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Sustainability

An Arc'teryx jacket.
Lifestyle

The Quest to Ban the Best Raincoats in the World

Why Patagonia, REI, and just about every other gear retailer are going PFAS-free.

AM Briefing

Endangerment Zone

On Ohio’s renewables ban, China’s emissions, and Israeli nuclear

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AM Briefing

Georgia on My Mind

On electrolyzers’ decline, Anthropic’s pledge, and Syria’s oil and gas

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AM Briefing

The Nuclear Backstop

On Equinor’s CCS squeamishness, Indian solar, and Orsted in Oz

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Lee Zeldin.

Endangered Finding

On BYD’s lawsuit, Fervo’s hottest well, and China’s geologic hydrogen

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Wind turbines.

Headwinds Blowing

On Tesla’s sunny picture, Chinese nuclear, and Bad Bunny’s electric halftime show

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AM Briefing

$34 Billion Bust

On Texas’ free speech violation, nuclear recycling, and deadly smoke

A broken wind turbine.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Temperatures across the Northeast will drop nearly 30 degrees Fahrenheit below historical averages as another five inches snow heads for New England • Warmer air blowing eastward from the Pacific is set to ease the East Coast cold snap by mid-month • Storm Leonardo is pummeling Iberia with rain, killing at least one person so far and forcing more than 4,000 to evacuate Andalusia, Spain.

THE TOP FIVE

1. More than $34 billion of clean energy projects canceled in the U.S.

Developers axed or pared down more than $34 billion worth of clean energy projects across the United States last year as the Trump administration yanked back support for renewables and low-carbon industries. Last year marked the first time since 2022 that companies abandoned more annual investments than they announced in the sector, E&E News reported, citing a new report from the clean energy business group E2. The 61 affected projects had promised about 38,000 jobs.

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AM Briefing

Mineral Mates

On LIHEAP saved, copper king, and Drax’s ‘betrayal’

JD Vance.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: The snow squalls and cold air headed from the Ohio Valley to the Northeast are coming with winds of up to 55 miles per hour • A “western disturbance,” an extratropical storm that originates in the Mediterranean and travels eastward, is set to arrive in India and bring heavy snow to the Himalayas • Tropical Storm Basyang made landfall over the Philippines this morning, forcing Cebu City to cancel all in-person classes for public school students.

THE TOP FIVE

1. White House kicks off critical minerals summit

Vice President JD Vance delivered a 40-minute speech Wednesday appealing to 54 countries and the European Union to join a trading alliance led by the United States to establish a supply of critical minerals that could meaningfully rival China. The agreement would create a “preferential trade zone” meant to be “protected from disruptions through enforceable price floors.” The effort comes in response to years of export controls from Beijing that have sent the prices of key minerals over which China has near monopolies skyrocketing. “This morning, the Trump administration is proposing a concrete mechanism to return the global critical minerals market to a healthier, more competitive state,” Vance said at the State Department’s inaugural Critical Minerals Ministerial in Washington.

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