Sign In or Create an Account.

By continuing, you agree to the Terms of Service and acknowledge our Privacy Policy

Podcast

Podcast

How to Make Your Climate Giving Count, According to an Expert

Rob preps for Giving Tuesday with Giving Green’s Dan Stein.

Green
Podcast

How Clean Energy Could Prepare for an AI Bubble

Rob and Jesse talk data center finance with the Center for Public Enterprise’s Advait Arun.

Yellow
Podcast

Shift Key Live: The 2025 Elections, the Gates Memo, and More

Rob goes to Yale with Heatmap staff writers Emily Pontecorvo and Matthew Zeitlin.

Blue
Chinese solar panels.

Shift Key Classic: Have China’s Carbon Emissions Peaked?

Rob and Jesse unpack one of the key questions of the global fight against climate change with the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air’s Lauri Myllyvirta.

EV charging.

How EVs Can Actually Help the Electricity Crisis

Rob and Jesse touch base with WeaveGrid CEO Apoorv Bhargava.

Yellow
Podcast

The Lesson Nuclear Companies Should Take From the Dot-Com Boom

Rob talks New Jersey past, present, and future with Employ America’s Skanda Amarnath.

Nuclear reactors.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Electricity prices are the biggest economic issue in the New Jersey governor’s race, which is perhaps next month’s most closely watched election. Mikie Sherrill, the Democratic candidate and frontrunner, has pledged to freeze power prices for state residents after getting elected. Can she do that?

On this week’s episode of Shift Key, Rob talks to Skanda Amarnath, the executive director of Employ America, a center-left think tank that aims to encourage a “full-employment, robust-growth economy.” He’s also a nearly lifelong NJ resident. They chat about how New Jersey got such expensive electricity, whether the nuclear construction boom is real, and what lessons nuclear companies should take from economic history.

Keep reading...Show less
Podcast

The Startup Trying to Put Geothermal Heat Pumps in America’s Homes

Rob and Jesse hang with Dig Energy co-founder and CEO Dulcie Madden.

Geothermal energy.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Simply operating America’s buildings uses more than a third of the country’s energy. A major chunk of that is temperature control — keeping the indoors cool in the summer and warm in the winter. Heating eats into families’ budgets and burns a tremendous amount of fuel oil and natural gas. But what if we could heat and cool buildings more efficiently, cleanly, and cheaply?

On this week’s episode of Shift Key, Rob and Jesse talk to Dulcie Madden, the founder and CEO of Dig Energy, a New Hampshire-based startup that is trying to lower the cost of digging geothermal wells scaled to serve a single structure. Dig makes small rigs that can drill boreholes for ground source heat pumps — a technology that uses the bedrock’s ambient temperature to heat and cool homes and businesses while requiring unbelievably low amounts of energy. Once groundsource wells get built, they consume far less energy than gas furnaces, air conditioners, or even air-dependent heat pumps.

Keep reading...Show less