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Energy

Energy policy figures.
Politics

2025 Was the Year of Energy Confusion

Neither Republicans nor Democrats have a coherent idea of how to move forward.

Podcast

Shift Key Classic: California’s Rooftop Solar Question

A blast from the past with the director of the Energy Policy Institute at the University of California, Berkeley’s Haas School of Business, Severin Borenstein.

Yellow
Donald Trump.

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.

The Google logo holding electricity.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Google is on an AI hiring spree — and not just for people who can design chips and build large language models. The tech giant wants people who can design energy systems, too.

Google has invested heavily of late in personnel for its electricity and infrastructure-related teams. Among its key hires is Tyler Norris, a former Duke University researcher and one of the most prominent proponents of electricity demand flexibility for data centers, who started in November as “head of market innovation” on the advanced energy team. The company also hired Doug Lewin, an energy consultant and one of the most respected voices in Texas energy policy, to lead “energy strategy and market design work in Texas,” according to a note he wrote on LinkedIn. Nathan Iyer, who worked on energy policy issues at RMI, has been a contractor for Google Clean Energy for about a year. (The company also announced Monday that it’s shelling out $4.5 billion to acquire clean energy developer Intersect.)

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Podcast

The Biggest Energy and Climate Stories of 2026

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

Clean energy.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

2025 has been a rough year for climate and energy news. But enough about that. Let’s start looking at 2026!

On this week’s episode of Shift Key, Rob is joined by some of Heatmap’s writers and editors to discuss our biggest stories and predictions for 2026 — what we’re tracking, what could surprise us, and what could happen next. We also discuss a recent op-ed in The New York Times arguing that Democrats should work more closely with the U.S. oil and gas industry. Today’s panel includes Heatmap’s founding staff writer Emily Pontecorvo, staff writer Matthew Zeitlin, and deputy editor Jillian Goodman.

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