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Energy

Donald Trump and offshore wind.
Politics

Trump ‘Fabricated’ Timeline in Offshore Wind Deal, House Democrat Says

Emails raise questions about who knew what and when leading up to the administration’s agreement with TotalEnergies.

Energy

Exclusive: Western States Form New Bipartisan Geothermal Consortium

The effort brings together leaders of four Mountain West states with nonprofit policy expertise to help speed financing and permitting for development.

Blue
AM Briefing

A Broken Streak

On Tesla’s solar factory, Bolivia’s protests, and China’s hydrogen motorcycle

Blue
Energy

Span Is Building a New Kind of Electric Utility

The maker of smart panels is tapping into unused grid capacity to help power the AI boom.

Yellow
EV charging.

EV Fee

On forever chemicals, Indian and Swedish nuclear, and Ford’s battery business

Green
AM Briefing

A $400 Billion Megamerger

On Thacker Pass, the Bonneville Power Administration, and Azerbaijan’s offshore wind

Dominion Energy headquarters.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: New York City is bracing for triple-digit heat in some parts of the five boroughs this week • The warm-up along the East Coast could worsen the drought parching the country’s southeastern shores • After Sunday reached 95 degrees Fahrenheit in the war-ravaged Gaza, temperatures in the Palestinian enclave are dropping back into the 80s and 70s all week.


THE TOP FIVE

1. The Iran War energy crisis enters a new phase: ‘We are living on borrowed time’

Assuming world peace is something you find aspirational, here’s the good news: By all accounts, President Donald Trump’s two-day summit in Beijing with Chinese President Xi Jinping went well. Here’s the bad news: The energy crisis triggered by the Iran War is entering a grim new phase. Nearly 80 countries have now instituted emergency measures as the world braces for slow but long-predicted reverberations of the most severe oil shock in modern history. With demand for air conditioning and summer vacations poised to begin in the northern hemisphere’s summer, already-strained global supplies of crude oil, gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel will grow scarcer as the United States and Iran mutually blockade the Strait of Hormuz and halt virtually all tanker shipments from each other’s allies. “We are taking that outcome very seriously,” Paul Diggle, the chief economist at fund manager Aberdeen, told the Financial Times, noting that his team was now considering scenarios where Brent crude shoots up to $180 a barrel from $109 a barrel today. “We are living on borrowed time.”

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Energy

The Department of Energy Is Spending a Tiny Fraction of Its Money

Deep cuts to the department have left each staffer with a huge amount of money to manage.

A big pile of cash.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The Department of Energy has an enviable problem: It has more money than it can spend.

DOE disbursed just 2% of its total budgetary resources in fiscal year 2025, according to a report released earlier this year from the EFI Foundation, a nonprofit that tracks innovations in energy. That figure is far lower than the 38% of funds it distributed the year prior.

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