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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

Ripened on the Vine

On a sodium-ion megadeal, the Bangladeshi atom, and space solar

Blue
AM Briefing

Trump’s Tailwinds

On hydropower, GOP renewables, and sewage in Seattle

Red
AM Briefing

Science Experiments

On China’s fossil fuel controls, Maine data centers, and a faster NRC

Blue
A Kairos Power plant.

Nuclear Anew

On offshore mining, New Jersey’s offshore wind, and China’s oil breakthrough

Blue
Wind turbines in fog.

Et Moi?

On Chinese solar exports, Blue Energy’s nuclear reactors, and GE Vernova stock

Blue
AM Briefing

Blowing the Whistle

On Trump’s renewables embargo, Project Vault, and perovskite solar

Pollution.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Illinois far outpaces every other state for tornadoes so far this year, clocking 80, with Mississippi in a distant second with 43 • Western North Carolina’s Blue Ridge Mountains face high wildfire risk during the day and frost at night • A magnitude 7.4 earthquake off the coast of Honshu, Japan, has raised the risk of a tsunami.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Whistleblowers allege big problems with corporate carbon standards-setter

The nonprofit that sets the standards against which tens of thousands of companies worldwide measure their greenhouse gas emissions is secretive and ideologically tilted toward industry. That’s the conclusion of a new whistleblower report on which Heatmap’s Emily Pontecorvo got her hands yesterday. The problems at the Greenhouse Gas Protocol “are systemic,” and the nonprofit “seems to be moving further away from its commitment to accountability,” the report said. Danny Cullenward, the economist and lawyer focused on scientific integrity in climate science at the University of Pennsylvania’s Kleinman Center for Energy Policy who authored the report, sits on the Protocol’s Independent Standards Board. Due to a restrictive non-disclosure agreement preventing him from talking about what he has witnessed, he instead relied on publicly available information to illustrate the report. “Not only does the nonprofit community not have a voice on the board,” Cullenward wrote, but the absence of those voices “risks politicizing the work of scientist Board members.” Emily added: “While the Protocol’s official decision-making hierarchy deems scientific integrity as its top priority, in practice, scientists are left to defend the science to the business community.” The report follows a years-long process meant to bolster the group’s scientific credibility. “Critics have long faulted the Protocol for allowing companies to look far better on paper than they do to the atmosphere,” Emily explains. But creating standards that are both scientifically robust and feasible to implement is no easy feat.

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AM Briefing

‘A Critical Phase’

On China’s H2 breakthrough, vehicle-to-grid charging, and USA Rare Earth goes to Brazil

Arctic clouds.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: In the Atlantic, Tropical Storm Fernand is heading northward toward Bermuda • In the Pacific, Tropic Storm Juliette is active about 520 miles southwest of Baja California, with winds of up to 65 miles per hour • Temperatures are surging past 100 degrees Fahrenheit in South Korea.


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