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Ideas

Coal going down, solar going up.
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.

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
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.

Green
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
Carbon removal and AI.

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
A donkey miner.

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
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.

A circuit board and money.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Last night, between the trumpeting of fossil fuels and the lengthy honors awarded to both veterans and hockey players, President Trump devoted a portion of his State of the Union address to announcing a “ratepayer protection pledge,” under which big tech companies pay for their own power plants for data centers — a show of how central energy prices are becoming to today’s affordability debate.

Electricity in the United States is rapidly becoming expensive and unreliable. Vast swaths of the United States are at elevated risk of outages. January’s winter storms wiped out power for millions of Americans from Louisiana to Brooklyn. In 2025, utilities requested a record $31 billion in rate increases from captive customers. Gas and electricity prices are the two highest drivers of inflation.

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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.

Joe Biden inside a coal miner.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

A fossil fuel superpower cannot sustain deep emissions reductions if doing so drives up costs for vulnerable consumers, undercuts strategic domestic industries, or threatens the survival of communities that depend on fossil fuel production. That makes America’s climate problem an economic problem.

Or at least that was the theory behind Biden-era climate policy. The agenda embedded in major legislation — including the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act — combined direct emissions-reduction tools like clean energy tax credits with a broader set of policies aimed at reshaping the U.S. economy to support long-term decarbonization. At a minimum, this mix of emissions-reducing and transformation-inducing policies promised a valuable test of political economy: whether sustained investments in both clean energy industries and in the most vulnerable households and communities could help build the economic and institutional foundations for a faster and less disruptive energy transition.

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