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Energy

A northern spotted owl.
AM Briefing

Endangered Species Act in Danger

On Turkey’s COP31 win, data center dangers, and Michigan’s anti-nuclear hail mary

Energy

PJM Is Paralyzed by Its Data Center Dilemma

Members of the nation’s largest grid couldn’t agree on a recommendation for how to deal with the surge of incoming demand.

Blue
Energy

What If Utilities Just Made Less Money?

California energy companies are asking for permission to take in more revenue. Consumer advocates are having none of it.

Green
AM Briefing

The Atomic LPO

On ravenous data centers, treasured aluminum trash, and the drilling slump

Blue
A data center.

How Clean Energy Could Prepare for an AI Bubble

Rob and Jesse talk data center finance with the Center for Public Enterprise’s Advait Arun.

Yellow
David Richardson.

FEMA Fubar

On EPA’s wetland protections, worsening blackouts, and a solar bright spot

Blue
Energy

How an Electricity Rate Freeze Could Actually Work

New Jersey Governor-elect Mikie Sherrill made a rate freeze one of her signature campaign promises, but that’s easier said than done.

Mikie Sherrill.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

So how do you freeze electricity rates, exactly? That’s the question soon to be facing New Jersey Governor-elect Mikie Sherrill, who achieved a resounding victory in this November’s gubernatorial election in part due to her promise to declare a state of emergency and stop New Jersey’s high and rising electricity rates from going up any further.

The answer is that it can be done the easy way, or it can be done the hard way.

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AM Briefing

UN Gets Critical

On Alaskan drilling, EPA cuts, and Eavor’s progress

A lithium mine.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Unseasonable warmth of up to 20 degrees Fahrenheit above average is set to spread across the Central United States, with the potential to set records • Scattered snow showers from water off the Great Lakes are expected to dump up to 18 inches on parts of northern New England • As winter dawns, Israel is facing summertime-like temperatures of nearly 90 degrees this week.


THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump opens half of an untouched Alaska reserve to drilling

The Department of the Interior finalized a rule last week opening up roughly half of the largely untouched National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska to oil and gas drilling. The regulatory change overturns a Biden-era measure blocking oil and gas drilling on 11 million acres of the nation’s largest swath of public land, as my predecessor in anchoring this newsletter, Heatmap’s Jeva Lange, wrote in June. The Trump administration vowed to “unleash” energy production in Alaska by opening the 23 million-acre reserve, as well as nearby Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, to exploration. By rescinding the Biden-era restrictions, “we are following the direction set by President Trump to unlock Alaska’s energy potential, create jobs for North Slope communities, and strengthen American energy security,” Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum said in a statement, according to E&E News. In a post on X, Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy, a Republican, called the move “yet another step in the right direction for Alaska and American energy dominance.”

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