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Climate

Electricity Demand Is Rapidly Eclipsing The U.S. Supply
AM Briefing

The Brittle Grid

On copper prices, coal burning, and Bonaire’s climate victory

AM Briefing

Avenue Électrique

On nuclear deregulation, Drax’s troubles, and NYC solar scammers

Green
Climate

Why Michigan’s Big Oil Lawsuit Is Not Like the Others

Fossil fuel companies colluded to stifle competition from clean energy, the state argues.

AM Briefing

So Long, Paris

On Vineyard Wind’s win, Hydro-Quebec, and the EU-India trade deal

Blue
Mining.

The Rare Earth Shopping Spree

On aluminum smelting, Korean nuclear, and a geoengineering database

Green
Icy power lines.

White Out

On deep-sea mining, New York nuclear, and kestrel symbiosis

Blue
Climate

Climate Change Won’t Make Winter Storms Less Deadly

In some ways, fossil fuels make snowstorms like the one currently bearing down on the U.S. even more dangerous.

A snowflake with a tombstone.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The relationship between fossil fuels and severe weather is often presented as a cause-and-effect: Burning coal, oil, and gas for heat and energy forces carbon molecules into a reaction with oxygen in the air to form carbon dioxide, which in turn traps heat in the atmosphere and gradually warms our planet. That imbalance, in many cases, makes the weather more extreme.

But this relationship also goes the other way: We use fossil fuels to make ourselves more comfortable — and in some cases, keep us alive — during extreme weather events. Our dependence on oil and gas creates a grim ouroboros: As those events get more extreme, we need more fuel.

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AM Briefing

Hot Stocks

On Trump’s clawed-back loans, California’s power surge, and ‘Coalie’

A Fervo facility.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Fervo Energy, Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: The monster snow storm headed eastward could dump more than a foot of snow on New York City this weekend • An extreme heat wave in Australia is driving temperatures past 104 degrees Fahrenheit • In northwest India, Jammu and Kashmir are bracing for up to 8 inches of snow.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Fervo and General Fusion are going public

Last month, Fervo Energy raised another $462 million in a Series E round to finance construction of the next-generation geothermal startup’s first major power plant. Pretty soon, retail investors will be able to get in on the hype. On Thursday, Axios reported that the company had filed confidential papers with the Securities and Exchange Commission in preparation for an initial public offering. Fervo’s IPO will be a milestone for the geothermal industry. For years, the business of tapping the Earth’s molten heat for energy has remained relatively small, geographically isolated, and dominated by incumbent players such as Ormat Technologies. But Fervo set off a startup boom when it demonstrated that it could use fracking technology to access hot rocks in places that don’t have the underground reservoirs that conventional geothermal companies rely upon. In yesterday’s newsletter, I told you about how Zanskar, a startup using artificial intelligence to find more conventional resources, and Sage Geosystems, a rival next-generation company to Fervo, had raised a combined $212 million. But as my colleague Matthew Zeitlin wrote in December when Fervo raised its most recent financing round, it’s not yet clear whether the company’s “enhanced” geothermal approach is price competitive. With how quickly things are progressing, we will soon find out.

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