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Climate Tech

Waymos.
Climate Tech

Funding Friday: Beyond Carbon Certification

A new fundraise from Isometric, plus more of this week’s — and last week’s! — big money moves.

AM Briefing

Video Killed the Polestar

On Texas transmission trouble, Russian nuclear reprocessing, and ‘guerrilla solar’

Yellow
AM Briefing

Gassed Up

On alumina, CANDUs, and copper

Yellow
AM Briefing

Save Nuclear Plants. Live Better.

On Trump’s AP1000 deal, Utah solar, Canadian cobalt

Yellow
A Lucid Air.

Lucid Shrinking


On simplified oil and gas leases, lawsuits over plastic and coal, and a new climate research database

Blue
The Strait of Hormuz.

‘Incidents and Miscommunication’

On Michael Bloomberg’s big climate gift, SMRs in Ohio, and the consequences of a “Super El Niño”

Green
Climate Tech

Climate Tech SPACs Are Back

This time with more rules — but risk remains.

A hundred dollar bill, an atom, and a battery.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

SPACs are back! At the start of this decade, special purpose acquisition companies — publicly traded firms whose raison d’être is taking startups public through mergers — went from a niche financial vehicle to one of Wall Street’s hottest trends. Fueled by near-zero interest rates and a surge in investors’ risk appetite during the pandemic, SPAC deals exploded in 2020 and 2021, with climate tech companies such as Lucid Motors and ChargePoint riding the wave.

“What the SPAC unlocked was retail and public market investor access to these early stage, high growth opportunities that were more speculative in nature,” Julian Klymochko, founder of the SPAC specialist investment firm Accelerate Financial Technologies, told me. SPAC deals offer companies a faster route to market, with parties negotiating valuation and pricing upfront. This provides pre-revenue or pre-profit startups that have exhausted their options in the private market with the quick capital they may need to scale up, build out hard tech infrastructure, or simply survive until their technology is commercially viable.

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AM Briefing

Strait Shooting

On Estonian nuclear, solar’s land use, and Kristi Noem’s mining gig

A Wall Street trader.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Tropical Storm Arthur made landfall over Texas just hours after strengthening into the first named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season • Temperatures in Spain, France, and Portugal are forecast to eclipse 104 degrees Fahrenheit by this weekend • A fast-moving wildfire is scorching homes in the Beacon Hill area of Spokane, Washington.


THE TOP FIVE

1. U.S.-Iran deal will reopen the Strait of Hormuz and lift sanctions

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump signed a 14-paragraph memorandum of understanding with Iran to end the war. Under the deal, which is set for tougher negotiations over the fine details within 60 days, the Strait of Hormuz will reopen, the U.S. will lift sanctions on Iran and unfreeze billions of dollars, and Tehran will continue expanding its civilian nuclear program with a pledge not to seek an atomic weapon. Oil markets responded to the milestone with mixed results. The benchmark prices for oil produced in the U.S. and Europe tumbled about 2% on Wednesday, while the standard for crude from the United Arab Emirates jumped over 3%.

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