Hello! California rooftop solar owners have a lot to worry about if a bill making its way through the state legislature passes. The proposal would upend some 20-year net-metering contracts that reward solar owners who sell power back to the grid, but wouldn’t do much to meet its purported goal of lowering electricity prices, Jeff St. John reports.
And electric cooperatives are in trouble too as federal funding uncertainty derails their plans to build renewable generation and upgrade the grid, Keaton Peters reports for our partners at High Country News.
A coalition of 16 states and Washington, D.C., sue the Trump administration for blocking billions of dollars designated for building EV charging stations. (New York Times)
Michigan-based auto supplier BorgWarner is ending its electric vehicle charging unit and consolidating its battery business as it contends with shrinking volume and tariff uncertainty. (Crain’s Detroit)
OFFSHORE WIND
Seafloor monitoring at the South Fork Wind project off Rhode Island, which was built between 2022 and 2024, shows no negative impact to the biological communities around the development and the presence of a wide range of “ecologically important” species. (report)
Danish energy company Ørsted is moving forward with work on wind farms already under construction off New York and Rhode Island, despite the threats coming from the Trump administration. (E&E News)
HYDROGEN
Republican Congress members consider ending tax credits passed during the Biden administration that Exxon Mobil and Chevron want to use for investments in clean hydrogen and carbon storage. (Houston Chronicle)
FOSSIL FUELS
The U.S. EPA hasn’t filed any new cases against major polluters under President Trump, and has significantly scaled back minor criminal and civil enforcement cases. (Grist)
The Trump administration grants an export permit for Venture Global’s recently announced second liquified natural gas export terminal alongside its Calcasieu Pass facility in Louisiana, marking the White House’s fifth LNG-related approval since Trump took office. (Grist)
Trump’s order exempting some coal plants from federal air pollution rules has rattled environmental advocates and led the Tennessee Valley Authority to delay planned retirements, but Entergy says it’s still on track to close its coal plants in Louisiana by 2030. (Floodlight)
GRID
Adoption of electric vehicles and electric heating systems will drive an 11% increase in annual electricity consumption in New England over the next 10 years, after two decades of trending downward, according to a forecast from regional grid operator ISO New England. (Utility Dive)
Amid soaring demand projections, a Texas lawmaker pushes for a bill to place more requirements on large businesses to better help the state grid operator forecast its electricity needs, though some critics say the measure is too heavy-handed. (Texas Tribune)
WHITE PAPER
From Grid Challenge to Grid Asset: Data Center Load Flexibility
Download this eBook from Uplight to learn more about data center energy decision-making, as well as the opportunities and barriers to participating in load flexibility programs.
Canary Media is excited to bring our live event series to D.C.!
On stage: Conversations with clean energy experts, including Rep. Buddy Carter of the U.S. Congress, Lisa Friedman of The New York Times, Shannon Osaka of The Washington Post, Justin Worland of Time, with more speaker announcements coming soon.
Off stage:There'll be ample time to network with speakers and the nation's leading policymakers and thinkers over drinks and hors d'oeuvres.
🗓️June 4, 2025, 5:00 p.m.- 10:00 p.m. ET
📍 National Press Club • 529 14th Street Northwest Washington, DC 20045