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Climate Tech

5 Thoughts About the SpaceX IPO
Daily Briefing

5 Thoughts About the SpaceX IPO

Welcoming the world’s first clean energy trillionaire.

Climate Tech

Funding Friday: Yet Another SpaceX Alum Raises $54 Million

Plus SAF, another SPAC, and more of the week’s biggest money moves.

Green
AM Briefing

Blue Wave Past the Breakers

On SpaceX’s IPO, hydro deals, and UnionDAC

Green
Elon Musk.

How SpaceX and Tesla Gave Rise to a New Generation of Climate Tech Startups

SpaceX and Tesla have produced executives and founders across the clean energy world. Here’s what they had to say about working for their former boss.

Green
Solar panels.

Solar Outshines Coal

On Texas data centers, Holtec’s New Jersey plans, and Polish renewables

Blue
AM Briefing

A Solar Bright Spot

On grid investments, CANDUs, and green steel

Qcells workers.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Qcells</p>

Current conditions: Tropical Storm Cristina is inching north toward landfall in Central America, threatening floods, landslides, and winds of up to 73 miles per hour • Washington, D.C., is poised for rain for the rest of the week as temperatures rise to nearly 100 degrees Fahrenheit by Friday • By contrast, Cartersville, Georgia, where the solar manufacturer Qcells just started up its factory, is looking at a two-day break of sunshine from an otherwise gray and wet forecast.


THE TOP FIVE

1. America’s biggest solar factory is nearing full capacity

At the start of 2023, South Korea’s biggest solar manufacturer, Qcells, began construction on a sweeping new factory northwest of Atlanta in Cartersville, Georgia. Betting that U.S. tariffs on Chinese solar panels were here to stay, the company gambled on bringing most of the supply chain under one roof. On Tuesday, Qcells started producing solar cells at the plant, marking what it called “a major milestone toward completing the country’s only vertically integrated solar manufacturing plant.” The firm expects to reach full production by the third quarter of this year. The factory’s module assembly line, meanwhile, is now at full capacity, building 16,700 panels per day. “Producing the first solar cells at Cartersville is a milestone for Qcells and for American manufacturing,” Andy Park, the global chief executive of Qcells, said in a statement. “As our ingot, wafer, and cell lines reach full capacity, we’ll be making the major components of a solar panel right here in Georgia.”

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Climate Tech

This AI Software Saved New Yorkers $5 Million in Heating Costs

Entech’s S2 platform debuted last year to help make century-old boilers more efficient.

Entech's logo and boilers.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Emissions from existing buildings are responsible for about 70% of New York City’s climate emissions, with space heating as the dominant source. Yet most of the city’s multifamily buildings still rely on central steam boilers that cycle on and off when the outdoor temperature drops below a certain threshold, regardless of indoor conditions. The result is a system that leaves many residents sweltering in the dead of winter, wasting fuel and money while releasing unnecessary greenhouse gases.

Completely overhauling and modernizing a central boiler system — many of which date to the early 1900s — and installing a building-scale heat pump could address many of these issues. But that’s an expensive, complex, and disruptive endeavor that many building owners either can’t afford or simply don’t want to undertake. And while heat pump startups such as Quilt and Gradient are making inroads in single-family homes and individual apartment units respectively, neither is working to optimize the operations of existing steam boilers, which remain the dominant heating source for New York’s apartment stock.

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