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Electric Vehicles

A flooded street.
AM Briefing

Washington Washout

On Trump’s electricity insecurity, Rivan’s robots, and the European grid

AM Briefing

Blue Wall

On supersonic gas, space solar, and Japanese fusion

Blue
Podcast

Why the Rest of the World Is Buying Chinese EVs

Rob catches up with the Center for Strategic and International Studies’ Ilaria Mazzocco.

AM Briefing

Solar Stunner

On MARVEL’s market, a climate retraction, and Eavor’s geothermal milestone

Blue
Automobile exhaust.

Smog Unchecked

On diesel backup generators, Chinese rare earths, and geothermal milestones

Blue
Donald Trump and auto executives.

Trump’s Big Pivot to Gasoline

The rollback of fuel efficiency rules is here.

AM Briefing

Trump’s SMR Play

On black lung, blackouts, and Bill Gates’ reactor startup

Donald Trump and Chris Wright.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: The Northeastern U.S. is bracing for 6 inches of snow, including potential showers in New York City today • A broad swath of the Mountain West, from Montana through Colorado down to New Mexico, is expecting up to six inches of snow • After routinely breaking temperature records for the past three years, Guyana shattered its December high with thermometers crossing 92 degrees Fahrenheit.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Energy Department shells out $800 million to two nuclear projects

The Department of Energy gave a combined $800 million to two projects to build what could be the United States’ first commercial small modular reactors. The first $400 million went to the federally owned Tennessee Valley Authority to finance construction of the country’s first BWRX-300. The project, which Heatmap’s Matthew Zeitlin called the TVA’s “big swing at small nuclear,” is meant to follow on the debut deployment of GE-Hitachi Nuclear Energy’s 300-megawatt SMR at the Darlington nuclear plant in Ontario. The second $400 million grant backed Holtec International’s plan to expand the Palisades nuclear plant in Michigan where it’s currently working to restart with the company’s own 300-megawatt reactor. The funding came from a pot of money earmarked for third-generation reactors, the type that hew closely to the large light water reactors that make up nearly all the U.S. fleet of 94 commercial nuclear reactors. While their similarities with existing plants offer some benefits, the Trump administration has also heavily invested in incentives to spur construction of fourth-generation reactors that use coolants other than water. “Advanced light-water SMRs will give our nation the reliable, round-the-clock power we need to fuel the President’s manufacturing boom, support data centers and AI growth, and reinforce a stronger, more secure electric grid,” Secretary of Energy Chris Wright said in a statement. “These awards ensure we can deploy these reactors as soon as possible.”

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AM Briefing

China’s Fusion Friends

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

A tokamok.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Winds of up to 30 miles per hour will threaten the balloons at Macy’s iconic Thanksgiving Day parade in New York • Lake-effect snow could cause whiteouts across the Great Lake region • Temperatures are set to soar to nearly 90 degrees Fahrenheit in Queensland and New South Wales, Australia.

THE TOP FIVE

1. China forms a 10-nation alliance to work on fusion energy

China has formed a fusion energy alliance with more than 10 countries to promote open science and encourage collaboration among international researchers to hasten the commercialization of electricity generated from what is effectively an artificial sun. At a launch event on Monday, Beijing unveiled the so-called Hefei Fusion Declaration, whose signatories include France, the United Kingdom, and Germany. “We are about to enter a new stage of burning plasma, which is critical for future fusion engineering,” Song Yuntao, vice president of the Hefei Institutes of Physical Science, said in a government press release.

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