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Electric Vehicles

AM Briefing

The Grinch of Offshore Wind

On Google’s energy glow up, transmission progress, and South American oil

Green
Electric Vehicles

More Affordable EVs Are Coming in the Nick of Time

Just as Americans have started to revolt against expensive cars.

Green
AM Briefing

Trump Gets Into Fusion

On permitting reform passing, Oklo’s Swedish bet, and GM’s heir apparent

Yellow
Elizabeth Warren.

Data Dump

On permitting reform hangups, transformers, and Last Energy’s big fundraise

Blue
Jim Farley and a Ford F-150 Lightning.

Ford’s EV Writedown

On EU’s EV reversal, ‘historic’ mineral deals, and India’s nuclear opening

Green
AM Briefing

China’s Rising Sun

On vulnerable batteries, Canada’s about face, and France’s double down

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

Current conditions: New York City is digging out from upward of six inches of snow • Storm Emilia is deluging Spain with as much as 10 inches of rain • South Africa and Southern Australia are both at high risk of wildfires.


THE TOP FIVE

1. China is outspending the U.S. on fusion energy

Last month, I told you about China’s latest attempt at fusion diplomacy, uniting more than 10 countries including France and the United Kingdom in an alliance to work together on the holy grail energy source. Over the weekend, The New York Times published a sweeping feature on China’s domestic fusion efforts, highlighting just how much Beijing is outspending the West on making the technology long mocked as “the energy source of tomorrow that always will be” a reality today. China went from spending nothing on fusion energy in 2021 to making investments this year that outmatch the rest of the world’s efforts combined. Consider this point of comparison: The Chinese government and private investors poured $2.1 billion into a new state-owned fusion company just the summer. That investment alone, the Times noted, is two and half times the U.S. Department of Energy’s annual fusion budget.

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Electric Vehicles

How Rivian Is Trying to Beat Tesla to the First AI Car

The electric vehicle-maker’s newly unveiled, lidar-equipped, autonomy-enabled R2 is scheduled to hit the road next year.

A Rivian R2.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Rivian, Getty Images</p>

When Rivian revealed the R2 back in the spring of 2024, the compelling part of the electric SUV was price. The vehicle looked almost exactly like the huge R1S that helped launch the brand, but scaled down to a true two-row, five-seat ride that would start at $45,000. That’s not exactly cheap, but it would create a Rivian for lots of drivers who admired the company’s sleek adventure EV but couldn’t afford to spend nearly a hundred grand on a vehicle.

But at the company’s “Autonomy and AI Day,” held on Thursday at Rivian’s Palo Alto office in the heart of Silicon Valley, company leaders raised the expectations for their next vehicle. R2 wouldn’t just be the more affordable Rivian — it would be the AI-defined car that vaults them into the race to develop truly self-driving cars.

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