By Laura Millan The Trump administration’s gutting of the US Agency for International Development, with 80% of its programs now canceled, is a blow for clean cookstove programs in Africa. That means more Africans will have to rely on burning wood or charcoal in their homes, driving air pollution, deforestation and greenhouse gas emissions across the continent. Clean cookstoves run on electricity, gas or smaller amounts of biomass, and switching households to less polluting cooking methods reduces harmful impacts. Health and environmental advocates for years have promoted clean cooking as an affordable, win-win solution. But the stoppage of US aid has left many projects in limbo. A demonstrator holds a sign during a "clap out" in support of USAID workers, outside the agency's headquarters in Washington, DC. Photographer: Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg “Funding is drying up, and the impact is real,” said Mattias Ohlson, chief executive officer of Emerging Cooking Solutions in Zambia. “These programs can make a difference between a company getting off the ground or not.” About a third of the global population cooks on open fires or basic stoves, burning charcoal, coal, firewood, agricultural waste or animal dung. The resulting air pollution contributes to 3.7 million premature deaths annually, according to the International Energy Agency. The practice is also responsible for about 2% of global emissions, says the Stockholm Environment Institute. For more, read the full story. The heartbeat of Spain’s power grid | By Naureen S Malik and Eamon Farhat Last week, Spain’s power grid failed in mere seconds, blacking out the entire country and parts of Portugal. It was a stunning collapse that illustrates an inviolable law of the electric system: The heartbeat of the grid — known as frequency — must be stable at all times. With more renewables on the grid and an ever-greater reliance on electricity to power everything from cars to heat pumps, the chances of that heart skipping a beat are rising. That has grid operators racing to find solutions to avoid the next Spain-sized blackout — and they’re increasingly turning to batteries. In order to maintain the right frequency and stability, the grid needs kinetic energy called inertia, which is typically created by the spinning turbines of thermal plants. Wind turbines and solar panels can’t provide that, so Spain and Portugal need coal, gas or hydro plants connected to the grid. Other blackouts have raised similar alarms, notably what happened in Texas when a February 2021 cold snap forced gas-fired generators to trip offline. The state, along with California and Utah, has also seen wind, solar and batteries trip during smaller frequency fluctuations, which then caused a bigger frequency dip and cascade into even more outages, including at gas plants. For more, read the full story. Pedestrians walk on an unlit street during a power outage in Ourense, Spain after losing power. Photographer: Brais Lorenzo/Bloomberg The European Union’s plan to slash the scope of new ESG regulations opens the door to a wave of litigation, as companies would no longer be required to act in a way that lives up to the bloc’s climate law, according to more than 30 legal scholars across the EU and UK. The new head of FEMA has a clear message to employees: All decisions go through him. David Richardson told staff in an all-hands meeting he alone will speak for the agency and interpret President Donald Trump’s vision for it, according to employees. Anyone who gets in the way of change will be sidelined, Richardson said. Canada’s most populous province greenlit a C$20.9 billion ($15 billion) plan to build a new, smaller kind of nuclear plant, a step forward for a nascent technology that’s been touted as a way to meet surging power demand from artificial intelligence. Zimbabwe has debuted a blockchain-enabled registry that will allow approved project developers to trade the nation’s carbon credits. The step is aimed at making trade in the emission offsets more transparent. Nissan Motor has abandoned plans to build a battery plant in Fukuoka, Japan, to focus its resources and funding on rescuing itself from a deepening financial crisis. Australia is in a unique place when it comes to the energy transition. It is the world’s largest exporter of coal and a leading exporter of gas, yet has set a target to have 82% renewable electricity by 2030 and hit net-zero by 2050. The Pacific nation is also caught juggling relations between the US — its military ally — and China — its biggest trading partner — as the two superpowers compete over trade. It is an unenviable challenge for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who has just been voted back into the office with an impressive new majority and also wants Australia to host the COP31 climate summit in 2026. But the Labor Party’s climate credentials will be put to test very soon, says David Stringer, Bloomberg Green’s Asia managing editor, on this week’s episode of Zero. Listen now, and subscribe on Apple, Spotify, or YouTube to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday. |