When Big Oil meets Trump, extraordinary things happen

Trump meets with oil execs, announces meeting with ...

By David Gelles, New York Times

Last year, President Trump gathered with executives from the oil and gas industry at the White House to discuss a range of topics, including drilling and tariffs.

Few details emerged from the March 2025 meeting at the time, leaving many to wonder what exactly had transpired. Now, our colleagues Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan have answers.

In the new book “Regime Change,” they provide an account of that meeting that sheds additional light on Trump’s affinity for fossil fuels and his willingness to exert presidential power.

At one point during the meeting, the executives began complaining about the Climate Superfund bills that had recently passed in Vermont and New York. As they spoke, Trump’s policy adviser, Stephen Miller, was texting the attorney general, Pam Bondi. “I’m on it,” Miller told the group. Less than two months later, the administration sued both states, seeking to block enforcement of the laws.

In another instance, the ExxonMobil chief executive, Darren Woods, voiced concerns about European Union regulations that required big companies to monitor and reduce the environmental effects of their activities and develop “climate transition plans.”

Haberman and Swan report that, upon hearing this, Trump instructed Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick to impose additional tariffs on the E.U. until they abandoned those regulations.

Read the full story here

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Hold the obituary for renewables

By Shelby Webb, Politico Power Switch

The artificial intelligence boom may be insulating renewables from the Trump administration’s attacks.

Wind and solar generation churned out more power than nuclear and coal in the first half of 2026 — in spite of the administration issuing emergency orders to keep retiring coal plants open and axing clean energy tax credits, my colleague Ben Storrow writes.

That’s largely because power demand is up and solar is cheap.

“If you’re a utility, and you need to build generation and you want to build generation, you’re going to build what’s fast and cheap. Solar is fast and cheap,” said Nora Brownell, a former Pennsylvania utility regulator who also served on the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

Utilities are scrambling to bring more power online as data centers spread across the country. The power-hungry facilities could consume as much as 17 percent of U.S. power generation by 2030, according to the Electric Power Research Institute, up from about 5 percent in early 2026.

“Rising demand from data centers and AI has become an independent driver of renewable and storage investment,” said Helen Kou, a U.S. power market analyst at Bloomberg.

Read full story here

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Recycling company in Camden begins phased reopening

By Emily Rose Grassi, NBC Philadelphia

The recycling company at the center of controversy following a series of fires has begun reopening, according to a spokesperson for EMR.

Starting on Monday, July 13, EMR’s Waterfront South facility will be reopening in a phased approach with the location being fulling operational by Friday, July 17.

EMR announced that they have created a new “operating framework” called FireSMART to help manage the property.

This phased plan comes less than a week after a judge allowed EMR to reopen the facility by overturning the Camden City Council’s decision to shut it down.

At least 13 fires have been reported at the facility since 2020, raising concerns among neighbors, community leaders, and state officials.

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NJ Gov. Sherrill launches new nuclear energy process

NJ Gov. Sherrill launches new nuclear energy process

NJ Gov. Sherrill launches new nuclear energy process Read More »

N.J. American Water expands as $63 billion merger looms

 

 

N.J. American Water expands as $63 billion merger looms Read More »

Poland’s first offshore wind farm begins generating power

 

 

Poland’s first offshore wind farm begins generating power Read More »