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Climate

A Chevron facility.
AM Briefing

Oil’s Road to Damascus

On NRC moves, Blue Energy, and China’s solar and methanol breakthroughs

Climate

How Bad Is Exercising in Wildfire Smoke?

Your mileage may vary — but you’ll probably want to keep the outdoor runs to a minimum.

Blue
Sparks

5 Things to Keep in Mind When It’s Smoky Outside

What are the health risks? How can I protect myself? And will my plants be okay?

AM Briefing

La Brega de Agua

On Hungary’s BYD scandal, seawater uranium, and saving styrofoam

Yellow
An orange sky.

Orange Skies Are Back

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

Yellow
Tombstones and a thermometer.

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

Power lines.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Canadian wildfires smoke has returned to the Northeast United States, worsening air quality across the region • Catastrophic 1-in-1,000-year floods devastated Missouri’s Black River region, right as intense rainfall is headed for Texas • Temperatures in Beijing are set to drop by nearly 10 degrees Fahrenheit after roasting at nearly 100 degrees yesterday.

THE TOP FIVE

1. PJM’s latest auction lands at the price cap

PJM Interconnection just released the results of its latest capacity auction for 2028 to 2029, and the nation’s largest grid system maxed out its prices yet again. The clearing price hit its cap of $325 per megawatt-day, all while PJM failed to line up enough supply to meet its incoming demand with a sufficient margin of safety. “These auction results show that demand for electricity continues to grow faster than electricity supply,” PJM CEO David Mills said in a statement. “At the same time, PJM recognizes how this supply-and-demand imbalance impacts the reliability of the system and costs for consumers. We are working with government and industry leaders on multiple fronts to restore that balance by bringing on new generation as fast as possible and managing the growth of new load on the grid.” But Julia Kortrey, the director of strategic initiatives for state-level programs at the climate advocacy group Evergreen, said PJM had just “delivered more bad news for people already struggling with higher energy bills,” and accused the grid operator of slow-walking “cheap, clean energy that could lower bills.”

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AM Briefing

Dubai Bypass

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

Fujairah.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: New England is bracing for a series of severe thunderstorms this afternoon with the potential to cause widespread damage from winds and flooding • A firefighting helicopter crashed while battling Colorado’s Gold Mountain Fire, killing the pilot • Temperatures in Delhi, India, are nearing 100 degrees Fahrenheit today.

THE TOP FIVE

1. The UAE is planning a new port to bypass the Strait of Hormuz

Dubai is planning to build a new port and container terminal on the United Arab Emirates’ east coast in a bid to circumvent the Strait of Hormuz and neuter Iran’s ability to leverage its control of the waterway toward geopolitical ends. On Monday, the Financial Times reported that DP World, the logistics giant and port operator based in the glitzy Emirati megacity, was working on a new port in the coastal area of Fujairah. The company’s Jebel Ali hub, located near the contested maritime route, has long served as “Dubai’s crown jewel.” But the newspaper said “shifting some of the port’s capacity outside Dubai marks a seismic change for the emirate, which has established itself as a global trade and finance hub partly off the back of Jebel Ali’s growth.” After all, activity at the port nosedived by as much as 95% after the United States and Israel began bombing Iran in February.

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