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Energy

A Lucid Air.
AM Briefing

Lucid Shrinking


On simplified oil and gas leases, lawsuits over plastic and coal, and a new climate research database

AM Briefing

‘Incidents and Miscommunication’

On Michael Bloomberg’s big climate gift, SMRs in Ohio, and the consequences of a “Super El Niño”

Green
Daily Briefing

‘We Proved That America Can Still Build Big Things’

An exclusive interview with Senator Martin Heinrich on SunZia, the largest renewables project in U.S. history, which is now — finally — fully operational.

Yellow
Energy

FERC Has a New Plan for Data Centers

But there’s still plenty of room for regional grid operators to set their own rules.

Blue
A Wall Street trader.

Strait Shooting

On Estonian nuclear, solar’s land use, and Kristi Noem’s mining gig

Green
Donald Trump and offshore wind.

Trump Pays $765 Million to Kill 4 More Offshore Wind Leases

The deal with developer Invenergy includes a commitment to build geothermal generation in addition to natural gas.

Climate

Anthropic Is Buying Carbon Removal — But Not Clean Power

That may be not be the case for long, though, as the AI company poaches energy talent from Google, Meta, the DOE, and others.

A Claude flower.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

To the extent that any $965 billion artificial intelligence company built on pirated model training material can be “good-coded,” Anthropic has somehow managed to earn that reputation, at least relative to its peers. It’s somewhat surprising, then, that the company has been silent on climate change.

Until today. Sort of.

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AM Briefing

The Road to Damascus

On carbon removal funding, Chinese nuclear, and Hawaiian solar

A ConocoPhillips refinery.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: The powerful earthquake that killed at least 61 people in the Philippines last week raised the seabed by as much as 7 feet • Raja Ampat, the archipelago off Indonesia’s Southwest Papua province, is enduring days of intense thunderstorms • The Gulf Coast of Texas is bracing for what could become a tropical cyclone set to dump heavy rain across the region.


THE TOP FIVE

1. ConocoPhillips becomes the first U.S. oil company to reenter Syria

A Syrian oil field. Kasim Yusuf/Anadolu via Getty Images

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