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Energy

Offshore wind.
AM Briefing

Total Waste

On Eli Lilly’s nuclear, Sunrise Wind, and Brazil’s minerals

Energy

New Documents Undermine Trump Administration’s Claims About Offshore Wind Deal

There was no new investment required from TotalEnergies, according to newly disclosed terms.

Energy

The Six Weeks That Changed the Global Energy Economy

How China emerged the victor of the war with Iran.

Blue
AM Briefing

SunZia Rises

On Minnesota mining, DAC being back, and desalination dividends

Blue
Thorium.

This American Nuclear Startup Aims to Supply India’s Reactor Boom

Chicago-based Clean Core is set to announce a pilot deal to manufacture thorium-based fuel.

Green
The Mariana Islands.

Saipan’s ‘Total Darkness’

On Trump’s dubious offshore wind deal, fast tracks, and missed deadlines

Green
Energy

Scoop: How Trump Is Paying Off TotalEnergies

New documents add to doubt over President Trump’s deal to buy back the multinational energy company’s U.S. offshore wind leases.

Sinking an offshore turbine.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum's announcement last month that the administration was cancelling two offshore wind leases and reimbursing the lessee, TotalEnergies, nearly $1 billion, raised a host of questions. What authority was he using to do this? Where would the money come from? Was this legal? Could the Trump administration kill the offshore wind industry by paying it exorbitant sums to go away?

A newly unearthed copy of one of the agency’s official lease cancellation decisions begins to fill in the picture. It confirms what the Department of the Interior has thus far refused to acknowledge: The agency intends to pay TotalEnergies using the Judgment Fund, a cache of public money overseen by the Department of Justice intended for agency settlements.

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AM Briefing

Trump’s Blockade in Force

On a rare earth jumpstart, Constellation’s warning, and V.C. Summer

The Strait of Hormuz.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Super Typhoon Sinlaku made landfall over America’s Pacific territories as the strongest storm in the world, walloping the Northern Mariana Islands with 42-foot waves • New York City’s forecast high of 88 degrees Fahrenheit could break the the 87-degree record set for this day in 1941 • Equatorial Guinea faces flooding as heavy thunderstorms are on track to continue for at least the next week.

THE TOP FIVE

1. The U.S. blockade is, indeed, halting ships in the Strait of Hormuz

The blockade.Yasin Demirci/Anadolu via Getty Images

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