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Energy

Trump Announces U.S. Withdrawal From Framework Climate Treaty
AM Briefing

AM Briefing: A Broken Framework

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

Energy

The Fuel Cell Company Now Bigger Than Southwest Airlines

Bloom Energy is riding the data center wave to new heights.

Green
AM Briefing

AM Briefing: Greenland Dreamin’

On AI forecasts, California bills, and Trump’s fusion push

Yellow
Energy

Is Burying a Nuclear Reactor Worth It?

Deep Fission says that building small reactors underground is both safer and cheaper. Others have their doubts.

Green
An oil field.

AM Briefing: Cheap Crude

On energy efficiency rules, Chinese nuclear, and Japan’s first offshore wind

Blue
Pete Hegseth, John Ratcliffe, and Donald Trump.

Why Trump’s Oil Imperialism Might Be a Tough Sell for Actual Oil Companies

Rob talks about the removal of Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro with Commodity Context’s Rory Johnston.

Energy

The 4 Things Standing Between the U.S. and Venezuela’s Oil

And that’s before we start talking about the tens of billions of dollars of investment required.

Nicolas Maduro and Donald Trump.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Donald Trump could not have been more clear about his intentions. Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro may be sitting in New York’s Metropolitan Detention Center on drugs and weapons charges, but the United States removed him from power — at least in part — because the Trump administration wants oil. And it wants American companies to get it.

“We’re going to have our very large United States oil companies, the biggest anywhere in the world, go in, spend billions of dollars, fix the badly broken infrastructure, the oil infrastructure, and start making money for the country,” Trump said over the weekend in a press conference following Maduro’s removal from Venezuela.

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AM Briefing

The Calm After the Storm

On Venezuela’s oil, South Korean nuclear, and Berlin militants’ grid attack

Donald Trump.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Juneau, Alaska, is blanketed under a record 80 inches of snow, equal to six-and-a-half feet • A heat wave stretching across southern Australia is sending temperatures as high as 104 degrees Fahrenheit • Arctic air prompted Ireland’s weather service to put out a nationwide warning as temperatures plunge below freezing.


THE TOP FIVE

1. The U.S. raid in Venezuela isn’t shaking up oil markets just yet

When The Wall Street Journal asked Chevron CEO Mike Wirth about his oil giant’s investments in Venezuela back in November, he said, “We play a long game.” Then came President Donald Trump’s Saturday morning raid on Caracas, which ended in the arrest of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and appeared to bring the country’s vast crude resources under the U.S.’s political influence. Unlike the light crude pumped out of the ground in places like the Permian Basin in western Texas, Venezuela’s oil is mostly heavy crude. That makes it particularly desirable to American refineries along the Gulf Coast, which can juice more profit out of making fuels from heavy crude than from lighter grades. Still, don’t expect America’s No. 2 oil producer to declare victory just yet. Shares in Chevron inched up by just a few percentage points over the weekend.

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