59 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Justine Calma

Justine Calma

Senior Science Reporter

Senior Science Reporter

    More From Justine Calma

    Justine Calma
    Justine Calma
    The price of Bitcoin hit a new peak, rising above $69,000 today.

    That’s the highest it’s been since 2021, before the long, cold crypto winter brought that price crashing down to less than $20,000.

    A friendly reminder: the higher that price gets, the more energy Bitcoin mining typically burns through and the greater its greenhouse gas emissions.

    A graph shows fluctuating Bitcoin prices, peaking around $69,000.
    A screenshot of Bitcoin prices tracked by CoinDesk.
    Image: CoinDesk
    Justine Calma
    Justine Calma
    No sir, your greenhouse gas is not allowed here.

    A dude in California became the first person to be charged with smuggling greenhouse gases. He was actually lugging refrigerants into the US from Mexico: Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), to be exact. HFCs are “super” greenhouse gases up to thousands of times more potent than CO2. The US and other countries have pledged to phase down the use of HFCs under the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol.

    Justine Calma
    Justine Calma
    The methane-tracking satellite Jeff Bezos essentially paid for just launched.

    But it’s not on one of his rockets. SpaceX’s Falcon 9 is carrying MethaneSat, a satellite made to measure the potent greenhouse gas methane. The Bezos Earth Fund gave the nonprofit Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) $100 million to build and launch the satellite. Google is also partnering with EDF to create a global map of methane pollution coming from oil and gas infrastructure.

    Justine Calma
    Justine Calma
    Lawsuits blame an electric utility in Texas for the state’s largest wildfire.

    The devastating Smokehouse Creek fire has already burned more than a million acres, killing at least two people, and destroying hundreds of structures. Officials are still investigating the cause of blaze. But at least one homeowner and one rancher have filed suits against utility Xcel Energy. A pole owned by Excel subsidiary Southwestern Public Service Company reportedly fell within the area where the blaze might have started.

    Justine Calma
    Justine Calma
    The US Department of Energy has to start over if it wants to survey Bitcoin miners’ electricity use.

    The DOE reached a settlement with crypto miners who sued to block data collection. The agency tried to make companies disclose their energy use through an emergency data request. But a federal judge placed a temporary restraining order on it in February, saying the situation probably didn’t warrant emergency authorization. On Friday, the DOE agreed to destroy information it’s already collected. It can start over without emergency authorization, but would have to propose a new survey and give the public 60 days to comment.