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Climate

The Louvre.
AM Briefing

Europe’s Heat Deaths

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

AM Briefing

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.

AM Briefing

‘A Watershed Moment’

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

Green
Joe Biden and Donald Trump.

Exclusive: New Report Says Trump Hasn’t Squashed Biden’s Clean Energy Buildout

A just-released MIT paper argues that the energy transition is still largely following the trajectory laid out in the Inflation Reduction Act.

This Heat Wave Is Just a Test

This Heat Wave Is Just a Test

Cities like New York, Philadelphia, and Toronto will see more days like this — but the effects of chronic not-so-extreme heat also build up.

AM Briefing

Radioactive!

On Puerto Rico’s grid, West Virginia’s rare earths hub, and China’s trucking fight

NRC Proposes Overhauling Radiation Rules
<p>Illustration by Simon Abranowicz / Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Flooding from heavy rains in Ivory Coast and Ghana has killed at least 71 people so far • Barreling northwest of the Philippines, Tropical Depression Henry could strengthen into a storm by this evening • Philadelphia is roasting in 100 degrees Fahrenheit and bracing for thunderstorms as France and Paraguay prepare for Saturday’s World Cup knockout game.

THE TOP FIVE

1. NRC proposes major nuclear energy overhauls

On Wednesday afternoon, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission pitched two sweeping overhauls of the nation’s rules for building atomic power stations. The first proposal calls for replacing a radiation protection standard called As Low as Reasonably Achievable, or ALARA, with hard dose limits. “This rulemaking is raising the bar on clarity in our regulations. It is not lowering the bar on our safety standards,” Ho Nieh, the NRC chairman, told a small group of reporters on a call. “Dose limits for members of the public? They are not changing. We’re just really putting in clarifications on how to address doses below regulatory limits.” The second proposal expands the menu of options available to developers pursuing licensing through one of the NRC’s existing pathways, allowing some novel approaches to weighing the risk of certain technologies to factor into older processes.

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AM Briefing

The Zeal of the Inverter

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

U.S. Weighs Banning Foreign Inverters
<p>Illustration by Simon Abranowicz / Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: As a dangerous heat dome settles over the central and eastern United States, evapotranspirate, or “sweat,” from corn has rendered Iowa and Illinois more humid than the Amazon • Temperatures just topped 100 degrees Fahrenheit in Zagreb, where intense thunderstorms are deluging the Croatian capital today • Hanoi, Vietnam, is in the midst of a week of severe thunderstorms.

THE TOP FIVE

1. U.S. weighs banning foreign inverters

In May 2025, Reuters broke news that the U.S. government had discovered rogue communications devices in the inverters that converted the direct current flow of electricity from certain Chinese-made solar panels to the alternating current needed to patch the generators onto the grid. Now, more than a year later, Reuters is out with another scoop indicating that the Trump administration is preparing to slap new import restrictions on foreign-made inverters, particularly from China. The prohibition being drafted by the Federal Communications Commission would apply to all new foreign models of inverters and could be published as early as this year, unnamed sources told the newswire.

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