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Climate Tech

The Air Products logo.
Climate Tech

Why Air Products Investors Revolted Against Clean Hydrogen

The company has a new CEO and a new strategy — to refocus on its “core business.”

Climate Tech

A New Green Hydrogen Partnership? In This Economy?

Ecolectro, a maker of electrolyzers, has a new manufacturing deal with Re:Build.

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Climate Tech

Nobody Understands What Trump’s Steel and Aluminum Tariffs Will Do

Not even the companies that — on the surface, at least — seem most likely to benefit from them.

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Climate Tech

Inside Heatmap’s Event on Climate Tech’s Next Winners

A report from Heatmap’s San Francisco Climate Week event with Tom Steyer.

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The Statue of Liberty.

For Real Energy Dominance, We Need the IRA

Biden’s Secretary of Energy argues that if Trump wants to achieve his goals, preserving his predecessor’s manufacturing incentives is the only way.

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Power lines and a microchip.

Utilidata Raises $60 Million to Scale the Smart Grid of the Future

The AI-powered startup aims to provide home-level monitoring and data to utilities.

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Climate Tech

Rise and Grind Through the Apocalypse

At San Francisco Climate Week, everything is normal — until it very much isn’t.

San Francisco.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

San Francisco Climate Week started off on Monday with an existential bang. Addressing an invite-only crowd at the Exploratorium, a science museum on the city’s waterfront, former vice president and long-time climate advocate Al Gore put the significance and threat of this political moment — and what it means for the climate — in the most extreme terms possible. That is to say, he compared the current administration under President Trump to Nazi Germany.

“I understand very well why it is wrong to compare Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich to any other movement. It was uniquely evil,” Gore conceded before going on: “But there are important lessons from the history of that emergent evil.” Just as German philosophers in the aftermath of World War II found that the Nazis “attacked the very heart of the distinction between true and false,” Gore said, so too is Trump’s administration “trying to create their own preferred version of reality,” in which we can keep burning fossil fuels forever. With his voice rising and gestures increasing in vigor, Gore ended his speech on a crescendo. “We have to protect our future. And if you doubt for one moment, ever, that we as human beings have that capacity to muster sufficient political will to solve this crisis, just remember that political will is itself a renewable resource.”

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Climate Tech

Electra Raises $186 Million to Decarbonize Steel

The company has developed a low-temperature refining process that’s similar to the one used for copper, nickel, and other metals.

Green steel.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Energy use in the iron and steel industry accounts for about 7% of global greenhouse gas emissions — that’s more than it takes to power commercial buildings, more than twice the emissions of the entire cement industry, and nearly four times as much as the aviation sector. Steel-related emissions are so high primarily because melting and refining iron ore, the base metal of steel, requires extremely high temperatures, which has typically come from burning coke — derived from coal — in blast furnaces.

Electra, a Colorado-based startup, is building momentum around a low-temperature electrochemical approach to iron refining that stands to drastically reduce emissions, and on Thursday announced a $186 million Series B funding round. The company’s battery-like devices would electrify the steelmaking process while their relatively small size could move the industry towards a more modularized, “Lego block” approach, negating the need to build a huge facility all at once.

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