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Amazon-Pennsylvania nuclear plant deal would burden ratepayers, utilities say
Jun 27, 2024

GRID: Two utilities argue that allowing the colocation of an Amazon data center at Pennsylvania’s Susquehanna nuclear plant as the current deal is written would allow the tech company to shift up to $140 million in transmission costs to ratepayers. (Utility Dive)

ALSO:

  • Construction is wrapping up at the Great Kills battery energy storage site on Staten Island. (SI Live)
  • Pennsylvania Republicans say that greening the grid will risk reliability, but environmentalists in the state say the concern is overblown and can be resolved by streamlining development for clean energy projects. (Spotlight PA)

TRANSIT: The board of New York City’s transit agency votes to confirm the governor’s widely contested request to indefinitely delay the start of the Manhattan traffic congestion tolls, stopping over $16 billion in system upgrades and maintenance. (NBC New York, Gothamist)

WIND:

  • With tensions still high between the state and groups that don’t want to see an offshore wind port on Maine’s undeveloped Sears Island, state officials say it’s going to take awhile before they make a decision between that location and Mack Point, an industrially developed area. (Penobscot Bay Pilot)
  • With federal officials looking to auction off three open ocean parcels for offshore wind development to the east of Cape Cod, local leaders want to ensure they’re consulted throughout the development process. (Cape Cod Times)

SOLAR:

  • The New York branch of the solar industry’s top trade group publishes a policy report that suggests the state should set a 20 GW of distributed solar by 2035 goal, 10 GW higher but five years later than the actual current goal. (news release)
  • A developer starts construction of a 2.5 MW solar project in Brewster, Massachusetts, in the same industrial area as three smaller arrays. (Cape Cod Chronicle)
  • Dozens of Wendy’s fast food joints are now subscribed to community solar projects in Massachusetts, New York and elsewhere, sourcing between 30% to 100% of each location’s energy demand. (news release)
  • Some residents of a Vermont town push back on a proposal for a 50 MW solar project they say isn’t in the locally designated renewable energy siting zone and could harm a nearby wildlife area. (WCAX)
  • A Delaware library installs enough rooftop solar to cover half of its electricity needs. (news release)

ELECTRIC VEHICLES: New York City’s public housing authority explains its new rules for lithium-ion battery use in their units and the consequences of breaking them, months after setting them. (City Limits)

UTILITIES: New Hampshire’s public advocate wants the state utility commission to investigate an electricity co-op over concerns with its power purchase practices and allegations its board is struggling with sexism and bullying. (In-Depth NH)

Frustrated by lack of renewable energy, Louisiana companies find a workaround
Jun 27, 2024

SOLAR: Louisiana regulators approve a sleeved power purchase agreement to purchase power from non-utility sources for a coalition of 26 companies, including some of the state’s largest industrial giants, that have grown frustrated with the lack of renewables available from utilities. (Louisiana Illuminator)

ALSO:

ELECTRIC VEHICLES:

CLEAN ENERGY: Columbus, Georgia, business leaders say they’re building out the area’s higher education systems and freeing up land in hopes of taking part in the clean energy manufacturing boom that’s seen $32 billion invested in the state since 2021. (Columbus Ledger-Enquirer)

OIL & GAS:

HYDRO: A federal loan program provides $16.6 million for construction of the third of six planned hydroelectric plants in Kentucky, while a grant will fund solar power at a farm. (Kentucky Lantern)

GRID: A Virginia county supervisor proposes requiring new data centers to build on-site power to limit the use of eminent domain and construction of new transmission lines. (Loudoun Times-Mirror)

EMISSIONS: Researchers find plumes of toxic gas at the fenceline of some chemical plants in Louisiana’s “Cancer Alley” to be more than 1,000 times higher than what the U.S. EPA deems “an acceptable risk.” (Inside Climate News)

UTILITIES:

COAL: Businesses owned by West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice reach a settlement with a Virginia bank over roughly $300 million in outstanding loans, but now face the prospect of the forced sale of a coal company to satisfy different debts. (Cardinal News, WV Metro News)

COMMENTARY: A college student interviews climate activist Bill McKibben about the campaign to push the Tennessee Valley Authority away from building new natural gas-fired power plants toward solar power. (Tennessean)

