to change the game, impact the game. and make it tough on the offense.”
The sooner Sensabaugh can connect the dots to be that two-way wing that can score and defend at a high rate, the quicker Will Hardy will carve out more valuable minutes in the Jazz’s rotation—which is exactly what happened during Utah’s latest game vs. the Dallas Mavericks by elevating him to his first start of the season, and could be a sign of things to come getting deeper into the regular season.
Utah enters Wednesday’s game on the second half of a back-to-back. The Mammoth are 16-16-3 this season and 4-6-0 in their last 10 games. Currently Utah is fourth in the Central Division with 35 points …
Utah enters Wednesday’s game on the second half of a back-to-back. The Mammoth are 16-16-3 this season and 4-6-0 in their last 10 games. Currently Utah is fourth in the Central Division with 35 points …
The Utah Jazz have to keep their pick this season. It’s a non-negotiable. Ending this season without a top-8 pick with a 10-15 roster that, even with some impressive wins, is not a credible contender …
The Utah Jazz have to keep their pick this season. It’s a non-negotiable. Ending this season without a top-8 pick with a 10-15 roster that, even with some impressive wins, is not a credible contender for the championship.
That said, they have a chance to get there if they keep this pick and keep this roster together. But it’s going to take the Jazz taking control of their team’s future. And that likely means some drastic moves that ensure the team doesn’t win games they likely would have had they just played to win.
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And that will be the most applauded move by the entire fan base.
Last night’s game showed us that the Jazz understand the importance of the pick. Not playing Svi Mykhailiuk, Kevin Love, and Jusuf Nurkic. The difference between what the Mavericks did last night and the Jazz? They rested their second most important player. For Utah to get to where they need to go, they have to do the same thing.
Yes, it’s unsavory. Yes, the system sucks, and we all wish it weren’t this way. But in basketball as in life, you can only control what you can control. For the Jazz, they can control who they play and how long they play. And the rewards will be massive. Utah has a core of young players who are developing into something special. The Jazz need one more top pick in the lottery to build around, and they can credibly argue they are building towards something. Just like the Dallas Mavericks did with Anthony Davis not playing against the Jazz, Utah needs to rest their second-best player, Lauri Markkanen, when they play against below .500 teams for the rest of the season.
This will allow Keyonte George to continue playing and enable Ace Bailey to receive prime development at the small forward spot. There is no downside to this plan, and it will assure the Jazz keep their top-8 pick this year, a pick that has the potential to change the franchise forever.
Omar Yaghi thinks crystals with gaps that capture moisture could bring technology from “Dune” to the arid parts of Earth.
Omar Yaghi was a quiet child, diligent, unlikely to roughhouse with his nine siblings. So when he was old enough, his parents tasked him with one of the family’s most vital chores: fetching water. Like most homes in his Palestinian neighborhood in Amman, Jordan, the Yaghis’ had no electricity or running water. At least once every two weeks, the city switched on local taps for a few hours so residents could fill their tanks. Young Omar helped top up the family supply. Decades later, he says he can’t remember once showing up late. The fear of leaving his parents, seven brothers, and two sisters parched kept him punctual.
Yaghi proved so dependable that his father put him in charge of monitoring how much the cattle destined for the family butcher shop ate and drank. The best-quality cuts came from well-fed, hydrated animals—a challenge given that they were raised in arid desert.
Specially designed materials called metal-organic frameworks can pull water from the air like a sponge—and then give it back.
But at 10 years old, Yaghi learned of a different occupation. Hoping to avoid a rambunctious crowd at recess, he found the library doors in his school unbolted and sneaked in. Thumbing through a chemistry textbook, he saw an image he didn’t understand: little balls connected by sticks in fascinating shapes. Molecules. The building blocks of everything.
“I didn’t know what they were, but it captivated my attention,” Yaghi says. “I kept trying to figure out what they might be.”
