HURRICANE HELENE: More than 1 million people are without power and at least three are dead as Hurricane Helene hits Florida, although it’s weakening into a tropical storm as it moves into Georgia. (Miami Herald, Tampa Bay Times, Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

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SOLAR: 

OIL & GAS: 

  • Texas regulators approve a plan to expand grid infrastructure in the Permian Basin to accommodate a significant increase in electric load demand from the oil and gas industry. (Reuters)
  • The Tennessee Valley Authority’s new long-term resources plan generates criticism from environmental groups frustrated that every scenario envisioned by the utility involves construction of new gas plants to meet escalating power demand. (Nashville Scene)
  • Texas scientists use some of the $20 billion from BP’s settlement over the Deepwater oil spill to grow and perhaps restore the 12 different coral species affected by the disaster. (Houston Landing)

ELECTRIC VEHICLES: 

NUCLEAR: The Tennessee Valley Authority considers how to pay for development of small modular nuclear reactors, after it already budgeted $350 million for initial design and permitting. (Knoxville News Sentinel)

COAL: An Indiana bank that sued one of West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice’s coal companies for more than $4.5 million signals it’s in talks with the company about an out-of-court settlement. (Charleston Gazette-Mail)

GRID: Google announces a new $2 billion data center and a $1.3 billion expansion of an existing center in South Carolina, charging state lawmakers’ debate about the sector’s growing power demand and utilities’ push for new power plants to meet it. (South Carolina Daily Gazette)

POLITICS: Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin announces the launch of a green bank with $10 million to accelerate the deployment of clean generation and energy infrastructure, prompting skepticism because he previously vetoed Democratic legislation to establish a similar program. (Virginia Scope)

COMMENTARY: Dominion Energy’s offshore wind farm and other clean energy projects in Virginia should benefit coastal communities that are most threatened by rising seas and climate change, writes the Virginia director of Conservatives for Clean Energy. (Virginian-Pilot)

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Mason has worked as a journalist since 2001, covering Appalachian communities and the issues that affect them. He compiles the Southeast Energy News digest. Mason previously worked as a wildlife biologist before moving into journalism by freelancing at Coast Weekly in Monterey, California, before taking an internship in 2001 at High Country News. He wrote for the Enterprise Mountaineer in western North Carolina and the Roanoke Times in western Virginia before going freelance in 2012. His work has appeared in Southerly, Daily Yonder, Mother Jones, Huffington Post, WVPB’s Inside Appalachia and elsewhere. Mason was born and raised in Clifton Forge, Virginia, and now lives with his family and a small herd of goats in Floyd County, Virginia.