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Climate

Columns.
AM Briefing

Blue Wave Past the Breakers

On SpaceX’s IPO, hydro deals, and UnionDAC

Climate

5 Key Changes to SBTi’s Net Zero Standard

The Science Based Targets Initiative just released a major update to its signature rulebook for setting climate goals.

Blue
AM Briefing

Solar Outshines Coal

On Texas data centers, Holtec’s New Jersey plans, and Polish renewables

Blue
Climate

The World Cup’s Hottest Disaster Plan

Seattle practiced responding to a heat dome during the international soccer tournament. It didn’t go well.

Qcells workers.

A Solar Bright Spot

On grid investments, CANDUs, and green steel

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A future fusion plant.

Great Tokamak Mountains

On Chinese nuclear, Mongolian uranium, and screwworm spreading

Blue
AM Briefing

A Safer Harbor

On desalination, Japanese nuclear, and Latin American hydroelectricity

Wind and solar power.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Des Moines, Iowa, is bracing for thunderstorms through Thursday night • Temperatures in Touggourt, in northern Algeria, are soaring north of 103 degrees Fahrenheit • European forecasters expect the brewing El Niño conditions forming now could become the strongest ever recorded.


THE TOP FIVE

1. Federal court tosses out Trump’s strict limits on solar and wind tax credits

Last August, the Internal Revenue Service issued strict new rules for solar and wind developers hoping to tap the federal tax credits known as 45Y, for the production of carbon-free electricity, and 48E, for investment in green generating assets. For years, the U.S. government had required companies to invest 5% of the total cost of the project by a certain deadline to qualify for the rebates. But last summer, the Trump administration eliminated the 5% threshold and instead mandated that projects over 1.5 megawatts in capacity show evidence that physical construction has begun to be eligible for the writeoffs. In all, the new rules “could have been so much worse,” Heatmap’s Emily Pontecorvo wrote at the time. But requiring construction to start narrowed the scope of how many turbines and panels could be built before the two tax credits are phased out this July 4. With less than a month to go before the credits go away, a federal court has intervened to restore the original 5% rules. On Saturday, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia overturned the Internal Revenue Service’s strict new rules. The decision found that the Trump administration had repeatedly failed to back up its justifications for eliminating the 5% provision, consider reasonable alternatives, or demonstrate that the policy change wasn’t motivated by discriminatory views of the wind and solar sectors. “Evidence in the record leaves substantial doubt that the proffered explanation sincerely accounts for the agency’s decision,” the ruling reads. “A thorough review of the record undercuts the conclusion that the defendants made a reasoned decision to eliminate the 5% safe harbor for wind and large-scale solar projects based on concerns about stockpiling.”

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AM Briefing

Trump's Billion-Dollar Coal Gamble

On flesh-eating parasites, Italian nuclear, and China’s “wasted” renewables

Donald Trump.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Tropical Storm Amanda has formed in the eastern Pacific off Baja California, marking the first big storm of the season • Typhoon Jangmi is pummeling Japan, leaving 60,000 without electricity • Western and central Argentina are bracing for a deluge of up to 8 inches of rain this week.


THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump offers nearly $1 billion in funding for coal

President Donald Trump just upped his bid to revive America’s dying coal-fired power sector. In the first of three funding announcements Thursday, the Department of Energy said it would spend up to $425 million to support the supply chain and expand the capacity of at least 13 coal plants. The agency said in the same press release that it would give $75 million to build a new coal export facility at the West Gateway Terminal Project in Oakland, designed to ship more than 10 millions tons of coal overseas each year. Then the Energy Department unveiled another $350 million to support construction of America’s first new coal plants in over a decade: one in Anchorage, Alaska, and the other in Mt. Storm, West Virginia. The money will also support an upgrade of Puerto Rico’s only coal plant, the infamous 510-megawatt facility in Guayama, and the recommissioning of a 205-megawatt Cumberland, Maryland-based plant that shut down in 2024. Since taking office, Secretary of Energy Chris Wright has repeatedly ordered coal plants set to shutter to remain open, despite steep costs to utilities that the companies are now challenging in court. But coal plants themselves have played the biggest part in thwarting his plans, given that — as Heatmap’s Matthew Zeitlin wrote last year — they keep breaking down.

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