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Energy

The United States.
Hotspots

The Electro-Magnetic Freakout on the Cape

And more of the week’s news around project development.

Sparks

Fervo Is Drilling Wells Deeper, Faster, and Hotter

The enhanced geothermal company just announced a new 19,448-foot well.

Green
AM Briefing

A Global Nuclear Renaissance

On Trump’s mineral paradox, China’s Great Green Wall, and sodium-ion batteries

Green
A polluting air conditioner.

Why the Hottest Summer Days Also Have Dirtier Air

Pollution from peaker plants combined with heat and smoke can push summer air quality into the danger zone.

The Louvre.

Europe’s Heat Deaths

On Trump’s gas boom, Germany’s fusion push, and Meta’s Canadian complex

Red
AM Briefing

Go West, Young Man

On half-full glasses, Omani polysilicon, and U.S. vs. Chinese nuclear

Electricity pylons.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands are carrying out damage assessments after Super Typhoon Bavi made landfall Monday as the equivalent of a Category 5 hurricane • A wildfire has scorched more than 11,000 acres in the French Pyrenees, forcing thousands to evacuate • Heavy rain from Typhoon Maysak has killed at least 15 people in China this week.

THE TOP FIVE

1. 11 Western U.S. states unite to bolster the grid

The governors of 11 states across the American West signed onto a pact to speed up permitting and increase coordination on the regional electrical grid. The agreement, brokered at the Western Governors’ Association’s annual meeting last week, unites Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming behind the Western Transmission Expansion Coalition, or WestTEC. The interstate effort to build out the grid across America’s western half published a study in February that found the region needed 12,600 miles of new transmission lines over the next decade, at a cost of roughly $60 billion. Even the energy adviser to Utah Governor Spencer Cox — a Republican who has positioned himself as a vocal champion of “fiscal responsibility” — called the investment “just common sense” for the West. “Getting energy to where it’s needed, when it’s needed, is just as important as generating it in the first place,” Emy Lesofski, who also serves as the director of the Utah Office of Energy Development, said in a statement. “Think of the grid like the roads and highways connecting our communities — it doesn’t matter how much is produced if you can’t move it to where people actually live and work.”

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Daily Briefing

Why Biden’s Climate Law Is Stickier Than It Seems

Any version of the future — even one under Trump — includes bits of the Inflation Reduction Act.

Donald Trump and Joe Biden.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

We passed a major milestone over the weekend: the one-year anniversary of President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. That piece of legislation — which curtailed the wind and solar tax credits, ended incentives for electric vehicle buyers, and terminated a lot of green industrial policy — was signed into law on July 4, 2025. It also formally ended the era of decarbonization and climate policy experimentation that began when the United States passed the Inflation Reduction Act roughly three years earlier.

Now we’re far enough out to begin assessing the Trump law’s impact. And a fascinating new report, published today by the MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research, argues that the damage … is not as bad as one might fear — at least in the electricity sector.

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