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Ideas

Voting.
Ideas

Global Climate Politics Had a Rough 2024

In 2025, it’s time for stern resolve and bold maneuvers.

Ideas

How Covid Shaped Climate Policy

Five years from the emergence of the disease, the world — and the climate — is still grappling with its effects.

Ideas

Biden’s Climate Law Can’t Die. Wall Street Loves It Too Much.

A cynical optimist’s take on the Inflation Reduction Act.

Green
Donald Trump.

Trump’s Gift to China

Who will benefit most from repealing the Inflation Reduction Act?

Red
Ideas

Abundance, Not Additionality, Will Meet the Energy Demands of AI

A counter-proposal for the country’s energy future.

Power lines.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

American electricity consumption is growing for the first time in generations. And though low-carbon technologies such as solar and wind have scaled impressively over the past decade, many observers are concerned that all this new demand will provide “a lifeline for more fossil fuel production,” as Senator Martin Heinrich put it.

In response, a few policy entrepreneurs have proposed novel regulations known as “additionality” requirements to handle new sources of electric load. First suggested for electrolytic hydrogen, additionality standards would require that subsidized hydrogen producers source their electricity directly from newly built low-carbon power plants; in a Heatmap piece from September, Brian Deese and Lisa Hansmann proposed similar requirements for new artificial intelligence. And while AI data centers were their focus, the two argued that additionality “is a model that can be extended to address other sectors facing growing energy demand.”

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Ideas

America Needs an Energy Policy for AI

Additionality isn’t just for hydrogen.

Circuits and a wind turbine.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The rapid increase in demand for artificial intelligence is creating a seemingly vexing national dilemma: How can we meet the vast energy demands of a breakthrough industry without compromising our energy goals?

If that challenge sounds familiar, that’s because it is. The U.S. has a long history of rising to the electricity demands of innovative new industries. Our energy needs grew far more quickly in the four decades following World War II than what we are facing today. More recently, we have squared off against the energy requirements of new clean technologies that require significant energy to produce — most notably hydrogen.

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