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Economy

Sparks

RIP Trump’s Liberation Day and Fentanyl Tariffs

Clean energy stocks were up after the court ruled that the president lacked legal authority to impose the trade barriers.

AM Briefing

Loaded Barrel

On geothermal’s heat, Exxon Mobil’s CCS push, and Maine’s solar

Yellow
AM Briefing

Mercury Rules in Retrograde

On the real copper gap, Illinois’ atomic mojo, and offshore headwinds

Yellow
Chris Wright.

Energy Policy en Français

On Georgia’s utility regulator, copper prices, and greening Mardi Gras

Blue
Wind turbines.

New York Quits

On microreactor milestones, the Colorado River, and ‘crazy’ Europe

Blue
AM Briefing

Endangerment Zone

On Ohio’s renewables ban, China’s emissions, and Israeli nuclear

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

Current conditions: It looks like rain on Valentine’s Day across the South • Storm Nils is battering France with heavy rain and gales of up to 100 miles per hour • A Northeast Monsoon, known locally as an Amihan, is flooding the northern Philippine island of Luzon, threatening mudslides.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump formally repeals the rule undergirding all federal climate policy

President Donald Trump has done what he didn’t dare attempt during his first term, repealing the finding that provided the legal basis for virtually all federal regulations to curb greenhouse gas emissions. By rescinding the 2009 “endangerment finding,” which established that planet-heating emissions harm human health and therefore qualify for restrictions under the Clean Air Act, the Trump administration hopes to unwind all rules on pollution from tailpipes, trucks, power plants, pipelines, and drilling sites all in one fell swoop. “This is about as big as it gets,” Trump said alongside Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin at a White House event Thursday.

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AM Briefing

Georgia on My Mind

On electrolyzers’ decline, Anthropic’s pledge, and Syria’s oil and gas

The Alabama statehouse.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Warmer air from down south is pushing the cold front in Northeast back up to Canada • Tropical Cyclone Gezani has killed at least 31 in Madagascar • The U.S. Virgin Islands are poised for two days of intense thunderstorms that threaten its grid after a major outage just days ago.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Alabama weighs scrapping utility commission elections after Democratic win in Georgia

Back in November, Democrats swept to victory in Georgia’s Public Service Commission races, ousting two Republican regulators in what one expert called a sign of a “seismic shift” in the body. Now Alabama is considering legislation that would end all future elections for that state’s utility regulator. A GOP-backed bill introduced in the Alabama House Transportation, Utilities, and Infrastructure Committee would end popular voting for the commissioners and instead authorize the governor, the Alabama House speaker, and the Alabama Senate president pro tempore to appoint members of the panel. The bill, according to AL.com, states that the current regulatory approach “was established over 100 years ago and is not the best model for ensuring that Alabamians are best-served and well-positioned for future challenges,” noting that “there are dozens of regulatory bodies and agencies in Alabama and none of them are elected.”

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