Sign In or Create an Account.

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

Ideas

A donkey miner.
Ideas

Democrats Need a Critical Minerals Policy Beyond Anti-Trumpism

Party orthodoxy is no longer serving the energy transition, the Breakthrough Institute’s Seaver Wang and Peter Cook write.

Ideas

Bring Your Own Generation Comes With Its Own Risks

It’s an idea with bipartisan appeal, but AOC’s former policy adviser argues that the scale of the data center problem is too big for that.

Green
Ideas

The Energy Transition Won’t Work Without Coal Towns

A senior scholar at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy on what Trump has lost by dismantling Biden’s energy resilience strategy.

Blue
Ideas

Trump’s Energy Policy Isn’t Just Dirty. It’s Expensive.

And it’s blocking America’s economic growth, argues a former White House climate advisor.

A flower and a lightbulb.

Climate Innovation Calls for a New Kind of Environmentalism

Why America’s environmental institutions should embrace a solutions mindset

Green
Ideas

A Backup Plan for the AI Boom

If it turns out to be a bubble, billions of dollars of energy assets will be on the line.

Popping the AI bubble.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The data center investment boom has already transformed the American economy. It is now poised to transform the American energy system.

Hyperscalers — including tech giants such as Microsoft and Meta, as well as leaders in artificial intelligence like OpenAI and CoreWeave — are investing eyewatering amounts of capital into developing new energy resources to feed their power-hungry data infrastructure. Those data centers are already straining the existing energy grid, prompting widespread political anxiety over an energy supply crisis and a ratepayer affordability shock. Nothing in recent memory has thrown policymakers’ decades-long underinvestment in the health of our energy grid into such stark relief. The commercial potential of next-generation energy technologies such as advanced nuclear, batteries, and grid-enhancing applications now hinge on the speed and scale of the AI buildout.

Keep reading...Show less
Ideas

It’s Time for a Faster, Smarter Kind of Climate Action

The president of the Clean Economy Project calls for a new approach to advocacy — or as she calls it, a “third front.”

An oil refinery and trees.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Roughly 50,000 people are in Brazil this week for COP30, the annual United Nations climate summit. If history is any guide, they will return home feeling disappointed. After 30 years of negotiations, we have yet to see these summits deliver the kind of global economic transformation we need. Instead, they’ve devolved into rituals of hand-wringing and half measures.

The United States has shown considerable inertia and episodic hostility through each decade of climate talks. The core problem isn’t politics. It’s perspective. America has been treating climate as a moral challenge when the real stakes are economic prosperity.

Keep reading...Show less