| After winning a $20 billion contract with Google, Intersect Power wants to “create a whole new class͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ |
|  San Francisco |  Copenhagen |  Aberdeen |
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 - GOP tax credit tensions
- Data center competition
- Methane madness
- Offshore wind letdown
- Tesla’s European headache
 Hurdles ahead for EU’s Russian gas exit, and Warren Buffett’s complicated fossil fuel legacy. |
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House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) Andrew Harnik/Getty Images.As Republicans in the US House of Representatives debate a new budget, tensions are rising over the fate of clean-energy tax credits. The $7,500 EV credit offered by the Inflation Reduction Act, for example, will probably get axed, Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said on Tuesday. Analysts have warned for some time that the EV credit was on thin ice. But credits for renewables, carbon capture, and other technologies remain more contentious, especially because they’ve become a critical driver of job creation in Republican-majority districts. Some 26 House Republicans issued a letter last week calling for the credits to be preserved, and at least an additional 12 have voiced some form of support for them. More details will likely be forthcoming next week when the House Ways and Means Committee is expected to release its markup of a budget reconciliation bill. In the meantime, on the flip side, some Democrats are siding with Republicans in voting to pull back California’s legal authority to set its own strict vehicle emissions standards. |
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Power companies get creative |
|  | Tim McDonnell |
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Leah Millis/ReutersThe energy company that Google is counting on to power some of its US data center buildout is making a play for more Big Tech clients by expanding its services beyond just operating power plants. When it comes to building and powering data centers, Google and its peers care about speed more than anything else, Sheldon Kimber, CEO of Intersect Power, told Semafor. Most are fed up with waiting for the transmission grid and lumbering legacy utilities to catch up with booming demand, and would prefer to build bespoke on-site power plants that draw on some combination of renewables, batteries, and gas. But the independent power companies competing for those contracts mostly lack experience building anything but the power equipment itself, while the infrastructure companies that usually build data centers don’t know how to build power plants. Kimber sees a payday in bridging that gap in-house, and is busily hiring data center technicians to complement his staff of electric engineers. The company signed a $20 billion deal with Google in December, and Kimber said the first site to emerge from it — under construction now in an undisclosed location — will be operational by next year. “We’re not just a power company anymore,” he said. “We think we’re creating a whole new class of real estate that we call a digital power asset. It’s not just AI data centers, but a whole host of things that are going to need massive electrification and we’re positioning ourselves to be the real estate provider for that.” |
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The Trump administration’s move to roll back restrictions on methane emissions by oil and gas producers could undermine its global “energy dominance” agenda.  A sweeping report this week from the International Energy Agency found that energy-related methane emissions — a major driver of global warming — have barely budged in the last decade, in spite of numerous cost-effective mitigation options and a host of commitments from companies and countries to slash them. Only 5% of global oil and gas productions actually meet a low-methane standard, the report found: That’s going to become a problem for US exporters as key gas markets implement strict emissions standards for imports, said Marcelo Mena, CEO of the Global Methane Hub, a philanthropic group that works with companies and governments on methane. In March, Trump signed a Congressional resolution to block enforcement of a fee on methane pollution. Meanwhile, methane emissions from coal mining in China also remain extremely high, as do emissions from abandoned fossil fuel sites around the world, a source that is largely neglected by existing regulations and commitments. |
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 As AI continues to evolve at a rapid pace, companies are shifting from experimentation to real-world deployment and practical use within their businesses. Join Anthropic Co-Founder Jack Clark, World Labs Co-Founder and CEO Dr. Fei-Fei Li, Booking Holdings President and CEO Glenn Fogel, and Singapore Economic Development Board Executive Vice President Ih-Ming Chan for a discussion on the breakthroughs driving AI. Discussions will dive into how global, national, and regional AI ecosystems are shaping the technology’s future, and why building the policy frameworks governing them is more critical than ever for its potential. May 21, 2025 | San Francisco, CA | Request Invitation |
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Tesla’s European headache |
Tesla’s revenues dropped still further, especially in Europe, adding to an already calamitous 2025 so far.  The number of vehicles sold by the Elon Musk-led firm fell 81% year-on-year in April in Sweden and 73.8% in the Netherlands, with steep falls in Denmark, France, the UK, and in China, despite overall demand for electric vehicles going up. The US saw a smaller but still noteworthy fall, Inside EVs reported. Europe is a particular issue since Tesla opened a “gigafactory” in Germany in 2021, capable of building 375,000 cars annually but “likely to be underutilized for some time,” Ars Technica reported. Competition from China is part of the problem, but Musk’s embrace of right-wing politics also appears to be toxic to many EV buyers. Tesla’s US EV rival Rivian, meanwhile, beat Wall Street’s profit expectations for the first quarter but cut its delivery target for the year, citing thousands of dollars per vehicle in additional costs because of tariffs. |
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