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Climate Tech

Wind turbines.
AM Briefing

New York Quits

On microreactor milestones, the Colorado River, and ‘crazy’ Europe

Climate Tech

Funding Friday: It’s All in the Nucleus

Plus a pre-seed round for a moon tech company from Latvia.

Green
AM Briefing

Endangerment Zone

On Ohio’s renewables ban, China’s emissions, and Israeli nuclear

Blue
Climate Tech

There’s More Than One Way to Build a Wind Turbine

Startups Airloom Energy and Radia looked at the same set of problems and came up with very different solutions.

Green
The Alabama statehouse.

Georgia on My Mind

On electrolyzers’ decline, Anthropic’s pledge, and Syria’s oil and gas

Red
A nuclear power plant.

The Nuclear Backstop

On Equinor’s CCS squeamishness, Indian solar, and Orsted in Oz

Green
AM Briefing

Endangered Finding

On BYD’s lawsuit, Fervo’s hottest well, and China’s geologic hydrogen

Lee Zeldin.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: A midweek clipper storm is poised to bring as much as six more inches of snow to parts of the Great Lakes and Northeast • American Samoa is halfway through three days of fierce thunderstorms and temperatures above 80 degrees Fahrenheit • Northern Portugal is bracing for up to four inches more of rain after three deadly storms in just two weeks.


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AM Briefing

Headwinds Blowing

On Tesla’s sunny picture, Chinese nuclear, and Bad Bunny’s electric halftime show

Wind turbines.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Orsted</p>

Current conditions: The Seattle Seahawks returned home to a classically rainy, overcast city from their win in last night’s Super Bowl, though the sun is expected to come out for Wednesday's victory parade • Severe Tropical Cyclone Mitchell is pummeling Western Australia with as much as 8 inches of rain • Flash floods from Storm Marta have killed at least four in Morocco.


THE TOP FIVE

1. Orsted’s offshore wind projects are back on track

Orsted’s two major offshore wind projects in the United States are back on track to be completed on schedule, its chief executive said. Rasmus Errboe told the Financial Times that the Revolution Wind and Sunrise Wind projects in New England would come online in the latter half of this year and in 2027, respectively. “We are fully back to work and construction on both projects is moving forward according to plan,” Errboe said. The U.S. has lost upward of $34 billion worth of clean energy projects since President Donald Trump returned to office, as I wrote last week. A new bipartisan bill introduced in the House last week to reform the federal permitting process would bar the White House from yanking back already granted permits. For now, however, the Trump administration has signaled its plans to appeal federal courts’ decisions to rule against its actions to halt construction on offshore turbines.

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