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Climate

JD Vance.
AM Briefing

Mineral Mates

On LIHEAP saved, copper king, and Drax’s ‘betrayal’

AM Briefing

Courting a Win

On the FREEDOM Act, Siemens’ bet, and space data centers

Red
AM Briefing

Rock Stockpile

On offshore wind wins, China’s ‘strong energy nation,’ and Japan’s deep-sea mining

Yellow
AM Briefing

Southern Chill

On nuclear’s NEPA exemption, alumina, and Congolese collapse

Blue
Lee Zeldin.

The 3 Big Unknowns About the EPA’s Biggest Climate Science Rollback Ever

What to watch for when the agency releases its final decision on the greenhouse gas endangerment finding.

Power lines.

The Brittle Grid

On copper prices, coal burning, and Bonaire’s climate victory

Blue
AM Briefing

Avenue Électrique

On nuclear deregulation, Drax’s troubles, and NYC solar scammers

A BYD car.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: A bomb cyclone is headed up the East Coast, bringing more cold air and possible blizzard conditions to the Northeast, especially New England • Even Tampa Bay, where so-called snowbirds from the Northeast go to winter, could see snow by the end of this week • A storm system named Kristin is on track to bring thunderstorms, strong winds, and hail to Greece.

THE TOP FIVE

1. European EV sales overtake gas for the first time

Workers assemble Volkswagen's ID.3 electric car on a production line at German car factory. Jens Schlueter/Getty Images

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Climate

Why Michigan’s Big Oil Lawsuit Is Not Like the Others

Fossil fuel companies colluded to stifle competition from clean energy, the state argues.

A judge and Michigan.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

A new kind of climate lawsuit just dropped.

Last week the state of Michigan joined the parade of governments at all levels suing fossil fuel companies for climate change-related damages. But it’s testing a decidedly different strategy: Rather than allege that Big Oil deceived the public about the dangers of its products, Michigan is bringing an antitrust case, arguing that the industry worked as a cartel to stifle competition from non-fossil fuel resources.

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