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Climate Tech

Trump’s Latest Metals Play: A $12 Billion Mineral Stockpile
AM Briefing

Rock Stockpile

On offshore wind wins, China’s ‘strong energy nation,’ and Japan’s deep-sea mining

AM Briefing

Southern Chill

On nuclear’s NEPA exemption, alumina, and Congolese collapse

Blue
Climate Tech

Funding Friday: A Big Week for Batteries

Plus a pair of venture capital firms close their second funds.

Green
AM Briefing

The Brittle Grid

On copper prices, coal burning, and Bonaire’s climate victory

Blue
A BYD car.

Avenue Électrique

On nuclear deregulation, Drax’s troubles, and NYC solar scammers

Green
A Redwood Materials facility.

Redwood Materials Is Cashing In on Its Big Battery Bet

The battery recycling company announced a $425 million Series E round after pivoting to power data centers.

Yellow
AM Briefing

So Long, Paris

On Vineyard Wind’s win, Hydro-Quebec, and the EU-India trade deal

Donald Trump.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Temperatures as low as 30 degrees Fahrenheit below average are expected to persist for at least another week throughout the Northeast, including in New York City • Midsummer heat is driving temperatures up near 100 degrees in Paraguay • Antarctica is facing intense katabatic winds that pull cold air from high altitudes to lower ones.

THE TOP FIVE

1. America just officially left the Paris Agreement again

President Donald Trump, no fan of the Paris Agreement.Tom Brenner/Getty Images

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Climate Tech

The Other Startup Promising 100 Hours of Cheap Energy Storage

Noon Energy just completed a successful demonstration of its reversible solid-oxide fuel cell system.

A Noon battery.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Noon Energy, Getty Images</p>

Whatever you think of as the most important topic in energy right now — whether it’s electricity affordability, grid resilience, or deep decarbonization — long-duration energy storage will be essential to achieving it. While standard lithium-ion batteries are great for smoothing out the ups and downs of wind and solar generation over shorter periods, we’ll need systems that can store energy for days or even weeks to bridge prolonged shifts and fluctuations in weather patterns.

That’s why Form Energy made such a big splash. In 2021, the startup announced its plans to commercialize a 100-plus-hour iron-air battery that charges and discharges by converting iron into rust and back again. The company’s CEO, Mateo Jaramillo, told The Wall Street Journal at the time that this was the “kind of battery you need to fully retire thermal assets like coal and natural gas power plants.” Form went on to raise a $240 million Series D that same year, and is now deploying its very first commercial batteries in Minnesota.

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