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Podcast

A data center.
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.

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
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.

Podcast

How EVs Can Actually Help the Electricity Crisis

Rob and Jesse touch base with WeaveGrid CEO Apoorv Bhargava.

Yellow
Nuclear reactors.

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.

Blue
Geothermal energy.

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.

Green
Podcast

How Julian Brave NoiseCat Changed His Mind About Climate Politics

Rob talks with the author and activist about his new book, We Survived the Night.

Julian Brave NoiseCat.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Julian Brave NoiseCat is a writer, Oscar-nominated filmmaker, champion powwow dancer, and student of Salish art and history. His first book, We Survived the Night, was released this week — it uses memoir, reporting, and literary anthology to tell the story of Native families across North America, including his own.

NoiseCat was previously an environmental and climate activist at groups including 350.org and Data for Progress. On this week’s episode of Shift Key, Rob talks with Julian about Native American nations and politics, the complexity and reality of Native life in 2025, and the “trickster” as a recurring political archetype.

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Podcast

How China’s Power Grid Really Works

Rob and Jesse break down China’s electricity generation with UC San Diego’s Michael Davidson.

Xi Jinping.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

China announced a new climate commitment under the Paris Agreement at last month’s United Nations General Assembly meeting, pledging to cut its emissions by 7% to 10% by 2035. Many observers were disappointed by the promise, which may not go far enough to forestall 2 degrees Celsius of warming. But the pledge’s conservatism reveals the delicate and shifting politics of China’s grid — and how the country’s central government and its provinces fight over keeping the lights on.

On this week’s episode of Shift Key, Rob and Jesse talk to Michael Davidson, an expert on Chinese electricity and climate policy. He is a professor at the University of California, San Diego, where he holds a joint faculty appointment at the School of Global Policy and Strategy and the Jacobs School of Engineering. He is also a senior associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, and he was previously the U.S.-China policy coordinator for the Natural Resources Defense Council.

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