Sign In or Create an Account.

By continuing, you agree to the Terms of Service and acknowledge our Privacy Policy

Energy

The Capitol.
AM Briefing

Schoolhouse Hot Rocks

On offshore wind's defense, Three Mile Island, and virtual power plants

Energy

New York Just Filed the First Major Challenge to Trump’s TotalEnergies Deal

Attorney General Letitia James leads a group of states suing the administration’s move to buy back two offshore wind leases.

Blue
AM Briefing

China’s Nuclear Milestone

On Anthropic’s IPO, home energy rebates, and French rare earths

Blue
Energy

The Electricity Economy Is Having Its Moment

Behind both the Anthropic IPO and the Iran War negotiations sits the energy transition.

Coal going down, solar going up.

Why We’re So Bad at Predicting the Future of Energy

A climate scientist goes back to the numbers to argue that we’re overestimating the cost of the energy transition.

Green
Offshore wind.

Easterly Winds

On data center generators, nuclear waste recycling, and Omani H2

Blue
Ideas

How to Fix the Fastest-Rising Electricity Prices in the U.S.

A group of energy researchers have a three-part prescription for Washington, D.C.’s exploding energy costs.

Washington, DC.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Washington, D.C. has earned an unwelcome distinction: the largest one-year electricity price increase of any state (or equivalent geographic distinction) in the U.S. Prices there are up 87% over the past five years and 26% in the past year alone, according to new data from MIT and Heatmap News’ Electricity Price Hub. The average D.C. household is now paying $55 more for power each month than it did five years ago.

In the face of this crisis, local officials have done little but blame regional markets, emphasizing the parts of recent rate increases they don’t fully control — generation charges — rather than any proactive measures they could take to offer relief to D.C. households. Meanwhile Exelon, the parent company for Pepco, D.C.’s local utility, has used the crisis to lobby state policymakers across the region for something worse — a return to utility-owned generation, which could leave consumers holding the bag for projects that run over budget or that are built for demand that never materializes.

Keep reading...Show less
Q&A

What’s Bothering a Free Market Wonk About the Data Center Boom

A conversation with Travis Fisher of the Cato Institute.

Travis Fisher.
<p>Heatmap Illustration</p>

This week’s conversation is with Travis Fisher, an energy policy analyst with the Cato Institute and one of my favorite people to chop it up with on Energy Twitter. I reached out to Fisher for a conversation about how he’s approaching the data center boom as a free market-minded wonk at a time when other figures on the so-called Right are calling for strict regulations on the sector. What I learned is that folks like Fisher are concerned about the scale of the buildout too, but their ideas and approaches wildly differ from the Tucker Carlsons of the world.

As always, our conversation was edited for length and clarity.

Keep reading...Show less