Tuesday - June 9, 2026
Journals Energy Newsletter for Friday May 01, 2026 ( 11 items )  

Americans for Tax Reform: Examples of Good News Arising From Big Beautiful Bill's Full Business Expensing Provisions
WASHINGTON, April 28 -- Americans for Tax Reform posted the following commentary by John Kartch: * * * Examples of Good News Arising from Big Beautiful Bill's Full Business Expensing Provisions In addition to across-the-board tax cuts for households, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act signed by President Trump on July 4 provides full business expensing for American businesses. In their own words, U.S. employers describe the benefits of the expensing provisions in the bill: Wideman Pools (Festus  more

Case Western Reserve University Economics Professor Helper Testifies Before House Science, Space & Technology Subcommittee
WASHINGTON, May 1 -- The House Science, Space and Technology Subcommittee on Research and Technology released the following testimony by Susan Helper, Carlton professor of economics at the Case Western Reserve University Weatherhead School of Management, from an April 21, 2026, hearing entitled "Robots Made in America: Advancing U.S. Leadership in Manufacturing and Automation": * * * Chairman Obernolte, Ranking Member Stevens, and distinguished Members of the Subcommittee, thank you for the op  more

Gillings School honors 7 faculty members for teaching innovation
CHAPEL HILL, North Carolina, April 30 -- The University of North Carolina Gillings School of Global Public Health posted the following news: * * * Gillings School honors 7 faculty members for teaching innovation * Students at the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health voted last month to select the School's most innovative classroom teachers. First presented in February 2012, the Teaching Innovation Awards honor faculty members who students feel "improve the learning environment at th  more

Jamestown Foundation Issues Commentary: State-Driven Nuclear Expansion is Winning Energy Race
WASHINGTON, May 1 -- The Jamestown Foundation issued the following commentary on April 30, 2026, by non-resident fellow Christopher Nye in its China Brief: * * * State-Driven Nuclear Expansion is Winning Energy Race Executive Summary: * The People's Republic of China (PRC) now commands the world's largest overall nuclear construction pipeline, placing Beijing on a credible path to surpass the United States in operable nuclear capacity before 2030. * Policy continuity--including the 2024 En  more

Perovskite solar cells skip yellow phase, degrade slower thanks to key additives
HOUSTON, Texas, April 30 -- Rice University posted the following news release: * * * Perovskite solar cells skip yellow phase, degrade slower thanks to key additives * Halide perovskites are gaining ground on silicon as a critical material for solar cell technologies: A new study published in the journal Science reports a method to make perovskite-based photovoltaics more durable, allowing the films to attain the desirable black phase of crystal configuration quicker and at lower temperature  more

Researchers Uncover Strategy to Help Exhausted Immune Cells Fight Tumors
LA JOLLA, California, April 30 -- The University of California San Diego campus posted the following news: * * * Researchers Uncover Strategy to Help Exhausted Immune Cells Fight Tumors * Key Takeaways * UC San Diego biologists have identified a way to reinvigorate immune system cells, which can become exhausted after fighting disease. * The break down resembles what occurs in other protein aggregate diseases such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's. * Protein recycling malfunctions aft  more

Startup Founder: Daniel Ormsbee Builds Tech To Serve the World
CEDARVILLE, Ohio, April 30 -- Cedarville University posted the following news: * * * Startup Founder: Daniel Ormsbee Builds Tech To Serve the World * by Elisabeth Coon, Student Public Relations Writer Before he finishes college this May, Daniel Ormsbee will have already launched two companies -one developing technology to turn waste into energy and another focused on solving complex industrial problems. As a senior with a double major in mechanical engineering and molecular biology at Ce  more

Three KU students receive prestigious Goldwater scholarships
LAWRENCE, Kansas, April 30 -- The University of Kansas posted the following news: * * * Three KU students receive prestigious Goldwater scholarships * LAWRENCE -The University of Kansas has three juniors who were selected to receive the Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship out of more than 1,000 nominees nationwide. KU's 2026 Barry M. Goldwater Scholars are Tatum Aikin, Arthur Benson and Carter Gray. Congress established the Goldwater scholarship program in 1986 in tribute to the retired U.S. se  more

Under crushing hypergravity, flies adapt - and recover
RIVERSIDE, California, April 30 -- The University of California Riverside campus issued the following news: * * * Under crushing hypergravity, flies adapt -- and recover * Expose an animal to extreme physical stress, and the expectation is simple: It will break down. But when UC Riverside scientists subjected fruit flies to forces many times stronger than Earth's gravity -a condition called hypergravity -the insects did something unexpected. They survived. They even mated and reproduced. Th  more

University of Otago: Climate Change a Global Threat to Brain Health - Stroke Experts
DUNEDIN, New Zealand, April 30 (TNSjou) -- The University of Otago issued the following news release: * * * Climate change a global threat to brain health - stroke experts The World Stroke Organization is warning that climate change poses an escalating threat to brain health, with extreme heat in particular increasing the risk of having a stroke and of patients dying from stroke. In a scientific statement published in the International Journal of Stroke, the organization summarises the lates  more

Yale University: Building a Superconducting Quantum Circuit That Follows Protons on the Go
NEW HAVEN, Connecticut, April 30 (TNSjou) -- Yale University issued the following news: * * * Building a superconducting quantum circuit that follows protons on the go A new device that originated at a pair of Yale labs simulates quantum proton "tunneling," a ubiquitous phenomenon found commonly in chemistry and biology. By Jim Shelton Researchers at Yale, Google, and the University of California-Santa Barbara have created a device that simulates the quantum "tunneling" behavior of proton  more