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Climate Tech

Trump Opens Billions of Ocean Acres to Offshore Drilling
AM Briefing

Lots More Drilling

On a permitting bill shocker, spiking gas bills, and China’s nuclear progress

AM Briefing

Endangered Species Act in Danger

On Turkey’s COP31 win, data center dangers, and Michigan’s anti-nuclear hail mary

Green
AM Briefing

The Atomic LPO

On ravenous data centers, treasured aluminum trash, and the drilling slump

Blue
AM Briefing

FEMA Fubar

On EPA’s wetland protections, worsening blackouts, and a solar bright spot

Blue
A lithium mine.

UN Gets Critical

On Alaskan drilling, EPA cuts, and Eavor’s progress

Green
Josh Shapiro.

Pennsylvania’s Climate Exit

On power prices keep climbing, TVA’s ‘historic’ gas buildout, and mounting climate woes

Blue
Climate Tech

With Power Prices Surging, Can We Still Electrify Everything?

In some cases, rising electricity rates are the least of a company’s worries.

Hydrogen tipping off a graph.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Skyrocketing electricity prices are hitting Americans hard, which makes one wonder: Are electrification-based technologies doomed? No doubt sectors like green hydrogen, clean fuels, low-carbon steel and cement, and direct air capture would benefit from a hypothetical world of cheap, abundant electricity. But what happens if that world doesn’t materialize anytime soon?

The answer, as it so often turns out, is significantly more complicated than a simple yes or no. After talking with a bunch of experts, including decarbonization researchers, analysts, and investors, what I’ve learned is that the extent to which high electricity prices will darken the prospects for any given technology depends on any number of factors, including the specific industry, region, and technical approach a company’s taking. Add on the fact that many industries looking to electrify were hit hard by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which yanked forward deadlines for clean hydrogen and other renewable energy projects to qualify for subsidies, and there are plenty of pressing challenges for electrification startups when it comes to unit economics.

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AM Briefing

The Government Reopens

On America’s climate ‘own goal,’ New York’s pullback, and Constellation’s demand response embrace

Donald Trump reopening the government.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Geomagnetic activity ramped up again last night, bringing potential glimpses of the Aurora Borealis as far south as the Gulf Coast states • Heavy rain and mountain snow is disrupting flights across the Southwestern United States • Record November heat across Spain brought temperatures as high as 84 degrees Fahrenheit.

THE TOP FIVE

1. The longest-ever government shutdown officially ends

President Donald Trump signed legislation to fund the government and reopen operations late Wednesday, setting the stage for federal workers to return as soon as Thursday morning. “That is what has happened in the past — if it is signed the night before, no matter how late, you head back to work the next day,” Nicole Cantello, the head of a union that represents Environmental Protect Agency employees in the agency’s Chicago regional office, told E&E News, noting that it’s told its members to prepare to go back to the office today.

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