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Energy

Wind turbines.
AM Briefing

New York Quits

On microreactor milestones, the Colorado River, and ‘crazy’ Europe

Energy

Half of the Missing Tax Rules Are Out

The Treasury Department released partial guidance for the new “foreign entities of concern” restrictions on clean energy tax credits.

Blue
Politics

A New Bipartisan Geothermal Bill Is About to Heat Up the House

Representatives Jake Auchincloss and Mark Amodei want to boost “superhot” exploration.

Yellow
AM Briefing

Endangerment Zone

On Ohio’s renewables ban, China’s emissions, and Israeli nuclear

Blue
Snow-covered power lines.

The Power Grid Just Passed Its Biggest Test in Years

Rob and Jesse talk about the big Northeastern freeze.

Blue
AM Briefing

Georgia on My Mind

On electrolyzers’ decline, Anthropic’s pledge, and Syria’s oil and gas

The Alabama statehouse.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Warmer air from down south is pushing the cold front in Northeast back up to Canada • Tropical Cyclone Gezani has killed at least 31 in Madagascar • The U.S. Virgin Islands are poised for two days of intense thunderstorms that threaten its grid after a major outage just days ago.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Alabama weighs scrapping utility commission elections after Democratic win in Georgia

Back in November, Democrats swept to victory in Georgia’s Public Service Commission races, ousting two Republican regulators in what one expert called a sign of a “seismic shift” in the body. Now Alabama is considering legislation that would end all future elections for that state’s utility regulator. A GOP-backed bill introduced in the Alabama House Transportation, Utilities, and Infrastructure Committee would end popular voting for the commissioners and instead authorize the governor, the Alabama House speaker, and the Alabama Senate president pro tempore to appoint members of the panel. The bill, according to AL.com, states that the current regulatory approach “was established over 100 years ago and is not the best model for ensuring that Alabamians are best-served and well-positioned for future challenges,” noting that “there are dozens of regulatory bodies and agencies in Alabama and none of them are elected.”

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Energy

Democrats Should Embrace ‘Cleaner’ LNG, This Think Tank Says

Third Way’s latest memo argues that climate politics must accept a harsh reality: natural gas isn’t going away anytime soon.

A tree and a LNG boat.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

It wasn’t that long ago that Democratic politicians would brag about growing oil and natural gas production. In 2014, President Obama boasted to Northwestern University students that “our 100-year supply of natural gas is a big factor in drawing jobs back to our shores;” two years earlier, Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer devoted a portion of his speech at the Democratic National Convention to explaining that “manufacturing jobs are coming back — not just because we’re producing a record amount of natural gas that’s lowering electricity prices, but because we have the best-trained, hardest-working labor force in the history of the world.”

Third Way, the long tenured center-left group, would like to go back to those days.

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