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Energy

A pipeline.
AM Briefing

Power to the Pipelines

On PJM backs offshore wind, reconciliation 2.0, and nuclear to the moon

AM Briefing

Revolution Back On

On bring-your-own-power, Trump’s illegal energy cuts, and New York’s nuclear bonanza

Blue
Sparks

How Trump’s Case Against Revolution Wind Fell Apart (Again)

A federal court has once again allowed Orsted to resume construction on its offshore wind project.

Blue
Politics

Amid Rising Local Pushback, U.S. Data Center Cancellations Surged in 2025

A Heatmap Pro review of public records shows that 25 data centers were scrubbed last year after local pushback — four times as many as 2024.

Blue
An Exxon sign.

Exxon Shrugs

On Meta’s atom, Illinois frees nuclear, and China’s fusion milestone

Red
A lithium worker.

There’s a Better Way to Mine Lithium — At Least in Theory

In practice, direct lithium extraction doesn’t quite make sense, but 2026 could be its critical year.

Green
AM Briefing

AM Briefing: Gates Is ‘Still an Optimist’

On a $6 billion EV write-down, a disappointing bullet train, and talks on a major mining merger

Bill Gates.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Nearly all of Australia is under a heat warning as wildfires continue to burn • 65,000 properties in the United Kingdom lose power due to Storm Goretti • Two tornadoes ripped through Oklahoma on Thursday, the first in the U.S. in 2026.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Bill Gates: ‘I am still an optimist’

After writing a memo last year that shook up the climate community with its call for a pragmatic “pivot,” Microsoft founder and philanthropist Bill Gates published another missive Friday morning laying out his ideas on global problems — and their solutions. The bulk of his “The Year Ahead: Optimism with Footnotes” letter touches on his primary philanthropic concern, global public health, and he laments that “the world went backwards last year on a key metric of progress: the number of deaths of children under 5 years old.” Across both public health and climate change, he maintains his characteristic optimism about innovation (now, innovation buoyed by artificial intelligence), but says that “my optimism comes with footnotes.”

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AM Briefing

AM Briefing: A Broken Framework

On Venezuela’s oil, permitting reform, and New York’s nuclear plans

Donald Trump at the United Nations.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Cold temperatures continue in Europe, with thousands of flights canceled at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, while Scotland braces for a winter storm • Northern New Mexico is anticipating up to a foot of snow • Australia continues to swelter in heat wave, with “catastrophic fire risk” in the state of Victoria.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump withdraws U.S. from United Nations climate change treaty

The White House said in a memo released Wednesday that it would withdraw from more than 60 intergovernmental organizations, including the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, the international climate community’s governing organization for more than 30 years. After a review by the State Department, the president had determined that “it is contrary to the interests of the United States to remain a member of, participate in, or otherwise provide support” to the organizations listed. The withdrawal “marks a significant escalation of President Trump’s war on environmental diplomacy beyond what he waged in his first term,” Heatmap’s Robinson Meyer wrote Wednesday evening. Though Trump has pulled the United States out of the Paris Agreement (twice), he had so far refused to touch the long-tenured UNFCCC, a Senate-ratified pact from the early 1990s of which the U.S. was a founding member, which “has served as the institutional skeleton for all subsequent international climate diplomacy, including the Paris Agreement,” Meyer wrote.

Among the other organizations named in Trump’s memo was the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which produces periodic assessments on the state of climate science. The IPCC produced the influential 2018 report laying the intellectual foundations for the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

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