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Climate

Trump Pays Duke Energy $129 Million to Kill Offshore Wind
AM Briefing

Duke Abdicates

On FERC’s independence, North Dakota, and Ecuador’s bombed regulator

AM Briefing

Sayonara, Equinor

On Greenland’s rare earths, Baker Hughes’ geothermal bet, China’s green H2

Green
AM Briefing

Video Killed the Polestar

On Texas transmission trouble, Russian nuclear reprocessing, and ‘guerrilla solar’

Yellow
Daily Briefing

Heat Waves, Hot Rods, and Mr. Wonderful

Three climate stories that caught my eye today.

Blue
Gas prices.

Gassed Up

On alumina, CANDUs, and copper

Yellow
Walmart.

Save Nuclear Plants. Live Better.

On Trump’s AP1000 deal, Utah solar, Canadian cobalt

Yellow
AM Briefing

Lucid Shrinking


On simplified oil and gas leases, lawsuits over plastic and coal, and a new climate research database

A Lucid Air.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Lucid Motors</p>

Current conditions: The U.K.’s Met Office issued its second-ever Red Extreme Heat Warning for Wednesday and Thursday • A wildfire near Eureka, Utah forced the town’s evacuation • Flash flood warnings are in effect today for Southern Massachusetts.


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Climate

How a Documentary About Climate Migration Found a Happy Ending

Director Josh Fox on his latest film, The Welcome Table, plus Shakespearean comedy and the New York Knicks.

Climate migrants.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

After images of oil-slicked waterfowl and marching protesters, there is perhaps no visual more representative of the fossil fuel crisis than the flaming faucet in Josh Fox’s 2010 documentary GasLand. The film, which investigated how the fracking boom pollutes local communities, memorably included a scene of a man lighting his kitchen tap water on fire as methane spewed out through the contaminated water line. As one reporter wrote several years after its initial release, GasLand was the film that made “fracking” a household word in the United States.

Over 16 years and about a quarter of a million more American oil and gas wells later, the climate crisis caused by human use of fossil fuels has grown ever more acute. The emissions from burning those hydrocarbons have made the weather more extreme and unpredictable, of course, but they’re also reshaping the human landscape. In 2021, a team of international scientists published a report warning that a third of the world’s population, some 3.5 billion people, may be forced to leave their homes over the next 50 years due to the increasingly hot and unstable climate.

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