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Climate

Technology

AM Briefing: What Is Stargate?

On artificial intelligence, the polar vortex, and LNG

Yellow
Podcast

How Wildfires Destroyed California’s Insurance Market

Rob and Jesse talk with Wharton’s Benjamin Keys, then dig into Trump’s big Day One.

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A wind turbine and a huge wave.

The Wind Industry Is Putting on a Brave Face

After Trump’s executive orders took aim at wind developers, they’re mostly keeping a stoic silence.

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The Day After Tomorrow.

‘The Day After Tomorrow’ Was Actually Sort of Onto Something

Not that the movie was correct, but it wasn’t totally wrong — and we could soon face the consequences.

Blue
Politics

AM Briefing: Trump’s Day 1

On the Paris Agreement, Chinese renewables, and a rare winter storm

Unpacking Trump’s Day 1 Energy Moves
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Heavy rainfall triggered flooding and disrupted travel in Spain • An oil spill in Nigeria’s Niger River delta has entered its fourth week • Dangerous fire conditions persist in Southern California, where the Palisades fire is 61% contained.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump declares ‘national energy emergency’

President Trump began his first day back in office with a series of executive orders aimed at undermining climate policy and unleashing American energy production. He declared a “national energy emergency,” describing an “active threat to the American people from high energy prices.” The order directs agency leaders to “exercise any lawful emergency authorities available to them, as well as all other lawful authorities they may possess” to facilitate U.S. energy production, including — but not limited to — activities on federal lands. The stated goal of many of the policies put forward under this energy emergency is to bring down energy costs for American consumers. But few of them are designed to do so. Instead, they aim to do virtually the opposite: shore up oil and gas demand. “That makes sense,” says Heatmap’s Robinson Meyer. “The United States is, at the moment, producing more oil and gas than any country in world history. The fossil fuel industry’s problem isn’t getting gas out of the ground, but finding people to sell it to. By suspending fuel economy and energy efficiency rules, Trump can force Americans to use more energy — and spend more on oil and gas — to do the same amount of useful work.”

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Politics

Trump Bids Adieu to the Paris Agreement. Again.

This time, it’ll happen more quickly, though still not right away.

The Eiffel Tower and a smokestack.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

In a completely unsurprising redux of President Donald Trump’s first term, the new/old U.S. president has officially notified the United Nations of America’s intent to withdraw from the Paris Agreement. According to the terms of the agreement, which went into effect in 2016, it takes a full year for withdrawal to become official. But Trump will almost certainly henceforth act as if the U.S. is no longer bound by the treaty, which has been adopted by nearly every other nation on Earth, in an effort to keep global warming “well below” 2 degrees Celsius.

“I’m immediately withdrawing from the unfair, one-sided Paris Climate Accord rip-off,” Trump told the crowd at the Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C., before signing a list of executive orders. “The United States will not sabotage our own industries while China pollutes with impunity,” he said. Trump has previously stated that he thinks it is unfair that less developed nations such as China are not required to peak their emissions for a number of years, while the U.S. is expected to continue decreasing its own.

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