Sign In or Create an Account.

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

Energy

A snowflake power line.
Energy

Winter Is Going to Be a Problem

With more electric heating in the Northeast comes greater strains on the grid.

AM Briefing

China’s Fusion Friends

On Beijing’s coal dip, Iran’s environmental ‘catastrophe,’ and Thanksgiving carbon footprint

Green
Donald Trump.

The Biggest Wild Card in Permitting Reform

Congress is motivated to pass a bipartisan deal, but Democrats are demanding limits on executive power.

Blue
Power lines.

Georgia Depowered

On California solar eating gas, China’s newest reactor, and GOP vs. CCS

Green
AM Briefing

Dirty COP30

On Ex-Im’s energy spree, a new American coal plant, and Oregon abundance

Climate protesters.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Thunderstorms are rolling through eastern Texas today into Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi • More than 11,000 people in seven Malaysian states say they’re affected by heavy flooding • America’s two most populous overseas territories at opposite sides of the planet are experiencing diverging rip tides, with a dangerously powerful undertow in Guam but a weak pull this week in Puerto Rico.


THE TOP FIVE

1. COP30 ends with a fossil fuel victory

The conference logo on a building. Wagner Meier/Getty Images

Keep reading...Show less
Energy

11 Takeaways from the DOE’s Big Reorganization

Here’s what stood out to former agency staffers.

The Department of Energy, Chris Wright, and Donald Trump.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The Department of Energy unveiled a long-awaited internal reorganization of the agency on Thursday, implementing sweeping changes that Secretary of Energy Chris Wright pitched as “aligning its operations to restore commonsense to energy policy, lower costs for American families and businesses.”

The two-paragraph press release, which linked to a PDF of the new organizational chart, offered little insight into what the changes mean. Indeed, two sources familiar with the rollout told me the agency hadn’t even held a town hall to explain the overhaul to staffers until sometime Friday. (Both sources spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear of reprisals.)

Keep reading...Show less