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Climate

EV charging.
AM Briefing

EV Fee

On forever chemicals, Indian and Swedish nuclear, and Ford’s battery business

AM Briefing

A $400 Billion Megamerger

On Thacker Pass, the Bonneville Power Administration, and Azerbaijan’s offshore wind

Blue
AM Briefing

Silica Skies

On Cleveland’s rejection, Cuba’s energy crisis, and U.S. LNG exports

Blue
AM Briefing

Hot Rock, Hot Stock

On the transformer shortage, sodium batteries, and a space grid

Yellow
South Korea nuclear.

K-Nuclear

On the transformer shortage, sodium batteries, and a space grid

Blue
An LNG pipeline.

Pilgrim's Pipeline

On Chinese nuclear, Kenyan geothermal, and American hydropower

Blue
AM Briefing

Strait Through

On New England data centers, ITER’s appetite, and Chinese solar

An LNG tanker.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Temperatures are climbing to 100 degrees Fahrenheit in Las Vegas as a heat wave settles over the Southwest • In India’s northwest Gujarat state, thermometers are soaring as high as 112 degrees • Fire season in the U.S. state of Oregon has officially begun, weeks ahead of usual.


THE TOP FIVE

1. A Qatari gas tanker passes the Strait of Hormuz

A tanker carrying liquified natural gas from Qatar has appeared to transit the Strait of Hormuz, marking the country’s first export out of the Persian Gulf since the Iran War started. On Sunday, Bloomberg reported that the Al Kharaitiyat had successfully passed through the narrow waterway near the mouth of what’s traditionally the busiest route for oil and gas in the world. As of Sunday evening, the vessel en route to Pakistan from Qatar’s Ras Laffan export plant had reached the Gulf of Oman. The ship, the newswire noted, “appears to have navigated the Tehran-approved northern route that hugs the Iranian coast through the strait.”

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Podcast

What Has All This Back-and-Forth Climate Legislating Bought Us?

Rob takes stock of both Biden and Trump’s climate legacies with John Bistline and Ryna Cui.

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

When Congress passed the Inflation Reduction Act in 2022, researchers estimated it would cut U.S. carbon pollution by more than 40% by the mid-2030s. Then President Trump and a GOP majority partially repealed the law, and many of those emissions declines looked doubtful. What will U.S. carbon emissions look like after the One Big Beautiful Bill Act?

We’re starting to get a sense. On this week’s episode of Shift Key, Rob talks with John Bistline and Ryna Cui about a new paper they coauthored modeling the Inflation Reduction Act and One Big Beautiful Bill Act’s combined effects. Bistline is the head of science at Watershed and a former researcher at the Electric Power Research Institute. Cui is a professor at the University of Maryland School of Public Policy and the research director for its Center for Global Sustainability.

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