That’s how he discovered chemistry—or maybe how chemistry discovered him. After coming to the United States and, eventually, a postdoctoral program at Harvard University, Yaghi devoted his career to finding ways to make entirely new and fascinating shapes for those little sticks and balls. In October 2025, he was one of three scientists who won a Nobel Prize in chemistry for identifying metal-organic frameworks, or MOFs—metal ions tethered to organic molecules that form repeating structural landscapes. Today that work is the basis for a new project that sounds like science fiction, or a miracle: conjuring water out of thin air.
When he first started working with MOFs, Yaghi thought they might be able to absorb climate-damaging carbon dioxide—or maybe hold hydrogen molecules, solving the thorny problem of storing that climate-friendly but hard-to-contain fuel. But then, in 2014, Yaghi’s team of researchers at UC Berkeley had an epiphany. The tiny pores in MOFs could be designed so the material would pull water molecules from the air around them, like a sponge—and then, with just a little heat, give back that water as if squeezed dry. Just one gram of a water-absorbing MOF has an internal surface area of roughly 7,000 square meters.
Yaghi wasn’t the first to try to pull potable water from the atmosphere. But his method could do it at lower levels of humidity than rivals—potentially shaking up a tiny, nascent industry that could be critical to humanity in the thirsty decades to come. Now the company he founded, called Atoco, is racing to demonstrate a pair of machines that Yaghi believes could produce clean, fresh, drinkable water virtually anywhere on Earth, without even hooking up to an energy supply.
That’s the goal Yaghi has been working toward for more than a decade now, with the rigid determination that he learned while doing chores in his father’s butcher shop.
“It was in that shop where I learned how to perfect things, how to have a work ethic,” he says. “I learned that a job is not done until it is well done. Don’t start a job unless you can finish it.”
Most of Earth is covered in water, but just 3% of it is fresh, with no salt—the kind of water all terrestrial living things need. Today, desalination plants that take the salt out of seawater provide the bulk of potable water in technologically advanced desert nations like Israel and the United Arab Emirates, but at a high cost. Desalination facilities either heat water to distill out the drinkable stuff or filter it with membranes the salt doesn’t pass through; both methods require a lot of energy and leave behind concentrated brine. Typically desal pumps send that brine back into the ocean, with devastating ecological effects.
Heiner Linke, chair of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry, uses a model to explain how metalorganic frameworks (MOFs) can trap smaller molecules inside. In October 2025, Yaghi and two other scientists won the Nobel Prize in chemistry for identifying MOFs.
JONATHAN NACKSTRAND/GETTY IMAGES
I was talking to Atoco executives about carbon dioxide capture earlier this year when they mentioned the possibility of harvesting water from the atmosphere. Of course my mind immediately jumped to Star Wars, and Luke Skywalker working on his family’s moisture farm, using “vaporators” to pull water from the atmosphere of the arid planet Tatooine. (Other sci-fi fans’ minds might go to Dune, and the water-gathering technology of the Fremen.) Could this possibly be real?
It turns out people have been doing it for millennia. Archaeological evidence of water harvesting from fog dates back as far as 5000 BCE. The ancient Greeks harvested dew, and 500 years ago so did the Inca, using mesh nets and buckets under trees.
Today, harvesting water from the air is a business already worth billions of dollars, say industry analysts—and it’s on track to be worth billions more in the next five years. In part that’s because typical sources of fresh water are in crisis. Less snowfall in mountains during hotter winters means less meltwater in the spring, which means less water downstream. Droughts regularly break records. Rising seas seep into underground aquifers, already drained by farming and sprawling cities. Aging septic tanks leach bacteria into water, and cancer-causing “forever chemicals” are creating what the US Government Accountability Office last year said “may be the biggest water problem since lead.” That doesn’t even get to the emerging catastrophe from microplastics.
So lots of places are turning to atmospheric water harvesting. Watergen, an Israel-based company working on the tech, initially planned on deploying in the arid, poorer parts of the world. Instead, buyers in Europe and the United States have approached the company as a way to ensure a clean supply of water. And one of Watergen’s biggest markets is the wealthy United Arab Emirates. “When you say ‘water crisis,’ it’s not just the lack of water—it’s access to good-quality water,” says Anna Chernyavsky, Watergen’s vice president of marketing.
