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Climate

An orange sky.
Climate

Orange Skies Are Back

Where is the smoke worst, where will it go next, and what causes that color?

Climate

Why Heat Waves Are Tricky Killers

Deciding what counts as a heat death is more difficult than it sounds.

AM Briefing

PJM Maxes Out

On America’s thorium progress, Google’s solar buy, and Chinese nuclear

Yellow
AM Briefing

Dubai Bypass

On American nuclear, a labor union record, and climate tech’s resurgence

Blue
Grand Escalante.

Monumental Change

On fusion’s record year, nuclear satellites, and Chilean copper

Blue
Power lines.

False Summit

On the India-Australia uranium deal, a U.S. general’s warning, and Chicago’s VPP

Red
AM Briefing

A Global Nuclear Renaissance

On Trump’s mineral paradox, China’s Great Green Wall, and sodium-ion batteries

A reactor under construction.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: After devastating the U.S. island of Rota in the Northern Mariana Islands territory, Super Typhoon Bavi is barreling toward Taiwan with winds of up to 200 miles per hour • Rare tornadoes brought on by storms touched down in China’s Hubei province, leaving 11 dead • Temperatures in Madrid are hovering at around 100 degrees Fahrenheit all week as the Spanish capital roasts in Europe’s latest heat wave.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Oil prices shoot up again as U.S. ceasefire with Iran abruptly ends

Exactly three weeks after President Donald Trump signed a formal memorandum to halt the bombing campaign against Iran that the United States and Israel embarked on nearly five months ago, the war is back on. After Washington accused Tehran of launching missiles at tankers passing through the Strait of Hormuz this week, Trump officially declared the resumption of combat. Speaking Wednesday morning at the NATO summit in Turkey, Trump called the Iranian regime “scum,” “sick people,” and “vicious, violent people” when asked about the peace pact during a press conference. “If they had a nuclear weapon, they’d use it,” Trump said. “So as far as I’m concerned, it’s over.” He spent the rest of the day posting more than a dozen videos and photos on his Truth Social account purportedly showing U.S. missile strikes in Iran. “This is in retribution for yesterday’s bombing of ships by Iran,” Trump wrote in one post. “If it happens again, it will get much worse!”

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Climate

New Climate Investing Framework Aims for Maximum Acceleration

Generate Capital, CalSTRS, and the Rhodium Group have teamed up on a new Transition Acceleration Framework to measure and assess emissions impacts.

A money maze.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The most common way to judge whether a company or project is helping to tackle climate change is to measure emissions. Has the company reduced its carbon footprint? Will the project add fewer greenhouse gas emissions to the atmosphere than alternatives?

It’s a useful metric, but a limited one. One company might be doing more to advance the energy transition than another — by investing in an expensive, early-stage solution such as geothermal power, for example — but a comparison of their carbon footprints won’t necessarily show it. At the project level, a solar farm in Mississippi, where solar deployment has lagged, will do more to decarbonize the U.S. power grid than one of equal size in California, even though both projects emit zero carbon.

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