Columbia climate scientist says it’s time to get practical and focus more on effects than causes

For many climate activists, “adaptation” has long been a dirty word. The notion that the way to deal with a warming earth is through localized, adaptive activities, not large-scale, internationally organized science-based political action, has been derided as failing to get to the root causes of global warming, an admission of defeat, focusing only on … More Columbia climate scientist says it’s time to get practical and focus more on effects than causes

Wyoming wants to force states to buy Powder River Basin coal

Wyoming: Rock-ribbed Republican; loudly conservative; free-market advocates; pushes small government. Huh? Wyoming’s economy for the past 40 years has relied on revenues from the low-sulfur, low-BTU steam coal from the Powder River Basin (which also extends into neighboring Montana). The state benefitted enormously from the early federal clean air rules, which displaced eastern, high-BTU, high-sulfur … More Wyoming wants to force states to buy Powder River Basin coal

Is recycling CO2 a path to deep emissions reductions?

Given that fossil fuel requirements will continue well into the future, and the worldwide desire for cuts to ultimate emissions, is CO2 recycling a valid tactic for emissions reductions? A new study from Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy – Opportunities and Limits of CO2 Recycling in a Circular Carbon Economy: Techno-economics, Critical Infrastructure Needs, … More Is recycling CO2 a path to deep emissions reductions?

US nuke industry turns to military and space electric applications for rescue

The US nuclear power industry, failing to produce a growing business from new civilian plants, large and small, is turning to small, mobile nukes to use on military bases in war zones and in space. It’s a concept a Republican Congress and the Trump administration have embraced, but is getting scathing reviews from nuclear non-proliferation … More US nuke industry turns to military and space electric applications for rescue

Earth Day warning: coal remains king in China, distorting climate response

On April 17, less than a week before the Biden administration’s Earth Day climate summit April 22, which demonstrated return from the Trump administration’s distain for international cooperation in any forum and Trump’s skepticism about global warming, the U.S. and China produced a joint statement on their shared goals for reducing greenhouse gases. The word … More Earth Day warning: coal remains king in China, distorting climate response

Analysis: Texas is a mess

Texas is an electrical (among other things) mess. The state features an independent grid operator that is purposefully, and stupidly, unconnected to the rest of the U.S. It has inadequate and unreliable generation, with little flexibility. It has retail rate regulators subservient to the utilities it regulates. Its ideology is autarky, which never works. Texas … More Analysis: Texas is a mess

New “cherry blossom” claims of fusion breakthrough

Fusion power hopes spring eternal this time of year, but there’s plenty of reason to doubt. The periodic hype for fusion always seems to start in the spring, particularly when the U.S. federal budget season is in full bud. But endless energy from smashing hydrogen atoms together, promising unlimited clean and cheap electric power, so … More New “cherry blossom” claims of fusion breakthrough

FirstEnergy to refund nuclear bailout charges as DeWine repeals most of HB 6

Ohio’s FirstEnergy electric utility holding company has agreed to disgorge some $26 million it collected under legislation (HB 6) passed to rescue two of the company’s uneconomic power plants with more than a billion dollars in subsidies after it became clear the legislation passed as a result of a utility-led $60 million bribery scheme. Akron-based … More FirstEnergy to refund nuclear bailout charges as DeWine repeals most of HB 6