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Energy

A data center.
AM Briefing

‘Big Deal’ Blackout Warning

On thorium, South Carolina nuclear, and green steel

AM Briefing

New Headwinds

On congestion pricing, deep sea mining, and kiwi birds

Blue
Climate Tech

Funding Friday: Space Solar Goes Meta

Plus news on cloud seeding, fission for fusion, and more of the week’s biggest money moves.

Green
AM Briefing

Belgian Nuclear Waffling

On Texas solar, Total’s deal, and Rivian’s revving

Yellow
Earth.

Some Great News About the Global Electricity System

Rob chats with Ember’s Nicholas Fulghum about the think tank’s newest report.

Green
Energy

Where Did All the Solar Go?

PJM is back open for business, but the new generation applying to interconnect is primarily natural gas.

A power plant.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

America’s largest electricity market is looking at hooking up new power generation again, and a lot of it is natural gas.

PJM stopped evaluating new generation in 2022, when the backlog of projects awaiting interconnection studies stood at 2,664, of which 1,972 — representing 107 gigawatts, about two-thirds of the total — were renewables.

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AM Briefing

Delete Virginia

On FEMA fubar, South African nuclear, and Chinese electrolyzers

A data center interior.
AM 4/28
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: The Gulf Coast states are bracing for a series of midweek thunderstorms • Temperatures are rocketing up near 100 degrees Fahrenheit in Lahore, Pakistan • San Juan, Puerto Rico, is facing days of severe thunderstorms.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Brookfield abandons data center complex in Virginia amid opposition

Compass Datacenters is quitting a yearslong bid to build a key part of a 2,100-acre data center corridor in northern Virginia amid mounting pushback from neighbors, marking one of the highest profile examples yet of political opposition killing off a major server farm. The company, backed by the private equity giant Brookfield Asset Management, has gunned for Prince William County’s approval to turn more than 800 acres into a portion of the data center buildout. But after spending tens of millions of dollars on the effort, the firm decided that political resistance to providing tax breaks had created what Bloomberg described Wednesday as “too many roadblocks,” prompting a withdrawal.

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