JAMES WATT

TODAY IN ENERGY HISTORY August 25, 2025 JAMES WATT On Wednesday, August 25, 1819, James Watt, the brilliant Scottish engineer and inventor, passed away at the age of 83. His improvements to the steam engine didn’t just power machines—they powered a movement that transformed the world. By enhancing fuel efficiency and enabling rotary motion, Watt’s […]
NUCLEAR-POWERED SHIP DOCKS IN GEORGIA

TODAY IN ENERGY HISTORY August 22, 2025 NUCLEAR-POWERED SHIP DOCKS IN GEORGIA On Wednesday, August 22, 1962, the N.S. Savannah—the world’s first nuclear-powered merchant ship—arrived in Georgia. A symbol of innovation during the Atomic Age, Savannah wasn’t built for war but for peace: a demonstration of how nuclear energy could revolutionize global shipping. Fueled by […]
DRAKE’S OIL STRIKE

TODAY IN ENERGY HISTORY August 27, 2025 DRAKE’S OIL STRIKE On August 27, 1859, Edwin Drake struck oil near Titusville, Pennsylvania—drilling the first successful commercial oil well in the United States. At just 69 feet deep, this modest well triggered a boom that transformed the global energy landscape. Before this, oil was collected in small […]
THE END OF A NUCLEAR CLEANUP ERA

TODAY IN ENERGY HISTORY August 26, 2025 THE END OF A NUCLEAR CLEANUP ERA On August 26, 1998, the Department of Energy marked the successful completion of the Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Action (UMTRA) Project. After nearly two decades of work, the 22nd and final site—located in Maybell, Colorado—was remediated. UMTRA was launched in response […]
ECLIPSE CUTS SOLAR POWER IN HALF

TODAY IN ENERGY HISTORY August 21, 2025 ECLIPSE CUTS SOLAR POWER IN HALF On Monday, August 21, 2017, a total solar eclipse swept across the United States—an awe-inspiring event for skywatchers, but also a real-time test for our energy systems. As the Moon temporarily blocked the Sun, solar power generation in the Southern U.S. plummeted […]
VIKING 1 LAUNCHED TO MARS

TODAY IN ENERGY HISTORY August 20, 2025 VIKING 1 LAUNCHED TO MARS On Wednesday, August 20, 1975, NASA launched Viking 1—the first U.S. spacecraft to successfully land on Mars. But behind that historic landing was a quiet power source: radioisotope thermoelectric generators (RTGs). Too far from the Sun for solar panels to be effective, Viking […]
YANKEE ROWE GOES CRITICAL

TODAY IN ENERGY HISTORY August 19, 2025 YANKEE ROWE GOES CRITICAL On August 19, 1960, the Yankee Rowe Nuclear Power Station in Massachusetts went critical—becoming the third nuclear plant in the U.S. to achieve a self-sustaining reaction. Built as part of an experiment to prove nuclear energy’s commercial viability, Yankee Rowe quietly helped launch a […]
DISCOVERY OF HELIUM

TODAY IN ENERGY HISTORY August 18, 2025 DISCOVERY OF HELIUM On August 18, 1868, French astronomer Jules Janssen observed a mysterious yellow spectral line during a solar eclipse. That line? It wasn’t hydrogen—it was helium, a completely new element, first discovered in the Sun before it was ever found on Earth. Helium now plays a […]
THE WAVE BEHIND THE PARTICLE

TODAY IN ENERGY HISTORY August 15, 2025 THE WAVE BEHIND THE PARTICLE On August 15, 1971, we mark the birthday of Louis de Broglie, born in 1892—a physicist who changed the course of science with his wave-particle duality theory. His idea that electrons could act like both particles and waves became a cornerstone of quantum […]
BLACKOUT CROSS-BORDER FAULT

TODAY IN ENERGY HISTORY August 14, 2025 BLACKOUT CROSS-BORDER FAULT On August 14, 2003, a massive blackout hit the northeastern U.S. and parts of Canada, leaving over 50 million people without power. What started as a small utility failure in Ohio escalated into one of the largest grid failures in North American history. Canada’s involvement […]