It  is the nightmare of the wired world -- a smartphone low on battery. Now  Swedish group myFC says its water-powered charger could be the fix  anywhere while battery giant Duracell is championing a push for cars and  even stadiums to be built with energy "mats" that would power up  phones. A Californian firm, meanwhile, has launched a phone that it  claims can remain charged for up to 15 years, making it the perfect  spare in emergencies or disasters. "The difference between the energy on  a phone and the energy we consume is increasing. We need to charge more  often but you don't want to be hooked onto a wall," said myFC chief  executive Bjorn Westerholm. His firm has therefore come up with a  portable fuel cell charger which is slightly larger than a compact  camera and which uses just one spoonful of water and a small metallic  device called a fuel puck, to fully charge an iPhone. The PowerTrekk  could appeal most to campers, aid workers or the military, said  Westerholm, who is exhibiting the charger at the world's biggest mobile  fair in Barcelona. "It could be sea water, fresh water. You need to  carry water with you to survive anyway and the PowerTrekk needs just one  spoonful," he told AFP. 
  
"So  you can Facebook, email even when you're in the outdoors for hours.  "Our value proposition is that you don't need to go to the grid. You  don't need to wait to charge your phone." Competition for solutions to  power up phones is fierce. XPAL Power rolled out a phone with a battery  that "lasts 15 years," said Christian Scheder, chairman of the  Californian firm. The so-called Spareone, which will be commercialised  in March, remains charged for up to 15 years if the phone is turned off,  and for two months if it is on. "This is great for emergency, disaster  situations," Scheder said. Battery giant Duracell meanwhile has its own  vision to keep the world charged. It is championing the PowerMat system,  a mat which looks like a small tablet that plugs into the power source  and which has sufficient space to charge two phones which are equipped  with special protective covers. But that is just the beginning, Stassi  Anastassov, Duracell President, told AFP. Beyond just targeting  consumers with the charging kit, Duracell is at the Mobile World  Congress to talk phone manufacturers into designing a slot for a special  chip or even build it into the telephone, thereby doing away with the  protective covers that are currently required to dock with the mat. The  company further wants to fit the mats in public places, for instance,  build them into tables at fast-food chains, thereby allowing anyone with  equipped phones to charge up anytime. It already has a deal with  General Motors to fit all vehicles from 2013 with the charging mat.  Likewise, it has an agreement to equip New York's Madison Square Garden,  starting with bar tabletops. "Of course it will take many years, the  whole ecosystem will not be up tomorrow," said Anastassov. "But our  vision is that you will be able to never go out of power, simply by  facilitating the whole charging process for you. "It's very similar to  banking and money. If you want to have cash, you can either have a very  big wallet full of money or you have an ATM card," he said.
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