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Energy

Shutting off Ravenswood.
Energy

New York City’s Climate Progress Has Hit a Wall

The July 4 heat wave showed just how far the metropolis has to go to reach its decarbonization goals.

Sparks

Virginians Are Getting an Electricity Price Doubly-Whammy

Rates were up 17% year over year in June, according to the latest Electricity Price Hub update, with another increase on the way.

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AM Briefing

False Summit

On the India-Australia uranium deal, a U.S. general’s warning, and Chicago’s VPP

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Spotlight

Meta’s Bacterial Mystery Could Poison the Data Center Well

Water pollution in Wyoming has big implications for the future of data center development.

Yellow
A Fervo installation.

Fervo Is Drilling Wells Deeper, Faster, and Hotter

The enhanced geothermal company just announced a new 19,448-foot well.

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A reactor under construction.

A Global Nuclear Renaissance

On Trump’s mineral paradox, China’s Great Green Wall, and sodium-ion batteries

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Daily Briefing

Trump Isn’t ‘Looking for Long Term’ in Iran

The question is whether he still has a choice.

Donald Trump.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The United States has resumed bombing Iran, the U.S. military’s regional command announced on Wednesday. The United States also bombed more than 80 sites on Tuesday, including radar and air defense facilities, but the new set of targets is more expansive.

President Trump declared on Wednesday that the ceasefire between the two countries is dead. Yet he also suggested that an extended war isn’t on the table. “We’re not looking for long term,” he said at the NATO Summit in Turkey. “Anything that happens is going to be over very quickly … and will only make it safer, including for oil.”

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Adaptation

Why the Hottest Summer Days Also Have Dirtier Air

Pollution from peaker plants combined with heat and smoke can push summer air quality into the danger zone.

A polluting air conditioner.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

If you ever have to pick a day to stay inside, pick July 5. In cities across the United States, the Fourth of July’s pyrotechnic revelries make the wee hours after Independence Day consistently one of the worst of the year for air quality. Just look at Washington, D.C., which briefly held the distinction of having the world’s most polluted air this past Sunday morning following one of the largest firework displays in history.

But if you have to pick a second day to stay inside, shoot for one during the second half of July, which is the hottest period of the year in the United States. For one thing, it’s just plain miserable out. For another, the country’s 1,000 or so peaking power plants, or “peakers,” are more likely to be operating to meet the energy demands of heavy air-conditioning use, emitting disproportionately high levels of pollution for the electricity they generate.

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