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Energy

Wall Street traders.
AM Briefing

Wall Street's War Anxiety

On Qatari aluminum, floating offshore wind, and Taiwanese nuclear

Energy

Oil Is Surging. Clean Energy Stocks Are Down Anyway.

The attacks on Iran have not redounded to renewables’ benefit. Here are three reasons why.

AM Briefing

Not Just Oil

On BlackRock’s AES buy, Chinese solar, and Canadian uranium

Red
Podcast

Why the Iran War Is a Warning for Natural Gas

In this special edition of Shift Key, Rob talks to Eurasia Group’s Gregory Brew about how the U.S.-Israeli-led conflict will reshape global energy markets.

An LNG vessel.

War With Iran Isn’t Just an Oil Story

The U.S.-Israeli campaign will have, if anything, bigger implications for liquified natural gas.

Blue
A gas station.

$100 a Barrel

On Greenpeace, deep-sea mining, and Lithuanian nuclear

Red
Energy

How Trump’s War Could Destabilize the Global Energy Market

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

Iran strike.
<p>Photo by ATTA KENARE / AFP via Getty Images</p>

For the second time in a year, the United States and Israel have launched a major aerial assault on Iran. Strikes were reported across the country early Saturday, targeting Iranian leadership and military infrastructure. In retaliation, Iran has launched attacks on Israel and Gulf nations allied with the U.S., with several of the targets appearing to be American military installations. “The United States military is undertaking a massive and ongoing operation,” President Trump said in a video posted to Truth Social explaining his rationale for launching the war.

While the conflict has quickly metastasized across the region, it has the potential to affect the entire world by disrupting the production and shipment of oil and natural gas.

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Energy

Utility CEOs Can’t Stop Talking About Affordability

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

Talking power lines.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Investor-owned utilities are a funny type of company. On the one hand, they answer to their shareholders, who expect growing returns and steady dividends. But those returns are the outcome of an explicitly political process — negotiations with state regulators who approve the utilities’ requests to raise rates and to make investments, on which utilities earn a rate of return that also must be approved by regulators.

Utilities have been requesting a lot of rate increases — some $31 billion in 2025, according to the energy policy group PowerLines, more than double the amount requested the year before. At the same time, those rate increases have helped push electricity prices up over 6% in the last year, while overall prices rose just 2.4%.

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