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Energy

Doug Burgum.
AM Briefing

Courting a Win

On the FREEDOM Act, Siemens’ bet, and space data centers

Politics

Scoop: New Bipartisan House Bill Would Keep President From Yanking Permits

The FREEDOM Act aims to protect energy developments from changing political winds.

Blue
Energy

The Radical Grid Idea Gaining Traction on the Right — and the Left

Maybe utilities’ “natural monopoly” isn’t so natural after all.

Green
AM Briefing

Rock Stockpile

On offshore wind wins, China’s ‘strong energy nation,’ and Japan’s deep-sea mining

Yellow
Donald Trump and offshore wind.

Sunrise Wind Got Its Injunction

Offshore wind developers: 5. Trump administration: 0.

Green
Florida cold.

Southern Chill

On nuclear’s NEPA exemption, alumina, and Congolese collapse

Blue
Politics

Trump Administration Restarts Key Permitting Process for Wind Farms

The Fish and Wildlife Service has lifted its ban on issuing permits for incidental harm to protected eagles while also pursuing enforcement actions — including against operators that reported bird deaths voluntarily.

A golden eagle and wind turbines.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

When Trump first entered office, he banned wind projects from receiving permits that would allow operators to unintentionally hurt or kill a certain number of federally protected eagles, transforming one of his favorite attacks on the industry into a dangerous weapon against clean energy.

One year later, his administration is publicly distancing itself from the ban while quietly issuing some permits to wind companies and removing references to the policy from government websites. At the same time, however, the federal government is going after wind farm operators for eagle deaths, going so far as to use the permitting backlog it manufactured to intimidate companies trying in good faith to follow the law, with companies murmuring about the risk of potential criminal charges.

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AM Briefing

The Brittle Grid

On copper prices, coal burning, and Bonaire’s climate victory

Power lines.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: The bomb cyclone barrelling toward the East Coast is set to dump up to 6 inches of snow on North Carolina in one of the state’s heaviest snowfalls in decades • The Arctic cold and heavy snow that came last weekend has already left more than 50 people dead across the United States • Heavy rain in the Central African Republic is worsening flooding and escalating tensions on the country’s border with war-ravaged Sudan.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Much of the U.S. is at high risk of blackouts by the end of the decade

A chart from the NERC report showing the grids most at risk between now and 2030. NERC

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