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Economy

Washington State Issues Evacuation Orders for 100,000 Amid Floods
AM Briefing

Washington Washout

On Trump’s electricity insecurity, Rivan’s robots, and the European grid

AM Briefing

Exxon Taps Out

On gas turbine backorders, Europe’s not-so-green deal, and Iranian cloud seeding

Yellow
AM Briefing

Blue Wall

On supersonic gas, space solar, and Japanese fusion

Blue
Economy

The Case for a Strategic Lithium Reserve

One longtime analyst has an idea to keep prices predictable for U.S. businesses.

Green
Offshore wind.

Positive Spin

On rare earth refining, gas with CCS, and fusion goes to Washington

Green
Nuclear power.

Nuclear Strategy

On MAHA vs. EPA, Congo’s cobalt curbs, and Chinese-French nuclear

Green
AM Briefing

Solar Stunner

On MARVEL’s market, a climate retraction, and Eavor’s geothermal milestone

Solar panel installation.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: A nor’easter dumping as much as a foot of snow on parts of the Upper Midwest is set to dust New York City on its way to deliver heavier snow to northern New England • Temperatures nearly topped 90 degrees Fahrenheit in Charlotte Amalie, U.S. Virgin Islands, as America’s third-most populous overseas territory endures a record December heatwave • South Australia, Victoria, and Tasmania are all under severe fire warnings.

THE TOP FIVE

1. U.S. solar installations in 2025 set to beat previous year

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of smashing solar installation records, it was the age of phasing out the federal tax credits that so successfully spurred the boom in the first place. The United States added 2 gigawatts of utility-scale solar in September, bringing the total installed this year to 21 gigawatts. That, as Utility Dive noted of newly released Federal Energy Regulatory Commission data, is slightly above the 20 gigawatts installed in the same period last year. Of the 28 gigawatts of new generation the U.S. installed so far in 2025, 75% was solar, followed by wind at 13% and gas at 11%. Still, natural gas makes up the largest share of the U.S. grid’s electricity capacity, with 42% compared to the combined 31% that wind, solar, and hydro comprise. And the picture isn’t getting better. As Heatmap’s Jael Holzman wrote yesterday, the solar industry is “begging Congress for help with Trump.”

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Economy

The Future of Climate Tech Is Emerging in Some Unexpected Places

A new model from Johns Hopkins’ Net Zero Industrial Policy Lab uses machine learning to predict tomorrow’s industrial powerhouses.

Green tech and countries.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images, Johns Hopkins Net Zero Industrial Policy Lab</p>

It’s no secret that China, Japan, and Germany are industrial powerhouses, with vast potential in clean tech manufacturing. So how’s a less industrialized nation with an eye on the economy of the future supposed to compete? Are protectionist policies such as tariffs a good way to jumpstart domestic manufacturing? Should it focus on subsidizing factory buildouts? Or does the whole game come down to GDP?

According to a new machine learning tool from Johns Hopkins’ Net Zero Industrial Policy Lab, none of the above really matters all that much. Many of the policies that dominate geopolitical conversations aren’t strongly correlated with a country’s relative industrial potential, according to the model. The same goes for country-specific characteristics such as population, percentage of industry as a share of GDP, and foreign direct investment, a.k.a. FDI. What does count? A nation’s established industrial capabilities, and the degree to which they cross over to climate tech.

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