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Electric Vehicles

A clock with lightning hands.
Electric Vehicles

For EVs, Charging Speed Is the New Range

They may not refuel as quickly as gas cars, but it’s getting faster all the time to recharge an electric car.

AM Briefing

Trump’s ‘Con Job’

On offshore wind labor history, Oklo breaks ground, and American gallium

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AM Briefing

Trump Sues Over Superfund Statute

On Democrats’ AI blueprint, more nationalized minerals, and the GOP’s anti-geoengineering push

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Electric Vehicles

Elon Musk Defeats Reality, Again

The CEO’s $1 billion share buy changes nothing — except in the eyes of his shareholders.

The White House.

Climate Progress Takes a Hit Under Trump

On Rick Perry’s loan push, firefighters’ mask rules, and Europe’s heat pump problems

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A Tesla approaching a cliff.

More Bad News for Tesla

U.S. EV sales have been way up — just not for the domestic champion, which sank to its worst-ever market share in August.

Electric Vehicles

How EVs Could Help Lower Everyone’s Electricity Costs

Using more electricity when it’s cheap can pay dividends later.

An EV charger ATM.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

One of the best arguments for electric vehicles is the promise of lower costs for the owner. Yes, EVs cost more upfront than comparable gas-powered cars, but electric cars are cheaper to fuel and should require less routine maintenance, too. (Say goodbye to the 3,000-mile oil change.)

What about the societal scale, though? As the number of EVs on the road continues to rise, more analysts are putting forth the argument that EV ownership could lead to lower energy bills for everyone, even the people who don’t buy them.

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Climate

AM Briefing: America’s Green Bank Withers

On PJM’s inflexible giants, another wind attack, and a Sino-Russia mega deal

Trump Wins a Court Battle Against America’s $20 Billion Green Bank
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: In the Pacific, Tropical Storm Kiko has strengthened into a hurricane on its way toward Hawaii • Unusually cool air in the Upper Midwest and Appalachians could drop temperatures to as much as 20 degrees Fahrenheit below average • Nearly one million people are displaced in Pakistan’s most populous state as Punjab suffers the biggest flood in its history.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump’s plan to kill green bank gets court approval

The Trump administration’s plan to kill a $20 billion clean energy financing program got the green light from a federal appeals court on Tuesday. The Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, housed under the Environmental Protection Agency, was designed to provide low-cost loans for solar installations, building efficiency upgrades, and other local efforts to reduce planet-heating emissions. The three-judge panel overturned a lower court’s injunction temporarily requiring the EPA to resume payments, ruling that most of the plaintiffs’ claims were contract disputes and belonged in the Court of Federal Claims. If the case now moves to that court, Heatmap’s Emily Pontecorvo wrote, “the plaintiffs would only be able to sue for damages and any possibility of reinstating the grants would be gone.”

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