While control of the White House and US Senate waits for ballot counters, a host of implications for energy and commodity markets from the Nov. 3 elections unfolded across the country, revealing a deepening US divide on energy issues that will make it harder to pursue federal policy on decarbonization and mitigating climate change. Receive daily email alerts, subscriber notes & personalize your experience. Register Now “Energy remains a powerful wedge in an increasingly divided America,” said Katie Bays, managing director of FiscalNote Markets. Even if Democratic nominee Joe Biden ultimately secures the 270 electoral votes needed to win the White House, the state and local results showed a lack of a Democratic “blue wave to easily sweep in national US climate policy,” said […]