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Energy

Iran strike.
Energy

How Trump’s War Could Destabilize the Global Energy Market

It starts — but doesn’t end — with the Strait of Hormuz.

Energy

Utility CEOs Can’t Stop Talking About Affordability

It’s either reassure investors now or reassure voters later.

Blue
AM Briefing

Trump’s Reactor Realism

On the solar siege, New York’s climate law, and radioactive data center

Green
Donald Trump.

Scoop: Energy Department Meeting With Utilities, Developers on Trump’s Nuclear Plans

The public-private project aims to help realize the president’s goal of building 10 new reactors by 2030.

Chris Womack and Chris Wright.

Southern Comfort

On nuclear tax credits, BLM controversy, and a fusion maverick’s fundraise

Blue
Climate Tech

Shine Technologies Raises Nearly a Quarter of a Billion Dollars for Commercial Fusion

That doesn’t mean it plans to produce electricity anytime soon.

Nuclear recycling.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Greg Piefer thinks nearly all his rivals in the race to commercialize fusion are doing it backward.

Of the 59 companies tracked in the Fusion Industry Association’s latest annual survey, 48 are primarily focused on generating electricity, off-grid energy, or industrial heat by harnessing the power produced when two atoms fuse together in the same type of reaction that fuels the sun. Just four are following the path of Shine Technologies and using plasma beam energy to manufacture rare and extremely valuable radioisotopes for breakthrough cancer treatments — 10 if you count the startups with a secondary medical business.

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Energy

Public Power Advocates Have Learned From Past Failures

After a disappointing referendum in Maine, campaigners in New York are taking their arguments straight to lawmakers.

Paying for power.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

As electricity affordability has become the issue on every politician’s lips, a coalition of New York state lawmakers and organizations in the Hudson Valley have proposed a solution: Buy the utility and operate it publicly.

Assemblymember Sarahana Shrestha, whose district covers the mid-Hudson Valley, introduced a bill early last year to buy out the Hudson Valley’s investor-owned utility, Central Hudson Gas and Electric, and run it as a state entity. That bill hung around for a while before Shrestha reintroduced it to committee in January. It now has more than a dozen co-sponsors, a sign that the idea is gaining traction in Albany.

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