Carbon credit market needs reform, scientists say
Jun 27, 2024

CLIMATE: A group of climate scientists says the market for carbon credits needs to adopt significant oversight and reforms after finding many offsetting markets didn’t deliver their promised climate benefits. (The Guardian)

ELECTRIC VEHICLES:

SOLAR:

  • A domestic solar panel manufacturer that spent millions lobbying for the Inflation Reduction Act has been among the law’s biggest beneficiaries, records show. (Associated Press)
  • Louisiana regulators let a coalition of 26 companies purchase power from non-utility sources after they say they’ve grown frustrated with the lack of renewables available from utilities. (Louisiana Illuminator)

NUCLEAR: The eventual — but stalled and over-budget — success of Georgia’s Plant Vogtle is sparking optimism in the state and beyond, especially after the passage of $900 million for small nuclear development. (E&E News)

CLEAN ENERGY:

GRID:

  • Two utilities argue that allowing the colocation of an Amazon data center at Pennsylvania’s Susquehanna nuclear plant as the current deal is written would allow the tech company to shift up to $140 million in transmission costs to ratepayers. (Utility Dive)
  • An energy efficiency bill working through the Ohio General Assembly is among the first signs of bipartisan policy agreement after the HB 6 scandal and comes as utilities brace for a surge in power demand. (E&E News)

UTILITIES:

  • Ohio regulators will stick to a piecemeal approach as they consider four separate, ongoing House Bill 6-related FirstEnergy cases despite calls from the utility and customer groups for consolidation. (Energy News Network)
  • A U.S. Supreme Court ruling striking down part of a federal bribery law could result in a new trial for four convicted former ComEd executives and lobbyists. (Center Square)

OIL & GAS: A study finds more than half of the 47,000 oil and gas wells in Colorado don’t generate enough money to pay for their end-of-life plugging and remediation, potentially saddling taxpayers with the tab. (Colorado Sun)

COMMENTARY: California’s increasingly clean energy mix proves the rest of the country’s grid can be powered with 100% clean energy sources, a climate advocate argues. (The New Yorker)

Lawyers: Oil industry could be liable for Arizona heat deaths
Jun 27, 2024

CLIMATE: An advocacy group’s legal analysis finds Arizona could reasonably bring homicide charges against the fossil fuel industry for hundreds of deaths caused by a climate change-exacerbated 2023 heat wave. (Guardian)

OIL & GAS:

ELECTRIFICATION: Santa Cruz, California’s city council votes to ban the use of gasoline-powered leaf blowers. (East Bay Times)

SOLAR: Records show an Arizona solar manufacturing company benefited from the Inflation Reduction Act after lobbying Congress and donating to Joe Biden’s presidential campaign. (Associated Press)

WIND: A developer proposes an offshore wind power facility off Hawaii’s coast. (Honolulu Civil Beat)

HYDROPOWER: Records show federal government officials in the 1940s and 1950s welcomed Northwest hydropower dams’ destruction of salmon fisheries and the tribal nations reliant upon them. (ProPublica)

TRANSPORTATION: Washington state considers implementing a fee on e-commerce doorstep deliveries to help replace dwindling gasoline-tax revenues. (E&E News)

POLITICS: Conservative Climate Caucus founder Rep. John Curtis wins the Utah Republican primary for Mitt Romney’s Senate seat. (Heatmap)

STORAGE:

MINING: The Havasupai Tribe continues to push back against a uranium mine reopening near the Grand Canyon, saying it could contaminate their drinking water source. (KJZZ)

ELECTRIC VEHICLES:

COMMENTARY:

Vineyard Wind hits production milestone
Jun 26, 2024

WIND: With 21 of its planned 62 wind turbines completely installed, Vineyard Wind claims to now be the largest operating wind project in the country, pushing 136 MW to the grid. (electrek)

SOLAR:

RENEWABLE POWER:

  • Massachusetts state senators advance legislation that intends to lower power bills while increasing renewable energy development, ban competitive electric suppliers and ease permitting for energy projects and electric vehicle chargers, among other provisions. (Associated Press)
  • Pennsylvania lawmakers advance a bill restructuring a state energy authority to allow it to use federal funds to develop energy projects. (Pennsylvania Capital-Star)

GRID:

