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Climate

The U.S. Finally Has Two New Nuclear Projects Underway
AM Briefing

Nuclear Anew

On offshore mining, New Jersey’s offshore wind, and China’s oil breakthrough

Climate

El Niño’s Comeback Is Bad News for Climate Politics

This year’s ocean-heating phenomenon could make climate change seem less bad than it really is — at least in the U.S.

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AM Briefing

Et Moi?

On Chinese solar exports, Blue Energy’s nuclear reactors, and GE Vernova stock

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AM Briefing

Blowing the Whistle

On Trump’s renewables embargo, Project Vault, and perovskite solar

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Arctic clouds.

‘A Critical Phase’

On China’s H2 breakthrough, vehicle-to-grid charging, and USA Rare Earth goes to Brazil

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Offshore wind.

Total Waste

On Eli Lilly’s nuclear, Sunrise Wind, and Brazil’s minerals

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AM Briefing

SunZia Rises

On Minnesota mining, DAC being back, and desalination dividends

Wind turbines.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: A broad swath of the United States stretching from South Texas to Chicago is being bombarded by the Central U.S. with severe storms and more than two dozen tornadoes so far • The thunderstorms pummeling Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands are expected to stretch into the weekend • Kigali is also in the midst of a days-long stretch of heavy storms, testing the Rwandan capital’s recent wetland overhaul.

THE TOP FIVE

1. The U.S. just brought one of the Western Hemisphere’s biggest wind farms online

SunZia Wind, the largest renewable energy project of its kind ever built in the U.S., has started generating electricity, nearly capping off a two-decade effort to supply Californians with wind power generated in New Mexico. The developer has begun testing the project’s 916 turbines ahead of planned full-scale commercial operations later this quarter, unnamed sources told E&E News. The project includes 3.5 gigawatts of wind and 550 miles of transmission line to funnel the electricity west from the desert state to the coast. “The impact is already evident,” the newswire wrote. “California broke its record for wind generation eight times in the last four weeks.”

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AM Briefing

Saipan’s ‘Total Darkness’

On Trump’s dubious offshore wind deal, fast tracks, and missed deadlines

The Mariana Islands.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: At least eight tornadoes touched down Wednesday between central Iowa and southern Wisconsin, and more storms are on the way • Temperatures in Central Park, where your humble correspondent sweltered in a suit jacket yesterday afternoon, hit 90 degrees Fahrenheit, shattering the previous record of 87 degrees • Mount Kanloan, a volcano on the Philippines’ Negros island, is showing signs of looming eruption with dozens of ash emissions.

THE TOP FIVE

1. New documents raise questions about Trump’s $1 billion offshore wind kill fee

The Trump administration appears to be tapping an essentially bottomless but highly restricted pool of federal money at the Department of Justice to pay the French energy giant TotalEnergies the $1 billion the Department of the Interior promised in exchange for abandoning two offshore wind projects. Heatmap’s Emily Pontecorvo got her hands on a document that suggests the fund, which is typically reserved for helping federal agencies pay out legal settlements, may have been improperly used for the deal. Tony Irish, a former solicitor in the Department of the Interior who unearthed a letter in the public docket from his former agency to TotalEnergies and shared the document with Emily, told her that the terms of the French energy giant’s lease are such that a lawsuit requiring monetary damages couldn't have been reasonably imminent. Without that, there would be no credible reason to dip into the Judgment Fund for the payout.

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