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Climate

U.S. Weighs Banning Foreign Inverters
AM Briefing

The Zeal of the Inverter

On New York’s solar farmland, German nuclear, and Argentinian gas

Climate

My Extremely Hot European Vacation

I decided to go to Italy in June with my husband, my 9-month-old daughter, and my 69-year-old father. What could go wrong?

Yellow
AM Briefing

Duke Abdicates

On FERC’s independence, North Dakota, and Ecuador’s bombed regulator

Yellow
AM Briefing

Sayonara, Equinor

On Greenland’s rare earths, Baker Hughes’ geothermal bet, China’s green H2

Green
A Polestar.

Video Killed the Polestar

On Texas transmission trouble, Russian nuclear reprocessing, and ‘guerrilla solar’

Yellow
Paris, a Slate, and J. Stuart Adams.

Heat Waves, Hot Rods, and Mr. Wonderful

Three climate stories that caught my eye today.

Blue
AM Briefing

Gassed Up

On alumina, CANDUs, and copper

Gas prices.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: France just recorded its hottest day ever, with Wednesday’s temperatures soaring to just under 111 degrees Fahrenheit; nearly 50 people died drowning while seeking respite from the heat • A pair of 7.1-magnitude earthquakes struck Venezuela, collapsing buildings in Caracas • Wind has whipped the Cottonwood Fire, one of six wildfires raging in Utah, into a larger blaze now covering 60,000 acres — and it’s still at 0% containment.


THE TOP FIVE

1. One of the highest-ranking Democrats yet calls for a data center moratorium

New Jersey Representative Frank Pallone, the ranking Democrat on the House Energy and Commerce committee, joined calls for a national moratorium on data center construction ahead of Wednesday afternoon’s markup of a series of bills related to the buildout of infrastructure to support artificial intelligence software. In a statement, Pallone described the bills as a “useful first step,” but one that, “compared to the challenges the American power grid is facing,” amounts to “not nearly enough.” Rather, he backed a “national AI data center moratorium until we can find a way to ensure they don’t harm our nation’s air, water, and power bills.” Pallone’s new public position makes him one of the highest-ranking Democrats yet to back the idea, championed by the likes of Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, of halting permitting on new data centers in response to the growing blowback from voters.

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AM Briefing

Save Nuclear Plants. Live Better.

On Trump’s AP1000 deal, Utah solar, Canadian cobalt

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

Current conditions: The warehouse fire in Boyle Heights is raging for a third day, spewing dark smoke over the Downtown Los Angeles skyline • The death toll from Western Europe’s heatwave has reached into the dozens • An 18-wheeler carrying more than 400 beehives overturned in eastern Texas and filled a small neighborhood with more than 2 million honeybees.


THE TOP FIVE

1. Walmart inks a major deal for nuclear energy

Wally World is soon to be powered by the atom. On Tuesday, Walmart announced a 15-year deal with Constellation, the nation’s largest operator of nuclear plants, for a chunk of the electricity coming from the Dresden Clean Energy Center in Illinois. The agreement included about 176 megawatts of wholesale supply from the two-reactor station southwest of Chicago, including 30 megawatts of expanded generating capacity through “uprates” — upgrades that allow operators to get more power out of an existing unit. Over the past two years, tech giants such as Google, Microsoft, and Meta, have bought shares of the power coming from nuclear power stations as the companies sought steady supplies of clean electricity for their burgeoning data centers. But the Walmart deal stands out as one of the first to involve a major brick-and-mortar retailer. “We’re constantly evaluating new capabilities and energy solutions that help ensure the electricity we rely on is dependable, responsibly produced, and built to support long-term growth,” Shayne Wahlmeier, Walmart’s senior vice president of energy, said in a statement.

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