  • New York’s grid operator receives four bids to develop up to 8 GW of offshore wind power transmission to New York City, most of which would connect to the Brooklyn Clean Energy Hub. (RTO Insider, subscription)
  • With hot temperatures arriving earlier than usual, the Washington, D.C., grid is straining to cope with increased cooling demand — and makes working conditions more strenuous for line workers. (WTOP)
  • Several consumer advocates file a complaint with federal energy regulators that claims PJM Interconnection practices stop energy efficiency resources from completely participating in the capacity market. (Utility Dive)
  • In New Jersey, the developer of the Atlantic Shores offshore wind project selects a contractor to expand an Egg Harbor Township substation to help carry the project’s anticipated 1.5 GW of electricity. (news release)
  • A spinoff startup out of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology wants to deploy special power lines that look like any other but can transmit up to ten times the electricity. (news release)

FOSSIL FUELS:

  • Pennsylvania environmental protection officials will host a hearing this week on a proposed natural gas pipeline route that local conservation groups say would harm a wetland and several streams in its path. (NorthCentralPA.com)
  • Much of the toxic remnants of the Tonawanda Coke Site near Buffalo, New York, have been removed, but some remediation activities remain before it can be redeveloped for commercial purposes. (Buffalo News)
  • A top Massachusetts lawmaker says claims that thousands of natural gas workers could lose their jobs due to pending state climate legislation is “fundamentally flawed” and “misinformation.” (Boston Herald)

CLEAN TECH: For Boston’s clean tech hub dream to become reality, observers say it needs a “flagship” firm to attract workers and innovative ideas — but could that kickstarter be GE Vernova? (Boston Globe)

BIOENERGY: A proposed class action lawsuit has been filed in Massachusetts against a home heating oil dealer, which allegedly claimed to be selling them biodiesel when they weren’t. (Law360)

AFFORDABILITY: In a rural Maine county, residents subject to recently rising Versant Power rates discuss their affordability concerns. (The County)

Iowa regulators approve carbon pipeline
Jun 26, 2024

PIPELINES: Iowa regulators approve the controversial Summit Carbon Solutions pipeline, and for developers to use eminent domain to acquire property, though the project still needs approval in the Dakotas. (Iowa Capital Dispatch)

ALSO:

  • Landowner rights activists express disappointment in the ruling, while one GOP state lawmaker says regulators “failed miserably at their job and I’m going to file legislation to do their job for them.” (WHO, Radio Iowa)
  • A group submits petition signatures seeking to have voters decide whether to reject a South Dakota law that critics say benefits carbon pipeline developers. (South Dakota Searchlight)

CLEAN ENERGY: District energy systems that heat and cool buildings in Minneapolis-St. Paul and beyond are facing increasing pressure to decarbonize and reduce their reliance on fossil fuels. (Energy News Network)

ELECTRIC VEHICLES: Volkswagen will invest $5 billion in electric vehicle startup Rivian under a new joint venture to share EV architecture and software that could benefit Rivian’s roughly 8,000 workers in Illinois. (Reuters; Crain’s Chicago, subscription)

NUCLEAR:

  • An effort to restart a shuttered nuclear plant in southwestern Michigan may get a boost from a federal nuclear permitting bill awaiting President Biden’s signature, experts say. (MLive)
  • An Ohio bill seeks to define nuclear power as “green energy” under a plan that has drawn support from labor groups and concerns from environmental groups. (Toledo Blade)

SOLAR:

GRID: Indiana energy groups aren’t concerned about a new MISO outlook forecasting a potential future capacity shortfall, though they are urging more robust planning and avoiding plant retirements. (WTHR)

UTILITIES: A utility operating in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula withdraws a request for a permanent waiver in how it counts customer outage credits required under a new state law aiming to improve reliability. (Michigan Advance)

COMMENTARY:

  • Three recent Minnesota laws to increase renewable energy targets, paired with supportive siting regulations, show the state is serious about capitalizing on clean energy, a Ceres policy official writes. (Minnesota Reformer)
  • Former Democratic Ohio Congressman Tim Ryan, who now lobbies for the gas industry, says renewable energy needs to be paired with gas to avoid economic and climate destruction. (Ohio Capital Journal)
  • The head of a Michigan propane advocacy group says the Line 5 tunnel needs to be built in the Straits of Mackinac to “ensure energy security and economic stability.” (Bridge)

Reversing climate policies would jeopardize investment, economists say
Jun 26, 2024

