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Climate

Climate

AM Briefing: Breaching 1.5

On tipping points, Trump’s emissions impact, and private jets

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Politics

AM Briefing: Trump and COP29

On the looming climate summit, clean energy stocks, and Hurricane Rafael

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Politics

The 2 Climate Bulwarks Against the Next Trump Presidency​

State-level policies and “unstoppable” momentum for clean energy.

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Donald Trump.

The Inflation Reduction Act Is About to Be Tested

Rob and Jesse talk about what comes next in the shift to clean energy.

Climate Groups React to Trump’s Election Win

AM Briefing: Trump Wins. Climate Groups React.

On the future of the energy transition, Elon Musk’s moment to shine, and heat records

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Sparks

Election Day Breaks Heat Records

Across the U.S., millions of voters cast their ballots in record or near-record daily heat.

2024 voters.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

If you’re sweating bullets in line, stay in line!

Across the United States, millions of voters cast their ballots in record or near-record daily heat, including in Rochester, New York, where it hit a sweltering 81 degrees Fahrenheit (it was also the city’s hottest November day on record). It also hit a record 81 degrees in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, which has not seen rain since October 6, and a record 78 degrees in Columbus, Ohio. In Hartford, Connecticut, the mercury likewise reached 78 degrees, tying the previous Nov. 5 record set in 2022. New York City and Washington, D.C., meanwhile, experienced their warmest Election Days since President Franklin D. Roosevelt defeated the Republican governor of Kansas, Alf Landon.

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Politics

AM Briefing: Welcome to Election Day

On Trump vs. Harris, Spain’s rain, and a wooden satellite

Election Day Is Finally Here
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Typhoon Yinxing is expected to bring heavy rain to the Philippines this week • India is considering cloud seeding to trigger artificial rain to combat dangerous air pollution • It will be 59 degrees Fahrenheit and cloudy in Washington, D.C., where security fences have been put in place ahead of potential Election Day unrest.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Americans head to polls in 2024 presidential election

Voters head to the polls today to decide whether Kamala Harris or Donald Trump will be the next president of the United States. As Heatmap’s Jeva Lange writes, Americans will either elect a leader who continues the build-out of renewable energy and prioritizes a healthy, clean environment, or a leader who embraces the fossil fuel industry. In some places, climate will be on the ballot directly. In South Dakota, for example, the debate over carbon capture and CO2 pipelines is being put in the hands of voters; in Berkeley, California, voters will decide if they want to incentivize the decarbonization of large buildings with a natural gas tax; and Washingtonians will have two different climate-related policies to defend, with repeal initiatives on the ballot thanks to a determined Republican millionaire.

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