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Energy

A palm tree and power lines.
Energy

Hawaii’s Electricity Bills Spiked 22% in May

The latest update to the Electricity Price Hub shows a price increase in line with what regulators predicted.

AM Briefing

A Safer Harbor

On desalination, Japanese nuclear, and Latin American hydroelectricity

Blue
AM Briefing

Trump's Billion-Dollar Coal Gamble

On flesh-eating parasites, Italian nuclear, and China’s “wasted” renewables

Blue
Gentner Drummond.

Oklahoma!

On depleted U.S. oil stocks, Taiwan geothermal, and hybrid sales

Blue
Daily Briefing

What’s Powering Clean Energy

Notes from Heatmap’s second Energy Entrepreneurship Summit.

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

I’m writing from Washington, D.C., today, after having the privilege of watching (and moderating) Heatmap’s second Energy Entrepreneurship Summit this morning. We heard from folks leading in a variety of technologies — geothermal, batteries, fusion, conventional nuclear — but I was struck by a few common themes.

The first was the new wave of excitement about fusion energy and how, in some ways, the artificial intelligence boom has reinvigorated the fusion conversation. Much like fusion, AI was a long-prophesied technology that made steady, iterative improvements over time — and then, one day, delivered a transformative product in the form of ChatGPT. I’m not sure if fusion has yet had a raw technological improvement on par with the transformer, the neural network innovation that preceded today’s AI chatbots and agents, but fusion startups have reported significant improvements in recent years. The industry believes — as do some fusion-pilled policymakers — that they will have commercial reactors on the grid by the mid-2030s.

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Energy

Americans Now Blame Data Centers for Their Rising Power Bills

Our latest Heatmap Pro poll found one big reason why public support for data centers has plummeted.

A data center and an electric bill.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Americans’ support for data centers cratered over the past nine months. Rising electricity prices are a big part of the reason.

A Heatmap Pro poll conducted in May found that seven in 10 Americans would oppose a data center being built near where they live, up from four in 10 when we asked the same question in August 2025. We also polled people on mounting electricity costs, providing them with about a dozen potential explanations for the surge in prices and asking whether they blame each one “a lot,” “a little,” or “not at all.”

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