EDITOR'S PICK
11 May 2026 | Synopsis
Offshore wind farm construction temporarily drives seals away due to dangerously loud pile-driving noise that risks permanent hearing damage. But once construction ends, the turbine foundations act as artificial reefs, attracting anemones, fish, and other marine life. Seals return to feast, moving methodically between turbines like a food court. Long-term effects are still being studied, though wind farms appear to minimally disrupt - and may even boost - marine biodiversity.10 May 2026 | Synopsis
Vogtle nuclear power plant's expansion became the costliest power project in U.S. history, and two years after completion it's viewed as a warning for states pursuing new nuclear. Massive overruns, delays, and shifting risks left ratepayers footing the bill while utilities were shielded. The article concludes that without strict oversight and protections, future nuclear projects could repeat Vogtle’s expensive mistakes.09 May 2026 | Synopsis
Twenty years after An Inconvenient Truth, Yale Climate Connections finds Al Gore's warnings largely accurate: global temperatures, ice melt, and extreme weather have followed his projections. Some timelines were conservative, others accelerated, but the film's core message - human‑driven warming and urgent need for emissions cuts - proved prescient. Scientists say Gore's advocacy helped shape today's climate policy debate.09 May 2026 | Synopsis
A new InfluenceMap analysis argues that US automakers brought ~$70B in EV writedowns on themselves by lobbying to roll back the very emissions regulations that gave their EV investments stability. Industry lobby groups flip-flopped positions based on political winds, undercutting members' own stated concerns about regulatory uncertainty. Meanwhile, China's automakers - unhampered by such self-sabotage - surged ahead, with China now the world's largest auto exporter as global EV demand keeps rising.09 May 2026 | Synopsis
Chinese automakers' March 2026 exports show three clear strategies: Chery pushes a dual‑core focus on Europe and CIS, Geely expands across multiple regions, and BYD concentrates heavily on Central & South America, where it leads with strong dealer networks and policy support. The Gasgoo Institute says China’s export model is shifting from raw volume to region‑tailored expansion.
11 May 2026 |
A recent Fox News opinion piece claims the New York Times has announced the "end of the climate change hoax." However, a closer look reveals this is a misinterpretation of political strategy. While Democratic messaging may shift ahead of the 2026 midterms, the scientific reality and industrial momentum toward electrification remain unchanged. This debunking explores the gap between campaign rhetoric and global climate data.
11 May 2026 |
A decade of research shows offshore wind farms reshape marine ecosystems in surprising ways. Turbines create artificial reefs that attract fish and seals, yet their persistent low-frequency noise raises unresolved concerns for whales, porpoises, and other species. As turbine sizes grow, underwater noise scales sharply, outpacing regulation and leaving key ecological questions unanswered.
08 May 2026 |
WeatherFox essay rightly notes nuclear's polarizing politics, renewable intermittency, and the need for every low-carbon tool, but it skips the hard system math. Once you include firming, 100% wind/solar grids can cost several times more than mixes with 20–40% firm clean power. Neither nuclear nor renewables build fast under today's permitting, supply-chain, and social-license constraints. The real question is which local mix cuts emissions fastest and cheapest.
06 May 2026 |
The editor of EVWorld.com compares how five major AI systems - Copilot, Meta AI, ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini - summarize the same Yahoo Autos article about a Chinese-made minivan spotted in Detroit. The experiment highlights how differently each AI interprets the same source, raising questions about reliability, accuracy, and the emerging "personalities" of modern LLMs.
04 May 2026 |
A viral video claims the Iran war and disruption in the Strait of Hormuz are "crippling" green energy because key components are stuck on tankers. This EVWORLD fact check finds a sliver of truth - global shipping shocks can delay some clean‑energy projects - but no evidence that renewables are uniquely dependent on Hormuz or structurally collapsing. If anything, fossil‑fuel chaos strengthens the long‑term case for renewables and energy security.
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