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Climate Tech

AI giving money to humans.
Climate Tech

AI IPOs Could Create a Wave of New Funding for Climate Tech

All that cash has to go somewhere. Why not philanthropic funding for decarbonization?

AM Briefing

A Safer Harbor

On desalination, Japanese nuclear, and Latin American hydroelectricity

Blue
Climate Tech

Funding Friday: Helion Just Tripled Its Valuation

Plus more of the week’s big money moves in critical minerals and electric vehicle charging.

Green
AM Briefing

Trump's Billion-Dollar Coal Gamble

On flesh-eating parasites, Italian nuclear, and China’s “wasted” renewables

Blue
Gentner Drummond.

Oklahoma!

On depleted U.S. oil stocks, Taiwan geothermal, and hybrid sales

Blue
A tokamak.

What’s Powering Clean Energy

Notes from Heatmap’s second Energy Entrepreneurship Summit.

Blue
AM Briefing

Schoolhouse Hot Rocks

On offshore wind's defense, Three Mile Island, and virtual power plants

The Capitol.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Heavy hail storms across Belgium, France, and Italy have injured at least 30 people • Powerful winds are churning up dust storms that are blanketing broad swaths of Delhi, India’s capital region • The United Nations just warned that El Niño weather patterns have an 80% chance of returning by September, threatening to supercharge weather extremes.


THE TOP FIVE

1. New York sues the Trump administration over shady offshore wind deals

New York Attorney General Letitia James led a group of Northeast states in a lawsuit against the Trump administration to pay TotalEnergies nearly $1 billion to abandon its two offshore wind leases in the United States. The lawsuit comes on the heels of reporting by Heatmap’s Emily Pontecorvo that found, contrary to the administration’s announcements, the U.S. government’s agreement with Total didn’t actually require any new investments in fossil fuels, as the administration strongly implied, and that the payment may not have actually met the requirements to be drawn from a federal coffer designed to fund legal settlements. “After repeatedly losing in court, this administration cooked up a sham deal to pay a foreign energy company hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to abandon offshore wind and invest in oil and gas instead,” James said in a press release. “We are fighting back to stop this illegal agreement that threatens to erase over a thousand union jobs and cheat millions of New Yorkers out of clean, affordable energy.” New Jersey, Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Vermont joined the litigation.

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AM Briefing

China’s Nuclear Milestone

On Anthropic’s IPO, home energy rebates, and French rare earths

A nuclear power plant.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/China National Nuclear Corporation</p>

Current conditions: The most powerful storm to hit Western Australia in 49 years has deluged the capital of Perth • Temperatures in the Arizonan metropolis of Phoenix are climbing to 103 degrees Fahrenheit today, and will stay around that level all week • South Georgia Island, a British overseas territory near Antarctica in the Atlantic, is bracing for heavy snow.


THE TOP FIVE

1. Anthropic prepares to go public

Anthropic, the artificial intelligence giant behind the chatbot Claude, filed the first documents to the Securities and Exchange Commission to make its stock market debut. The company submitted a confidential S-1, meaning that — unlike the recent SpaceX filing — the details aren’t yet publicly available. By doing so, Anthropic has “the option to go public after the SEC completes its review,” the company wrote Monday in a blog post. The number of shares to be offered and the price “have not yet been set.” The IPO could have big energy implications. Unlike some hyperscalers, who have pushed back against the public blowback to data centers, Anthropic vowed three months ago to pay to offset electricity price hikes from its server farms, as I previously wrote. Coupled with the news yesterday morning that Iran had broken off negotiations with the U.S. to end the conflict blocking the Strait of Hormuz, Monday offered clear evidence of what Heatmap’s Robinson Meyer described as the electricity economy “having its moment.”

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