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Electric Vehicles

Charging a Rivian.
Climate Tech

Funding Friday: Google Locks Down 20 Years of Data Center Power

This week is light on the funding, heavy on the deals.

AM Briefing

Trump’s Reactor Realism

On the solar siege, New York’s climate law, and radioactive data center

Green
AM Briefing

Trump’s Data Center Defense

On Cybertruck deaths, Texas wind waste, and American aluminum

Red
AM Briefing

Renewables’ Year of Defiance

On the California atom, Russian nuclear theft, and Taiwan’s geothermal hope

Green
Donald Trump.

Loaded Barrel

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

Yellow
EV manufacturing.

The Outdated Economics Driving Trump’s Car Standards Rollback

Rob talks about the consumer response to fuel economy with Yale’s Kenneth Gillingham, then gets the latest Clean Investment Monitor data from Rhodium Group’s Hannah Hess.

Yellow
Energy

Trump’s One Big Beautiful Blow to the EV Supply Chain

New data from the Clean Investment Monitor shows the first year-over-year quarterly decline since the project began.

Cutting an EV charging cord.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Investment in the clean economy is flagging — and the electric vehicle supply chain is taking the biggest hit.

The Clean Investment Monitor, a project by the Rhodium Group and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research that tracks spending on the energy transition, found that total investment in clean technology in the last three months of 2025 was $60 billion. That compares to $68 billion in the fourth quarter of 2024 and $79 billion in the third quarter of last year. While total clean investment in 2025 was $277 billion — the highest the group has ever recorded — the fourth quarter of 2025 was the first time since the Clean Investment Monitor began tracking that the numbers fell compared to the same quarter the year before.

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AM Briefing

Energy Policy en Français

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

Chris Wright.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Multiple wildfires are raging on Oklahoma’s panhandle border with Texas • New York City and its suburbs are under a weather advisory over dense fog this morning • Ahmedabad, the largest city in the northwest Indian state of Gujarat, is facing temperatures as much as 4 degrees Celsius higher than historical averages this week.

THE TOP FIVE

1. New bipartisan bill aims to clear nuclear’s biggest remaining bottleneck

The United States could still withdraw from the International Energy Agency if the Paris-based watchdog, considered one of the leading sources of global data and forecasts on energy demand, continues to promote and plan for “ridiculous” net-zero scenarios by 2050. That’s what Secretary of Energy Chris Wright said on stage Tuesday at a conference in the French capital. Noting that the IEA was founded in the wake of the oil embargoes that accompanied the 1973 Yom Kippur War, the Trump administration wants the organization to refocus on issues of energy security and poverty, Wright said. He cited a recent effort to promote clean cooking fuels for the 2 billion people who still lack regular access to energy — more than 2 million of whom are estimated to die each year from exposure to fumes from igniting wood, crop residue, or dung indoors — as evidence that the IEA was shifting in Washington’s direction. But, Wright said, “We’re definitely not satisfied. We’re not there yet.” Wright described decarbonization policies as “politicians’ dreams about greater control” through driving “up the price of energy so high that the demand for energy” plummets. “To me, that’s inhuman,” Wright said. “It’s immoral. It’s totally unrealistic. It’s not going to happen. And if so much of the data reporting agencies are on these sort of left-wing big government fantasies, that just distorts” the IEA’s mission.

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