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Energy

A nuclear power plant.
AM Briefing

China’s Nuclear Milestone

On Anthropic’s IPO, home energy rebates, and French rare earths

Energy

The Electricity Economy Is Having Its Moment

Behind both the Anthropic IPO and the Iran War negotiations sits the energy transition.

Ideas

Why We’re So Bad at Predicting the Future of Energy

A climate scientist goes back to the numbers to argue that we’re overestimating the cost of the energy transition.

Green
AM Briefing

Easterly Winds

On data center generators, nuclear waste recycling, and Omani H2

Blue
Washington, DC.

How to Fix the Fastest-Rising Electricity Prices in the U.S.

A group of energy researchers have a three-part prescription for Washington, D.C.’s exploding energy costs.

Blue
Travis Fisher.

What’s Bothering a Free Market Wonk About the Data Center Boom

A conversation with Travis Fisher of the Cato Institute.

Yellow
AM Briefing

New Fees for Offshore Wind

On Fervo’s blowout, nuclear investment, and Indian solar

The Capitol.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: The 100-degree Fahrenheit temperatures in Spain won’t drop until Tuesday • Tropical Storm Domeng is barreling toward the Philippines, the country's second major cyclone this month • New satellite images show that Santa Rosa Island, the so-called Galapagos of California, is scarred from the wildfire that torched the landmass earlier this month.


THE TOP FIVE

1. House Republicans propose a new attack on offshore wind: steep inspection fees

The spending bill House Republicans put forward this week for the Department of the Interior comes with yet another blow to the offshore wind industry. The legislation the House Appropriations subcommittee advanced last week would impose a range of fees on offshore wind projects, including $7,300 annual fees for onshore inspection visits and $15,400 for a visual inspection of an individual turbine. Further physical inspections of a turbine or substation would total $72,800. The fees, E&E News reported, “could amount to much more than is paid by offshore oil companies for inspections, given that the language calls for per-turbine inspections and wind farms include many turbines.” In a statement, Timothy Fox, the managing director of ClearView Energy Partners, told the newswire: “This appears as another direct effort to constrain the offshore wind industry. The Trump Administration has already significantly constrained proposed offshore wind projects and may hope the inspection fees undermine the viability of projects already in service.”

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AM Briefing

A Rare Earths Civil War

On Last Energy’s milestone, California CCS, and RFK Jr. vs. microplastics

A mining truck.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: The summerlike heat in the Northeast is set to drop by double digits as cold Canadian air blows southward, sending temperatures in Boston as low as 50 degrees Fahrenheit by Saturday • Temperatures are nearing 100 degrees in Cordoba, Spain, as Western Europe’s record-breaking heatwave continues • Juba is also nearly 100 degrees as heavy thunderstorms roll into the capital of conflict-riven South Sudan.


THE TOP FIVE

1. America’s two rare earths champions are fighting each other

Last year, in a move so bold it made Biden administration officials jealous, President Donald Trump took an equity stake in MP Materials, making the federal government the largest shareholder in the United States’ only active domestic rare earths producer. The deal became a trend, with the U.S. government taking minority ownership stakes in at least a dozen more companies that produce or process critical minerals, of which China controls the global supply. In January, USA Rare Earth, a manufacturer of rare earth magnets that aims to eventually mine and process fresh ore in Texas, became the second large rare earths-focused company in the Trump administration’s portfolio. Now America’s two champions in the war against China’s metal monopolies are instead battling each other. On Wednesday afternoon, the Financial Times reported that MP Materials had filed a lawsuit against USA Rare Earth, accusing its rival of “stealing” its technology for making the permanent magnets that go into everything from phones and electronics to electric vehicles to fighter jets. “USA Rare Earth has repeatedly failed to meet its commercial and performance targets and is now resorting to stealing technology to dig itself out,” MP Materials alleged in a complaint filed last week in Texas court. In response, USA Rare Earth said: “MP Materials’ complaint has misrepresented our company, our culture, and our people, and we will defend ourselves vigorously.”

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