How The Grid Report handles corrections and updates
Accuracy matters more than speed theater. When a factual error appears, the goal is to correct it clearly, quickly, and in public.
The Grid Report covers AI infrastructure, energy, data centers, automation, and markets. Many of the subjects we report on move quickly, involve technical source material, and can change as regulators, utilities, companies, and market participants release new information. When a factual error is identified, the publication aims to correct it clearly instead of silently rewriting history.
Typos, formatting issues, and small wording fixes that do not change meaning may be corrected without a formal note.
If a correction changes a factual claim, interpretation, statistic, source attribution, or timeline, a correction note should be added to the article.
If a story evolves because new facts arrive, the article may be updated with clearer context and a timestamp-style note when needed.
Readers can report factual errors, sourcing concerns, or missing context by emailing nawaz@thegridreport.news. Include the article URL, the specific claim in question, and supporting evidence when possible.
The publication does not guarantee agreement with every reader challenge, but it does commit to reviewing substantive claims in good faith. If an error is confirmed, the correction should be made in a way that keeps the record understandable to future readers.