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Electric Vehicles

A tokamok.
AM Briefing

China’s Fusion Friends

On Beijing’s coal dip, Iran’s environmental ‘catastrophe,’ and Thanksgiving carbon footprint

Electric Vehicles

Fear and Electrification at the Los Angeles Auto Show

Automakers aren’t sure what to do with their EVs in the age of Trump.

Green
AM Briefing

Lots More Drilling

On a permitting bill shocker, spiking gas bills, and China’s nuclear progress

Red
AM Briefing

The Atomic LPO

On ravenous data centers, treasured aluminum trash, and the drilling slump

Blue
Josh Shapiro.

Pennsylvania’s Climate Exit

On power prices keep climbing, TVA’s ‘historic’ gas buildout, and mounting climate woes

Blue
Donald Trump reopening the government.

The Government Reopens

On America’s climate ‘own goal,’ New York’s pullback, and Constellation’s demand response embrace

Red
AM Briefing

China’s Climate Streak

On partisan cuts, an atomic LPO, and the left’s data center fight

Solar panels in Wuhan, China.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: New York City is set for its first snow of the season • More than a million Filipinos are under evacuation orders after Super Typhoon Fung-wong slammed into the archipelago as the equivalent of a Category 4 hurricane • Mexico just recorded its hottest November day, with temperatures of nearly 83 degrees Fahrenheit in the southern Pacific Coast town of Arriaga.


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AM Briefing

Lightning Strikes Out

On ‘critical’ coal, data center costs, and recycled metals

The F-150 Lightning.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Typhoon Kalmaegi is slamming into Vietnam after leaving more than 110 dead in the Philippines • Temperatures are plunging 15 degrees Fahrenheit on average across the eastern half of the United States, bringing the season’s first snowfall in many places • A barrage of autumn storms are set to deluge parts of the Pacific Northwest with up to 8 inches of rain.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Ford swerves on the electric F-150

Ford may be veering away from the zero-emissions model of the pickup that spent nearly a half-century as America’s most popular passenger vehicle. Executives at the Detroit giant “are in active discussions about scrapping the electric version of its F-150 pickup,” The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday, declaring the discontinuation “America’s first major EV casualty.” When Ford first unveiled the truck in 2022, the company compared the Lightning to its Model T. But with $13 billion in losses since 2023, and overall electric vehicles sales falling since Congress ended the federal credit in September, the sleek Space Age-looking pickup has looked less likely to take off. “The demand is just not there” for F-150 Lightning and other full-size trucks, Adam Kraushaar, owner of Lester Glenn Auto Group in New Jersey, told the newspaper. “We don’t order a lot of them because we don’t sell them.”

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