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Podcast

Clean energy.
Podcast

The Biggest Energy and Climate Stories of 2026

A lookahead with Heatmap’s own Emily Pontecorvo, Matthew Zeitlin, and Jillian Goodman.

Podcast

Say ‘Guten Tag!’ to This New Kind of Geothermal Tech

Rob and Jesse catch up with Mark Fitzgerald, CEO of the closed-loop geothermal startup Eavor.

Green
Podcast

Why the Rest of the World Is Buying Chinese EVs

Rob catches up with the Center for Strategic and International Studies’ Ilaria Mazzocco.

A check.

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

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

Green
A data center.

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.

Shift Key, live from Yale.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Randy Siegel</p>

It’s been a huge few weeks for climate news. Democrats swept state and local elections in New Jersey, Virginia, California, and New York City — and won two crucial regulatory races in Georgia. A few weeks before, the climate tech investor and philanthropist Bill Gates released a memo arguing for a pivot on climate funding vis a vis global health.

On this special episode of Shift Key, Rob talks to Heatmap staff writers Emily Pontecorvo and Matthew Zeitlin about what the 2025 elections might mean for climate policy, why “affordability” politics could hamper decarbonization, and whether the Gates memo represents anything but a rebrand. They recorded this conversation live at the Yale School of Management’s annual clean energy conference in New Haven, Connecticut.

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Podcast

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.

Chinese solar panels.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Robinson Meyer and Jesse Jenkins are off this week. Please enjoy this selection from the Shift Key archive.

China’s greenhouse gas emissions were essentially flat in 2024 — or they recorded a tiny increase, according to a November report from the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, or CREA. A third of experts surveyed by the report believe that its coal emissions have peaked. Has the world’s No. 1 emitter of carbon pollution now turned a corner on climate change?

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