A rare flurry of rare earth news from Wyoming and California

By Kennedy Maize The Trump administration last week (July 11) joined a groundbreaking ceremony at a new Wyoming coal mine, where the more important product is expected to be rare earth minerals. At the same time, the administration was buying a controlling interest in the only currently producing U.S. rare earth mine, in southern California. … More A rare flurry of rare earth news from Wyoming and California

Guest Commentary: The old nuclear rules won’t stop proliferation

By Henry Sokolski Of all the questions America’s bombing of Iran has generated, the one that’s received the least attention is how we got here. The US and Israeli assault on Iran’s nuclear facilities was the predictable result of persistent US and international unwillingness to draw the line properly between safe and dangerous nuclear activities … More Guest Commentary: The old nuclear rules won’t stop proliferation

New ideas for nuke finance: follow Finland and France?

By Kennedy Maize Do U.S. electric power suppliers looking to nuclear power to serve AI data centers need a new way to finance new plants? An analysis by the Haynes Boone law firm says the conventional U.S. approach to nuclear finance is likely a dead end. The analysis offers two European models for nuclear finance … More New ideas for nuke finance: follow Finland and France?

Will the Southwest reach a new deal on Colorado River water?

By Kennedy Maize One of the nation’s most important and least well-known environmental and energy wrangles could be headed to a conclusion. The clock is ticking on the multi-state discussion on how to manage the use of the water from the crucial Colorado River. The Denver Post reports, “After months of stalemate, glimmers of hope … More Will the Southwest reach a new deal on Colorado River water?

For energy, Trump’s law is a dog’s dinner

By Kennedy Maize “Dog’s dinner” is a Britishism signifying something messy, chaotic, badly organized. The massive legislation Congress passed, and the president signed into law on Independence Day, has all those attributes. That’s particularly true for the energy provisions, which include a whole lotta fakin’ goin’ on. Overall, the energy provisions are bad for the … More For energy, Trump’s law is a dog’s dinner

Exhausting Exxon air pollution suit expires at SCOTUS

The U.S. Supreme Court Monday (June 30) refused to grant a petition from ExxonMobil Corp. seeking to reverse an appeals court loss in a massive, 15-year dispute over air pollution at the oil giant’s Baytown, Texas petrochemical complex. Exxon now faces a $14.25 million penalty, the largest ever in a Clean Air Act citizen suit. … More Exhausting Exxon air pollution suit expires at SCOTUS

Commentary: Trump administration’s electric ignorance revealed

A bogus presidential order and a feckless administrative agency has put the Trump administration in a nasty, complex dispute involving a private sector electric company, state regulators, a state governor, a multi-state electric grid management organization that includes a bit of Canada and runs to the Gulf of Mexico, a host of public interest groups, … More Commentary: Trump administration’s electric ignorance revealed

FERC’s Christie: Eastern grid survives the heat dome

By Kennedy Maize Outgoing Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Chairman Mark Christie yesterday (June 26) praised the performance of the electric system during the week’s massive “heat dome” that blanketed most of the eastern U.S. (and half of the country’s population). The regional transmission operators and the conventional utility systems faced very difficult circumstances and “got … More FERC’s Christie: Eastern grid survives the heat dome

BESS riding a wave of success

By Kennedy Maize Large scale battery energy storage systems, once regarded as suspect, have garnered a major place in the U.S. electrical marketplace by making low-cost renewable energy dispatchable while bolstering grid stability. A major success story for battery storage has come in Texas, where renewable energy is politically incorrect among many of the state’s … More BESS riding a wave of success

Supreme Court OKs away-from-reactor nuke waste storage

By Kennedy Maize The U.S. Supreme Court has given a green light to temporary, away-from-reactor storage of spent nuclear power plant fuel in Texas and New Mexico, overturning the ultra-conservative Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. The 6-3 decision deals a blow to Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, Texas oil and gas company Fasken Land and … More Supreme Court OKs away-from-reactor nuke waste storage