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Energy

Julie Liu.
Energy

Meet Con Edison’s One-Woman Electrification Show

Julie Liu is converting gas customers to heat pumps, one home at a time.

AM Briefing

Data Deluge

On NREL’s rebrand, British LNG wariness, and Japan’s DAC embrace

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AM Briefing

PJM WTF

On NYPA nuclear staffing, Zillow listings, and European wood

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Ideas

A Backup Plan for the AI Boom

If it turns out to be a bubble, billions of dollars of energy assets will be on the line.

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A snowflake power line.

Winter Is Going to Be a Problem

With more electric heating in the Northeast comes greater strains on the grid.

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Sparks

Catherine Cortez Masto on Critical Minerals, Climate Policy, and the Technology of the Future

The senator spoke at a Heatmap event in Washington, D.C. last week about the state of U.S. manufacturing.

Senator Cortez Masto
<p>Heatmap </p>

At Heatmap’s event, “Onshoring the Electric Revolution,” held last week in Washington, D.C. every guest agreed: The U.S. is falling behind in the race to build the technologies of the future.

Senator Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada, a Democrat who sits on the Senate’s energy and natural resources committee, expressed frustration with the Trump administration rolling back policies in the Inflation Reduction Act and Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act meant to support critical minerals companies. “If we want to, in this country, lead in 21st century technology, why aren’t we starting with the extraction of the critical minerals that we need for that technology?” she asked.

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AM Briefing

China’s Fusion Friends

On Beijing’s coal dip, Iran’s environmental ‘catastrophe,’ and Thanksgiving carbon footprint

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

Current conditions: Winds of up to 30 miles per hour will threaten the balloons at Macy’s iconic Thanksgiving Day parade in New York • Lake-effect snow could cause whiteouts across the Great Lake region • Temperatures are set to soar to nearly 90 degrees Fahrenheit in Queensland and New South Wales, Australia.

THE TOP FIVE

1. China forms a 10-nation alliance to work on fusion energy

China has formed a fusion energy alliance with more than 10 countries to promote open science and encourage collaboration among international researchers to hasten the commercialization of electricity generated from what is effectively an artificial sun. At a launch event on Monday, Beijing unveiled the so-called Hefei Fusion Declaration, whose signatories include France, the United Kingdom, and Germany. “We are about to enter a new stage of burning plasma, which is critical for future fusion engineering,” Song Yuntao, vice president of the Hefei Institutes of Physical Science, said in a government press release.

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