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Energy

The Treasury Department and corn.
Politics

The Climate-Smart Program Trump Didn’t Kill (Yet)

New guidelines for the clean fuel tax credit reward sustainable agriculture practices — but could lead to greater emissions anyway.

AM Briefing

Headwinds Blowing

On Tesla’s sunny picture, Chinese nuclear, and Bad Bunny’s electric halftime show

Blue
Spotlight

Are Republicans Turning on Data Centers?

The number of data centers opposed in Republican-voting areas has risen 330% over the past six months.

Yellow
Energy

Energy Companies Are Dancing in the Data Center Money Fountain

With investment in AI booming, any business that can promise quick generation is looking pretty good right now.

Blue
Donald Trump and smokestacks.

Trump’s Energy Policy Isn’t Just Dirty. It’s Expensive.

And it’s blocking America’s economic growth, argues a former White House climate advisor.

A broken wind turbine.

$34 Billion Bust

On Texas’ free speech violation, nuclear recycling, and deadly smoke

Blue
Energy

Factories Are Becoming More Like Data Centers

Large electricity users that employ few workers are not what America’s reindustrialization dreams are made on.

A factory and a data center.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

A group of local activists recently rallied against a major new industrial site in their area.

They worried the new facility was going to suck up water and electricity. They fretted about the chemicals and risky materials it might store on site. And they argued that the land’s “light industrial” zoning designation is not appropriate for the incoming tenant.

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Sparks

Google’s Investment Surge Is Fabulous News for Utilities

Alphabet and Amazon each plan to spend a small-country-GDP’s worth of money this year.

A data center and the Google logo.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Big tech is spending big on data centers — which means it’s also spending big on power.

Alphabet, the parent company of Google, announced Wednesday that it expects to spend $175 billion to $185 billion on capital expenditures this year. That estimate is about double what it spent in 2025, far north of Wall Street’s expected $121 billion, and somewhere between the gross domestic products of Ecuador and Morocco.

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