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Ideas

A polluting sewing machine.
Ideas

The Shocking Predictability of Shein’s Big Everlane Deal

The founder of one-time sustainable apparel company Zady argues that policy is the only that can push the industry toward more responsible practices.

Ideas

Philanthropy Needs a New Grassroots Strategy for Clean Energy

Invest in Our Future’s Peter Colavito on why funders and advocates should pay more attention to the solar farm down the road.

Green
Ideas

The AI Boom Needs Carbon Removal

The CEO of Climeworks argues that the buildout of technology to suck greenhouse gas from the air should be considered part of the cost of artificial intelligence.

Green
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.

Blue
A circuit board and money.

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
Joe Biden inside a coal miner.

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.

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

Everyone is talking about affordability and the rising cost of energy to power our lives — with good reason. Leading up to Winter Storm Fern, natural gas prices skyrocketed more than 50% in just two days. Since President Trump took office, electricity prices have risen by 13%, despite his promise to cut them in half in his first year. Now, 16% of U.S households are behind on their electricity bills, and that number is expected to rise throughout the winter.

And we all know that much more energy will be needed in the years ahead to meet our electrification needs. The Trump administration and its well-funded allies in the fossil fuel industry are blocking our ability to put the cheapest, most reliable energy onto the grid. They are standing in the way of progress, pushing a false narrative that our country needs more dirty, expensive energy to bring costs down.

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Ideas

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

Lawmakers today should study the Energy Security Act of 1980.

Jimmy Carter.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images, Library of Congress</p>

The past few years have seen wild, rapid swings in energy policy in the United States, from President Biden’s enthusiastic embrace of clean energy to President Trump’s equally enthusiastic re-embrace of fossil fuels.

Where energy industrial policy goes next is less certain than any other moment in recent memory. Regardless of the direction, however, we will need creative and effective policy tools to secure our energy future — especially for those of us who wish to see a cleaner, greener energy system. To meet the moment, we can draw inspiration from a largely forgotten piece of energy industrial policy history: the Energy Security Act of 1980.

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