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Ideas

A Rivian and an American flag.
Ideas

Electric Vehicles Are a Defense Technology

Two former defense officials argue that Rivian may be as important to America’s national security as SpaceX.

Ideas

Thinking Like an Engineer Won’t Fix the Grid

A longtime energy analyst argues that there are no solutions to the hyperscale problem, only tradeoffs.

Blue
Ideas

Why We’re So Bad at Predicting the Future of Energy

A climate scientist goes back to the numbers to argue that we’re overestimating the cost of the energy transition.

Green
Ideas

How to Fix the Fastest-Rising Electricity Prices in the U.S.

A group of energy researchers have a three-part prescription for Washington, D.C.’s exploding energy costs.

Blue
A polluting sewing machine.

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.

Green
A suburban house.

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.

Carbon removal and AI.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Somewhere in Virginia, Texas, or Arizona, a data center is being commissioned this month that will draw more power than a small city. The server racks inside will train and run artificial intelligence models for years to come. And the electrons feeding it will, in all likelihood, come partly from natural gas — because that is what can be built fast enough to meet the demand.

AI is driving a major new wave of data center construction, and with it, a surge in demand for power and infrastructure. The International Energy Agency projects that the electricity consumption of global data centers could more than double to around 945 terawatt-hours by 2030, comparable to Japan’s entire electricity demand today.

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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.

A donkey miner.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

President Trump has announced a dizzying array of executive branch led critical mineral policies since taking office again last year. While bombastically branded as new achievements, many elements from critical mineral tariffs to strategic stockpiling to Defense Production Act financing trace back to bipartisan recommendations and programs spanning the past several administrations.

Many Democrats in Congress, however, are stuck on the defensive. During a recent House Natural Resources hearing, for instance, Washington Representative Yassamin Ansari singled out the SECURE Minerals Act, a bipartisan proposal for a strategic minerals reserve, as “a framework ripe for fraud, corruption, and abuse.” Yet the draft bill actually contains strong safeguards: Senate confirmation of board members, annual independent audits, public tracking and annual reporting to Congress, conflict-of-interest prohibitions, and more.

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