CLIMATE: Economists say former President Trump’s plans to repeal Biden administration climate policies would put U.S. manufacturing investments at risk and send jobs back overseas. (New York Times)

ALSO:

STORAGE: Energy storage capacity installations jumped 84% in the first quarter of 2024 from the year before, with utility-scale installations more than doubling year-over-year. (Utility Dive)

CLEAN ENERGY:

ELECTRIC VEHICLES:

WIND: With 21 of its planned 62 wind turbines completely installed, Vineyard Wind claims to now be the largest operating wind project in the country, pushing 136 MW to the grid. (electrek)

OIL & GAS:

POLITICS: As the coal industry’s influence fades, former President Trump’s campaign has drifted from his promise to end “the war on coal.” (E&E News)

CARBON CAPTURE: Louisiana officials announce two new carbon capture projects, frustrating residents who say the technology will prolong the use of fossil fuels. (Associated Press)

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE: Black residents in Louisiana’s “Cancer Alley” call on the U.S. Justice Department to protect them against the ongoing expansion of the region’s petrochemical industry and its pollution. (Floodlight)

NUCLEAR:

  • An effort to restart a shuttered nuclear plant in southwestern Michigan may get a boost from a federal nuclear permitting bill awaiting President Biden’s signature, experts say. (MLive)
  • Some residents of a Wyoming coal community are slow to support a proposed advanced nuclear reactor, saying they don’t like project-backer Bill Gates’ politics. (Casper Star-Tribune)

Study: Oil and gas wells in wildfire zones threaten Western communities
Jun 26, 2024

OIL & GAS: California researchers find more than 100,000 oil and gas wells in the Western U.S. are in wildfire-prone areas, compounding health and safety risks that disproportionately affect marginalized populations. (The Hill)

ALSO: A federal Bureau of Land Management oil and gas lease auction in Nevada garners zero bids. (E&E News, subscription)

UTILITIES: Some Western utilities are operating without insurance as coverage becomes prohibitively expensive amid increasing wildfire hazard. (Bloomberg)

CLIMATE:

POLITICS: Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon pays a law firm $800,000 in state funds as a down payment to fight Biden administration power plant regulations, public land rules and a proposal to end coal leasing in the Powder River Basin. (Cowboy State Daily)

SOLAR:

WIND: California’s energy commission publishes its final offshore wind strategic plan with a goal of bringing 25,000 MW of capacity online by 2045. (Recharge News, subscription)

HYDROPOWER: Pumped hydropower storage developers step up outreach to the Navajo Nation after federal regulators rejected several proposed projects due to tribal opposition. (Bloomberg Law)

CLEAN ENERGY:

EMISSIONS: A southern California grand jury finds many cities are failing to recycle organic waste, resulting in increased landfill methane emissions. (Voice of OC)

NUCLEAR: Some residents of a Wyoming coal community are slow to support a proposed advanced nuclear reactor, saying they don’t like project-backer Bill Gates’ politics. (Casper Star-Tribune)

ELECTRIC VEHICLES: Arizona transportation officials seek public input on plans to expand its electric vehicle fast-charging station network. (Arizona Daily Star)

COMMENTARY:

In Twin Cities and beyond, district energy systems see pressure to cut carbon emissions
Jun 26, 2024

The operators of the decades-old energy systems that heat and cool buildings in downtown Minneapolis and St. Paul have ambitious plans underway to reduce emissions.

The mostly hidden networks of insulated pipes connected to centralized heating and cooling equipment are known as district energy systems. They’ve long been championed as an energy efficient way to heat and cool campuses or downtowns, especially in cooler climates.

Many, though, are connected to fossil fuel facilities, and the systems’ high efficiency alone won’t be enough to help schools, cities, and companies meet their goals of eliminating greenhouse gas emissions by midcentury or sooner. Climate pledges by these institutional customers are now driving efforts to repower district energy systems with clean energy.

University district energy systems began initiatives to reduce emissions years ago and “now in the last five years we’re seeing a lot of emphasis on this from cities and towns,” said Rob Thornton, president and CEO of the International District Energy Association.

In Minneapolis, Cordia Energy, the private company that operates the largest downtown district energy system, is replacing natural gas boilers with electric models. And in downtown St. Paul, officials are seeking federal funding for a project to recover heat from a wastewater treatment plant and reduce energy use for a system currently powered by electricity and biomass.

