Friday, February 13, 2026

Iowa’s Wind Boom Stalls as Politics Clashes With Power Prices



  • Anti-renewable politics are slowing wind development in states that once led the industry.

  • Iowa’s wind boom helped lower power prices, but local opposition has largely frozen new projects.

  • The policy shift comes as U.S. electricity demand surges, raising risks for prices and competitiveness.


On January 20, the United States Department of Energy released a report on the first year of Donald Trump's second term called “PROMISES MADE, PROMISES KEPT” which touted a return to global energy dominance and a reversal of the “Biden energy subtraction agenda.” But on the ground in energy-industry states, the story is a lot more complicated. 

A groundswell of anti-renewable sentiment has cropped up in rural and red areas of the United States in recent years, echoed and crystallized by the Trump campaign but certainly not created by it. However, this stance has caused many local-level economies to plateau, as some of the nation’s biggest concentrations of renewable energy development were unfolding in red states and counties, which tend to hold the undeveloped land and the blue-collar workforce that such projects call for. 

In Iowa, for example – a state which voted for Trump in all three elections he ran in – wind energy has flourished over the past decade. Iowa is currently the second-largest wind producer after Texas, and wind energy provides around two-thirds of the state’s energy. The state’s largest utility reports that the growth of wind power in the midwestern state “has directly held down Iowans’ electricity bills” according to recent reporting from Politico’s E&E News. But now, Iowa’s wind industry has come to a near-complete standstill.

“Wind energy development has all but ground to a halt in the face of community opposition, a phaseout of federal tax credits and the Trump administration’s actions to slow the approval of federal permits,” reports The Gazette, a local news outlet based in Cedar Rapids. Now, many locals are wondering whether Iowans have shot themselves in the foot by embracing an anti-wind and anti-renewable political agenda.

And Iowans are not alone. “U.S. onshore wind is in its weakest shape in about a decade, not because the technology has stopped being competitive, but because the policy and, to an extent, the macro-environment have turned sharply against it,” Atin Jain, a BloombergNEF energy analyst, told The Gazette.

Embodying this opposition, Trump recently said, “my goal is to not let any windmill be built,” at a White House meeting with oil executives. “They’re losers.”

“We have not approved one windmill since I’ve been in office,” Trump went on to say at last month’s World Economic Forum summit in Davos, “and we’re going to keep it that way.”

This could be a major issue for wind-heavy states like Texas and Iowa, both of which helped to put Trump in office. And the bottoming out of renewable energy growth comes at a particularly painful time. Energy demand across the nation (and the world) is skyrocketing, driven by the AI boom and the voracious energy needs of data centers.

Trump’s energy policy and its gutting of renewable incentives “severely hamstrings the U.S. ability to meet skyrocketing power demands and dilutes its economic competitiveness on the global stage,” Sandhya Ganapathy, CEO of Houston-based EDP Renewables North America, told Forbes last year.

Despite the current administration’s claims that it has made good on promises to lower energy prices nationwide, data from the United States Energy Information Administration suggest otherwise. Between November 2024 and 2025, nearly every state has seen an energy price jump, with many mid-Atlantic states seeing hikes between 10 and 15 percent.

Iowa, for its part, has only seen a 1.2 percent energy price increase over the last year. And many Iowans are standing strongly with Trump, and in opposition to any expansion of the wind industry that currently makes up the lion’s share of the country’s energy mix. At present, 58 of Iowa’s 99 counties have rules limiting wind power development, many of which have the strongest wind resources in the state.

By Haley Zaremba for Oilprice.com




 

Airport strikes in Italy to disrupt thousands of travellers during Winter Olympics and Paralympics

The industrial action could impact between 25,000 and 27,000 passengers.
Copyright Aron Marinelli

By Rebecca Ann Hughes
Updated 


The industrial action could impact between 25,000 and 27,000 air passengers.

Travellers to Italy should prepare for disruption to flights and rail services this month.

Nationwide strikes will hit air transport on 16 February, while trains across the country will be affected on 27 and 28 February. Flights will again be impacted on 7 March.

Deputy prime minister Matteo Salvini has condemned the industrial action for its potential disruption during the Winter Olympics and Paralympics, and is pushing for the strike dates to be changed.

Here’s what travellers need to know.

Nationwide air transport strike to hit Italy on 16 February


Severe disruption is expected to impact air transport on Monday 16 February, causing headaches for holidaymakers heading to Italy’s ski slopes and the Winter Olympics.

Staff of flagship carrier ITA Airways have planned a 24-hour walkout from midnight.

