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Climate

Grand Escalante.
AM Briefing

Monumental Change

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

AM Briefing

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

Green
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.

Blue
The Louvre.

Europe’s Heat Deaths

On Trump’s gas boom, Germany’s fusion push, and Meta’s Canadian complex

Red
Electricity pylons.

Go West, Young Man

On half-full glasses, Omani polysilicon, and U.S. vs. Chinese nuclear

Blue
Daily Briefing

Why Biden’s Climate Law Is Stickier Than It Seems

Any version of the future — even one under Trump — includes bits of the Inflation Reduction Act.

Donald Trump and Joe Biden.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

We passed a major milestone over the weekend: the one-year anniversary of President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. That piece of legislation — which curtailed the wind and solar tax credits, ended incentives for electric vehicle buyers, and terminated a lot of green industrial policy — was signed into law on July 4, 2025. It also formally ended the era of decarbonization and climate policy experimentation that began when the United States passed the Inflation Reduction Act roughly three years earlier.

Now we’re far enough out to begin assessing the Trump law’s impact. And a fascinating new report, published today by the MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research, argues that the damage … is not as bad as one might fear — at least in the electricity sector.

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AM Briefing

‘A Watershed Moment’

On energy inefficiency, global green H2, and New Hampshire’s guerrilla solar

Holtec machinery.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Holtec International</p>

Current conditions: Super Typhoon Bavi is slamming into Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands as the equivalent of a Category 5 hurricane, with sustained wind speeds topping 178 miles per hour • The record-shattering heat dome over the central and eastern United States is easing and shifting westward until mid July • In Europe, however, the heat is continuing, with temperatures hitting 108 degrees Fahrenheit in southern Spain over the weekend.

THE TOP FIVE

1. America’s historic first restart of a nuclear reactor hits a ‘watershed moment’

America’s next nuclear reactor is coming to life via resurrection. For the past two years, Holtec International has been working to bring the single reactor at the decommissioned Palisades nuclear plant in western Michigan back into service. It would be the first time in U.S. history that a permanently shuttered nuclear plant came back online. If successful, a growing list of projects are lining up to follow in Palisades’ footsteps. On Friday, Holtec announced that the Palisades crew had completed “the last of the major projects,” marking a “watershed moment” in the restoration effort. “We’re now focused on safely executing the remaining testing, verification, and operational readiness activities required before startup,” Michael Schultheis, Holtec’s vice president of the plant, said in a statement. “The plant is coming back together, and the professionalism and dedication demonstrated by our workforce continue to move the project forward.”

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