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Energy

A Chevron facility.
AM Briefing

Oil’s Road to Damascus

On NRC moves, Blue Energy, and China’s solar and methanol breakthroughs

AM Briefing

La Brega de Agua

On Hungary’s BYD scandal, seawater uranium, and saving styrofoam

Yellow
Politics

New York Governor Kathy Hochul Is Walking a Narrow Lane on Data Centers

Can she appease AI skeptics, economic development advocates, and renewables boosters?

Blue
AM Briefing

PJM Maxes Out

On America’s thorium progress, Google’s solar buy, and Chinese nuclear

Yellow
Fujairah.

Dubai Bypass

On American nuclear, a labor union record, and climate tech’s resurgence

Blue
Money and power lines.

Solar Is Still Pretty Cheap — But Everyone Wants Natural Gas

Five takeaways from the latest Lazard Levelized Cost of Energy report.

Green
AM Briefing

Monumental Change

On fusion’s record year, nuclear satellites, and Chilean copper

Grand Escalante.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: More than two dozen locations across the Mountain West and Midwest broke temperature records Sunday as the nation’s heat wave roasted the Central United States • At least 12 people died fleeing a sweeping wildfire in Spain as hundreds of firefighters battled the flames • In Colorado, the ongoing Aspen Acres Fire has destroyed 780 structures.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump poised to shrink two national monuments

During President Donald Trump’s first term, his administration’s big fight over public lands centered on the last two national monuments approved by Barack Obama on the way out of office. In 2017, Trump signed executive orders slashing the size of Bears Ears National Monument by 85% and nearby Grand Staircase-Escalante, both located in Utah, by half. Legal challenges were still pending when President Joe Biden restored the reserves to their initial size in 2021. But ABC4 in Utah reported last week that Trump planned to announce a new executive order to shrink the boundaries of the monuments yet again, likely this afternoon. “The Antiquities Act was a one-way statute when Teddy Roosevelt signed it into law. It was a one-way statute when President Trump tried to ignore it in 2017. It’s still a one-way statute today,” Aaron Weiss, the executive director of the Center for Western Priorities, said in a statement. “Just last month, Congress had a chance to weaken the management plan for Grand Staircase-Escalante and declined.”

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Energy

New York City’s Climate Progress Has Hit a Wall

The July 4 heat wave showed just how far the metropolis has to go to reach its decarbonization goals.

Shutting off Ravenswood.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

New York City’s decarbonization plan has stalled. The events of this year’s Fourth of July weekend all but prove it.

The temperature in the city reached as high as 100 degrees Fahrenheit on Thursday, July 2, the hottest it’s been here in 14 years. As New Yorkers blasted their air conditioners to stay cool, utilities drew on all of New York’s resources to serve the resulting electricity demand for cooling. These included a fleet of dual-fuel power plants, which can burn both oil and natural gas and encompasses many of its peakers, which turn on to deal with spikes of demand.

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