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Ideas

An oil refinery and trees.
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.”

Ideas

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
Ideas

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.

Yellow
The Capitol.

Permitting Reform Is Hard. This Is Easier.

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

Green
Heat Pumps Are Good Politics

Heat Pumps Are Good Politics

Climate policy strategist Justin Guay has a populist pitch for our warming world.

Ideas

Now We Decide the Future of U.S. Climate Policy

On the third anniversary of the signing of the Inflation Reduction Act, Heatmap contributor Advait Arun mourns what’s been lost — but more importantly, charts a path toward what comes next.

Biden signing the IRA into law and solar panels.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Today, the Inflation Reduction Act would have turned three years old — if it hadn’t been buried alive in a big, beautiful grave. While the IRA was a hodgepodge of programs salvaged from President Biden’s far more ambitious Build Back Better agenda, it still represented the biggest climate investment in U.S. history. It catalyzed over $360 billion in energy and manufacturing investments and was expected to drive the installation of over 155 gigawatts of new solar and wind energy by 2030. And now Republicans have taken a sledgehammer to its achievements.

The timing could not be worse — not just for the climate, but also for the energy systems that we rely on. At a moment when the energy sector requires $1.4 trillion worth of upgrades by 2030 just to keep up with rising energy demand and increasingly erratic weather, Republicans have instead delivered a one-two punch of tariffs and tax hikes, sabotaging the industrial base required to deliver those investments and raising the retirement age of our power generation fleet.

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Ideas

To Succeed in Washington, Clean Energy Has to Play Both Sides

A longtime climate messaging strategist is tired of seeing the industry punch below its weight.

Donald Trump and wind turbines.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The saga of President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act contains at least one clear lesson for the clean energy industry: It must grow a political spine and act like the trillion-dollar behemoth it is. And though the logic is counterintuitive, the new law will likely provide an opportunity to build one.

The coming threat to renewable energy investment became apparent as soon as Trump won the presidency again last fall. The only questions were how much was vulnerable, and through what mechanisms.

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