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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

$100 a Barrel

On Greenpeace, deep-sea mining, and Lithuanian nuclear

Yellow
AM Briefing

Trump’s Reactor Realism

On the solar siege, New York’s climate law, and radioactive data center

Green
AM Briefing

Southern Comfort

On nuclear tax credits, BLM controversy, and a fusion maverick’s fundraise

Blue
Donald Trump.

Trump’s Data Center Defense

On Cybertruck deaths, Texas wind waste, and American aluminum

Red
A power worker.

White Out

On geoengineering, Boston Metal’s setback, and French fusion

Green
AM Briefing

Renewables’ Year of Defiance

On the California atom, Russian nuclear theft, and Taiwan’s geothermal hope

Solar panels and a wind turbine.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: A blockbuster blizzard blanketed the Northeast in up to 2 feet of snow, trigger outages for nearly 500,000 households • Hot, dry Harmattan conditions are blowing into Nigeria out of the Sahara, leaving the capital, Abuja, and the largest city, Lagos, roasting in nearly 100 degrees Fahrenheit • Much of South Australia, the Northern Territory, and Victoria are bracing for severe thunderstorms and flooding.


THE TOP FIVE

1. The U.S. will get 93% of its new generating capacity this year from solar, batteries, and wind

A chart shows the expected new generating additions in the U.S. grid's pipeline. EIA

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AM Briefing

Loaded Barrel

On geothermal’s heat, Exxon Mobil’s CCS push, and Maine’s solar

Donald Trump.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: More than a foot of snow is blanketing the California mountains • With thousands already displaced by flooding, Papua New Guinea is facing more days of thunderstorms ahead • It’s snowing in Ulaanbaatar today, and temperatures in the Mongolian capital will plunge from 31 degrees Fahrenheit to as low as 2 degrees by Sunday.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Oil prices jump as Trump threatens to attack Iran

We all know the truisms of market logic 101. Precious metals surge when political volatility threatens economic instability. Gun stocks pop when a mass shooting stirs calls for firearm restrictions. And — as anyone who’s been paying attention to the world over the past year knows — oil prices spike when war with Iran looks imminent. Sure enough, the price of crude hit a six-month high Wednesday before inching upward still on Thursday after President Donald Trump publicly gave Tehran 10 to 15 days to agree to a peace deal or face “bad things.” Despite the largest U.S. troop buildup in the Middle East since 2003, the American military action won’t feature a ground invasion, said Gregory Brew, the Eurasia Group analyst who tracks Iran and energy issues. “It will be air strikes, possibly commando raids,” he wrote Thursday in a series of posts on X. Comparisons to Iraq “miss the mark,” he said, because whatever Trump does will likely wrap up in days. The bigger issue is that the conflict likely won’t resolve any of the issues that make Iran such a flashpoint. “There will be no deal, the regime will still be there, the missile and nuclear programs will remain and will be slowly rebuilt,” Brew wrote. “In six months, we could be back in the same situation.”

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