Flights across Italy’s airports, including Milan Malpensa, Milan Linate, Rome Fiumicino, Venice Marco Polo and Verona Valerio Catullo Airport, are expected to be affected.

Unions representing pilots, flight attendants and ground staff are participating in the strike.

Italian aviation legislation means there are still guaranteed time slots when services must operate. These will be from 7am to 10am and from 6pm to 9pm.

However, ITA has 314 flights scheduled on 16 February, according to data from Cirium, with nearly 70 per cent of departures outside the guaranteed hours.

The industrial action could impact between 25,000 and 27,000 passengers, in addition to potential cancellations or disruptions on the days before and after the strike.

Vueling flight attendants and easyJet pilots and flight attendants have also planned a 24-hour walkout for Monday.

Veuling and easyJet staff who are members of the USB union will strike between 1pm and 5pm.

A strike by ground staff from Airport Handling and ALHA is planned at Milan Linate and Milan Malpensa airports on 16 February as well.

Travellers are urged to check with their airline or tour operator for updates.

Next month, staff at ENAV, the national air traffic control services provider, are planning to strike on 7 March.

Authorities are negotiating for the industrial action to be rescheduled to reduce the impact on Olympics and Paralympics travellers, proposing the period between 24 February and 4 March instead.

Italy rail strikes expected at end of February

More travel chaos is expected to hit at the end of the month.

Staff of the Italian state railway Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane (FS) will walk out for 24 hours. The strike will begin at 9pm on Friday 27 February and end at 8.59pm on Saturday 28 February.

Regional, high-speed Frecce and Intercity trains are all likely to be impacted.

 

BNP likely to win a landslide in Bangladesh vote

BNP likely to win a landslide in Bangladesh vote
/ Bornil Amin - Unsplash
By bno Chennai Office February 13, 2026

Bangladesh’s parliamentary election points to a strong showing for the Bangladesh Nationalist Party(BNP) as counting continues after largely peaceful voting on February 12, 2026, in the country of about 170mn people.

The 300 seat Jatiya Sangsad requires 151 seats for a simple majority. More than 127mn citizens were eligible to vote, with turnout at 47.91% by 2pm local time and polling closing at 4:30pm, according to Bangladesh’s Election Commission as cited by The Daily Star in a report.

Former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, in exile in India, rejected the process and alleged widespread irregularities, including interference at polling stations and inducements to voters. She also disputed official participation levels and questioned the legitimacy of an election held without the Awami League after Bangladesh’s Election Commission cancelled the party’s registration.

Early tallies indicate the BNP has secured 135 seats, more than 100 ahead of the Jamaat-e-Islami-aligned bloc with 34, while other candidates have taken the remaining declared seats. The party’s chairman has won Dhaka-17 and Bogra-6 constituencies. Provisional trends show the BNP leading in more than 175 seats and its nearest rivals ahead in about 30.

Most media outlets in Bangladesh projecting exit polls are favouring the BNP to win in a landslide. BNP’s victory indicates that the Awami League’s removal has positioned it as the only dominant political force in the country with very little space for other actors like the Jamaat-e-Islami or the newly emergent Citizens National Party(CNP) but they may still form a credible opposition if not persecuted.

Voting included a parallel national referendum on adopting the July Charter, which proposes institutional reforms to strengthen governance, democracy and social justice. Ballots for the parliamentary poll were white, while referendum ballots were pink. More than 1,981 candidates contested the vote, including 109 women.

The interim administration led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus has pledged credible results, with investors watching for policy continuity and stability.

 

A hellish “hothouse world” looms as run-away warming tipping points approach

A hellish “hothouse world” looms as run-away warming tipping points approach
Global warming run-away heating will lead to a Hothouse Earth unless drastic action is taken. But surging wind and solar in China makes it one of the few countries where emissions are already falling. / bne IntelliNews
By Ben Aris in Berlin February 13, 2026

The world is closer than ever to a new hellish “hothouse world” as it approaches a “point of no return” after which runaway global heating cannot be stopped, scientists warn, the Guardian reported on February 11.

The warning comes as China and India report the first sustained emissions decrease, years ahead of schedule, but the US continues to ignore its carbon budget limits set by the 2015 Paris Agreement and has significantly increased CO₂ emissions – double those of China and India combined.

As bne IntelliNews reported, all the warning signals are flashing red as a raft of tipping points approaches after which positive feedback loops kick in and cause run-away heating that can’t be stopped.

The problems are getting acute as extreme weather events have become an annual disaster season for the last three years. Consultants McKinsey said in a recent report that the world spent $190bn on climate damage last year, but that will rise to $1.2 trillion – more than a six-fold increase – by 2030, and will continue to rise from there. Ratings agency Fitch also warned that countries exposed to extreme weather or that remain heavily dependent on hydrocarbons face sovereign debt downgrades by several notches from 2035 onwards unless they take action to mitigate their exposure now in an environmental damage impact report released last week.