In other words, the technology “has evolved from lab prototypes to robust, field-deployable systems,” says Guihua Yu, a mechanical engineer at the University of Texas at Austin. “There is still room to improve productivity and energy efficiency in the whole-system level, but so much progress has been steady and encouraging.”
MOFs are just the latest approach to the idea. The first generation of commercial tech depended on compressors and refrigerant chemicals—large-scale versions of the machine that keeps food cold and fresh in your kitchen. Both use electricity and a clot of pipes and exchangers to make cold by phase-shifting a chemical from gas to liquid and back; refrigerators try to limit condensation, and water generators basically try to enhance it.
That’s how Watergen’s tech works: using a compressor and a heat exchanger to wring water from air at humidity levels as low as 20%—Death Valley in the spring. “We’re talking about deserts,” Chernyavsky says. “Below 20%, you get nosebleeds.”
A Watergen unit provides drinking water to students and staff at St. Joseph’s, a girls’ school in Freetown, Sierra Leone. “When you say ‘water crisis,’ it’s not just the lack of water— it’s access to good-quality water,” says Anna Chernyavsky, Watergen’s vice president of marketing.
COURTESY OF WATERGEN
That still might not be good enough. “Refrigeration works pretty well when you are above a certain relative humidity,” says Sameer Rao, a mechanical engineer at the University of Utah who researches atmospheric water harvesting. “As the environment dries out, you go to lower relative humidities, and it becomes harder and harder. In some cases, it’s impossible for refrigeration-based systems to really work.”
So a second wave of technology has found a market. Companies like Source Global use desiccants—substances that absorb moisture from the air, like the silica packets found in vitamin bottles—to pull in moisture and then release it when heated. In theory, the benefit of desiccant-based tech is that it could absorb water at lower humidity levels, and it uses less energy on the front end since it isn’t running a condenser system. Source Global claims its off-grid, solar-powered system is deployed in dozens of countries.
But both technologies still require a lot of energy, either to run the heat exchangers or to generate sufficient heat to release water from the desiccants. MOFs, Yaghi hopes, do not. Now Atoco is trying to prove it. Instead of using heat exchangers to bring the air temperature to dew point or desiccants to attract water from the atmosphere, a system can rely on specially designed MOFs to attract water molecules. Atoco’s prototype version uses an MOF that looks like baby powder, stuck to a surface like glass. The pores in the MOF naturally draw in water molecules but remain open, making it theoretically easy to discharge the water with no more heat than what comes from direct sunlight. Atoco’s industrial-scale design uses electricity to speed up the process, but the company is working on a second design that can operate completely off grid, without any energy input.
Yaghi’s Atoco isn’t the only contender seeking to use MOFs for water harvesting. A competitor, AirJoule, has introduced MOF-based atmospheric water generators in Texas and the UAE and is working with researchers at Arizona State University, planning to deploy more units in the coming months. The company started out trying to build more efficient air-conditioning for electric buses operating on hot, humid city streets. But then founder Matt Jore heard about US government efforts to harvest water from air—and pivoted. The startup’s stock price has been a bit of a roller-coaster, but Jore says the sheer size of the market should keep him in business. Take Maricopa County, encompassing Phoenix and its environs—it uses 1.2 billion gallons of water from its shrinking aquifer every day, and another 874 million gallons from surface sources like rivers.
“So, a couple of billion gallons a day, right?” Jore tells me. “You know how much influx is in the atmosphere every day? Twenty-five billion gallons.”
My eyebrows go up. “Globally?”
“Just the greater Phoenix area gets influx of about 25 billion gallons of water in the air,” he says. “If you can tap into it, that’s your source. And it’s not going away. It’s all around the world. We view the atmosphere as the world’s free pipeline.”
