Sign In or Create an Account.

By continuing, you agree to the Terms of Service and acknowledge our Privacy Policy

Climate Tech

Onshore wind.
AM Briefing

New Headwinds

On congestion pricing, deep sea mining, and kiwi birds

Climate Tech

Funding Friday: Space Solar Goes Meta

Plus news on cloud seeding, fission for fusion, and more of the week’s biggest money moves.

Green
Climate Tech

Desalination Is Having a Moment

A handful of startups are promising better, cheaper, safer water purification tech.

Blue
AM Briefing

Belgian Nuclear Waffling

On Texas solar, Total’s deal, and Rivian’s revving

Yellow
A data center interior.

Delete Virginia

On FEMA fubar, South African nuclear, and Chinese electrolyzers

Green
Offshore wind.

Ripened on the Vine

On a sodium-ion megadeal, the Bangladeshi atom, and space solar

Blue
AM Briefing

Trump’s Tailwinds

On hydropower, GOP renewables, and sewage in Seattle

Wind turbine blades.
AM 4/28
Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images

Current conditions: After a springy warm up, temperatures in Northeast cities such as Boston and Atlantic City are plunging back into the low 50 degrees Fahrenheit range for the rest of the week • In India, meanwhile, a northern heatwave is sending temperatures in Gujarat as high as 110 degrees today • The Pacific waters off California and Mexico are hitting record temperatures amid an historic marine heatwave.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump has convinced two more offshore wind developers to cancel projects

Last month, following a string of legal defeats over his efforts to halt construction of offshore wind turbines through regulatory fiat, President Donald Trump tried something new: Paying developers to quit. The plan worked: French energy giant TotalEnergies agreed to abandon its two offshore wind farms in exchange for $1 billion from the federal government, with the promise that it would reinvest that money in U.S. oil and gas development. Reporting by Heatmap’s Emily Pontecorvo later showed that the legal reasoning behind the federal government's cash offer was shaky, and that the actual text of the agreement contained no definite assurances that the company would invest any more than it was already planning to. Last week, I told you that more deals were in the works, including with another French company, the utility Engie. Now the Trump administration has confirmed the rumors.

Keep reading...Show less
AM Briefing

Science Experiments

On China’s fossil fuel controls, Maine data centers, and a faster NRC

The National Science Foundation.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Nearly two dozen states from Texas to Minnesota are bracing for days of thunderstorms, tornadoes, hail, and winds up to 70 miles per hour • Japan is deploying 1,400 firefighters to battle a wildfire in Iwate prefecture that has forced at least 3,000 people to evacuate • While it’s nearly 50 degrees Fahrenheit and sunny today in Chernobyl, Ukraine, exactly 40 years ago yesterday the weather worsened the world’s worst nuclear accident by blowing radiation from the melted-down reactor.


THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump ousts the board members from National Science Foundation

The Trump administration has dismissed every member of the independent board that oversees the National Science Foundation. In what The New York Times described as a “terse email” sent Friday afternoon, members of the 25-member National Science Board were told their position was “terminated, effective immediately.” Willie E. May, a terminated board member and a vice president at Morgan State University, told the newspaper: “I am deeply disappointed, though I cannot say I am entirely surprised. I have watched the systematic dismantling of the scientific advisory infrastructure of this government with growing alarm, and the National Science Board is simply the latest casualty.” The move to seize tighter control over funding for scientific research comes two months after the Environmental Protection Agency repealed the legal finding that underpins all federal climate regulations and days after the Department of Health and Human Services nixed publication of a study about the safety of COVID-19 vaccines.

Keep reading...Show less