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Energy

Trump’s Media Company Strikes ‘Flabbergasting’ Fusion Deal
AM Briefing

Trump Gets Into Fusion

On permitting reform passing, Oklo’s Swedish bet, and GM’s heir apparent

Energy

Let’s Make It Easier To Plug Data Centers Into Power Plants, FERC Says

Federal energy regulators directed the country’s largest grid to make its rules make sense.

Blue
AM Briefing

Research Revision

On PJM’s auction, coal’s demise, and a murder at MIT

Yellow
AM Briefing

Data Dump

On permitting reform hangups, transformers, and Last Energy’s big fundraise

Blue
An Eavor facility.

Say ‘Guten Tag!’ to This New Kind of Geothermal Tech

Rob and Jesse catch up with Mark Fitzgerald, CEO of the closed-loop geothermal startup Eavor.

Green
The Capitol and renewables.

The Party of ‘All of the Above’ Is Now ‘Anything But’

The tension between the two GOP energy philosophies — one admitting renewables, the other firmly rejecting — could tank a permitting reform deal.

AM Briefing

Ford’s EV Writedown

On EU’s EV reversal, ‘historic’ mineral deals, and India’s nuclear opening

Jim Farley and a Ford F-150 Lightning.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Yet another powerful atmospheric river, this one dubbed Pineapple Express, is on track to throttle the Pacific Northwest this week • Bolivia is facing landslides • Western Australia is under severe risk of bushfire.


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Climate Tech

There’s a New Color for Hydrogen: Orange

The startup Vema just signed a new offtake agreement to provide 36,000 tons of orange hydrogen per year for data centers.

Hydrogen and rocks.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Love it or hate it, it’s looking like there may be a good reason to add yet another color to the hydrogen rainbow. In 2022, Florian Osselin, co-founder and CSO of the startup Vema Hydrogen, published a paper in Nature called “Orange hydrogen is the new green,” in which he outlines how to expedite the natural process of hydrogen formation in certain underground geologies, laying the foundation for what the company now calls Engineered Mineral Hydrogen.

Osselin’s startup, Vema, is now announcing a 10-year conditional offtake agreement with the off-grid data center power startup Verne to supply over 36,000 metric tons per year of so-called “orange” hydrogen for data centers. The announcement comes on the heels of Vema’s $13 million seed round earlier this year, which supports the company’s efforts to take its engineered hydrogen experiments out of the lab and into the field.

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