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Climate Tech

Offshore wind.
AM Briefing

Orsted’s Deep Discounts

On Toyota’s recalls, America’s per-capita emissions, and Sierra Club drama

Climate Tech

An AI Startup for Nuclear Developers Just Raised $10.5 Million

The company, Nuclearn, aims to speed development and licensing processes with the help of a specially trained large language model.

Green
AM Briefing

China’s Global Greening

On Tesla’s losses, Google’s storage push, and trans-Atlantic atomic consensus

Blue
Climate Tech

Everybody Wants to Invest in Critical Mineral Startups

Trump’s enthusiasm for the space has proved contagious — building on what Biden started.

Green
Exxon Counterattacks California Over Plastics

AM Briefing: Exxon’s Plastic Counterattack

On uranium challenges, Cadillac’s EV dreams, and a firefighter’s firestorm

Yellow
Welcome to Climate 101

Welcome to Climate 101

Your guide to the key technologies of the energy transition.

Green
Climate 101

How Do Batteries Work on the Grid?

The same technology that powers your cell phone also helps expand the reach of renewable energy.

How Do Batteries Work on the Grid?
<p>Heatmap illustration/Getty Images</p>

Batteries are the silent workhorses of our technological lives, powering our phones, computers, tablets, and remotes. But their impact goes far beyond our daily screentime — they’re also transforming the electricity grid itself. Grid-scale batteries store excess renewable energy and release it as needed, compensating for the fact that solar and wind resources aren’t always available on demand.

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Climate 101

What Is Geothermal Power and How Does It Work?

Where there’s heat — like, say, the molten core of the Earth — there’s energy.

What Is Geothermal Power and How Does It Work?
<p>Heatmap illustration/Getty Images</p>

Could the answer to our energy demand conundrums lie beneath our feet? And no, I’m not talking about oil, coal, or natural gas. I’m referring to the fundamental stuff of energy itself: heat. Geothermal power is having something of a moment as a non-carbon-emitting source of electricity that everyone seems to like — including climate activists, the oil and gas industry, technology companies, and even the Trump White House and Republican-controlled Congress.

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