Scientists are becoming increasingly alarmed at the lack of action, especially after the last three UN COP conferences to address the Climate Crisis – COP28COP29, and COP30 -- failed to take any action.

Failing to halt emissions and curb warming will lead to “a new and hellish “hothouse Earth” climate far worse than the 2-3°C temperature rise the world is on track to reach,” the Guardian reports.

As bne IntelliNews reported, the Climate Crisis is accelerating. The United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says that the Paris Agreement goal of keeping temperature increases to less than 1.5°C-2°C above the pre-industrial benchmark has already been missed. Temperature increases are on course to reach a catastrophic 2.7C-3.1C by 2050. At that point extreme temperature events will become routine and large parts of the world will become uninhabitable as global warming becomes irreversible due to positive feedback loops. Currently global warming is accelerating faster than all the 30-plus climate models used at the Paris meeting to set the rates and volumes of emission reduction goals. That suggests those goals should be dramatically increased, yet countries like the US are ignoring even their modest Paris targets, with the notable exception of China that has become a global green energy champion.

This new climate, which could arrive as soon as the middle of this century, would be very different to the benign conditions of the past 11,000 years, during which the whole of human civilization developed and could cause hundreds of millions of deaths in the most climate-exposed or underdeveloped parts of the world. Heat stress already killed thousands of people in Europe last summer, but if “wet-bulb” conditions are reached (35°C, 100% humidity, for six hours) then no one without air conditioning can survive outdoors. Wet bulb conditions have already been observed in places like Pakistan and UAE last year, but not for the full six hours.

Last year, studies calculating the role of the climate crisis in what are now unnatural disasters show 550 heatwaves, floods, storms, droughts and wildfires have been made significantly more severe or more frequent by global heating.

A comprehensive database of hundreds of studies that analyse the role of global heating in extreme weather was compiled by the website Carbon Brief provides overwhelming proof that the climate emergency is here today, taking lives and livelihoods in all corners of the world, the Guardian reports.

Despite the mounting evidence of the annual catastrophes, the public and politicians remain largely unaware of the severity of the mounting crisis, said the scientists. The group, led by Dr Christopher Wolf, a scientist at Terrestrial Ecosystems Research Associates in the US, said they were issuing their warning because while rapid and immediate cuts to fossil fuel burning were challenging, reversing course was likely to be impossible once on the path to a Hothouse Earth, even if emissions were eventually slashed, the Guardian reports. The team also includes Prof Johan Rockström at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany and Prof Hans Joachim Schellnhuber at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria.

“Crossing even some of the thresholds could commit the planet to a hothouse trajectory,” said Wolf. “Policymakers and the public remain largely unaware of the risks posed by what would effectively be a point-of-no-return transition.

Romania’s emissions plunge 75% since communism

Some countries are stepping up to the challenge, although too few to reverse the accelerating warming trend. China and India stand out with Romania the best performer in Europe.

Romania has cut greenhouse gas emissions by 75% since the fall of communism, achieving one of the fastest decoupling’s of economic growth from carbon pollution in Europe even as parts of the transition have proved socially painful.

Net emissions intensity — the amount of greenhouse gases per dollar of economic output — fell by 88% between 1990 and 2023, meaning each dollar of activity now produces almost 10-times less warming pollution than at the end of the Nicolae CeauÈ™escu era. Over the same period, real GDP has doubled.

Once emblematic of heavy industry and low-grade lignite, Romania is now expanding renewables at pace. In southern Romania, workers are preparing to assemble what developers describe as Europe’s largest solar farm, a 760MW project comprising one million photovoltaic panels and battery storage. In the north-west, authorities have approved a 1GW plant. The country already hosts a major onshore windfarm near the Black Sea and operates the Cernavodă nuclear power plant on the Danube, whose lifetime is being extended by 30 years.

The initial collapse in emissions followed the violent end of CeauÈ™escu’s rule in 1989, when privatisation led to factory closures and a sharp contraction in heavy industry. But since then the government has embraced renewables as the cost of generation, and more recently battery storage tumbled, making green power the cheapest option available.

Accession to the European Union in 2007 imposed stricter environmental standards and integrated Romania into the bloc’s emissions trading system. Revenues from the EU’s modernisation fund supported grid upgrades and cleaner generation. In the 17 years after 1990, the carbon intensity of Romania’s power sector fell by 9.2%; in the following 17 years, it dropped by 52%.

