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Electric Vehicles

Unpacking Trump’s Day 1 Energy Moves
Politics

AM Briefing: Trump’s Day 1

On the Paris Agreement, Chinese renewables, and a rare winter storm

Politics

Trump Includes Critical Minerals in His Energy Bonanza

A trio of executive orders boost rare earth metals essential to batteries.

Electric Vehicles

Trump Waged a Multi-Front Blitz on EVs

Among other actions, he overturned an electric vehicle mandate that, well, doesn’t exist.

Politics

AM Briefing: Trump’s Energy Shake-up

On rumors from fossil fuel insiders, the LA wind forecast, and Davos

Yellow
Los Angeles’ Ferocious Fires

AM Briefing: Los Angeles Ablaze

On the emergency in California, clean energy tax credits, and Exxon Mobil

Yellow
Solar panels in China.

Have China’s Emissions Already Peaked?

Rob and Jesse talk all things solar, steel, and cement with CREA’s Lauri Myllyvirta.

Green
Elon Musk and a Cybertruck.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images, Tesla</p>

It’s a bad sign when they won’t tell you the exact numbers.

On Thursday, Tesla released final production figures for 2024, which saw the EV maker post a rare year-over-year decline in sales growth. It’s likely that a slow start for the Cybertruck, Tesla’s only new model in recent memory, was a big cause of the slowdown. But we can’t tell you exactly how well or poorly the big truck is doing because the company won’t tell us.

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Climate

AM Briefing: Brrrrr!

On Arctic blasts, Tesla sales, and offshore drilling bans

Get Ready for a Brutally Cold January
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: A cold snap in Europe could deplete natural gas supplies • More than two feet of lake-effect snow could fall this weekend in upstate New York • Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam, has become the most polluted city in the world, prompting a push for more EVs.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Millions of Americans could see record cold in January

Bitterly cold weather is descending on the central and eastern U.S. this week, and it could last through the whole of January. The first Arctic blast will send temperatures plunging as much as 20 degrees Fahrenheit below normal, and that will be followed by an even colder burst of air next week, and then another. “This will likely be the most significant cold we have seen in years,” said forecasters at the National Weather Service office. Energy demand will surge, and a lot of snow and ice could cause power outages in some areas. Already a winter storm is forecast for the Central Plains this weekend, with the weather system shifting eastward to the Mid-Atlantic region next week. Even Southern states like Texas and Florida will feel the cold. “At this time, it looks like there will be at least three major blasts of Arctic air that will affect the Southern states,” AccuWeather meteorologist Alex DaSilva said. “The first outbreak will be from Jan. 3-4, the second on Jan. 7-8 and then the third round on Jan. 11-12.”

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