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Ideas

Jimmy Carter.
Ideas

The Last Time America Tried to Legislate Its Way to Energy Affordability

Lawmakers today should study the Energy Security Act of 1980.

Ideas

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.

Blue
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.”

Green
Bill Gates and Donald Trump.

Where Bill Gates Got It Wrong

One of the world’s leading climate scientists agrees with Gates in spirit, but thinks we can go much further in practice.

Yellow
A Zohran Mamdani sign with an atom.

Why Zohran Mamdani Should Fight for a Nuclear-Powered New York

The New York mayoral frontrunner has an opportunity to shift the left’s increasingly nonsensical position on a critical carbon-free energy source.

Green
Ideas

China Can’t Decide if It Wants to Be the World’s First ‘Electrostate’

The country’s underwhelming new climate pledge is more than just bad news for the world — it reveals a serious governing mistake.

Xi Jinping.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Five years ago, China’s longtime leader Xi Jinping shocked and delighted the world by declaring in a video presentation to the United Nations that his country would peak its carbon emissions this decade and achieve carbon neutrality by 2060. He tried to rekindle that magic late last month in another virtual address to the UN, announcing China’s updated pledge under the Paris Agreement.

This time, the reaction was far more tepid. Given the disastrous state of American climate policy under President Donald Trump, some observers declared — as the longtime expert Li Shuo did in The New York Timesthat China is “the adult in the room on climate now.” Most others were disappointed, arguing that China had merely “played it safe” and pointing out the new pledge “falls well short” of what’s needed to hit the Paris Agreement’s targets.

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Ideas

Permitting Reform Is Hard. This Is Easier.

Harmonizing data across federal agencies will go a long, long way toward simplifying environmental reviews.

The Capitol.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Comprehensive permitting reform remains elusive.

In spite of numerous promising attempts — the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, for instance, which delivered only limited improvements, and the failed Manchin-Barrasso bill of last year — the U.S. has repeatedly failed to overhaul its clogged federal infrastructure approval process. Even now there are draft bills and agreements in principle, but the Trump administration’s animus towards renewable energy has undermined Democratic faith in any deal. Less obvious but no less important, key Republicans are quietly disengaged, hesitant to embrace the federal transmission reform that negotiators see as essential to the package.

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