“We’re doing decarbonization at the rate that our customer base is asking for and we can economically withstand,” said Jacob Graff, Cordia Energy’s north region president. Customers connected to its downtown Minneapolis system range from stadiums and high rises to apartments and medical facilities.

From ancient Rome to skyscrapers

The concept of district heating has been around for centuries, with its roots in the networks of hot water pipes built in ancient Rome. Some of the first modern steam-based systems were built in New York in the 1880s. Today, the United States has more than 700 district energy systems heating and cooling buildings in downtowns, universities, medical campuses, towns and communities.

Cordia Energy’s Minneapolis system opened in 1972 to serve the 57-story IDS Center, still the tallest building in Minneapolis. Today, the steam and chilled water system manages seven plants that heat and cool the IDS and more than 100 other buildings, including U.S. Bank Stadium, Target Center, and the convention center.

Hennepin County owns and operates a much smaller district energy system, connected to a downtown trash incinerator, that primarily serves county buildings and Minneapolis City Hall.

District Energy St. Paul began in the early 1980s after then-Mayor George Latimer hired Swedish engineer Hans Nyman to replace the aging steam system with a hot-water central heating system. Latimer wanted to create a national model of district energy and he largely succeeded. District Energy St. Paul has the largest hot water system in the country, with more than 200 buildings.

Together, the two systems serve some of the state’s biggest buildings, which have emerged as the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in both cities. In Minneapolis, 65% of the emissions are from commercial, multifamily and industrial buildings. St. Paul’s data is similar.

Tapping clean electricity in Minneapolis

Cordia plans to reduce emissions from its Minneapolis system by 30% by 2030 before reaching net zero by 2050. Xcel Energy’s green tariff program will offset around half the electricity Cordia uses this year, and it wants to buy more credits if they become available.  

The company is replacing older engine-driven chillers with electric models at the former Dayton’s department store, where it has operations. Chillers modulate the temperature inside buildings and can be powered by electricity or natural gas. Geothermal is another potential solution being studied.

A potential geothermal project “hasn’t cleared the economic hurdles yet,” Graff said. “I think we’ll eventually get there.”

Minneapolis customers are not alone in seeking to reduce emissions from district energy systems, Graff said. San Francisco will be Cordia’s first system to decarbonize using hydropower from a dam the company owns in Yosemite National Park.

St. Paul looks to waste heat recovery

Downtown St. Paul’s district heating system is owned and operated by a company called District Energy, which recently worked with the city and the regional planning agency on a $152 million U.S. EPA grant application to tap heat from a regional wastewater plant for the city’s system. It would include a project with Xcel Energy to pay for an electric boiler and hot water storage.

District Energy president and CEO Ken Smith said half the system already has been decarbonized through biomass, solar thermal and renewable energy credits. An analysis showed that recovering heat from the Metro Wastewater Treatment Plant, which manages 170 million gallons of water daily, could produce 60 megawatts of thermal energy, and heat pumps could lift the temperature up to the system average.

If District Energy receives the Climate Pollution Reduction Grant, the system would go live in 2028 and allow District Energy to provide 92% of energy from carbon-free or carbon-neutral sources, far ahead of its goal of net zero by 2050.

“This certainly would be able to accelerate that by 30 years,” Smith said. “From everything we’ve seen, there’s nothing like this, certainly not in the United States, and I don’t believe there’s anything like it at this scale in Canada, either.”

St. Paul Resilience Officer Russ Stark said District Energy’s emissions represent a small portion of the total greenhouse gases in the city. Still, around 50,000 tons of carbon would be eliminated annually, and that’s “very impactful,” he said.

The wastewater project would allow District Energy St. Paul to expand to more buildings, decarbonizing them in the process, Stark said. Adding clients “is not a simple process but we’ve been talking a lot about that being an exciting part of the project,” he said. “I don’t know how many major city downtowns there are where there’s an opportunity to largely decarbonize most of the downtown in the way that we can.”

Systems face unique, local challenges

A one-size-fits-all solution for decarbonizing district energy systems doesn’t exist, as most are unique based on customers and geography. Not all can be inexpensively retrofitted for electricity, and the ongoing office and commercial real estate fallout from the Covid-19 pandemic adds risk to financing projects.

