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Climate

Mukhtar Babayev.
Sparks

It’s Never Too Early to Start Thinking About COP

President-Designate Mukhtar Babayev kicked off the climate diplomatic year in Berlin.

Sparks

The White House Has Some Transmission News Too

As if one set of energy policy announcements wasn’t enough.

Blue
Economy

American Solar Is in a Trade War With Itself

Manufacturers and installers have different opinions on tariffs.

Biden’s Plan to Jumpstart Offshore Wind

AM Briefing: Biden’s Schedule for Offshore Wind Auctions

On the new auction schedule, Tesla earnings, and the Mercedes G-Class EV

Yellow
What to Expect From Tesla’s Earnings Report

AM Briefing: Tesla’s Big Test

On low expectations, global EV demand, and heat domes

Yellow
Sparks

Biden’s $7 Billion Solar Bonanza

The Solar For All program is the final piece of the $27 billion Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund.

Solar panel installation.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The great promise of solar panels — in addition to their being carbon-free — is the democratization of energy. Anyone can produce their own power, typically for less than the going utility rate. The problem is that those who stand to benefit the most from this opportunity haven’t been able to access it.

That pattern could change, however, with Solar for All, a $7 billion program under the Environmental Protection Agency to support solar in low- to moderate-income communities. On Monday, the Biden administration announced it was awarding the funds to 60 state and local governments, tribes, and national and regional nonprofits, at an average grant size of more than $80 million.

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Climate

A Big Week for Batteries

Texas and California offered intriguing, opposing examples of what batteries can do for the grid.

A battery.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

While cold winters in the south and hot summers across the country are the most dramatic times for electricity usage — with air conditioners blasting as weary workers return home or inefficient electric heaters strain to keep toes warm from Chattanooga to El Paso before the sun is up — it may be early spring that gives us the most insight into the lower-emitting grid of the future.

In California, America’s longtime leader in clean energy deployment, the combination of mild temperatures and longer days means that solar power can do most of the heavy lifting. And in Texas — whose uniquely isolated, market-based and permissive grid is fast becoming the source of much of the country’s clean power growth — regulators allow the state’s vast fleet of natural gas power (and some coal) power plants to shut down for maintenance during the mild weather, giving renewables time to shine.

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