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Energy

A Belgian nuclear plant.
AM Briefing

Belgian Nuclear Waffling

On Texas solar, Total’s deal, and Rivian’s revving

Podcast

Some Great News About the Global Electricity System

Rob chats with Ember’s Nicholas Fulghum about the think tank’s newest report.

Green
Energy

Where Did All the Solar Go?

PJM is back open for business, but the new generation applying to interconnect is primarily natural gas.

Blue
A data center interior.

Delete Virginia

On FEMA fubar, South African nuclear, and Chinese electrolyzers

Green
Raskin, Huffman, and Trump.

House Democrats to TotalEnergies: ‘We’re Coming for You’

Representatives Jared Huffman and Jamie Raskin announced an investigation into the $1 billion offshore wind deal with the Trump administration.

Politics

Inside Josh Shapiro’s Attempt to Navigate the Data Center Backlash

Emails between the Pennsylvania governor’s office and Amazon illustrate the difficulty of courting big business as anti-AI fervor explodes.

Josh Shapiro.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

On March 6, Pennsylvania real estate mogul Brian O’Neill shot a panicked email to Benjamin Kirshner, a top state official, with a plea to the governor.

Amazon, wrote the property developer, had just told him “in writing, and I have sent you the e-mail, that they will not be doing any projects in Pennsylvania until they get certainty that the projects they have invested in can move forward. In conversations, they have pointed out to us that they have been appealed in EVERY project at EVERY turn,” O’Neill told Kirshner, Governor Josh Shapiro’s chief transformation and opportunity officer, referring to local governments rejecting the company’s permit applications. His own project in the Philadelphia suburb of Conshohocken had been blocked in November.

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AM Briefing

Ripened on the Vine

On a sodium-ion megadeal, the Bangladeshi atom, and space solar

Offshore wind.
AM 4/28
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Vineyard Wind</p>

Current conditions: More than 200 damaging wind reports from Missouri to Indiana came in so far this week as a series of storms wraps up over the Central United States • South Sudan’s capital of Juba is roasting in temperatures nearing 100 degrees Fahrenheit as heavy storms threaten to add to existing floods • Gale warnings are in effect in the Philippine Sea and the South China Sea as a northeasterly monsoon churns up winds of up to 40 knots.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Vineyard Wind enters into full service

And then there were three. Last month, Dominion Energy’s Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind started generating electricity for the mid-Atlantic grid just days after Orsted’s Revolution Wind entered into service off the coast of Rhode Island. Now a third U.S. offshore wind project is fully up and running. On Monday, Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey announced that Vineyard Wind had activated its electricity contracts with utilities, setting fixed prices for the 800-megawatt project 15 miles south of Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket over the next 20 years. In a press release, Healey said the power purchase agreements will save Massachusetts ratepayers roughly $1.4 billion in electricity costs throughout these next two decades. “Throughout one of the coldest winters in recent history, Vineyard Wind turbines powered our homes and businesses at a low price and now that price goes even lower with the activation of these contracts,” Healey said in a statement. “Especially as President Trump is taking energy sources off the table and increasing prices with his war in Iran, we should be leaning into more American-made wind power.” Vineyard Wind first began selling power to the market in 2024, but at what The New Bedford Light called “fluctuating and at times higher prices.” As of this week and for the next year, the price will be set at $69.50 per megawatt-hour.

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