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Climate

Onshore wind.
AM Briefing

New Headwinds

On congestion pricing, deep sea mining, and kiwi birds

AM Briefing

Belgian Nuclear Waffling

On Texas solar, Total’s deal, and Rivian’s revving

Yellow
AM Briefing

Delete Virginia

On FEMA fubar, South African nuclear, and Chinese electrolyzers

Green
AM Briefing

Ripened on the Vine

On a sodium-ion megadeal, the Bangladeshi atom, and space solar

Blue
Wind turbine blades.

Trump’s Tailwinds

On hydropower, GOP renewables, and sewage in Seattle

Red
The National Science Foundation.

Science Experiments

On China’s fossil fuel controls, Maine data centers, and a faster NRC

Blue
AM Briefing

Nuclear Anew

On offshore mining, New Jersey’s offshore wind, and China’s oil breakthrough

A Kairos Power plant.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Kairos Power</p>

Current conditions: Severe thunderstorms are pummeling the Mississippi Valley, particularly in Arkansas • Heavy rain has deluged much of the Somali capital of Mogadishu • Temperatures in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh are reaching 110 degrees Fahrenheit.

THE TOP FIVE

1. The U.S. officially has two new nuclear projects underway


Have Bart write this on the chalkboard: I Will Not Spread Nuclear Misinformation.The Simpsons

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Climate

El Niño’s Comeback Is Bad News for Climate Politics

This year’s ocean-heating phenomenon could make climate change seem less bad than it really is — at least in the U.S.

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

You may have heard that we could be in for a “super” or even a “super duper” El Niño this year. The difference is non-technical, a matter of how warm the sea surface temperature in the El Niño-Southern Oscillation region of the central-eastern Pacific Ocean gets. An El Niño forms when the region is at least half a degree Celsius warmer than average, which causes more heat to be released into the atmosphere and affects global weather patterns. A super El Niño describes an anomaly of 2 degrees or higher. Some models predict an anomaly of over 3 degrees higher than average for this year.

If a super El Niño forms — and that is still a big if, about a one-in-four chance — it would be the fourth such event in just over 40 years. But the impacts could be even more severe, simply because the world is hotter today than it was in the previous super El Niño years of 1983, 1998, and 2016.

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