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Climate

A reactor under construction.
AM Briefing

A Global Nuclear Renaissance

On Trump’s mineral paradox, China’s Great Green Wall, and sodium-ion batteries

Climate

Better Climate Investments Through Capital Allocation

Generate Capital, CalSTRS, and the Rhodium Group have teamed up on a new Transition Acceleration Framework to measure and assess emissions impacts.

Blue
AM Briefing

Europe’s Heat Deaths

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

Red
AM Briefing

Go West, Young Man

On half-full glasses, Omani polysilicon, and U.S. vs. Chinese nuclear

Blue
Donald Trump and Joe Biden.

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.

Holtec machinery.

‘A Watershed Moment’

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

Green
Energy

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.

Joe Biden and Donald Trump.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

When President Joe Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act into law in 2022, climate observers — myself included — marked it as a landmark victory in the history of climate policy.

For the first time since global warming arose as a major issue more than three decades earlier, the United States had enacted a comprehensive policy to do something about it. America could boast a generous set of incentives meant to spur new solar farms, electric vehicle factories, and other zero-carbon industries nationwide. The law was projected to bring down U.S. emissions by at least 36% by the mid-2030s, compared to the all-time high they had reached in 2005.

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Adaptation

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.

This Heat Wave Is Just a Test
<p>Illustration by Simon Abranowicz / Getty Images</p>

The map of the Eastern United States has turned purple.

That’s the color used by the National Weather Service to distinguish the most severe category of extreme heat — a “rare and long-duration” event “with no overnight relief” — which spread like a bruise on Thursday morning from Chicago to Detroit and across the entire state of Ohio. From there, the purple splits north toward Toronto — where Portugal and Croatia will face each other tonight in a Round of 32 match — and down across the 13 original colonies, from Boston to New York City to Washington, D.C., Richmond, Charlotte, and Atlanta. An estimated 83 million Americans, or about a quarter of the population, are under the most extreme heat warning, with local temperatures cresting 100 degrees Fahrenheit; in many places, humidity will push the heat index up to 15 degrees higher.

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