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Energy

Climate protesters.
AM Briefing

Dirty COP30

On Ex-Im’s energy spree, a new American coal plant, and Oregon abundance

Energy

11 Takeaways from the DOE’s Big Reorganization

Here’s what stood out to former agency staffers.

Green
Climate

Where COP30 Is Actually Making Progress

The United Nations climate conference wants you to think it’s getting real. It’s not total B.S.

Green
AM Briefing

Lots More Drilling

On a permitting bill shocker, spiking gas bills, and China’s nuclear progress

Red
Bruce Westerman and the Capitol Building.

House Permitting Bill Would Block Trump From Pulling Permits

It was approved by the House Natural Resources Committee on Thursday by a vote of 25 to 18.

Blue
A northern spotted owl.

Endangered Species Act in Danger

On Turkey’s COP31 win, data center dangers, and Michigan’s anti-nuclear hail mary

Green
Energy

PJM Is Paralyzed by Its Data Center Dilemma

Members of the nation’s largest grid couldn’t agree on a recommendation for how to deal with the surge of incoming demand.

Power lines.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The members of PJM Interconnection, the country’s largest electricity market, held an advisory vote Wednesday to help decide how the grid operator should handle the tidal wave of incoming demand from data centers. Twelve proposals were put forward by data center companies, transmission companies, power companies, utilities, state legislators, advocates, PJM’s market monitor, and PJM itself.

None of them passed.

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Energy

What If Utilities Just Made Less Money?

California energy companies are asking for permission to take in more revenue. Consumer advocates are having none of it.

Money and utilities, balanced.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

There’s a seemingly obvious solution to expensive electricity bills: Cut utility profits.

Investor-owned utilities have to deliver profits to their shareholders to be able to raise capital for grid projects. That profit comes in the form of a markup you and I pay on our electricity bills. State regulators decide how much that mark-up is. What if they made it lower?

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