To continue to live and sustain our homes and families, we have to work together to improve our resilience and transition to clean energy, economic development, and new investments in family sustaining jobs in clean industries.
Issue BriefUnited States, East, WestLauren Kubiak, Brad Sewell, Sarah Chasis
To meet our climate commitments, the United States must significantly reduce its current level of fossil fuel exploitation, including by not leasing new areas for development.
With training and capacity-building programs, people can gain the requisite skills to have both more opportunities in the job market and support the country's green transition.
How and where the country’s public hospitals, roads, schools, seaports, and wastewater treatment plants are built must change to account for a warming world.
Today, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) noticed its publication of a Proposed Determination (PD) regarding the Pebble deposit for Bristol Bay the next step in the process that brings EPA one step closer to enacting 404(c) Clean Water Act protections…
Good news for residents in 11 eastern states: RGGI, a regional power plant program, is working to lower electricity bills for households and businesses by billions of dollars and improve cost of living through investments in energy efficiency, renewable energy…
When President Biden signed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, he made sure billions in transportation funding would come to California to modernize and clean up our transportation system. Two bills would help the state prioritize climate and equity in…
Expert BlogUnited StatesLauren Urbanek, Stephen Walls
Buildings are one of the largest sources of carbon pollution and figuring out how to slash those emissions is central to our efforts to address the climate crisis.
The use of PFAS is not worth the risk of cancer, kidney, or liver damage, interference with vaccine uptake, or the myriad other serious health risks the chemicals are associated with.