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Energy

A Texas sign at a ZettaJoule facility.
Energy

Exclusive: Japan’s Tiny Nuclear Reactors Are Headed to Texas

The fourth-generation gas-cooled reactor company ZettaJoule is setting up shop at an unnamed university.

Hotspots

A Texas Data Center Dispute Turns Tawdry

Plus a resolution for Vineyard Wind and more of the week’s big renewables fights.

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AM Briefing

Trump Gets Into Fusion

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

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Energy

Let’s Make It Easier To Plug Data Centers Into Power Plants, FERC Says

Federal energy regulators directed the country’s largest grid to make its rules make sense.

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The National Center for Atmospheric Research.

Research Revision

On PJM’s auction, coal’s demise, and a murder at MIT

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Elizabeth Warren.

Data Dump

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

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Podcast

Say ‘Guten Tag!’ to This New Kind of Geothermal Tech

Rob and Jesse catch up with Mark Fitzgerald, CEO of the closed-loop geothermal startup Eavor.

An Eavor facility.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Eavor</p>

Over the past decade, the oil and gas industry has sharpened its drilling skills, extracting fossil fuels at greater depths — and with more precision — than ever before. What if there was a way to tap those advances to generate zero-carbon energy?

The Canadian company Eavor (pronounced “ever”) says it can do so. Its closed-loop geothermal system is already producing heat at competitive prices in Europe, and it says it will soon be able to drill deep enough to fuel the electricity system, too. It just opened a first-of-its-kind demonstration facility in Germany, which is successfully heating and powering the small hamlet of Geretsreid, Bavaria.

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Politics

The Party of ‘All of the Above’ Is Now ‘Anything But’

The tension between the two GOP energy philosophies — one admitting renewables, the other firmly rejecting — could tank a permitting reform deal.

The Capitol and renewables.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The fate of a House GOP permitting deal stands on a knife’s edge.

During a dramatic vote on the House floor Tuesday, far-right Republicans and opponents of the offshore wind industry joined with Democrats in a nearly-successful attempt to defeat a procedural vote on the SPEED Act, a bill to streamline implementation of the National Environmental Policy Act.

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