Romania’s rapid decarbonisation highlights limits of ‘low-hanging fruit’ Romania’s sharp fall in greenhouse gas emissions since the end of communism offers a striking example of how quickly economies can decouple growth from carbon, but analysts warn that much of the easiest progress may already have been made.

If industrialised countries could decouple as rapidly as Romania — while avoiding the social dislocation it endured — the task of limiting climate breakdown “may not seem so hopeless”, The Guardian reported.

An analysis by the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU) found that countries representing 92% of the global economy have either fully decoupled economic growth from emissions, including those embedded in imports, or achieved relative decoupling, where emissions rise more slowly than output.

Yet the pace remains insufficient to meet international targets. A 2023 study of 36 advanced economies found that 11 had fully broken the link between GDP and CO₂ emissions, but none had reduced emissions quickly enough to align with their share of the Paris Agreement goal of limiting warming to 1.5C.

Much of the early progress has come from the power sector, where coal-fired generation has been replaced by renewables and gas. However, progress has faced several major setbacks. The US has withdrawn from the Paris Agreements and is accelerating fossil fuels exploitation. The EU has also begun to roll back elements of its Green Deal in the face of economic stagnation and higher energy costs after Russian gas imports were cut off.

The ECIU identified nine countries that had absolutely decoupled in the decade before the 2015 Paris agreement but reversed progress in the following decade. Among them are Latvia and Lithuania, whose post-Soviet trajectories resembled Romania’s initial industrial contraction followed by EU-driven expansion. Russia, by contrast, increased emissions after the collapse of the Soviet Union, doubling down on the large extractive oil and gas sector, coupled with a highly inefficient use of those resources domestically.

 

 Climate tech startup switches Mongolian yurt dwellers from dirty coal to clean solar

Climate tech startup switches Mongolian yurt dwellers from dirty coal to clean solar
URECA says its coal-to-solar solution can solve Ulaanbaatar's huge difficulties with air pollution. / ureca.com
By bne IntelliNews February 13, 2026

URECA, a Mongolian climate tech startup that switches city dwellers who live in gers (yurts) from air-polluting coal to solar, has won the backing of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development’s (EBRD’s) Star Venture programme.

The fact that the ger districts of Ulaanbaatar rely on coal stoves to keep homes warm has made the city one of the most polluted capital cities in the world. Each household on average is responsible for 12 to 13 tonnes of carbon emissions, the EBRD said in a February 10 extended release on its support for URECA’s pilot Coal-to-Solar Initiative.

URECA has developed to the point where it is now better positioned to scale its climate solution, said the development bank.

“The question that we posed ourselves was: ‘If other large-scale renewables are able to generate carbon credits on the premise that they’re reducing emissions and then sell those credits and get additional revenue, how does someone living in a traditional Mongolian yurt and transitioning away from coal energy towards solar achieve the same thing?’” said URECA co-founder Orchlon.

The co-founder trio Orchlon, Amar and Unurbat see climate action as always having been a top-to-bottom approach, but believe that the clean energy transition should start with the people most affected by it, according to the EBRD.

By the end of 2025, URECA had almost 200 households using their technology. Its goal is to transition over 100,000 households by 2030. That would mean about 1.3mn tonnes of CO2 removed from the air per year, and Ulaanbaatar’s sometimes deadly air pollution reduced by more than 70%, said the bank.

Through two years of testing and piloting, URECA developed a plug-and-play system that means coal-dependent households can switch to renewable energy while financing the transition.

Cost is a major factor in climate tech adoption, explained Orchlon. With that in mind, the team, he said, concentrated on making the technology reliable and affordable by researching and developing both their hardware embedded systems and software internally.

Their infrastructure is described as combining an array of – as Orchlon put it – “low-cost, dumb, but very high-quality devices” like solar panels, inverters and electric heaters, all integrated with URECA’s verification, monitoring and reporting technologies. The latter include IoT sensors, AI, and other tools that track energy use in real time once families switch to renewable energy.

In practice, the systems enable URECA to insulate a yurt, install solar panels and batteries, then deploy smart sensors to track air quality, humidity and other indicators at five-minute intervals to verify whether any coal burning occurs throughout the day.

Emission reductions are automatically calculated, continuously verified and monetised through URECA’s platform. That opens the way to families funding their transition to renewable energy with carbon credits they generate entirely on their own, said the EBRD.

Since all devices are interconnected, URECA’s tech effectively makes each household a small virtual power plant that can be both monitored and controlled.

“Homes can operate in sync with the grid, ensuring no additional strain during peak demand, while remaining self-sustaining when the grid is under pressure,” it added.