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Climate Tech

A ConocoPhillips refinery.
AM Briefing

The Road to Damascus

On carbon removal funding, Chinese nuclear, and Hawaiian solar

AM Briefing

Crude Logic

On permitting reform, Japanese rare earths, and Rolls-Royce nuclear

Green
AM Briefing

‘Let the Oil Flow!’

On Trump’s wind concession, gas tax holidays, and CDP goes B2B

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5 Thoughts About the SpaceX IPO

5 Thoughts About the SpaceX IPO

Welcoming the world’s first clean energy trillionaire.

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Endurance Energy tech.

Funding Friday: Yet Another SpaceX Alum Raises $54 Million

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

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Climate Tech

These 8 Executives Told Us What It’s Like Working for Elon Musk

As SPCX hits the Nasdaq, here’s some more from our Musk Mafia survey.

Elon Musk.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Hopefully by now you’ve read our comprehensive look at Elon Musk’s “climate tech mafia” — a coterie of founders and executives running clean energy and decarbonization companies who jumpstarted their careers at Tesla and SpaceX. But, to quote another hardware executive, we have one more thing.

The backbone of this story was responses to a questionnaire we sent the executives and founders on our list, and we got more great responses than we were able to put in the story, so we wanted to share some of the most insightful and surprising answers they gave us here.

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AM Briefing

Blue Wave Past the Breakers

On SpaceX’s IPO, hydro deals, and UnionDAC

Columns.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: The powerful storm system rolling through the Midwest and the Plains on Thursday caused more than 350 incidents of severe weather in just two states, Iowa and Michigan • New York City is getting its own thunderstorm today, which will break the heat going into the weekend • Temperatures in Mecca are already 110 degrees Fahrenheit, and will climb higher on Saturday.


THE TOP FIVE

1. Energy Department’s terminations of ‘blue state’ grants ruled unconstitutional

The Department of Energy has reversed its terminations of 11 grants to clean energy projects in states that voted for former Vice President Kamala Harris in 2024. The move comes months after the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ruled that the cancellations violated the Fifth Amendment’s equal protection guarantee, citing the continuation of comparable grants to states that voted for President Donald Trump in the election. Under the terms of an agreement between the litigants and the federal government filed on Thursday, the Energy Department will vacate the terminations. Among the primary reasons for the decision, according to a blog post from a network for former Energy Department officials, is that the agency itself admitted that part of its justification for canceling the projects was that they were listed in documents as taking place in “blue states.” But it wasn’t just Democratic-leaning states that were targeted in the initial cuts last fall. As Heatmap’s Emily Pontecorvo wrote, red state projects were on the chopping block, too.

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