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Climate

A tanker.
AM Briefing

‘A Small Price to Pay’

On France’s power record, Qcells’ solar, and wave energy

AM Briefing

China Recalibrates

On Alaskan offshore leases, FEMA, and BYD batteries

Yellow
AM Briefing

Nuclear Beginnings

On lithium demand, coal, and compressed air energy storage

Green
Climate

Careful With That Wild-Caught Tuna

The Trump administration’s rollback of coal plant emissions standards means that mercury is on the menu again.

Blue
Wall Street traders.

Wall Street's War Anxiety

On Qatari aluminum, floating offshore wind, and Taiwanese nuclear

Red
Donald Trump.

Not Just Oil

On BlackRock’s AES buy, Chinese solar, and Canadian uranium

Red
AM Briefing

$100 a Barrel

On Greenpeace, deep-sea mining, and Lithuanian nuclear

A gas station.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Springlike weather is bringing rain from Texas to Michigan • A Saharan dust storm known as a calima is headed for Europe, threatening “blood rain” as far north as Luxembourg • The Greenlandic capital of Nuuk is poised for days of snow, but with limited accumulation.


THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump’s Iran war could send oil prices past $100 per barrel

Smoke billows from a missile strike in Tehran. Fatemeh Bahrami/Anadolu via Getty Images

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AM Briefing

Trump’s Reactor Realism

On the solar siege, New York’s climate law, and radioactive data center

A nuclear reactor.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Georgia Power</p>

Current conditions: A rain storm set to dump 2 inches of rain across Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, and the Carolinas will quench drought-parched woodlands, tempering mounting wildfire risk • The soil on New Zealand’s North Island is facing what the national forecast called a “significant moisture deficit” after a prolonged drought • Temperatures in Odessa, Texas, are as much as 20 degrees Fahrenheit hotter than average.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump’s plan to build 10 new large reactors is making headway

For all its willingness to share in the hype around as-yet-unbuilt small modular reactors and microreactors, the Trump administration has long endorsed what I like to call reactor realism. By that, I mean it embraces the need to keep building more of the same kind of large-scale pressurized water reactors we know how to construct and operate while supporting the development and deployment of new technologies. In his flurry of executive orders on nuclear power last May, President Donald Trump directed the Department of Energy to “prioritize work with the nuclear energy industry to facilitate” 5 gigawatts of power uprates to existing reactors “and have 10 new large reactors with complete designs under construction by 2030.” The record $26 billion loan the agency’s in-house lender — the Loan Programs Office, recently renamed the Office of Energy Dominance Financing — gave to Southern Company this week to cover uprates will fulfill the first part of the order. Now the second part is getting real. In a scoop on Thursday, Heatmap’s Robinson Meyer reported that the Energy Department has started taking meetings with utilities and developers of what he said “would almost certainly be AP1000s, a third-generation reactor produced by Westinghouse capable of producing up to 1.1 gigawatts of electricity per unit.”

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