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Electric Vehicles

The IRS building.
Sparks

The IRS Is Taking Mercy on Electric Car Buyers

The tax agency reopened its online portal to allow dealerships to register sales retroactively.

Politics

AM Briefing: Buckle Up, Auto Industry

On auto levies, NOAA’s new lawyer, and the future of FEMA

Yellow
Electric Vehicles

AM Briefing: BYD Leapfrogs Tesla

On EV sales, a clean energy lobbying blitz, and fusion

Yellow
Climate

AM Briefing: Global Energy Demand on the Rise

On the IEA’s latest report, wildfires in North Carolina, and EV adoption

Yellow
EV charging.

These States Are Still Pushing Public EV Charging Programs

If you live in Illinois or Massachusetts, you may yet get your robust electric vehicle infrastructure.

Green
The Greenpeace Verdict Is In

AM Briefing: The Greenpeace Verdict

On Energy Transfer’s legal win, battery storage, and the Cybertruck

Yellow
Electric Vehicles

Why BYD Keeps Shocking the World

The Chinese carmaker says it can charge EVs in 5 minutes. Can America ever catch up?

The BYD logo as a rabbit.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The Chinese automaker BYD might have cracked one of the toughest problems in electric cars.

On Tuesday, BYD unveiled its new “Super e-Platform,” a new standard electronic base for its vehicles that it says will allow incredibly fast charging — enabling its vehicles to add as much as 249 miles of range in just five minutes. That’s made possible because of a 1,000-volt architecture and what BYD describes as matching charging capability, which could theoretically add nearly one mile of range every second.

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Climate

AM Briefing: An 800,000-Year High

On the WMO’s latest report, EPA climate grants, and BYD

Atmosperhic CO2 Is at an 800,000-Year High
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: More than 2 million people are under blizzard warnings across the Midwest • A landslide is suspected of rupturing an oil pipeline in northwest Ecuador, triggering an environmental emergency • Beaches are closed in South Australia due to a dangerous microalgal bloom, which officials believe could be caused by the combination of unusual hot and dry weather, low wind, and low tides.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Judge temporarily blocks EPA’s efforts to claw back climate grants

A U.S. district judge issued a temporary restraining order yesterday blocking the Environmental Protection Agency from taking back billions of dollars in climate grants issued to a handful of nonprofits under the Inflation Reduction Act’s Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund. Under the order, Citibank, where the funds are held, cannot transfer the money out of the nonprofits’ accounts because doing so would cause them “imminent harm.” The nonprofits in question – Climate United Fund, Coalition for Green Capital, and Power Forward Communities – received about $14 billion of more than $20 billion awarded for clean energy and climate solutions. The Trump administration’s EPA, led by Lee Zeldin, has frozen and attempted to claw back the funds, accusing the Biden administration of approving them hastily and without oversight, and accusing the nonprofits of “fraud, waste, and abuse.” Several of the grantees have sued the EPA and Citibank. In her decision, Judge Tanya Chutkan of Washington, D.C., said “there are serious due process concerns” about the EPA’s actions.

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