Thornton, of the district energy association, said electricity pricing can escalate quickly, especially in summer, creating uncertainty in the market. New technology may require more space, different controls and significant staff training. Federal policy remains unclear about what parts of a district energy system would qualify for tax incentives, he said.

Graff ticks off many challenges in decarbonizing Cordia’s Minneapolis operations. Geothermal works well on campuses and in low-slung neighborhoods where the problem of sending steam to the 50th floor of a skyscraper does not exist, Graff said.

There’s not a simple clean power source like natural gas that has the energy density to create and push steam through a network, he said. To illustrate the point during a tour of Cordia’s downtown plant, he pointed to a pipe with a modest circumference and said the natural gas flowing through it provided the heating for much of the system.

Electrification may be a goal of heating and cooling, but offsetting it with clean power is daunting. Cordia would have to install heat pumps capable of drawing more than 400 megawatts from a clean energy source, which would be no small feat, Graff said.

Hydrogen sounds promising but has no track record yet for supplying an entire downtown district energy system, Graff said. Biomass has potential, too, but sourcing enough it to service a sprawling district energy system reliably remains difficult.

Battery storage, microgrids and other technologies could all play a role, but each brings issues ranging from cost to a lack of testing in a district energy environment, at least at the size of the downtown Minneapolis system.

“We have the economy of Minneapolis in our hands, and regional economics depend on downtown Minneapolis,” Graff said “We need a reliable infrastructure that people can count on that can be delivered economically, and it’s our responsibility to do that.”

Natural gas’ new “greenwashing scam”
Jun 26, 2024

When you see an “all natural” label on a snack, you might be tempted to think it’s a healthy choice. But there’s no way around the facts: organic potato chips just aren’t as good for you as a carrot.

A similar marketing strategy is popping up in the fossil fuel industry. As the world wakes up to natural gas’ emissions impact, some producers are adopting a “certified” or “responsible” label to convince customers they’re a climate-friendly choice. But according to a new report, it’s all a “scam.”

Gas producers have started working with third-party contractors they say will evaluate their gas extraction processes for leaks and “certify” those with a lower methane emissions. As industries increasingly seek out clean energy, gas producers hope this label will make them more desirable.

But as the report from climate groups Oil Change International and Earthworks details, gas certification isn’t yet regulated, and its monitoring systems often miss methane leaks. Dakota Raynes, an author on the study, summed up its findings to Inside Climate News: “Certified gas is a greenwashing scam.”

A third-party gas certifier disputed the report’s findings. But Democratic U.S. senators recently came to the same conclusion, calling gas certification a “dangerous greenwashing scheme” in a letter urging the Federal Trade Commission to crack down on the industry claims.

“The reality is that gas certification schemes allow the oil and gas industry to justify the continued expansion of methane gas use and undermine efforts towards a just transition to renewables,” the senators said.

More clean energy news

⚛️ Seeking a magic bullet: Large tech companies are betting on atomic fusion and other unproven energy technologies to power AI data centers, which critics say are already increasing reliance on fossil fuels. (Washington Post)

⚖️ A just transition? Residents of a former Pennsylvania coal community say the federal government has forgotten about them as they struggle to replace lost jobs and tax income, highlighting President Biden’s need to convince similar communities they won’t be left behind. (Washington Post)

🥃 Distilling decarbonization: A growing number of U.S. food and beverage manufacturers are using heat pumps to decarbonize the process heat they need to distill liquor and make other products. (Canary Media)

☀️ Perfect places: Researchers map millions of acres of abandoned U.S. farmland that could potentially be reused for renewable energy projects. (Journal Sentinel)

⛈️ Keeping solar panels safe: Hailstorms will likely become more common as the climate changes, but researchers say monitoring technologies and protective equipment can protect solar panels from hail damage. (Inside Climate News)

🛢️ Playing the reverse card: In New Mexico, oil and gas giants partnered with environmentalists and politicians to develop an abandoned well cleanup bill, but turned against the final product and claimed it would “destroy” the state. (ProPublica)

📉 We’re lagging on clean energy support: The world’s largest ever climate survey finds 54% of Americans want a quick transition from fossil fuels to clean energy, among the smallest majorities among counties polled. (The Guardian)

📄 Making it happen: Advocates say the 18-year permitting saga for the SunZia transmission line in the Southwest is a success story illustrating the challenges of building large-scale clean energy infrastructure. (Heatmap)

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