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Economy

A pipeline.
AM Briefing

Power to the Pipelines

On PJM backs offshore wind, reconciliation 2.0, and nuclear to the moon

AM Briefing

Revolution Back On

On bring-your-own-power, Trump’s illegal energy cuts, and New York’s nuclear bonanza

Blue
AM Briefing

Exxon Shrugs

On Meta’s atom, Illinois frees nuclear, and China’s fusion milestone

Red
AM Briefing

AM Briefing: Gates Is ‘Still an Optimist’

On a $6 billion EV write-down, a disappointing bullet train, and talks on a major mining merger

Green
Donald Trump at the United Nations.

AM Briefing: A Broken Framework

On Venezuela’s oil, permitting reform, and New York’s nuclear plans

Blue
An oil field.

AM Briefing: Cheap Crude

On energy efficiency rules, Chinese nuclear, and Japan’s first offshore wind

Blue
AM Briefing

The Calm After the Storm

On Venezuela’s oil, South Korean nuclear, and Berlin militants’ grid attack

Donald Trump.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Juneau, Alaska, is blanketed under a record 80 inches of snow, equal to six-and-a-half feet • A heat wave stretching across southern Australia is sending temperatures as high as 104 degrees Fahrenheit • Arctic air prompted Ireland’s weather service to put out a nationwide warning as temperatures plunge below freezing.


THE TOP FIVE

1. The U.S. raid in Venezuela isn’t shaking up oil markets just yet

When The Wall Street Journal asked Chevron CEO Mike Wirth about his oil giant’s investments in Venezuela back in November, he said, “We play a long game.” Then came President Donald Trump’s Saturday morning raid on Caracas, which ended in the arrest of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and appeared to bring the country’s vast crude resources under the U.S.’s political influence. Unlike the light crude pumped out of the ground in places like the Permian Basin in western Texas, Venezuela’s oil is mostly heavy crude. That makes it particularly desirable to American refineries along the Gulf Coast, which can juice more profit out of making fuels from heavy crude than from lighter grades. Still, don’t expect America’s No. 2 oil producer to declare victory just yet. Shares in Chevron inched up by just a few percentage points over the weekend.

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AM Briefing

The Grinch of Offshore Wind

On Google’s energy glow up, transmission progress, and South American oil

Donald Trump.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Nearly two dozen states from the Rockies through the Midwest and Appalachians are forecast to experience temperatures up to 30 degrees above historical averages on Christmas Day • Parts of northern New York and New England could get up to a foot of snow in the coming days • Bethlehem, the West Bank city south of Jerusalem in which Christians believe Jesus was born, is preparing for a sunny, cloudless Christmas Day, with temperatures around 60 degrees Fahrenheit.

This is our last Heatmap AM of 2025, but we’ll see you all again in 2026!

THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump halts construction on all offshore wind projects

Just two weeks after a federal court overturned President Donald Trump’s Day One executive order banning new offshore wind permits, the administration announced a halt to all construction on seaward turbines. Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum announced the move Monday morning on X: “Due to national security concerns identified by @DeptofWar, @Interior is PAUSING leases for 5 expensive, unreliable, heavily subsidized offshore wind farms!” As Heatmap’s Jael Holzman explained in her writeup, there are only five offshore wind projects currently under construction in U.S. waters: Vineyard Wind, Revolution Wind, Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind, Sunrise Wind, and Empire Wind. “The Department of War has come back conclusively that the issues related to these large offshore wind programs create radar interference, create genuine risk for the U.S., particularly related to where they are in proximity to our East Coast population centers,” Burgum told Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo.

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