Getting climate, energy & environment news right.

Articles from Around the Web

Princeton reverses ban on fossil fuel companies funding research
Post

Princeton reverses ban on fossil fuel companies funding research

Amanda Chu and Andrew Jack of the Financial Times report that Princeton is reversing its ban on fossil fuel-funded research. Princeton University has reversed a policy that had sharply constrained the funding of academic research by fossil fuel companies, after pressure from faculty members and concerns that the rules risked hindering work on environmental challenges....

Could Naturally Occurring Hydrogen Underground Be a Gusher of Clean Energy in Alaska?
Post

Could Naturally Occurring Hydrogen Underground Be a Gusher of Clean Energy in Alaska?

Hal Bernton of Inside Climate News reports on Alaska’s potential for underground hydrogen. Alaska geologist Mark Myers hopes that underground reserves of hydrogen could fuel a new state energy industry. His dreams were launched by a well drilled in the African country of Mali that yields enough hydrogen to fuel a village electric power plant.  ...

For data center cooling project, Advanced Cooling Technologies gets $1.1M DOE grant
Post

For data center cooling project, Advanced Cooling Technologies gets $1.1M DOE grant

Joe Burns of Utility Dive writes on ARPA-E funding for data center cooling. Advanced Cooling Technologies will receive $1.1 million through two subcontracts with the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy. The funding is part of ARPA-E’s Cooling Operations Optimized for Leaps in Energy, Reliability and Carbon Hyperefficiency for Information Processing Systems program,...

Could war in the Gulf push oil to $100 a barrel?
Post

Could war in the Gulf push oil to $100 a barrel?

The Economist writes on how conflict in the Middle East might impact oil prices. EVER SINCE Hamas’s attacks on Israel a year ago, the biggest fear in oil markets has been that tensions would escalate into a full-blown regional war pitting Israel against Iran, the world’s seventh-largest producer of crude. Until recently both countries seemed keen to...

Where Europe leads on climate, the United States should not follow
Post

Where Europe leads on climate, the United States should not follow

Paul Tice writes in The Hill about the folly of Europe’s climate strategy. Since the 2015 signing of the Paris climate agreement, the European Union has become the government standard-bearer for the climate change movement, plunging headlong into the legal and regulatory work required to achieve the United Nations’s global emissions targets.  Europe aspires to...

From Rust to AI: How America’s Industrial Heartland is Powering the Digital Revolution
Post

From Rust to AI: How America’s Industrial Heartland is Powering the Digital Revolution

Rahul Mewawalla writes in Power about the role that America’s heartland is playing in the digital revolution. The artificial intelligence (AI) revolution is transforming our world, but it comes with an insatiable surge in data centers that are powered by an ever-growing appetite for energy. As AI and high-performance computing (HPC) applications proliferate, the tech...

Japan Firms Unite to Cut Methane Emissions from LNG Supply
Post

Japan Firms Unite to Cut Methane Emissions from LNG Supply

Shoko Oda and Tsuyoshi Inajima of Bloomberg report that Japanese firms are cutting methane emissions from their LNG supply. Twenty-two Japanese utilities and trading houses are joining an initiative that aims to leverage their buying power to curb methane emissions from liquefied natural gas supply chains, as pressure mounts globally to curb the harmful greenhouse gas.  Companies...

Chevron bets on ‘green’ hydrogen
Post

Chevron bets on ‘green’ hydrogen

Barbara Grady writes in Trellis about Chevron’s bet on green hydrogen. In Richmond, California, a city plagued by the carbon dioxide, soot and methane emitted by a massive oil refinery owned by Chevron Corp., a startup is building a waste-to-green hydrogen conversion project designed to produce zero-carbon hydrogen for transportation applications. If it succeeds, the...

American Dams Weren’t Built for Today’s Climate-Charged Rain and Floods
Post

American Dams Weren’t Built for Today’s Climate-Charged Rain and Floods

Kendra Pierre-Louis and Leslie Kaufman of Bloomberg write on the status of America’s dams. As flooding hammered Appalachia in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, residents became intimately familiar with a new norm in the US’s post-storm script: dams at imminent risk of failing. Officials last week said multiple dams were on the brink, including Tennessee’s...

Zillow home listings to feature climate risk, insurance data
Post

Zillow home listings to feature climate risk, insurance data

Andrew Freedman of Axios writes on Zillow and First Street’s partnership to include climate risk in home listings. Mindful of increasing risks from extreme weather events such as hurricanes, Zillow will combine climate risk scores, interactive maps and insurance information on its home listings, the company announced this morning. Why it matters: This step gives prospective buyers their...

Subscribe to our exclusive email designed for conservatives who care about climate.

Help us promote free market solutions for climate change.

5 Incredible Ways Economic Freedom Helps the Planet.

Sign up for our newsletter now to get the full list right in your inbox.

Thank you for signing up

Help us promote sensible solutions for both planet and prosperity.

Download Now