Besides AirJoule’s head start on Atoco, the companies also differ on where they get their MOFs. AirJoule’s system relies on an off-the-shelf version the company buys from the chemical giant BASF; Atoco aims to use Yaghi’s skill with designing the novel material to create bespoke MOFs for different applications and locations.
“Given the fact that we have the inventor of the whole class of materials, and we leverage the stuff that comes out of his lab at Berkeley—everything else equal, we have a good starting point to engineer maybe the best materials in the world,” says Magnus Bach, Atoco’s VP of business development.
Yaghi envisions a two-pronged product line. Industrial-scale water generators that run on electricity would be capable of producing thousands of liters per day on one end, while units that run on passive systems could operate in remote locations without power, just harnessing energy from the sun and ambient temperatures. In theory, these units could someday replace desalination and even entire municipal water supplies. The next round of field tests is scheduled for early 2026, in the Mojave Desert—one of the hottest, driest places on Earth.
“That’s my dream,” Yaghi says. “To give people water independence, so they’re not reliant on another party for their lives.”
Both Yaghi and Watergen’s Chernyavsky say they’re looking at more decentralized versions that could operate outside municipal utility systems. Home appliances, similar to rooftop solar panels and batteries, could allow households to generate their own water off grid.
That could be tricky, though, without economies of scale to bring down prices. “You have to produce, you have to cool, you have to filter—all in one place,” Chernyavsky says. “So to make it small is very, very challenging.”
Difficult as that may be, Yaghi’s childhood gave him a particular appreciation for the freedom to go off grid, to liberate the basic necessity of water from the whims of systems that dictate when and how people can access it.
“That’s really my dream,” he says. “To give people independence, water independence, so that they’re not reliant on another party for their livelihood or lives.”
Toward the end of one of our conversations, I asked Yaghi what he would tell the younger version of himself if he could. “Jordan is one of the worst countries in terms of the impact of water stress,” he said. “I would say, ‘Continue to be diligent and observant. It doesn’t really matter what you’re pursuing, as long as you’re passionate.’”
I pressed him for something more specific: “What do you think he’d say when you described this technology to him?”
Yaghi smiled: “I think young Omar would think you’re putting him on, that this is all fictitious and you’re trying to take something from him.” This reality, in other words, would be beyond young Omar’s wildest dreams.
Alexander C. Kaufman is a reporter who has covered energy, climate change, pollution, business, and geopolitics for more than a decade.
Coming off a 5–4 overtime win against the Penguins, the Mammoth traveled to Boston hoping to defeat the Bruins without needing to rally from a three-goal deficit. While a first-period goal put Utah up …
Miracle comebacks, it seems, can only happen in Pittsburgh.
Coming off a 5–4 overtime win against the Penguins, the Mammoth traveled to Boston hoping to defeat the Bruins without needing to rally from a three-goal deficit.
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While a first-period goal put Utah up 1–0 — an encouraging start compared to its game against Pittsburgh — Boston slowly gained control of the game en route to a 4–1 win.
The game started off well for the Mammoth, with plenty of early shots on goal and extended time in the offensive zone. It looked as though the momentum from their win against the Penguins had carried over into the opening of the game.
Once Utah earned its first power play, Barrett Hayton and the second power-play unit made quick work of it, scoring to give Utah a 1–0 lead.
Just as it had done against Pittsburgh, Utah’s second power play unit now has scored it back-to-back games. The only difference this time is that Hayton got the goal rather than Michael Carcone, scoring at the net front after he collected a pass from Sean Durzi.
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Utah certainly started the game well. Not only did the Mammoth get its first lead of the game in the first rather than the third, but it also got it first goal on only its fifth shot on net of the game.
But as the game progressed, Boston slowly gained more and more control as the game went on. It suddenly became evident that Utah would have to be prepared to play with a lead because the Bruins weren’t going to go away quietly.
However, the lead Utah had didn’t last long as a Boston would also capitalize on a power play of its own, after an excellent display of passing led to a wide open look on net for Morgan Geekie.
