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Climate Tech

Cyclic Materials.
Climate Tech

Funding Friday: A Big Week for Batteries

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

AM Briefing

The Brittle Grid

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

Blue
AM Briefing

Avenue Électrique

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

Green
Climate Tech

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
Donald Trump.

So Long, Paris

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

Blue
A Noon battery.

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.

Yellow
AM Briefing

The Rare Earth Shopping Spree

On aluminum smelting, Korean nuclear, and a geoengineering database

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

Current conditions: Winter Storm Fern may have caused up to $115 billion in economic losses and triggered the longest stretch of subzero temperatures in New York City’s history • Temperatures across the American South plunged up to 30 degrees Fahrenheit below historical averages • South Africa’s Northern Cape is roasting in temperatures as high as 104 degrees.


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AM Briefing

White Out

On deep-sea mining, New York nuclear, and kestrel symbiosis

Icy power lines.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Winter Storm Fern buried broad swaths of the country, from Oklahoma City to Boston • Intense flooding in Zimbabwe and Mozambique have killed more than 100 people • South Australia’s heat wave is raging on, raising temperatures as high as 113 degrees Fahrenheit.


THE TOP FIVE

1. America’s big snow storm buckles the grid, leaving 1 million without power

The United States’ aging grid infrastructure faces a test every time the weather intensifies, whether that’s heat domes, hurricanes, or snow storms. The good news is that pipeline winterization efforts that followed the deadly blackouts in 2021’s Winter Storm Uri made some progress in keeping everything running in the cold. The bad news is that nearly a million American households still lost power amid the storm. Tennessee, Mississippi, and Louisiana were the worst hit, with hundreds of thousands of households left in the dark, according to live data on the Power Outage tracker website. Georgia and Texas followed close behind, with roughly 75,000 customers facing blackouts. Kentucky had the next-most outages, with more than 50,000 households disconnected from the grid, followed by South Carolina, West Virginia, North Carolina, Virginia, and Alabama. Given the prevalence of electric heating in the typically-warmer Southeast, the outages risked leaving the blackout region without heat. Gas wasn’t entirely reliable, however. The deep freeze in Texas halted operations at roughly 10% of the Gulf Coast’s petrochemical facilities and refineries, Bloomberg reported.

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