ELECTRIC VEHICLES: Auto industry experts say rapidly falling battery prices and improving technology will prevent the incoming Trump administration and Republican Congress from stopping the country’s transition to electric vehicles. (New York Times)
ALSO:
- Clean transportation advocates worry President-elect Trump will roll back the Biden administration’s “transformational” efforts on reducing pollution from large trucks and buses. (Inside Climate News)
- The Biden administration on Friday announced another $635 million in federal funding to help states, tribes, and the District of Columbia build out local electric vehicle charging networks. (E&E News)
- Volkswagen announces that an electric SUV made at its Tennessee plant no longer qualifies for a $7,500 federal tax credit because of escalating requirements for domestic sourcing of battery components and other materials. (Chattanooga Times Free Press)
CLIMATE:
OFFSHORE WIND:
- A New Jersey congressman says he was tasked with drafting an executive order for the Trump administration to freeze offshore wind development for six months. (NJ Spotlight)
- Virginia offshore wind leaders say they aren’t worried about Trump’s anti-wind energy threats because projects in the state already have federal funding or are on timelines longer than his four-year term. (Virginian-Pilot)
- Developers are expected to sign agreements this week with New England utilities for two offshore wind farms, but the fate of a second phase of the Vineyard Wind project, which lacks federal approval, remains unclear. (WCAI)
NATURAL GAS: A group that claimed a Maryland climate bill would be harmful to Black residents had backing from a group with ties to the fossil fuel industry, which a spokesman defends as “something that happens every day in advocacy.” (Washington Post)
GRID:
COMMENTARY: A climate scientist writes that in order to solve the climate crisis, humanity needs to confront “billionairism,” the system that extracts wealth from the poor to the rich and perpetuates racism, patriarchy, and suffering. (The Guardian)