EditorialA Sunrun installer carries a solar panel into place at a customer’s home in Carlsbad, Calif., Oct. 18, 2018. (Collin Chappelle/The New York Times)
EditorialLocal residents help police and war crimes investigators exhume the body of a 15-year-old girl, who local residents said had been executed by Russian forces along with several men whose bodies had been exhumed the day before, in the recently liberated village of Pravdyne, Ukraine, Nov. 29, 2022. (Finbarr O’Reilly/The New York Times)
EditorialWorkers repair a high-voltage electrical substation damaged by a missile strike in central Ukraine, on Nov. 10, 2022. (Brendan Hoffman/The New York Times)
EditorialDamage to a high-voltage electrical substation caused by a Russian missile strike in October in central Ukraine, Nov. 10, 2022. (Brendan Hoffman/The New York Times)
EditorialThermal power plant. Territory with a control point, electrical wires and an ash dump. Pavlodar, Kazakhstan., Pavlodar, Pavlodar, Kazakhstan - 29 May 2015
EditorialA truck draws electric power from overhead wires as it is driven along a highway near Erzhausen, Germany, on July 9, 2021. (Felix Schmitt/The New York Times)
EditorialBatteries are the only practical way, at the moment, to smoothly add more wind and solar power to the electrical grid, says Catherine Newman, chief executive of Limejump. (Andrew Testa/The New York Times)
EditorialPresident Chan Santokhi of Suriname gets out of a vehicle in Moengo, the hometown of Vice President Ronnie Brunswijk, to open an electrical grid, Dec. 19, 2020. (Adriana Loureiro Fernandez/The New York Times)