Energy Resources & Access

Fellow Story

Coleman on how climate change threatens to make more people poor

Without policies to protect the world’s most vulnerable from crop failure, natural disasters, waterborne diseases and other impacts of climate change, 100 million more people could sink into poverty by 2030, the World Bank said. The report unveiled yesterday is one of a growing number of high-level studies linking poverty to climate change. This one, World Bank officials said, goes further by combining findings from household surveys in 90 nations with modeling results on the impact of rising global temperatures on food prices, heat waves, floods, droughts and diseases.
January 12, 2016
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Hansen quoted on Clinton plan to save coal communities

Clinton’s plan calls for $30 billion towards infrastructure improvements, mine land remediation, training and education programs, and incentives for business investment in Appalachia, the Illinois Basin, and the Western coal areas. “What I like about this plan is that it’s multi-faceted,” Evan Hansen, president of Downstream Strategies, a West Virginia-based environmental consulting firm, told ThinkProgress. “There is no one solution.”
January 11, 2016
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Johnson quoted on safety threat of oil-hauling trains

The Heinz Endowments' Philip Johnson alerted more than 100 people attending an oil train safety conference Friday in Oakland that a five-car train hauling crude oil had derailed in suburban Philadelphia. Although no one was hurt and no oil spilled in the early morning accident, Johnson, Heinz's program director for science and environment, said: “It's important that we continue to push hard for ways to prevent incidents like this.” Read more
January 8, 2016
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Eldering on how NASA is targeting 'other half' of carbon, climate equation

During a media teleconference on Thursday [November 2015], NASA and university scientists were able to discuss new insights, tools and agency research into key carbon and climate change questions, as the agency ramps up its efforts to understand how Earth's ocean, forest, and land ecosystems absorb nearly half of emitted carbon dioxide today. ...
January 8, 2016
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Sims Gallagher Q&A on how U.S. and China can handle existential threat of climate change

In the lead-up to the United Nations climate change conference US-China Today spoke with Kelly Sims Gallagher, Director of the Center for International Environment & Resource Policy at Tufts University, to see how the U.S. and China can best handle this existential threat.
January 7, 2016
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Mulvaney writes op-ed: To help slow climate change, preserve desert habitats

Climate change is the keystone environmental problem of our times. While most proposed solutions emphasize reducing carbon emissions from fossil fuel combustion, measures that protect our remaining wildlands are also a means to combat and adapt to climate change. The designation of Mojave Trails, Castle Mountains, and Sand to Snow National Monuments in the California desert is an important mechanism for the United States to help fulfill its promise as a global leader on climate change.
January 3, 2016
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Harp Falk writes op-ed urging public to focus on solutions to climate change

The wake-up call of the last week, month and year is just the beginning. Images of climate change continue to become more personal as we see flooding in our towns — and our basements. But let’s not wallow in bad news. Let’s focus on solutions, especially when many of them — designed intentionally — will help us meet multiple restoration goals. By investing in nature, we will realize all of the benefits it affords, including resilient landscapes, clean air and clean water.
December 31, 2015
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Ramanathan quoted on next-generation clean cook stoves

Nithya Ramanathan, an assistant research professor at UCLA, is co-founder and president of Nexleaf Analytics, a startup that's using mobile phone sensor technology to improve health and the environment. In India, another place where millions of people rely upon wood stoves, Nexleaf is studying how various next-generation clean stoves actually perform in reducing emissions.
December 26, 2015
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Rinker writes op-ed protesting natural gas pipeline proposed for Shenandoah Valley

In Jewish tradition, Challah is a loaf of yeast-risen bread, often braided, blessed and then consumed on Sabbaths and holidays. Every aspect of Challah – from its making to its eating – is replete with wisdom tradition and reminders about our overarching duty to steward Creation. The burgeoning protests against Dominion Resources and its partners over the proposed Atlantic Coast Pipeline in Virginia, West Virginia, and North Carolina is a kind of community Challah with righteousness at its core.
December 16, 2015
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Fallon Lambert co-authors study on benefits of carbon emissions standards

A new study in the journal Nature Climate Change shows that states can gain large clean air and public health benefits from power plant carbon standards.
December 15, 2015