Sign In or Create an Account.

By continuing, you agree to the Terms of Service and acknowledge our Privacy Policy

Energy

Jimmy Carter.
Ideas

The Last Time America Tried to Legislate Its Way to Energy Affordability

Lawmakers today should study the Energy Security Act of 1980.

AM Briefing

The Grinch of Offshore Wind

On Google’s energy glow up, transmission progress, and South American oil

Green
Energy

Google Is Cornering the Market on Energy Wonks

The hyperscaler is going big on human intelligence to help power its artificial intelligence.

Yellow
Podcast

The Biggest Energy and Climate Stories of 2026

A lookahead with Heatmap’s own Emily Pontecorvo, Matthew Zeitlin, and Jillian Goodman.

Green
A graph and fire.

A Wildfire Is Coming for Electricity Bills

Forget data centers. Fire is going to make electricity much more expensive in the western United States.

Donald Trump on a wind turbine.

Trump Uses ‘National Security’ to Freeze Offshore Wind Work

The administration has already lost once in court wielding the same argument against Revolution Wind.

Blue
AM Briefing

The Big Atom

On Redwood Materials’ milestone, states welcome geothermal, and Indian nuclear

Kathy Hochul.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Powerful winds of up to 50 miles per hour are putting the Front Range states from Wyoming to Colorado at high risk of wildfire • Temperatures are set to feel like 101 degrees Fahrenheit in Santa Fe in northern Argentina • Benin is bracing for flood flooding as thunderstorms deluge the West African nation.


THE TOP FIVE

1. New York partners with Ontario on advanced nuclear

New York Governor Kathy Hochul. John Lamparski/Getty Images for Concordia Annual Summit

Keep reading...Show less
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.

A Texas sign at a ZettaJoule facility.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images, ZettaJoule</p>

The appeal of next-generation nuclear technology is simple. Unlike the vast majority of existing reactors that use water, so-called fourth-generation units use coolants such as molten salt, liquid metal, or gases that can withstand intense heat such as helium. That allows the machines to reach and maintain the high temperatures necessary to decarbonize industrial processes, which currently only fossil fuels are able to reach.

But the execution requirements of these advanced reactors are complex, making skepticism easy to understand. While the U.S., Germany, and other countries experimented with fourth-generation reactors in earlier decades, there is only one commercial unit in operation today. That’s in China, arguably the leader in advanced nuclear, which hooked up a demonstration model of a high-temperature gas-cooled reactor to its grid two years ago, and just approved building another project in September.

Keep reading...Show less