Any advantage Utah had over Boston quickly disappeared as it lost the momentum soon after Geekie’s goal.
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Though the Mammoth would finish the first tied 1-1, the Bruins were looking like it was starting to figure out how to play its style of hockey.
Once play had resumed, it didn’t take long for Geekie to score another goal for the Bruins.
Just like his first goal, Geekie benefited from a perfect pass from David Pastrnak that no one from Utah anticipated. Once the puck got through, Geekie was left alone with Vitek Vanecek and made the most of the opportunity.
After that, Utah never seemed able to regain control of the game, managing just eight combined shots on goal across the second and third periods. Even with those chances, Boston goalie Jeremy Swayman stood firm and did not allow the Mammoth to score again.
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While some defensive breakdowns made it nearly impossible for Vanecek to make a save — particularly when Pavel Zacha banked a pass off the end boards to set up a Casey Mittelstadt goal — Utah cannot ignore Vanecek’s 2-7-1 record on the season.
But Utah’s defense certainly needs to help Vanecek out and find ways to make him less vulnerable.
Now Utah will have to get ready fast as it plays the Detroit Red Wings in less than 24 hours on the second game of its back-to-back.
The three game win streak may be off the table, but Utah still should look to avoid falling into a losing streak.
Since Oct. 26, every time the Mammoth have lost a game, they have also lost the following game. Even worse, the team has endured two three-game losing streaks and two four-game losing streaks.
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Simply put, Utah has not found a way to bounce back immediately after losses. It is certainly more difficult to respond on a short turnaround. However, the Red Wings are in the same position, playing the second game of a back-to-back after securing a 3–2 win against the New York Islanders.
But with a chance to come away from the road trip with a 2–1 record, and a national TV spotlight on TNT and HBO Max, Utah should look to play hard and physical.
Lomu has been with the Utes since 2023, spending three seasons with the program. He grew into one of their best linemen overnight, shining as one of the top players at his position in the country.
This has garnered him acclaim at the Big 12 level, receiving first team honors in 2025. With how he excelled in one of the top leagues in college football, NFL teams would embrace the concept of considering him as a future talent.
With his stock at its highest, Lomu has made the decision to declare for the 2026 NFL Draft. Football analyst Jordan Reid reacted to the news, having high remarks to share about the standout lineman.
“Lomu is my top ranked OT and No. 15 overall player on my latest big board. He needs to gain strength, but his upside as a natural left tackle gives him the potential to be the first player off the board at the position,” Reid wrote.
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What’s next for Utah after Caleb Lomu’s decision
Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images
It is big news for Caleb Lomu to make about his football career, celebrating his time at Utah while moving on to his NFL aspirations.
Utah remarkably performed well as one of the best teams in the nation, especially in the Big 12. The Utes finished with a 10-2 overall record, going 7-2 in their conference matchups. They finished at third place in the league standings, being above the Houston Cougars and Arizona Wildcats while being under the BYU Cougars and Texas Tech Red Raiders.
Utah excelled on both sides of the ball in the regular season. They averaged 41.1 points per game on offense and conceded 18.7 points per game on defense.
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Devon Dampier led the attack with 193 completions for 2,180 yards and 22 touchdowns while adding 127 rushes for 687 net yards and seven scores on the ground. Wayshawn Parker starred in the run game with 133 carries for 931 net yards and six touchdowns while Byrd Fioklin and Naquari Rogers provided 10 touchdowns each.
The No. 15 Utes will look forward to ending the 2025 campaign with their bowl game. They will take part in the Las Vegas Bowl, facing the Nebraska Cornhuskers on Dec. 31 at 3:30 p.m. ET.
Utah enters the first half of a back-to-back with two-straight wins, including a victory on the first stop of the road trip. The Mammoth are 16-15-3 and 4-6-0 in their last 10 games.
Utah enters the first half of a back-to-back with two-straight wins, including a victory on the first stop of the road trip. The Mammoth are 16-15-3 and 4-6-0 in their last 10 games.