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Carbon Removal

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.

AM Briefing

Blue Wall

On supersonic gas, space solar, and Japanese fusion

Blue
Climate

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
David Richardson.

FEMA Fubar

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

Blue
Deep Sky.

The Great Canadian DAC-Off

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

Blue
AM Briefing

Shaken by Melissa

On EV investments hitting the brakes, Google’s nuclear restart, and a new data center consensus

Hurricane Melissa.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Cyclone Montha is poised to make landfall over the Andhra Pradesh coast in eastern India with winds of up to 62 miles per hour • South Africa’s Northern Cape faces extremely high fire risks • Southwest California is also facing high risk of wildfires amid Santa Ana winds and dry, warm conditions today and tomorrow.


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AM Briefing

Battery Bust

On Interior’s permitting upset, a nuclear restart milestone, and destroying ‘superpollutants’

Battery storage.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

A tropical storm brewing in the Caribbean is likely to strengthen into a named storm in the coming days, bringing deadly flooding and powerful winds | Tropical storm Fengshen has killed at least eight in the Philippines as it barrels toward Vietnam and Laos | In Australia, record heat in the eastern Outback hit 113 degrees Fahrenheit.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Energy Department kills $700 million in battery factory funding

Late last month, the Department of Energy clawed back $7.5 billion from 321 separate grants to clean energy projects. A week later, as Heatmap’s Emily Pontecorvo extensively reported, a list that included three times as many grants, including those that had already been canceled, began circulating. When the agency declined to confirm that the second list as real, speculation mounted that it was either an old document that the Trump administration was using as a threat for political leverage in ongoing negotiations over the government shutdown, or that the White House was staying mum to avoid conflicts over cuts in red districts. Recent events, however, seem to confirm that the longer kill list is precisely what it appears to be. On Monday, the Energy Department told E&E News that it had canceled $700 million in battery manufacturing projects, the first grants off the second list the agency confirmed were on the chopping block. The awards had gone to companies including Ascend Elements, American Battery Technology Co., Anovion, and ICL Specialty Products, as well as the glass manufacturer LuxWall.

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