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Climate

The F-150 Lightning.
AM Briefing

Lightning Strikes Out

On ‘critical’ coal, data center costs, and recycled metals

AM Briefing

COP Kickoff

On geoengineering consent, Taiwan’s nuclear hopes, and a spider ‘megacity’

Yellow
Climate

Neil Gorsuch Is Worried Tariffs Could Create a ‘Climate Emergency’

But this might all be moot thanks to the “major questions doctrine.”

AM Briefing

Morning in America

On Massachusetts’ offshore headwinds, Biden’s gas rules, and Australia’s free power

Blue
Mikie Sherrill.

Climate at the Polls

On precious metals, China’s iron mine, and New York’s gas ban

Blue
An Energy Star card.

Energy Star Saved

On ‘modernizing’ coal, 2.8 degrees of warming, and Spain’s nuclear phaseout

Blue
Climate

In the Long Run, Trump Might Not Mean Much for the Climate’s Trajectory

A new report from the Rhodium Group finds that the range of likely temperature outcomes has essentially not changed since 2023.

Donald Trump.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

It’s that time of year when COP, the annual United Nations climate conference, draws near, and a flood of reports assess how much progress the world has made (or not made) to limit global warming. Given the sharp reversal in U.S. climate policy under President Trump, it may seem inevitable that the future will look bleaker than before. His administration has spent the past nine months dismantling nearly every bit of domestic climate policy implemented by its predecessor, and has even managed to thwart international efforts at climate cooperation.

The annual climate outlook from the Rhodium Group, a U.S. energy and climate research firm, offers a somewhat hopeful counterpoint to that narrative, however. It finds that the range of possible climate futures has essentially not changed in the past two years.

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AM Briefing

The Ghosting of Shell

On Arctic drilling, BYD’s drop, and Democrats’ timid embrace of nuclear recycling

A Shell truck.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Hurricane Melissa now a Category 2 storm, has left as much as $52 billion in damages in its wake • Sadly for trick-or-treaters, a new storm moving northward from the Mississippi Valley is forecast to bring heavy rains and gusty winds to the Northeast, particularly New England, on Halloween • Heavy rains are bringing the highest possible flood risk to Kenya today.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Shell abandons its offshore wind project

Oil giant Shell withdrew from its Atlantic Shores project to develop offshore wind off the coast of New Jersey and New York. In a press release on Thursday, the company said it was pulling out of a 50-50 joint venture with the French energy giant EDF as the Anglo-Dutch behemoth grapples with the Trump administration’s so-called “total war on wind.” The decision, the company said, “was taken in line with Shell’s power strategy,” which includes “shifting away from capital-intensive generation projects to assets that support our trading and retail strengths.” The move comes nearly a month after Shell’s top executive in the United States called out President Donald Trump for setting what she called a bad precedent for future administrations that would use the legal approaches the White House has taken to attack offshore wind against oil and gas, as I wrote here a few weeks ago.

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