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Economy

Doug Burgum.
Energy

Climate Heats Up Transatlantic Tensions

On Hyundai’s ICE delays, Russia’s nuclear hiccup, and China exports its boom

AM Briefing

Trump’s Climate Contrarians Disband

On a copper mega merger, California’s solar canal, and Bahrain’s deep-sea mining bet

Red
AM Briefing

Climate Progress Takes a Hit Under Trump

On Rick Perry’s loan push, firefighters’ mask rules, and Europe’s heat pump problems

Red
AM Briefing

ICE Chills EV Manufacturing

On PJM pressure, Orsted’s approval, and a carbon storage well milestone

Yellow
A worker and a graph.

Trumponomics Is Starting to Have Some Ugly Effects

The energy sector — including oil and gas — and manufacturing took some heavy hits in the latest jobs report.

Revolution Wind Strikes Back at Trump’s Stop-Work Order

AM Briefing: Revolution Strikes Back

On a Justice Department crackdown, net zero’s costs, and Democrats’ nuclear fears

Yellow
Energy

AM Briefing: Trump’s Wind Blitz Widens

On Crux’s growth, Tesla’s slow ‘death,’ and a carbon storage warning

Trump Widens His War on Wind
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: In the Pacific, Hurricane Kiko has strengthened into a Category 2 storm, and is on track to reach “major storm” status • In the Atlantic, moisture is moving into an area with a lot of dry air, posing a “high risk” of developing into a tropical storm • Northern India is facing intense monsoon winds and deadly landslides.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump enlists more federal agencies in his war on wind

The White House has taken what The New York Times described as “the extraordinary step” of ordering half a dozen agencies to draft plans to thwart the country’s offshore wind industry. Helming the effort are White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller. While the assault on the wind industry has largely taken place at the Department of the Interior, the departments of Transportation and Commerce joined the effort in the past two weeks, as this newsletter reported yesterday. Now the Trump administration is tapping in even more agencies, including those that traditionally have little jurisdiction over marine energy production. The Department of Health and Human Services has begun a study into whether wind turbines emit electromagnetic fields that could damage human health. The Department of Defense, meanwhile, is probing whether the projects pose a risk to national security. “We’re all working together on this issue,” Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the secretary of health and human services, said during a cabinet meeting last week.

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Climate

AM Briefing: America’s Green Bank Withers

On PJM’s inflexible giants, another wind attack, and a Sino-Russia mega deal

Trump Wins a Court Battle Against America’s $20 Billion Green Bank
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: In the Pacific, Tropical Storm Kiko has strengthened into a hurricane on its way toward Hawaii • Unusually cool air in the Upper Midwest and Appalachians could drop temperatures to as much as 20 degrees Fahrenheit below average • Nearly one million people are displaced in Pakistan’s most populous state as Punjab suffers the biggest flood in its history.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump’s plan to kill green bank gets court approval

The Trump administration’s plan to kill a $20 billion clean energy financing program got the green light from a federal appeals court on Tuesday. The Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, housed under the Environmental Protection Agency, was designed to provide low-cost loans for solar installations, building efficiency upgrades, and other local efforts to reduce planet-heating emissions. The three-judge panel overturned a lower court’s injunction temporarily requiring the EPA to resume payments, ruling that most of the plaintiffs’ claims were contract disputes and belonged in the Court of Federal Claims. If the case now moves to that court, Heatmap’s Emily Pontecorvo wrote, “the plaintiffs would only be able to sue for damages and any possibility of reinstating the grants would be gone.”

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