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Climate Tech

An LNG tanker.
AM Briefing

Strait Through

On New England data centers, ITER’s appetite, and Chinese solar

Climate Tech

Funding Friday: Robots Want Fast-Charging Batteries

Big fundraises for Nyobolt and Skeleton Technologies, plus more of the week’s biggest money moves.

Green
AM Briefing

Blowback

On DAC delays, Cuba’s minerals, and Volkswagen’s margins

Red
AM Briefing

Up and Up

On data center cancellations, TVA nuclear, and British fusion

Blue
The SEC building.

SEC Won’t Let Me See

On wave energy, microplastics, and Emirati sun

Blue
A data center.

‘Big Deal’ Blackout Warning

On thorium, South Carolina nuclear, and green steel

Blue
Climate Tech

Exclusive: Trillium Raises $13 Million for Plant-Based Industrial Chemicals

A ubiquitous byproduct of the oil and gas industry just got a green competitor.

Pouring a leaf.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The chemicals industry, which accounts for about 5% of global emissions, can seem like a black box. Fossil fuel-based feedstocks go in and out pop plastic toys or agricultural fertilizer or laundry detergent. But most of us don’t understand what happens in between. That’s the part of the supply chain where Trillium Renewable Chemicals is focused, as it scales production of bio-based acrylonitrile, a key chemical intermediate used to make products ranging from carbon fiber aircraft components to plastic Lego bricks and rubber medical gloves.

Though you might not have heard of this mouthful of a chemical, acrylonitrile’s production is a major contributor to the embedded emissions of all the products that it goes into, as it’s typically derived from propylene, a byproduct of the oil and gas industry. “When you look at the lifecycle analysis of these products, the thing that jumps off the page is acrylonitrile dominates that lifecycle,” Trillium’s CEO, Corey Tyree, told me. “It is the number one challenge.”

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AM Briefing

New Headwinds

On congestion pricing, deep sea mining, and kiwi birds

Onshore wind.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: The weekend’s polar vortex chill in New York City is over as temperatures are set to hit 70 degrees Fahrenheit today, your humble correspondent’s birthday • A winter storm blanketing the Sierra Nevadas with as much as four feet of snow on Interstate 80’s Donner Pass, the primary route between Sacramento and Reno named for the notorious 1846 episode of snowbound settlers driven to cannibalism • Days after thermometers finally slid from an almost sauna-like 118 degrees to somewhere in the 90s, thunderstorms are deluging India’s northern Uttar Pradesh state as dust storms blast cities such as Kanpur.


THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump halts construction on onshore wind, citing national security

The Trump administration is bringing construction of virtually all new onshore wind turbines to a halt, putting as many as 165 projects on pause on the grounds that they may threaten national security. The projects, sited on private land, are being stalled by the Department of Defense, and include “wind farms which were awaiting final sign-off, others in the middle of negotiations, and some that typically would not require oversight” by the military, according to the Financial Times. Wind farms require routine approvals from the Pentagon to make sure turbines don’t interfere with radar systems. Normally these assessments are done in a few days. But developers told the newspaper they have faced a mix of setbacks since last August.

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