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Energy

Politics

New Jersey Lawmakers Just Nixed a 2-Year-Old Data Center Tax Credit

The bill is part of a package now sitting on Governor Mikie Sherrill’s desk.

Green
AM Briefing

The Zeal of the Inverter

On New York’s solar farmland, German nuclear, and Argentinian gas

Yellow
Politics

Indiana’s Governor Is on the Energy Warpath

Republican Mike Braun loves data centers but hates electricity price increases.

Blue
Trump Pays Duke Energy $129 Million to Kill Offshore Wind

Duke Abdicates

On FERC’s independence, North Dakota, and Ecuador’s bombed regulator

Yellow
Power lines and cords.

The Engineering Mindset Breaking the Grid

A longtime energy analyst argues that there are no solutions to the hyperscale problem, only tradeoffs.

Blue
AM Briefing

Sayonara, Equinor

On Greenland’s rare earths, Baker Hughes’ geothermal bet, China’s green H2

The Other Country Losing Offshore Wind Developers
<p>Illustration by Simon Abranowicz</p>

Current conditions: A sprawling heat dome stretching from the Midwest to the East Coast is raising temperatures for more than 200 million Americans upward of 100 degrees Fahrenheit this week • Three firefighters died battling wildfires along the Colorado-Utah border on Saturday, while winds fanned the flames of the Cottonwood Fire in southwest Utah into the largest blaze in the U.S. right now • Back-to-back tropical storms Mekkhala and Higos battered Japan’s coast over the weekend, leaving at least one dead in a landslide.


THE TOP FIVE

1. The U.S. isn’t the only country losing offshore wind developers

For much of the past decade, Japan looked primed for offshore wind development for the same reasons the American industry first took root in the Northeast: It’s coastal, densely populated, and — with its nuclear power stations either shut down or idled — it’s more reliant on fossil fuels that it doesn’t locally produce than ever before. But building turbines off Japan’s shores has proven tricky as project costs ballooned. On Friday, Norway’s Equinor announced its decision to close its offshore wind division in Japan, after failing to win any leases at repeated auctions over the past eight years. “This decision reflects a reassessment of Equinor’s strategic direction, with a strengthened focus on integrated power markets,” the company said in a statement on its Japanese website.

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Spotlight

Data Centers Have a Farmland Problem, Too

It’s not just renewables anymore.

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

The movement against data centers is raising up a raison d'etre of the anti-renewables movement: protecting would-be farmland.

Farm owners and operators across the U.S. are winning national headlines almost every week for rejecting big dollar offers from data center developers. In Hanover County, Virginia, protestors are chanting “Grow Tomatoes, Not Data Centers.” In Pennsylvania and elsewhere, Republican legislators are mulling proposals to block the sale of so-called “prime farmland” for data center development. In Texas, the fight over data center development has engulfed the race for the state’s ag commissioner seat. In the Midwest, where agriculture reigns supreme, statewide races and congressional campaigns are slowly but surely being defined by the issue. Like in Nebraska where Austin Ahlman, an independent candidate running for Congress in Nebraska’s first district, told me he believes the data center backlash is reflective of a populist politics that broadly criticize elites and top-down control of the economy: “I think sometimes people misunderstand the anxieties of rural Americans when it comes to these data centers because a lot of their fears are about control long term.”

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