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Politics

An LNG tanker.
AM Briefing

Strait Through

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

Politics

The Most At-Risk Projects of the Energy Transition

These are the 10 most important clean energy transition projects struggling to get off the ground

Yellow
Podcast

What Has All This Back-and-Forth Climate Legislating Bought Us?

Rob takes stock of both Biden and Trump’s climate legacies with John Bistline and Ryna Cui.

Yellow
Donald Trump.

Blowback

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

Red
Donald Trump and wind turbines.

How to Get Away with Murdering an Energy Industry

And future administrations will learn from his extrajudicial success.

Yellow
AM Briefing

Up and Up

On data center cancellations, TVA nuclear, and British fusion

An electricity meter.
Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images

Current conditions: Colorado is digging out of its biggest snowstorm of the season, which dumped another six inches on Denver yesterday • Heavy rain and mudflows in Tajikistan have killed at least four people this week • Spring showers are drenching the Croatian island of Ugljan in the Kornati archipelago.


THE TOP FIVE

1. U.S. electricity prices keep steadily rising

Electricity prices went up again last month, but as Heatmap’s Emily Pontecorvo reported this morning, it’s not because of the Iran War. The latest spike, which appears in a data update released this morning in Heatmap and MIT’s Electricity Price Hub, shows that prices were 6.7% higher, on average, than the same month the previous year. The 12-month trailing average, a measure that smooths out seasonal fluctuations in rates, was up 6.5% from a year ago.

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Politics

Exclusive: Local Opposition to Data Centers Explodes in 2026

The number of data centers canceled after pushback set a record in the first quarter of the year, new data from Heatmap Pro shows.

Peeling off a data center.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Data centers are getting larger and larger. But even so, few are as large as the Sentinel Grove Technology Park, a proposed data center near Port St. Lucie, Florida.

The proposed facility — which became known as Project Jarvis — was set to be built on old agricultural land. It would use up to 1 gigawatt of electricity, enough to power a mid-size city, and bring in up to $13.5 billion in investment to the county.

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