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Carbon Removal

Mining.
AM Briefing

The Rare Earth Shopping Spree

On aluminum smelting, Korean nuclear, and a geoengineering database

AM Briefing

Cowboy Beepboop

On Heatmap's annual survey, Trump’s wind ‘spillover,’ and Microsoft’s soil deal

Yellow
Carbon Removal

DAC Is Struggling in America, But It’s Big in Japan

With new corporate emissions restrictions looming, Japanese investors are betting on carbon removal.

Sheldon Whitehouse.

Blue Wall

On supersonic gas, space solar, and Japanese fusion

Blue
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

Where COP30 Is Actually Making Progress

The United Nations climate conference wants you to think it’s getting real. It’s not total B.S.

Green
AM Briefing

FEMA Fubar

On EPA’s wetland protections, worsening blackouts, and a solar bright spot

David Richardson.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Severe thunderstorms will bring winds of up to 85 miles per hour to parts of the Texarkana region • A cold front in Southeast Asia is stirring waves up to three meters high along the shores of Vietnam • Parts of Libya are roasting in temperatures as high as 95 degrees Fahrenheit.


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Carbon Removal

The Great Canadian DAC-Off

Deep Sky is running a carbon removal competition on the plains of Alberta.

Deep Sky.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Emily Pontecorvo, Getty Images</p>

Four years ago, Congress hatched an ambitious, bipartisan plan for the United States to become the epicenter of a new climate change-fighting industry. Like an idea ripped from science fiction, the government committed $3.5 billion to develop hulking steel complexes equipped with industrial fans that would filter planet-warming carbon dioxide out of the air.

That vision — to build regional hubs for “direct air capture” — is now languishing under the Trump administration. But a similar, albeit privately-funded initiative in Canada has raced ahead. In the span of about 12 months, a startup called Deep Sky transformed a vacant five-acre lot in Central Alberta into an operational testing ground for five different prototypes of the technology, with more on the way.

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